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Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper movies week’s new ardy!’ | This ‘Women in Jeop

ily that The fam abbles’ ‘Squ ... together e 6 Pag

Family that fights together

PENINSULA

Peninsula

‘Squabbles’ Olympic Theatre Arts

DANIEL CHRIS MC

/PENINSULA

as Abe Dreyfus of April at Peter Greene Sloan and out the month as Mildred ed through Marshall will be perform Sloan Cathy n as Jerry bles.” The comedy EJ Anderso “Squab From left, live tonight in N. Sequim Ave. will appear Arts, 414 PRIL Olympic Theatre

PENINSULA

DAILY NEWS

THE WEEK OF

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THIS WEEK

Peninsula Spotlight INSIDE

DAILY NEWS

DAILY NEW

’S NEW REA

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L ESTATE LI

STINGS

Homes on the Peninsula market! See Page C1

8-14, 2016

Paper listings wrong for ferry

Gone in just minutes

Bulletins for PT line circulating BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

QUILCENE FIRE DEPARTMENT

Firefighters from the Quilcene and Brinnon fire departments and personnel from Mason County, Discovery Bay and East Jefferson Fire-Rescue responded to this Duckabush Road fire Wednesday night.

Brinnon home consumed in Wednesday night blaze No injuries reported BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

BRINNON — Two people escaped unharmed when a double-wide mobile home was destroyed Wednesday night by a raging fire that started in the kitchen. About 24 firefighters from five departments responded to the call, which came in at 7:30 p.m. Fire crews arrived at about 7:50 p.m.

to find the structure on Duckabush Road about 3 miles from U.S. Highway 101 engulfed by fire, according to Quilcene Fire Chief Larry Karp. It was clear at the time that nothing in the house could be salvaged, he said. Karp said firefighters initially focused on a brush fire sparked by the house fire and waited for a water supply to arrive before addressing the structure itself. The fire was under control by 11 p.m., although one firefighter with a tender stayed on scene overnight for safety purposes, according to Karp.

At the fire’s beginning, two people were inside the structure, and they escaped uninjured, according to Karp. The couple told Karp they were only away from the kitchen for a short time, and the fire started suddenly. Karp said there would be no further investigation “because I was satisfied with the answer I got from the homeowner.” Aside from the Quilcene and Brinnon fire departments, personnel from Mason County, Discovery Bay and East Jefferson Fire-Rescue responded to the call.

PORT TOWNSEND — Washington State Ferries has issued a correction to its spring schedule for the Coupeville-Port Townsend ferry, but about 1 million incorrect paper schedules are still in circulation. The incorrect schedule says the 10:40 p.m. Coupeville-Port Townsend sailing runs every night when it only runs Fridays and Saturdays. The ferry system has issued 20,000 corrective bulletins to the Port Townsend and Coupeville terminals as well as those in Clinton, Anacortes and Edmonds. The mistakes are included in the late spring portion of the printed schedules but are correct online, on the reservations service and on the system’s automatic voice line. While some routes don’t change sailing times between seasons, the difference between the early spring and late spring portions on the Port Townsend-Coupeville route is considerable as two-boat service is scheduled to begin May 6. This increases the total number of daily sailings from 20 to 36. Customers arriving for the 10:40 p.m. sailing on a weekday will find the terminal closed, so the ferries system will post a staff member to explain the change, according to spokesman Ian Sterling. Sterling said the mistake was attributable to “human error” and was discovered after the schedules were printed. TURN

TO

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Film festival for, by or about women in PT Lineup includes 9 features, 2 shorts BY CHARLIE BERMANT

Theatre, 235 Taylor St. It is an intimate affair, screening nine feature and two short PORT TOWNSEND — This films about, made by or concernweekend’s second annual Women ing women, but not to the excluin Film Festival is about more sion of men. than just the movies. The festival is designed to mit- For men, too igate Hollywood’s gender imbal“A man from Seattle called me ance by exposing attendees to great work they might never see the other day and said, ‘Why elsewhere, said Janette Force, wouldn’t I go to a women’s film fesexecutive director of the Port tival? I love women and want to Townsend Film Festival, which is know their perspective,’ ” Force said. Unlike the fall festival, schedputting on the event. This year’s festival will start at uled this year for Sept. 23-25, this 10 a.m. Saturday, with the last weekend’s event screens each film film ending at 3 p.m. Sunday, in just once so no attendees can see both auditoriums of the Rose every movie. PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

“I wanted to give people a choice but make it as hard as possible,” Force said. As of Thursday, about 200 passes — each $75 — had been sold with another 56 remaining. At registration, attendees make reservations for the movies they want to see. Force said a certain number of rush tickets will be available at the box office for each show. Anyone who shows up, pass holder or not, has a chance to get in. The festival sponsors special screenings of movies throughout the year, and this weekend’s event CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS could be a source for some of the Port Townsend Film Festival Executive Director Janette films, Force said.

Force prepares for the 200 expected guests at this

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INSIDE TODAY’S PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 100th year, 84th issue — 4 sections, 42 pages

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UpFront

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Tundra

The Samurai of Puzzles

By Chad Carpenter

Copyright © 2016, Michael Mepham Editorial Services

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

PORT ANGELES main office: 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 ■ See Commentary page for names, telephone numbers and email addresses of key executives and contact people. SEQUIM news office: 360-681-2390 147-B W. Washington St. Sequim, WA 98382 JEFFERSON COUNTY news office: 360-385-2335 1939 E. Sims Way Port Townsend, WA 98368

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Circulation customer SERVICE! To subscribe, to change your delivery address, to suspend delivery temporarily or subscription bill questions: 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 (6 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday; 7 a.m.-noon Sunday) You can also subscribe at peninsuladailynews.com, or by email: subscribe@ peninsuladailynews.com If you do not receive your newspaper by 6:30 a.m. Monday through Friday or 7:30 a.m. Sunday and holidays: 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 (6 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday; 7 a.m.noon Sunday) Subscription rates: $2.85 per week by carrier. By mail: $4.10 per week (four weeks minimum) to all states and APO boxes. Single copy prices: 75 cents daily, $1.50 Sunday Back copies: 360-452-2345 or 800-826-7714

Newsroom, sports CONTACTS! To report news: 360-417-3531, or one of our local offices: Sequim, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052; Jefferson County/Port Townsend, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550; West End/Forks, 800-826-7714, ext. 5052 Sports desk/reporting a sports score: 360-417-3525 Letters to Editor: 360-417-3527 Club news, “Seen Around” items, subjects not listed above: 360-417-3527 To purchase PDN photos: www.peninsuladailynews.com, click on “Photo Gallery.” Permission to reprint or reuse articles: 360-417-3530 To locate a recent article: 360-417-3527

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS (ISSN 1050-7000, USPS No. 438.580), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Black Press Group Ltd./Sound Publishing Inc., published each morning Sunday through Friday at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. POSTMASTER: Periodicals postage paid at Port Angeles, WA. Send address changes to Circulation Department, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Contents copyright © 2016, Peninsula Daily News MEMBER

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Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

‘Star Wars’ trailer on rebels’ past THE DUST HAS barely settled from “Star Wars: The Force Awakens,” but audiences already have a new installment to get excited for. The world got a glimpse of “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story” in a teaser trailer that debuted Thursday on “Good Morning America” and quickly became a top trending topic on Twitter. The movie looks back to the events before 1977’s “A New Hope,” introducing the ragtag rebels who unite to steal plans for the Death Star. One of them is Felicity Jones from “The Theory of Everything,” whose blasterwielding character Jyn Erso is featured prominently in the spot as she’s tasked with the dangerous mission. The film is directed by Gareth Edwards, best

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This image released by Disney shows a scene from the upcoming film “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.” known for the 2014 reboot of “Godzilla.” “Rogue One,” which hits theaters Dec. 16, also stars Diego Luna, Forest Whitaker, Ben Mendelsohn and martial arts star Donnie Yen. In the world of “Rogue One,” Edwards said at a fan event last year, the “absence of Jedi is omnipresent.” The characters in the film realize that the “gods are not coming to save us,” he said. “It comes down to a group of people who don’t have magical powers who band together to bring

hope to the galaxy.” “Cinderella” scribe Chis Weitz wrote the screenplay based on an idea from visual effects supervisor John Knoll. It’s the first in a series of spinoff films set in the “Star Wars” universe, disconnected from the more chronological main trilogy that kicked off with “The Force Awakens” and will continue with Rian Johnson’s “Episode VIII,” which arrives in December 2017. One of the anthology films will focus on a young Han Solo.

Passings

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL WEDNESDAY’S QUESTION: Have you ever taken part in a community cleanup effort of any kind? Yes

By The Associated Press

OGDEN MILLS “DINNY” PHIPPS, 75, a prominent thoroughbred owner and breeder whose stable produced 2013 Kentucky Derby winner Orb, has died. Mr. Phipps died Wednesday night at New YorkPresbyterian Hospital, The Jockey Club Mr. Phipps said Thurs- in 2013 day. The horse racing organization, of which Mr. Phipps was once its longtime chairman, did not give a cause of death. Alex Waldrop, president and CEO of the National Thoroughbred Racing Association, called Mr. Phipps “a deeply committed leader, sportsman, steward and advocate for the sport he loved.” Phipps Stable ran many winners of top races, notably Orb, a horse he owned in partnership with his cousin Stuart S. Janney III. His list of star horses was daunting. Mr. Phipps owned and raced Successor, the champion juvenile colt of 1966; Rhythm, the champion 2-year-old colt of 1989 and 1990 Travers winner; Inside Information, the champion older filly or mare of 1995; Storm Flag Flying, the 2-year-old filly champion of 2002; and Smuggler, the 3-year-old filly champion of 2005. Craig Fravel, Breeders’ Cup president and CEO, said Mr. Phipps’ accomplishments as a breeder and owner were unmatched. Mr. Phipps was chairman and CEO of the New

55.9%

No York Racing Association Inc. from 1976 to 1983. He was chairman of The Jockey Club from 1983 to 2015, the longest service in that post in an organization dating to 1894. The group’s main responsibility is to maintain the stud book of American horses and ensure the welfare of thoroughbreds in North America.

__________ LEON HAYWOOD, 74, the silky smooth R&B singer-songwriter and producer whose 1975 single “I Want’a Do Something Freaky to You” was famously sampled by Dr. Dre and others, has died. Mr. Haywood’s godson Darnell “OG Cuicide” Price said he died in his sleep

Tuesday in Los Angeles. Mr. Haywood’s “I Want’a Do Something Freaky to You” served as the groovy hook on the Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg duet “Nuthin’ But a ‘G’ Thang.” The song was also featured in 50 Cent’s “Corner Bodega,” Aaliyah’s “I Gotcha Back” and Redman’s “Rockafella.” Mr. Haywood’s other hits included “It’s Got to Be Mellow,” “Keep It in the Family” and “Don’t Push It Don’t Force It.” Born in Houston, Mr. Haywood began his career as a blues musician performing with the likes of Guitar Slim and Big Jay McNeely before achieving success in the 1960s, ’70s and ’80s in the soul, R&B and funk genres.

44.1% Total votes cast: 538

Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.

Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications

■ Port Angeles resident Robbie Wayne Davis, 40, is charged with three counts of first-degree attempted aggravated murder, three counts of first-degree aggravated assault-administers a destructive or noxious substance and two counts of harassmentthreats to kill. A secondary headline in an article on Page A1 of the Clallam County edition Thursday incorrectly

Peninsula Lookback 1966 (50 years ago)

Preservation of 24 acres of Lake Crescent northshore timberland, threatened with logging, seemed fairly well-assured today as a result of local efforts to finance holding the timber for one year to give the National Park Service time to acquire it by exchange. Telegrams from Sen. Mon Wallgren and Congressman Henry M. Jackson state they are going to introduce legislation that will enable the park service to make the acquisition, subject to local prevention of logging meanwhile. The 24-acre tract is located about a half-mile east of Ovington’s and extends about a half-mile along the lake back of the road.

Seven vehicles were purchased by the city [of Port Angeles] during Thursday night’s council meeting. Ruddell ChevroletOlsmobile, First and Peabody streets, was the low bidder on five vehicles. Ruddell’s bid for a station wagon was $2,172; for a four-door sedan, $2,090; for a three-quarter-ton pickup truck, $1,890; for two halfton pickups, 1,600 and $1,890. Sandar International, Marine Drive, was awarded the bid for two trucks.

1991 (25 years ago) Earth Week shifts into gear Saturday with a community bike ride from Four Corners to Port Townsend

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

Lottery

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

1941 (75 years ago)

described the attempted aggravated murder charges in the case of alleged attempts to kill a relative of Davis with insulin injections in 2013 and 2014.

starting at 10 a.m. Bicyclists are encouraged to join the 8-mile ride, sponsored by the Peninsula Trails Coalition. Ride marshals will guide bicyclists in groups of 10 to aid safety and ease traffic interruptions, said Mium Rubin-Crump of the coalition.

Laugh Lines THE DEA HAS announced that by the middle of the year they may decide to remove marijuana from its Schedule 1 category of dangerous drugs. Because, let’s face it, it’s absurd to have “marijuana” and “schedule” in the same sentence. Seth Meyers

LAST NIGHT’S LOTTERY results are available on a timely basis by phoning, toll-free, 800-545-7510 or on the Internet at www. walottery.com/Winning Numbers.

Seen Around Peninsula snapshots

SEEN IN PASSING at Morse Creek, Four Seasons: a small, barefoot, pajama-clad boy earnestly stalking an unseen frog or creature moving in the grass of his front yard . . . WANTED! “Seen Around” items recalling things seen on the North Olympic Peninsula. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax 360-417-3521; or email news@ peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure you mention where you saw your “Seen Around.”

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS FRIDAY, April 8, the 99th day of 2016. There are 267 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On April 8, 1974, Hank Aaron of the Atlanta Braves hit his 715th career home run in a game against the Los Angeles Dodgers, breaking Babe Ruth’s record. ■ On April 8, 1994, Kurt Cobain, singer and guitarist for the grunge band Nirvana, was found dead in Seattle from an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound; he was 27. On this date: ■ In 1820, the Venus de Milo statue was discovered by a farmer on the Greek island of Milos. ■ In 1864, the United States

Senate passed, 38-6, the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution abolishing slavery. The House of Representatives passed it in January 1865; the amendment was ratified and adopted in December 1865. ■ In 1904, Longacre Square in Manhattan was renamed Times Square after The New York Times. ■ In 1913, the 17th Amendment to the Constitution, providing for popular election of United States senators (as opposed to appointment by state legislatures), was ratified. President Woodrow Wilson became the first chief executive since John Adams to address Congress in person as he asked law-

makers to enact tariff reform. ■ In 1952, President Harry S. Truman seized the American steel industry to avert a nationwide strike. The Supreme Court later ruled that Truman had overstepped his authority, opening the way for a seven-week strike by steelworkers. ■ In 1961, a suspected bomb exploded aboard the passenger liner MV Dara in the Persian Gulf, causing it to sink; 238 of the 819 people aboard were killed. ■ In 1990, Ryan White, the teenage AIDS patient whose battle for acceptance had gained national attention, died in Indianapolis at age 18. ■ Ten years ago: The Rolling Stones made their debut in main-

land China with a censored — but still raucous — concert in Shanghai. ■ Five years ago: Congressional and White House negotiators struck a last-minute budget deal ahead of a midnight deadline, averting an embarrassing federal shutdown and cutting billions in spending. ■ One year ago: Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was convicted by a federal jury on all 30 charges against him in the Boston Marathon bombing and found him responsible for the deaths of the three people killed in the 2013 attack and the killing of an MIT police officer three days later. He was sentenced to death the following month.


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

A3

Briefly . . . Port Angeles tavern closes doors today PORT ANGELES — It’s last call at the Lazy Moon Craft Tavern. The Port Angeles bar at 130 S. Lincoln St. is closing tonight. Twisted Roots is scheduled to play. Ownership declined to discuss the closure Thursday. The tavern features a wide variety of regional craft-brewed beers and wines along with pub food. It opened in May 2014 after it was purchased from the owners of the former Peaks Brew Pub.

Public meet set PORT TOWNSEND — Public comment will be taken during a meeting with Rich Parker of McPherson Jacobson, the consultant for the Port Townsend School District superintendent search, on Tuesday. The meeting will be from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. in the district’s boardroom in the Gael Stuart Building, 1610 Blaine St. The purpose of the meeting is to give community members an opportunity to share their views with the consultant about the district’s direction to help identify the best candidates for the position. Superintendent David Engle will retire June 30. The job posting will close Thursday, April 21. Finalists will be determined Monday, May 9, the school district said, and initial interviews will be Saturday, May 14. All-day site visits and interviews are scheduled May 16-18, with one candidate visiting each day. The new superintendent is expected to be named Thursday, May 19.

Nichols appointed PORT ANGELES — Gov. Jay Inslee has appointed Mark Nichols, Clallam County prosecuting attorney and ex officio coroner, to the Forensic Investigations Council. There are 13 board positions, with 12 of them being governor appointments. Nichols’s four-year term ends Aug. 10, 2019. For more information, visit www.tinyurl.com/ jk7cccb.

Team practice

‘Bandit’ mom dying EVERETT — The former teenage car, boat and plane thief who became known as the “Barefoot Bandit� during a two-year crime spree says his mother is ill and might die before he’s released from prison this summer. Colton Harris-Moore was arrested six years ago after he crash-landed a sto-

Send PDN to school! SUPPORT EDUCATION: When you go on vacation, donate the credit for your suspended copies to provide the PDN to schools. Phone 360-452-4507

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mother, Pam Kohler, is fighting advanced lung cancer. Kohler sometimes made the news during her son’s run, such as when she told

an Associated Press reporter she was proud of him for stealing planes and hoped he wore a parachute. Harris-Moore said she self-medicated with alcohol

when he was young, but the choices he made were his alone. Harris-Moore is due to be released to a halfway house at the end of July.

He said, “I would do another 10 years in prison if it meant my mom could live.� Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press

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SEQUIM — The USA Women’s Rugby Olympics Team will practice at the Albert Haller playfields next week. Starting at 3 p.m. Tuesday and 9 a.m. Wednesday, the team will hold practice sessions at the playfields in the Water Reuse Demonstration Park, 500 N. Blake Ave. The community is invited to come and watch. The 12-member team is visiting Sequim on its way to a tournament in Victoria.

len plane in the Bahamas. The Herald newspaper interviewed him this week by telephone from Stafford Creek Corrections Center near Aberdeen. He said his


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday, April 8-9, 2016 PAGE

A4 Briefly: Nation malities, calling the law unconstitutional. The federal lawsuit, which also challenges a provision that mandates an aborted fetus be buried or cremated, seeks an injunction to keep the law takCHICAGO — At least four ing effect on July 1. people have made “credible alle“The United States Supreme gations of sexual abuse” against former U.S. House Speaker Den- Court has repeatedly stressed nis Hastert, the Chicago Tribune that a woman, not the state, is to reported Thursday, citing uniden- determine whether or not to obtain an abortion,” ACLU of tified law enforcement sources. Indiana Legal Director Ken Falk The newssaid at a news conference midpaper also day Thursday. “The State of Indireported that ana’s attempt to invade a womit had deteran’s privacy and to control her mined the decision in this regard is unprecidentities of edented and unconstitutional.” three accusers, all of them Man shoots co-worker men whose allegations CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — A stem from 70-year-old man recently fired Hastert when they from his job at a Massachusetts were teenagers and Hastert was business shot at and injured a their coach in Yorkville, Illinois. former co-worker Thursday One is dead. morning before killing himself, The other two accusers have authorities said. been described in court docuThe shooter parked in a ments only as Individual A and nearby lot and waited for the Individual D. Individual A victim to arrive at the Camdeclined to make any comment bridge business before ambushwhen approached by the newsing him outside with a 12-guage paper. Individual D spoke pripump action shotgun at about vately to the newspaper, accord- 7:45 a.m., Middlesex District ing to the Tribune. Attorney Marian Ryan said. The victim played a role in Abortion suit lodged the decision to fire the shooter months ago, the prosecutor said. INDIANAPOLIS — The “He appears to have been American Civil Liberties Union and Planned Parenthood of Indi- waiting in his car for this particular individual,” she said. ana and Kentucky sued the The 58-year-old victim used state of Indiana on Thursday over its recently signed abortion his briefcase to shield his head but was struck in the face. law that bans the procedure if The Associated Press sought because of genetic abnor-

Four sex abuse allegations made against speaker

SEC nominees waiting on Senate Democrats Support of corporate political spending requirements wanted BY ANDREW TAYLOR AND MARCY GORDON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Opposition from top Senate Democrats on Thursday stalled two of President Barack Obama’s picks for the Securities and Exchange Commission over whether the nominees support requiring publicly traded corporations to disclose political spending.

Warren, Schumer Nominees Lisa Fairfax, a Democrat, and Hester Peirce, a Republican, had waffled on the issue. Sens. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., were among four members of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee opposing Obama’s choices.

allies to Fairfax, the Democrat, was particularly unusual. Peirce, a conservative lawyer, was recommended by Republicans. Shelby planned to advance them together but held off after Schumer, Warren and Sens. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., and Robert Menendez, D-N.J., spoke out. Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., voiced opposition to Fairfax as well, leaving the vote in doubt.

That led the chairman, Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., to postpone a vote set for Thursday. Schumer said the nominees are “fence-sitting” on whether to force corporations such as Koch Industries to reveal their political giving. Groups urge SEC Republicans succeeded in Consumer and liberal groups, blocking the proposal in last and some Democratic lawmakers, year’s catch-all spending bill. have urged the SEC in recent years to adopt a rule requiring More transparency public companies to disclose polit“The SEC needs commission- ical donations. ers who believe in and support Their argument is that sharecampaign spending transpar- holders, as owners of a company, ency,” Schumer said. “I hope that should know which political canboth nominees will reconsider didates or causes are receiving their fence-sitting on this critical their money. issue before the vote and make In questioning by lawmakers, clear that they will support an the agency’s head, Mary Jo White, SEC rule that will help root out has not committed to getting the secret money from our politics.” five-member commission to adopt The opposition from Obama such a rule.

Briefly: World Assailants hack, shoot atheist Islam opponent NEW DELHI — Three motorcycle-riding assailants hacked and shot to death a student opponent of radical Islam as he was walking with a friend along a street in Bangladesh’s capital, police said Thursday. The killing Wednesday night follows a string of similar attacks last year, when at least five secular bloggers and publishers were killed, allegedly by radical Islamists. Police suspect 28-year-old Nazimuddin Samad was targeted for his outspoken atheism in the Muslim-majority country and for supporting a 2013 movement to demand capital punishment for war crimes involving the independence war against Pakistan in 1971, according to Dhaka Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner Nurul Amin. The assailants, who had been riding a single motorcycle, escaped after the assault while shouting, “Allahu Akbar,” or “Allah is great.”

U.S. blamed for scandal ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — President Vladimir Putin on Thursday denied having any links to offshore accounts and described the Panama Papers document leaks scandal as part of a U.S.-led plot to weaken Russia. Putin also defended a cellist

friend named as the alleged owner of an offshore company, describing him as a philanthropist who spent his own funds to buy rare musi- Putin cal instruments for Russian state collections. Speaking at a media forum in St. Petersburg, Putin said Western media pushed the claims of his involvement in offshore businesses even though his name didn’t feature in any of the documents leaked from a Panamanian law firm.

Long weekends ordered CARCAS, Venezuela — Public employees in Venezuela will take long weekends under the government’s latest bid to ease a nationwide power crisis. President Nicolas Maduro announced that he would sign a decree giving state workers Fridays off for 60 days, a move that drew scorn from critics who said the employees would just go home and turn on the lights. Officials have been warning for weeks that the water level behind the nation’s largest dam has fallen to near its minimum operating level. Almost 70 percent of the South American country’s electricity comes from the Guri Dam, which holds back the Caroni River in the southeastern state of Bolivar. The Associated Press

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

FOR

GREAT GARDENS

First lady Michelle Obama, left, pulls a worm from a bucket of soil as Yasmeena Sharif, a fifth grade student at Philips Academy Charter School, watches during a visit as part of her American Garden Tour on Thursday in Newark, N.J.

Islamic State group blamed for abduction of 300 workers BY ZEINA KARAM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEIRUT — In a brazen assault near the Syrian capital, Islamic State group militants Thursday abducted 300 cement workers and contractors in an area northeast of Damascus, Syrian state TV reported as fighting elsewhere in the country also worsened. Meanwhile, the U.N. special envoy for Syria said the next round of peace talks in Geneva was expected to start next week, around April 13. Staffan de Mistura said the new round should focus on a political process that he hoped would

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lead to a “concrete or real beginning of a political transition.” State TV said Thursday’s mass abduction of workers from the alBadia Cement Co. took place in Dumeir, an area where militants launched a surprise attack against government forces earlier this week. State-run news agency SANA quoted a source in the company as saying that there has been no success in efforts to establish contact with any of the workers. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the Syria conflict, said earlier in the day that contact was lost with dozens of work-

ers in Dumeir. No further details of the abduction were immediately known and there has been no claim of responsibility. Mass abductions have taken place on occasion in Syria during the country’s devastating civil war, now in its sixth year, most often of religious minorities such as Christians. The abduction came as fighting with ISIS militants raged in northern Syria on Thursday. Syrian opposition fighters have advanced on strongholds of the Islamic State group, including the ISIS-held town of al-Rai in northern Aleppo along the border with Turkey.

. . . more news to start your day

West: Remains of Korean War soldier flown to Calif.

Nation: Inflatable module heading to space station

Nation: Criminal charges filed against social workers

World: Phone app links callers to random Swedes

THE REMAINS OF a Korean War soldier have been flown back to the San Francisco Bay Area more than six decades after he went missing in South Korea. The San Francisco Chronicle reported Thursday that Army Cpl. Robert Graham disappeared after Chinese forces attacked his combat battalion in February 1951. Nephew James George and two other relatives contributed DNA that enabled the Army to identify a single bone from Graham’s leg last fall. The bone was among body parts of missing U.S. servicemen that North Korea turned over in 1993.

FORGET BLOWUP AIR mattresses. Space station astronauts are getting their first inflatable room. It’s a technology demo meant to pave the way for moon bases and Mars expeditions. Bigelow Aerospace is behind the experiment, which will get a ride to the International Space Station with another private space company. An unmanned SpaceX Falcon rocket is set to launch late this afternoon, carrying a capsule full of supplies with the pioneering pod in its trunk. It will be SpaceX’s first station delivery since a launch accident halted shipments last June.

PROSECUTORS HAVE FILED criminal charges against four Los Angeles County social workers in connection with the death of a boy who authorities said suffered horrific abuse at home. District Attorney Jackie Lacey said in a statement Thursday that the social workers are charged with child abuse and falsifying public records involving 8-year-old Gabriel Fernandez, who died in May 2013. His injuries included a fractured skull, broken ribs and burns. Lacey said the four were negligent in Gabriel’s death. The Department of Children and Family Services had opened a case on the boy in October 2012.

EVER FELT LIKE calling up a complete stranger in Sweden? Now is your chance. The Swedish Tourist Association has set up a hotline that lets callers worldwide “get connected to a random Swede.” It’s not completely random. The Swedes who take the calls have volunteered by downloading an app. But they are not vetted or given any instructions about what to say. “It’s like when Swedes travel the world. You don’t know who they’re going to talk to and what they’re going to say,” said Magnus Ling, the head of the Swedish Tourist Association.


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

(J) — FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

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Ex-PC star recovering from Brussels attack BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

shrapnel, but the fire from the bomb shot across the top of the car . . . and it hit him right in the face,” Ross said Thursday. “He tried to get his hands up, so . . . the burns he suffered are mostly to the head and hands. I got the impression that he is OK, [but] I assume from the burns on his hands that he is not playing hoops anytime soon.” According to Hurd, Manzanza suffered seconddegree burns, but it could have been worse. “He was on the subway, but he was shielded by other passengers from the blast,” she said. “That is the only reason he is still alive. Others around him did not make it.” Manzanza “is very grateful, and his heart goes out to the people who lost loved ones and were affected by this,” Hurd said. “The physical part will heal, but the emotional is going to take longer.” Ross said Manzanza “is traumatized, of course, by the bomb going off and his injuries. “And he is also depressed about that happening. It is really tragic that happened to him, and it just reminds you how small the world is.”

PORT ANGELES — A former Peninsula College basketball star is recovering from severe injuries sustained in the March 22 terrorist attacks in Brussels that killed 32 people and injured 270. Christian Manzanza, 30, was burned after a bomb went off in the Maalbeek Metro train car he Manzanza was riding in, said Martha Hurd, whose family hosted Manzanza during his time in Port Angeles. Manzanza, a 6-foot-4 guard/forward, led the Peninsula College Pirates in blocked shots with 28 during his sophomore season in 2009 and 2010. Manzanza was released recently after being treated at a hospital in Brussels, Hurd said Thursday. He could not be reached for comment Thursday. Manzanza, who works as a production support technician for the Euroclear financial services firm and who continues to play professional basketball in Brussels, suffered severe burns to his head and hands, college officials said. Anxious moments

Shrapnel missed him According to Rick Ross, Peninsula College associate dean for athletics and student programs, Manzanza said there were quite a few people in the train car between him and the explosive device when it went off during attacks claimed by Islamic State group extremists. “He didn’t get hit by the

ing athlete. Very rarely could you catch Christian without a smile and a positive attitude. All of us wish him the very best in his recovery.”

Leading scorer

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Peninsula’s Christian Manzanza, center, goes up and over Whatcom’s Brandon Welch, left and Dustin Bowser, right, for the dunk in the first half of a February 2010 game in Port Angeles.

he was OK. His fiancee returned the email and said that he had been on the subway and that he was OK but that he was in intensive care at the hospital and that she would have him call us.” Martha spoke to Man“We were a host family for zanza over the phone a few Christian for two years,” days later. Hurd said. “He became part “It was a relief,” she said. of our family — another son for my husband, Dave, and I.” Thoughts and prayers So when the Hurds learned about the attacks Ross said the thoughts on the news, they “started and prayers of the college wondering if Christian was staff and student body are OK because we knew that with Manzanza. he commuted to work On Thursday afternoon, everyday in Brussels,” Mar- “we gathered all of our athletic teams and all the peotha said. “I emailed him, asking if ple from the campus who

Film: Festival

came on short notice, and we took a picture in the gym and held up a sign that said ‘Get well, Christian,’ ” Ross said. “We found his jersey and are going to send him his jersey in a care package to try and lift his spirits.” Manzanza, a native of the Congo who moved to Belgium when he was 3, left quite an impression on those he came to know, said Peter Stewart, former Peninsula College basketball coach. “I had the privilege of coaching Christian for two seasons while I was at Peninsula,” Stewart said. “Christian was an amaz-

Manzanza was Peninsula College’s third leading scorer, averaging 8.9 points and 5.9 rebounds per game. He played for the Pirates from 2008-10 under coach Stewart. His final game with Peninsula College was at the NWAACC Tournament in March 2010, where his team lost to Tacoma Community College 75-49. Manzanza last visited the area in 2014, according to Hurd. Manzanza earned his Associate of Arts at Peninsula College and returned to Belgium, where he played basketball for Spirou Basket Charleroi, a member of the Belgian League of probasketball, in 2010 and 2011. From 2011 to 2014, Manzanza played for CEP Fleurus, a Belgium Division II team. Beginning in 2014, Manzanza has played with United-Woluwe, a Belgium Division III team. Prior to coming to Peninsula College, Manzanza earned a bachelor’s degree in accounting from Haute Ecole Albert Jacquard in 2007. He then attended Adams State University from 2007 to 2008 before attending Peninsula College on an international student visa.

Latest from Brussels Belgian prosecutors launched a public appeal Thursday seeking any information on “the man in a hat” seen before the Brussels Airport suicide bomb-

hristian Manzanza, who works as a production support technician for the Euroclear financial services firm and who continues to play professional basketball in Brussels, suffered severe burns to his head and hands, college officials said.

C

ings that killed 16 people, according to The Associated Press. Belgian Federal Prosecutor Eric Van der Sypt said authorities were especially interested in any people who might have filmed or photographed him. The suspect was seen at the airport with two suicide bombers before they died in the March 22 attacks. A subsequent explosion at Brussels’ Maalbeek subway station killed another 16 people the same morning and injured Manzanza. Photos released by prosecutors showed the man, who was wearing a dark hat, leaving the airport on foot, walking to the nearby town of Zaventem and then into Brussels, where all traces of him were reportedly lost. The suspect also wore a white jacket but discarded it at some point, prosecutors said. The appeal for public assistance more than two weeks after the suicide bombings indicates that investigators are at a standstill. Three bombers, two at the airport and one in the subway, also died in the attacks.

Ferry: Phone app is available

CONTINUED FROM A1 showing at 7 p.m. Saturday of “Cameraperson,” a docu“This is a great place to mentary by filmmaker judge the audience reaction, Kirsten Johnson that to determine whether I chronicles her 25-year proshould bring one of the fessional career and perfilms back for a special sonal life. After the screening will showing or at the festival,” be a roundtable discussion she said. that includes many of the festival’s exhibitors. Highlight films If demand exists, Force Force said two highlight will expand next year’s fesfilms are “It Had to Be You” tival with more movies and at 10 a.m. Saturday and theaters, but she doesn’t “Screenagers” at 1 p.m. Sat- plan to establish any more urday, both in the Rosebud topic-specific mini festivals. Theatre, which is part of “I don’t think I could add the Rose Theatre. another event like this,” she “It Had to Be You” is a said. romance that flips the traFor a full schedule or to ditional male/female roles, purchase tickets, go to telling the story of a besot- http://tinyurl.com/PDNted man pursuing a woman film-schedule. For more information, who doesn’t want to commit. “Screenagers” examines call 360-379-1333. how young adults are strug________ gling over their prolific use Jefferson County Editor Charlie of social media, video games Bermant can be reached at 360and Internet addiction. 385-2335 or cbermant@peninsula The main event is a dailynews.com.

CONTINUED FROM A1 Reprinting all of the schedules was not an option, as it would cost around $70,000, he said, while the cost of issuing a corrective memo and staffing the terminal cost under $3,000. “The schedules are already out there, so there is no way to put the cat back in the bag.” Sterling said. Schedules are printed four times a year.

Average number Sterling could not provide an average number for schedules that are returned for recycling at the end of a quarter. Sterling said the mistake has drawn attention to the printing of paper schedules and might cause a reexamination of the process. “A good number of our customers get schedule information online or through their mobile

many drive-up spaces are available at the terminal. Sterling said this can be of limited use during busy days, as the count is taken from within the terminal and does not cover those outside the ticket booth.

What you access The app also displays vehicle locations and provides access to the cameras at each terminal, as well as connects directly to the reservation system, which is active on the CoupevillePort Townsend route. Sterling said the correcCHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS tive measures will prevent The MV Kennewick pulls into the Port Townsend people from showing up for Ferry Terminal on Thursday afternoon. The ferry a sailing that doesn’t exist. “Most people will get the system is taking steps to inform people about a word,” he said. misprint in the current printed schedule. For more information, go to www.wsdot.wa.gov/ferries. Transportation has pubdevices,” Sterling said. ________ “In the future, we may lished a free phone app on cut down on the number of Apple and Android platJefferson County Editor Charlie schedules to keep printing forms that provides sched- Bermant can be reached at 360costs down.” ules, crossing times and a 385-2335 or cbermant@peninsula The Department of graphic that shows how dailynews.com.

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PeninsulaNorthwest

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Briefly . . . Sustainability series starts this month

ROGER MOSLEY PHOTOGRAPHY

To celebrate the grand opening of the Lyre Conservation Area on April 23, the North Olympic Land Trust is hosting activities that will include opportunities to explore the land and details from local experts on area birds and habitat restoration.

Land trust to show off Lyre Conservation Area 4 p.m. from the school to the conservation area. The North Olympic Land Trust announced in December 2014 it had purchased property near the The grand opening cere- Lyre River to permanently mony will be at 2 p.m. on conserve the 280-acre estuary ecosystem. the waterfront. Guests are encouraged to arrive early to have time $3.15M purchase price to shuttle to the land from The total purchase price, Crescent School in Joyce much of it acquired through and walk the three-fourths- grants, was $3.15 million, mile to the water. said Tom Sanford, land Because parking is lim- trust executive director. ited at the conservation The land includes the area, parking will be pro- estuary at the mouth of the vided at Crescent School in Lyre River, streams, wetJoyce 20 miles west of Port lands, tidelands, kelp beds Angeles on state Highway and bluff-backed beaches, 112. as well as a large upland A shuttle will run con- area with a diverse forest at tinuously from 12:30 p.m. to various ages of growth.

Festivities are planned at grand opening April 23 PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

JOYCE — Festivities are planned for the grand opening of the Lyre Conservation Area on April 23. Activities will begin at 12:30 p.m. and continue through the afternoon, according to the North Olympic Land Trust. They will include opportunities to explore the land and learn from local experts about area birds, habitat restoration and the cultural history of the surrounding property.

The area opened to the public late last year. It is closed to motor vehicles, but visitors can walk to the beach for such day-use activities as bird-watching, wildlife viewing, surfing and picnicking. The area on the Strait of Juan de Fuca about 20 miles west of Port Angeles is important to several salmon species, said land trust officials. To RSVP for the grand opening celebration, email brad@northolympicland trust.org or call 360-4171815, ext. 4. For more about the land trust, which is at 104 N. Laurel St., Suite 104, see www.northolympicland trust.org.

Serenity House plans benefit with TV actress, lawmaker people who are homeless,” said George, who owns rental properties in Port will begin at 5 p.m. The pro- Angeles and divides her gram will start at 6 p.m. time between Sequim and Tickets are $50 per plate California. or $95 for two plates. Table sponsorships are ‘Housing hero’ $400. Organizers said Miloscia Marinated flank steak is recognized statewide as a dinner will be served with “housing hero” for his role gourmet sides, desserts and — especially when he was soft drinks. chair of the state House of Seating is limited. Representatives’ housing George is a supporter of committee in 2005 — in a soon-to-open youth drop- increasing state spending in center at Serenity for the homeless and requirHouse’s Sequim Housing ing the state and each Resource Center. county to create a plan to “Something has to hap- address the root causes of pen, particularly for young homelessness.

Tickets to fundraiser $50 a plate PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SEQUIM — Tickets are on sale for a Serenity House of Clallam County fundraiser May 21. Lynda Day George, a television actress throughout the 1970s, and state Sen. Mark Miloscia of Federal Way will be the featured speakers at The Art of Ending Homelessness dinner and auction of fine art in The Legends Room of The Cedars at Dungeness golf course, 1965 Woodcock Road in Sequim. A no-host social hour

“We make warm friends.”

The event celebrates accomplishments under the 10-Year Plan to End Homelessness in Clallam County, written as a result of Miloscia’s legislation, and raises funds to support Serenity House’s ongoing efforts to end homelessness. Tickets are available at Serenity House thrift stores at 551 W. Washington St. in Sequim and 502 E. First St. in Port Angeles; the administration office at 2203 W. 18th St. in Port Angeles; or via PayPal at www.serenity houseclallam.org/donate. html. To donate art for the auction, call 360-452-7224.

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PORT ANGELES — Monday Musicale invites high school seniors who are going on to major or minor in music to apply to audition for a scholarship. First place, in honor of Richard McCoy, is $3,000. Second place is $2,000 and third place $1,000. Auditions will take place at First Presbyterian Church, 139 W. Eighth St., at 2 p.m. Sunday, May 1. Three professional musicians will serve as adjudicators. Instrumentalists should prepare a classical piece not to exceed 10 minutes. Vocalists should have two selections of varied styles. Applications are available from the school’s scholarship person. Home-schooled students can contact Margot Hewitt for an application at 360457-4494 or mhewitt@ olypen.com. Applications must be returned by April 22 to be considered . Family, friends and the general public are invited to attend the auditions. Refreshments will be served while the judges make their decisions. Peninsula Daily News

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SEQUIM — The Dungeness National Wildlife Refuge is seeking volunteers to assist visitors and staff. Primary duties include greeting visitors and providing information about the refuge’s trails and wildlife. Additional opportunities include wildlife surveys, invasive-species mitigation, habitat restoration, maintenance, beach cleanup and administration. The refuge will hold its annual new volunteer training Thursday, April 21, from 8 a.m. to noon, with lunch provided from noon to 1 p.m., at the Sequim Prairie Grange Hall, 290 Macleay Road. New volunteer training is offered once each year and is a requirement for volunteering at the refuge. In addition, the refuge will hold its annual refresher for current volunteers from 1 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. that day. For more information and to reserve a space at the training, phone 360457-8451 or email david_ falzetti@fws.gov.

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The WSU Clallam County Extension will host four free upcoming events on waste reduction. The public is invited. The schedule is as follows: ■ Trashy Art Night: Sunday, April 17, from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m., Port Angeles Library’s Carver Room, 2210 S. Peabody St. Participants can get creative with material reuse and upcycling, be inspired by wearable “trashion” and other crafty ideas, and make wearable or functional art from materials that would otherwise go in the trash. Some materials will be provided. Bring interesting discards and crafting supplies. Participants can register their designs for the April 22 RainFest River & Ocean Days Upcycle and Trashion Show in Forks or sign up for the 2016 Washington Coast Cleanup on April 23. This event is co-sponsored by the Trashion Show and CoastSavers. ■ Hugelkultur & Compost Workshop: Sunday, May 1, from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., location TBA, preregistration required. Learn about composting basics and participate in a hands-on creation of a hugelkultur mound. Hugelkultur is a method of using decomposition of woody debris and other organic matter to build planting mounds. ■ Food Recovery & Gleaning Kickoff: Monday, May 9, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., Port Angeles Library’s Carver Room. Learn about the impacts of food waste and how to turn it into a resource, especially for neighbors in need. Meet WSU’s new produce recovery coordinator, get registered as a 2016 gleaning volunteer and share ideas for reducing food waste in the community ■ Re-use Roundtable: Saturday, May 21, from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., Port Angeles Library’s Carver Room. Learn and share tricks and tips for fixing electronics, clothes and other objects. Build community connections and reduce the number of repairable objects that are thrown in the trash. To register for an event or for more information, contact solid waste coordinator Meggan Uecker at the WSU Clallam County Extension office at 360-4172619 or muecker@co. clallam.wa.us, or visit http://ext100.wsu.edu/ clallam. Reasonable accommodations can be made in advance for people with disabilities and special needs.

Bring Spring Flowers” buffet luncheon on the second floor of the Port Angeles CrabHouse Restaurant, 221 N. Lincoln St. The event is planned from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday. Admission is $16. Jan Ripley of Milwaukie, Ore., will talk on “Finding Humor in Getting Older.” Randolf Foster will show some of his art and talk about how he creates his jewelry. Charney Trudell, a “recovering gospel singer,” will perform. All women are welcome. Child care is available. For reservations or more information, phone 360452-4343 or 360-457-5864.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

A7

Briefly . . . each performance. Send information to the City Clerk, 152 W. Cedar St., Sequim, WA 98382. The deadline to apply is At its March 1 member- Friday, May 6. ship meeting, the Rakers Phone 360-681-3428 Car Club approved changes with questions. to the club’s Automotive Technology Scholarship. Westall scholars The scholarship proPORT TOWNSEND — vides financial assistance First Presbyterian Church for one student from Chiof Port Townsend is offermacum, Port Townsend or ing the Sarah “Dusty” Quilcene High School to Westall Scholarship to stustudy at a club-approved dents from East Jefferson college or trade school. The increase of the first County. The scholarships will be year’s funding to $1,500 awarded to students who and the potential for an additional $1,500 grant for will be attending an the scholar’s second year of accredited Christian college study have been approved. or university during 2016Scholarship applications 17. have been delivered to the Preference will be given counseling offices of all to students participating in three high schools; stuFirst Presbyterian Church dents should contact an of Port Townsend. office for further informaStudents can reapply tion. annually as long as they Applicants should have maintain good standing in a GPA of 2.0 or above and their college or university. be attending a full-time Sarah “Dusty” Westall program at a college, trade was a longtime member of institute or trade school First Presbyterian Church. starting this fall and studyBefore her death in ing automotive technology. 2009, Westall expressed a Applications are due no desire to assist in the edulater than April 30. cational pursuits of ChrisThe Rakers Car Club tian students in East Jefwas organized in 1957 and ferson County. holds events throughout Scholarship applications the year, including its can be downloaded from annual car show, held at the church’s website, www. Memorial Field in Port fpcpt.org, or found at the Townsend, scheduled for church office, 1111 FrankJune 18 this year. lin St. Anyone interested in Interested applicants the club is invited to attend also can email firstpres@ a members’ meeting at cablespeed.com for an 7 p.m. the first Tuesday of application. the month at the Highway Completed applications 20 Road House, located at and supporting materials 2152 W. Sims Way in Port must be received by 4 p.m. Townsend. Monday, May 9. For more information, contact Lance Rosmaier, IPads at libraries scholarship committee This spring, the North chair, at 360-385-2638. Olympic Library System (NOLS) will offer full-sized Moss baskets iPad tablets for in-library PORT ANGELES — use at branches in Port First Baptist Church OutAngeles, Sequim, Forks reach will offer hanging and Clallam Bay. flower baskets for residenLibrary card holders in tial use as a fundraiser to good standing can borrow benefit local at-risk youths an iPad on a first-come, and children. The Victorian moss com- first-served basis for up to two hours at a time. bination baskets will be The new devices, to be planted by Wayne Roedell used inside the library, are and the church’s outreach ideal for research, personal department. browsing or to experience Begonia, fuchsia and small combination baskets the libraries’ downloadable resources, including will be available as well. streaming movies, TV Baskets can be picked shows and audiobooks, up the week of Mother’s according to a news Day beginning Monday, release. May 2, at the greenhouse For more information at Traylor’s Restaurant, in about this and other new the east parking lot. programs at NOLS Reservations should be made by phoning 360-452- branches, email librarian 9978, 360-808-1048 or 360- Sarah Morrison at smorrison@nols.org, phone 457-6382. 360-417-8500 or visit www. nols.org and select Call for bands “Events.” SEQUIM — The city is accepting applications for April Pool’s Day bands to perform at the PORT ANGELES — 2016 season of Music in William Shore Memorial the Park, held Tuesday Pool, 225 E. Fifth St., will evenings from 6 p.m. to hold an April Pool’s Day 8 p.m. from June 28 event from 11 a.m. to 1 through Aug. 30 at the p.m. Saturday, April 16. James Center for the PerParticipants will learn forming Arts. about pool and water The center is located at safety. the Water Reuse DemonThe event is free to famstration Park. ilies, children and teens. Bands are to submit a For more information, press kit that includes a email jschultz@william written request to participate and a CD of the group shorepool.org or phone 360-417-9767. that will perform. Peninsula Daily News Bands are paid $400 for

Scholarship now available

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Josh Borte and Amber Meyers, along with infant Nora Meyers, then 8 months, all of Port Angeles, walk along a newly opened section of the Spruce Railroad Trail on the north side of Lake Crescent.

Clallam seeks $100K grant for railroad trail County looks to help pay to pave 1.6-mile segment O with a scenic alternative to the narrow shoulders and heavy traffic along U.S. PORT ANGELES — Highway 101 on the south Clallam County is seeking a side of the lake. grant to help pay for a 1.6mile segment of the Spruce Olympic Discovery Trail Railroad Trail at Lake Once completed in 2018 Crescent. Commissioners Monday or 2019, the wheelchairdirected staff to apply for a accessible Spruce Railroad $100,000 grant from the fed- Trail will become part of eral Transportation Alterna- the ever-expanding Olymtives Program to partially pic Discovery Trail. “This [grant] is just the fund reconstruction of the trail between a pair of cen- segment between the two tury-old railroad tunnels. tunnels,” County Engineer Clallam County and Ross Tyler told commissionOlympic National Park are ers Monday. working together on the The estimated cost of the multi-year project to pave segment between the and widen the 4-mile McFee and Daley-Rankin Spruce Railroad Trail to tunnels is $1.1 million. Conprovide bicyclists and other struction is planned for the non-motorized travelers summer and fall of 2018. BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Donations are being accepted for the annual Kiwanis Garage Sale, which will be held May 14-15 at the Clallam County Fairgrounds. The three Port Angeles Kiwanis clubs, along with the Sequim and Port Townsend Kiwanis clubs, sponsor the annual sale to raise money for Camp Beausite Northwest. The camp, which is located on Lake Beausite in Jefferson County, offers

and Conservation Office. That segment earned the top score in the trails category of a 2015 Washington Wildlife and Recreation Program grant competition. The Olympic Discovery Trail will eventually cover 128 miles between Port Townsend and La Push.

_________ Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 56450, or at rollikainen@peninsula dailynews.com.

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Camp Beausite will offer at least four weeklong programs this summer, with sessions for different age groups each week. For information about the camp or about registering for a summer session, phone camp director Claudia Edmondson at 360-7327222, or visit www.camp beausitenw.org.

Wednesday, April 13

Presented by

Appointments preferred. To schedule an appointment, call our Home Health Dept. at 360.457.3462

To arrange a pickup for donations, phone Dave Sue at 360-452-9848, Chuck Standley at 360-809-0731, Lloyd Eisenmann at 360775-6504 or Bob Zindel at 360-457-1435. Donations also will be accepted in person at the fairgrounds from noon Monday, May 9, through Wednesday, May 11.

Join us for an informational meeting at Peninsula College’s main campus in Port Angeles in the Little Theater, Building J.

Healthy Leg Day

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Dave Grainger, CNE 360-774-2467 dgrainger@graingerandco.com

weeklong summer camping experiences for specialneeds youths and adults. The Kiwanians are looking for gently used items, including toys, children’s clothing, books, housewares, hobby supplies, furniture and sports equipment. No adult clothing will be accepted this year, but shoes and coats of any size can be donated. Other items that will not be accepted include CRT TVs or computer monitors, VCRs, film cameras and used mattresses, cribs or car seats.

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nce completed in 2018 or 2019, the wheelchairaccessible Spruce Railroad Trail will become part of the ever-expanding Olympic Discovery Trail.

Donations being taken for club’s May garage sale at fairgrounds

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The tunnels themselves will be restored as part of sister projects. Clallam County is constantly seeking state and federal grants to help pay for the four segments of the Spruce Railroad Trail. “This is just an application for $100,000 back,” Tyler said of the latest grant application. Last year, crews widened a 0.6-mile segment on the east end of the trail from the Lyre River trailhead to the historic railroad grade on the north shore of the lake. The packed gravel surface will be paved after more segments are built. This year, crews plan to extend the reconstructed trail another half-mile to the McFee tunnel. More than half of the cost of the trail reconstruction and tunnel restoration is covered by a $460,000 grant from the state Recreation

424 East 2nd St. • Port Angeles Mon-Fri. 8:30am-7pm • Sat 9-5pm • Sun. Noon-4pm

Call (360) 417-6340 or 1 (877) 452-9277, EXT 2 for more information.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday, April 8-9, 2016 PAGE

A8 $ Briefly . . . Agents of the Month named in PA PORT ANGELES — Marc and Pat Thomsen, aka Team Thomsen, of Coldwell Banker Uptown Realty have earned the Agent of the Month spot for March. The Agent of the Month is accomplished by producing the highest amount of M. Thomsen business transactions in one month’s time. Team Thomsen can be reached at P. Thomsen MThom sen@olypen.com and 360417-2782.

Airline seats WASHINGTON — The Senate refused Thursday to come to the aid of airline passengers squeezed by the ever-shrinking size of their seats. An amendment by Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., would have blocked airlines from further reducing the “size, width, padding, and pitch� of seats, passengers’ legroom and the width of aisles. “It costs you an arm and a leg just to have room for your arms and legs,� Schumer said. The amendment also would have required the Federal Aviation Administration to set standards for the minimum amount of space airlines must provide passengers for their “safety, health and comfort.� Airlines would have had to post the size of their seats on their websites so that consumers could take the information into consideration when buying tickets. The proposal failed on a vote of 42-54, with all but three Democrats in favor and all but one Republican against. Economy-class airline seats have shrunk in recent years on average

Real-time stock quotations at peninsuladailynews.com

Market watch April 7, 2016

-174.09

Dow Jones industrials

17,541.96

Nasdaq composite

4,848.37

Standard & Poor’s 500

2,041.91

-72.35 -24.75

Russell 2000

-16.02 1,092.79

NYSE diary Advanced: Declined:

708 2,378

Unchanged: Volume:

80 3.6 b

Nasdaq diary Advanced: Declined: Unchanged: Volume:

OMC

742 2,046 161 1.8 b AP

from a width of 18 inches to 16.5 inches. The average pitch — the space between a point on one seat and the same on the seat in front of it — has gone from 35 inches to about 31 inches.

Corruption case LAS VEGAS — Las Vegas Sands is paying a $9 million fine to settle a regulatory investigation that painted a sordid picture of the casino owner’s expansion into a gambling mecca in China. The resolution announced Thursday closes a Securities and Exchange Commission probe that began more than five years ago. The corruption case revolved around Las Vegas Sands’ efforts to become a major player in Macao, an enclave in China that has turned into a gold mine for U.S. casinos. The SEC penalized Las Vegas Sands for shady dealings with a consultant paid $62 million to serve as a “beard� for some of its business in Macao and Beijing.

Gold and silver Gold for June rose $13.70, or 1.1 percent, to settle at $1,237.50 an ounce Thursday. May silver went up 10.4 cents, or 0.7 percent, to $15.158 an ounce. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press

EMPLOYEES HONORED

Front row, from left, Senior Application Analyst Ryan Heiligenthal, Laboratory Technologist Patty Wood, Insurance Credentialing Specialist Stacy Remick and Health Information Management Customer Service Representative Gladys Dearinger stand with Chief Executive Officer Eric Lewis, Patient Access Representative Kayla Powell and Clinical Informatics Analyst Samantha Reynolds to receive awards for outstanding performance. In the back row, from left, Chief Medical Officer Dr. Scott Kennedy, Chief Finance Officer Julie Ruckstat and Board President John Nutter attended the presentation made early in March.

FBI debate continues: To share iPhone hack with Apple or not? BY TAMI ABDOLLAH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

“The FBI is very good at keeping secrets and the people we bought this from — I know a fair amount about them, and I have a high degree of confidence that they’re very good at protecting it and their motivations align with ours.�

WASHINGTON — The FBI has not decided whether to share with Apple Inc. details about how the bureau hacked into an iPhone linked to a California terrorism investigation, the bureau’s director said. James Comey discussed the situation during a speech Wednesday evening dropped its legal fight to at Kenyon College in Ohio. compel Apple to provide it with specialized software that would allow the FBI to Corner case hack into the iPhone, which He called it a “technologi- was issued to San Bercal corner case� and said the nardino, Calif., county health flaw the FBI exploited in inspector Syed Farook. Farook and his wife, Apple’s software works only on a “narrow slice of phones� Tashfeen Malik, killed 14 — the iPhone 5C, running people in December; the version 9 of Apple’s mobile couple died in a shootout operating system, not on with authorities. The iPhone was found in newer or older models. “If we tell Apple, they’re a vehicle the day after the going to fix it and we’re shooting. Two personal were found back where we started,� phones destroyed so completely the Comey said. “As silly as it may sound, FBI could not recover inforwe may end up there. We mation from them. U.S. Magistrate Sheri just haven’t decided yet.� The Justice Department Pym had ordered Apple to

JAMES COMEY director, FBI provide the FBI with software to help it hack into Farook’s work-issued iPhone after the government said only Apple could help authorities access the encrypted and locked iPhone. The order touched off a debate pitting digital privacy rights against national security concerns. Comey told the university audience that the case also inspired a lot of efforts to try to break into the phone — “everybody and his uncle Fred called us with ideas.� “Someone outside the government, in response to that attention, came up with a solution,� Comey said.

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Closest hints to plans Comey’s comments were the closest hints about what the FBI might do with its knowledge of a vulnerability in Apple’s software that could let someone bypass built-in digital locks to access private information. It remains unclear whether or when the FBI might share details about the technique with state or local police agencies or law enforcement offices. The FBI’s solution apparently would not help Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance, who told a congressional panel that he has 205 iPhones his investigators can’t access data from in criminal investigations. Not one of those phones is an iPhone 5C, according to his office. The encrypted phone in the California case was protected by a passcode that included security protocols: a time delay and selfdestruct feature that erased the phone’s data after 10 tries. The two features made it impossible for the government to repeatedly and continuously test passcodes.

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“One that I am confident will be closely protected and used lawfully and appropriately.� The government then “purchased a tool that allows court-authorized access to the phone,� Comey said. The government has declined to release the identity of the third party that made it possible to access the iPhone in the case. “The FBI is very good at keeping secrets and the people we bought this from — I know a fair amount about them, and I have a high degree of confidence that they’re very good at protecting it and their motivations align with ours,� Comey said.

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All-Day Studio: April 12-14, 9 am - 5 pm at Laurel & First St. (old Maurice’s bldg.)

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Port Angeles is updating its long-range Comprehensive Plan, establishing city-wide projects and policies for the next 20 years. It covers basic services, land use, parks, transportation, housing and more. Watch www.pa-compplan.org for updates and news.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday, April 8-9, 2016 PAGE

A9 Outdoors

Youthful anglers casting for trout IT’S THE TAIL end of spring break and the kids are bored and looking for an activity. Parents are in luck Saturday Michael morning when the 20th annual Carman Kids Fishing Day is held at the Lincoln Park Ponds in Port Angeles. Youth anglers from age 5 to 14 will vie to win one of 35 brandnew fishing rods in five different age groups. Fishing will run from 8 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Anglers and their parents are advised to arrive early to claim a fishing spot. The winning anglers will be announced at 10:45 a.m. John Procter, president of the Olympic Peninsula Fly Fishers, will be on hand with fellow club members to assist with setting up poles as well as the inevitable tangled line. The fly fishing club is one of the event’s sponsors, as well as the city of Port Angeles Parks and Recreation Department, the state Department of Fish and Wildlife and Port Angeles Kiwanis members. Procter anticipates seeing a host of beaming youngsters holding up their catch. “The smiles on those kids faces is what I’m looking forward to,” Procter said. “I wish every one of them could catch a fish and feel that flash of excitement. “Hopefully, that triggers a response and gets those kids interested in fishing as a healthy outdoor pursuit. I was outdoors fishing and hunting all the time when I was a kid.” Procter said 1,500 rainbow trout from the Sol Duc Hatchery have been planted in the ponds. “We just planted the fish out there,” Procter said Wednesday. “They are beautiful fish too. Most of them are 12 to 24 inches long and there are at least 50 fish that are 24 inches or larger.” Although the fly fishing group helps with the operations, there is no room for casting flies. “This is not fly fishing,” Procter said. “This is using spinning rods and reels and that’s what we give away as prizes. Young anglers should bring their own rods and reels. “They can use lures, power bait or whatever they want,” Procter said. “Bring what they have and our members will be going around with some supplies to help get rigged up.” The young anglers can catch as many fish as they please, but only the largest will count for a prize. Port Angeles Kiwanis members will provide hot dogs and bottled water for the kids.

Another early closure The final day of blackmouth fishing in Marine Area 9 (Admiralty Inlet) is now Sunday after the state Department of Fish and Wildlife announced an early closure. The season was originally set to run through Friday, April 15. But like Marine Area 6 (East Strait of Juan de Fuca) the fishery will close sooner than expected after projected chinook encounters were achieved. Before the salmon fishing season started, Fish and Wildlife and tribal co-managers agreed that anglers in Marine Area 9 should be limited to 4,729 encounters with chinook salmon, including fish either released or retained. Salmon fishing will remain open in other areas, including Marine Areas 5 (Sekiu) and 12 (Hood Canal).

Slow start at Lake Leland It appears that many of the thousands of trout planted last week in Lake Leland are a bit shy. TURN

TO

CARMAN/A11

JAMM AQUINO/HONOLULU STAR-ADVERTISER

Mililani’s Jayna Morikawa (11) watches as the ball crosses the goal line as Pearl City goalkeeper Sydney Young (32) looks on during a match in February. Morikawa, a midfielder, has signed to play at Peninsula College.

Pirate women reload New recruits signed, assistant coach added PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES – The Peninsula Pirates are reloading in an effort to win their sixth consecutive women’s soccer region championship. Head coach Kanyon Anderson and new assistant Dana De Vaughn have already signed 11 players to a roster that already is loaded with returning talent. “This recruiting class strikes me as one of the most tenacious and cerebral groups we’ve ever brought in,” Anderson said. “We will be able to try a few new things tactically, and we will have the toughness to make

sure that we ALSO . . . are competi■ De tive, even Vaughn when things joins Pirates aren’t going coaching our way.” staff/A11 The Northwest Athletic Conference’s North Region Coach of the Year said his 2016 recruiting class is very similar to one he had in 2011, calling them “tough, no-nonsense, competitive and strong.” “That group went on to win back-to-back division championships and an NWAC title,” Anderson said. “I think this recruiting class,

paired with a wonderful returning core, will be very good. I am excited to coach them.” Here is a look at the newest Pirates: ■ Malia Brudvik, Defender (Auburn): A four-year varsity player at Auburn Mountainview, where she was named first-team all-league and Defensive MVP. “Malia is a brave, intelligent defender,” Anderson said. “She is comfortable with the ball at her feet and she is intelligent. I am excited to see her game develop at the college level because she is a player who has the mind to out-think many on the field. “I see her using her mental and physical gifts to win the ball and turn defense into attack.” ■ Emilee Greve, Midfielder (Auburn): Like Brudvik, played four years of varsity at Auburn Mountainview, and also was first-team all-league.

“Emilee is both technically sound and tactically aware,” Anderson said. “In addition she has the strength to win tackles in the midfield and the mobility to put herself in the right position. “What makes her truly unique though is her ripping shot, which I have seen her use very effectively. She will be a weapon from distance all season.” ■ Tatiana Hagan, Midfielder (Reno, Nev.): The younger sister of Pirates standout Tori Hagen was a four-year varsity letter winner at Galena High School and three-time all-league player at both midfielder and striker. “Tati is a quick, athletic player with a knack for finding gaps in the opposing defense,” Anderson said. TURN

TO

PIRATES/A11

Walker ready to take leap for M’s Young pitcher starting tonight’s home opener BY BOB DUTTON MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

SEATTLE — If Taijuan Walker is to take the next big step, as many expect this season, it starts tonight at Safeco Field when he takes the mound for the Mariners’ home opener against the Oakland Athletics. “ I ’ m ready,” he declared. “I’m anxious. I feel pretty good. I threw a bullpen [ w o r k o u t Next Game Tuesday in Texas], and Today it felt really vs. Oakland at Safeco Field good.” Wa l k e r, Time: 7:10 p.m. at 23, has On TV: ROOT long been viewed as the heir apparent to Felix Hernandez as the frontman in the Mariners’

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Mariners pitcher Taijuan Walker will start the home opener tonight against the Oakland Athletics. The highly-touted Walker recorded an 11-8 record last season. rotation — even if the King, who turns 30 today, remains years away from surrendering the crown. Pitching the home opener, amid the hoopla and in front of a sellout crowd, is part of the ongoing development process. “It’s the big leagues,” manager Scott Servais said.

“If you want to be that guy, a top-of-the-rotation guy. I would think he has aspirations some day of pitching the season opener. So you might as well get used to it.” Walker got a feel for the heat of added spotlight roughly a year ago when he pitched on Jackie Robinson Day at Dodger

Stadium. He grew up near LA, in Yucaipa, Calif., and here he was surrounded by some of the game’s royalty. It didn’t go well. Walker gave up three runs in the first inning and had allowed five when pulled in the fifth. TURN

TO

M’S/A11

Errors doom Forks in doubleheader BY MICHAEL CARMAN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

EATONVILLE — The bats are coming around, but the gloves are lagging behind for the Forks softball team. The Spartans committed a total of 10 errors and dropped both games of a road doubleheader to Eatonville, falling by scores of 16-6 and 16-5.

Forks opened strong in game one, scoring three runs in the top of the first inning, but couldn’t hold on. “Struggles continue with a young team,” Spartans coach Scott Bennett said. “Started out well, but Eatonville took advantage of miscues and pitching inconsistencies to beat us.” Sarah Adams homered for

Forks, while Julia Lausche had Friday, April 15. two hits and an RBI. Eatonville 16, Forks 6, 5 innings In game two, the Cruisers’ 3 0 1 2 0 — 6 8 5 Kylie Koszykowski hit two home Forks Eatonville 1 0 5 2 0 — 16 7 0 runs as the Spartans fell 16-5. WP- Porter; LP- Dean Lausche and Britney Dean Eatonville 16, Forks 5, 5 innings each had two hits for Forks. Eatonville 4 0 5 0 7 — 16 9 0 Hitting was a bright spot for Forks 1 1 0 2 1 — 5 9 5 the Spartans as they totaled 17 WP- Porter; LP- Kratzer hits. ________ The Spartans (0-7, 0-7) host Compiled using team reports. undefeated Tenino (4-0, 7-0) on


A10

SportsRecreation

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

Today’s

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

Scoreboard Calendar Today

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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

SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY

Softball: Tacoma Baptist at Quilcene, 3:45 p.m.

Saturday Track and Field: Port Townsend at Birger Solberg Invitational, at Sehome, 3:30 p.m.

Baseball American League East Division W L Pct GB Baltimore 2 0 1.000 — New York 3 1 .750 ½ Tampa Bay 2 2 .500 1 Toronto 2 2 .500 1 Boston 1 1 .500 1 Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 2 0 1.000 — Chicago 3 1 .750 — Cleveland 1 1 .500 1 Kansas City 1 1 .500 1 Minnesota 0 2 .000 2 West Division W L Pct GB Seattle 2 1 .667 — Texas 1 2 .333 1 Houston 1 3 .250 1½ Oakland 1 3 .250 1½ Los Angeles 0 2 .000 1½ Wednesday’s Games Tampa Bay 5, Toronto 3 Seattle 9, Texas 5 Detroit 7, Miami 3 Cleveland 7, Boston 6 N.Y. Yankees 16, Houston 6 Baltimore 4, Minnesota 2 Oakland 2, Chicago White Sox 1 Thursday’s Games Chicago White Sox at Oakland, 3:35 p.m. N.Y. Yankees 8, Houston 5 Boston at Cleveland, ppd., rain Minnesota at Baltimore, late. Texas at L.A. Angels, late. Today’s Games N.Y. Yankees (Severino 0-0) at Detroit (Zimmermann 0-0), 10:08 a.m. Cleveland (Salazar 0-0) at Chicago White Sox (Danks 0-0), 1:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Archer 0-1) at Baltimore (Tillman 0-0), 4:05 p.m. Boston (Kelly 0-0) at Toronto (Stroman 1-0), 4:07 p.m. Houston (Feldman 0-0) at Milwaukee (Anderson 0-0), 5:10 p.m. Minnesota (E.Santana 0-0) at Kansas City (Ventura 0-0), 5:15 p.m. Texas (Griffin 0-0) at L.A. Angels (Shoemaker 0-0), 7:05 p.m. Oakland (Surkamp 0-0) at Seattle (T.Walker 0-0), 7:10 p.m. Saturday’s Games Boston at Toronto, 10:07 a.m. N.Y. Yankees at Detroit, 10:08 a.m. Cleveland at Chicago White Sox, 11:10 a.m. Tampa Bay at Baltimore, 4:05 p.m. Houston at Milwaukee, 4:10 p.m. Minnesota at Kansas City, 4:15 p.m. Texas at L.A. Angels, 6:05 p.m. Oakland at Seattle, 6:10 p.m. Sunday’s Games Boston at Toronto, 10:07 a.m. Tampa Bay at Baltimore, 10:35 a.m.

Today 10 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Tennis WTA, Volvo Car Open, Quarterfinal (Live) Noon (26) ESPN Golf, Masters Tournament (Live) 1 p.m. (319) PAC12 Women’s Lacrosse NCAA, Stanford vs. Oregon (Live) 3 p.m. (319) PAC12 Softball NCAA, Oregon vs. Oregon State (Live) 5 p.m. (319) PAC12 (320) PAC12WA Softball NCAA, Washington vs. Arizona State (Live) 5:30 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, Memphis Grizzlies at Dallas Mavericks (Live) 5:30 p.m. (306) FS1 Auto Racing NASCAR, O’Reilly Auto Parts 300, Xfinity Series (Live) 5:30 p.m. (311) ESPNU Baseball NCAA, Vanderbilt at LSU (Live) 7 p.m. (319) PAC12 Baseball NCAA, Stanford vs. UCLA (Live) 7 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Oakland Athletics at Seattle Mariners (Live) 7 p.m. (320) PAC12WA Baseball NCAA, Washington vs. Arizona State (Live)

Saturday

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAST-MINUTE

PREPARATIONS

Members of the Seattle Mariners’ grounds crew work on the infield at Safeco Field in advance of tonight’s home opener against the Oakland Athletics. Cleveland at Chicago White Sox, 11:10 a.m. Houston at Milwaukee, 11:10 a.m. Minnesota at Kansas City, 11:15 a.m. Texas at L.A. Angels, 12:35 p.m. Oakland at Seattle, 1:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Detroit, 5:08 p.m.

National League East Division W L Pct Washington 2 0 1.000 New York 1 1 .500 Atlanta 0 2 .000 Miami 0 2 .000 Philadelphia 0 3 .000 Central Division W L Pct Cincinnati 3 0 1.000 Pittsburgh 3 0 1.000 Chicago 2 0 1.000 Milwaukee 1 2 .333 St. Louis 0 3 .000 West Division W L Pct Los Angeles 3 1 .750

GB — 1 2 2 2½ GB — — ½ 2 3 GB —

San Francisco Colorado Arizona San Diego

3 2 1 0

1 1 2 3

.750 — .667 ½ .333 1½ .000 2½

Wednesday’s Games Milwaukee 4, San Francisco 3 Colorado 4, Arizona 3 Detroit 7, Miami 3 Pittsburgh 5, St. Louis 1 Cincinnati 3, Philadelphia 2 Washington 3, Atlanta 1 L.A. Dodgers 7, San Diego 0 Thursday’s Games Cincinnati 10, Philadelphia 6 San Francisco 12, L.A. Dodgers 6 Chicago Cubs at Arizona, late. Miami at Washington, late. Today’s Games Philadelphia (Eickhoff 0-0) at N.Y. Mets (deGrom 0-0), 10:10 a.m. San Diego (Rea 0-0) at Colorado (Lyles 0-0), 1:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Liriano 1-0) at Cincinnati (Simon 0-0), 4:10 p.m. St. Louis (J.Garcia 0-0) at Atlanta (Wisler 0-0),

4:35 p.m. Houston (Feldman 0-0) at Milwaukee (Anderson 0-0), 5:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Hammel 0-0) at Arizona (Ray 0-0), 6:40 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Stripling 0-0) at San Francisco (M.Cain 0-0), 7:15 p.m. Saturday’s Games Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 10:10 a.m. L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco, 1:05 p.m. Miami at Washington, 1:05 p.m. Houston at Milwaukee, 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets, 4:10 p.m. St. Louis at Atlanta, 4:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Arizona, 5:10 p.m. San Diego at Colorado, 5:10 p.m. Sunday’s Games Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets, 10:10 a.m. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 10:10 a.m. Miami at Washington, 10:35 a.m. St. Louis at Atlanta, 10:35 a.m. Houston at Milwaukee, 11:10 a.m. L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco, 1:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Arizona, 1:10 p.m. San Diego at Colorado, 1:10 p.m.

Spieth picks up where he left off at Augusta BY DOUG FERGUSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Jordan Spieth atop the leaderboard might be the latest tradition at Augusta National. One year later, he’s still the man to beat at the Masters. Six tough par saves and six birdies sent Spieth to a 6-under 66 on Thursday and a two-shot lead in a strong wind that made Augusta National play tough for just about everyone except the defending champion. Coming off his wire-to-wire victory last year, Spieth now has five straight rounds in the lead, and six out of the last seven when he was tied or leading. One more and he would match the longest streak since Arnold Palmer in 1960 and the opening two rounds of 1961. And just like last year, now it’s time for the rest of the field to try to catch him. “We’re through one round,” Spieth said. “There’s going to be a lot of different changes. There are going to be a lot of different birdies, bogeys and everything in between. We know how to win this golf tournament, and we believe in our process. And if the putts are dropping, then hopefully it goes our way.” They were dropping, which is why Spieth had the only bogeyfree round on a day where the wind made that seem unlikely. He had a two-shot lead over Danny Lee and Shane Lowry. The battle among the modern “Big Three” and other top players expected to contend did not take shape. Jason Day, the No. 1 player in the world and Masters favorite, was on the verge of catching Spieth until a mini-meltdown. He three-putted for bogey on the

SPORTS ON TV

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jordan Spieth tees off on the 12th hole during the first round of the Masters. par-5 15th, pulled his tee shot into the water on the par-3 16th and made triple bogey, and then sailed the green on the 17th for another bogey. Just like that, the Australian was back to even par. “It could happen to anyone,” Day said. “Even though I gave up five shots in three holes, I’m only six back. I know I can catch up.” Right when Day was falling apart, McIlroy holed an 18-foot eagle putt on the 13th and looked to be on his way in his bid to win a green jacket and complete the career Grand Slam. He was within two shots of the lead until he three-putted the 16th for bogey and missed the 18th green to the right, was plugged in a bunker and dropped another shot for a 70. Even so, it was his best start since 2011. “If somebody had given me a 70 on the first day, I would have taken it,” McIlroy said. “I’m a little disappointed in the way I finished.” Bubba Watson, a two-time champion, had a 41 on the back nine and shot 75. He wasn’t even low Watson — 66-year-old Tom Watson, in his last Masters, shot

74. Adam Scott, coming off two victories in Florida last month, opened with a 76. Rickie Fowler had his worst score ever at Augusta National by posting an 80, with 44 of those shots coming on the back nine. Spieth simply picked up where he left off a year ago. Never mind that he discovered a hairline crack in his driver during Wednesday practice and had to find a backup for the opening round. Or that he was hearing questions about what was wrong with his game from not having seriously contended in the last two months. Spieth was at Augusta National, a course that feels like home for the 22-year-old Texan. “That was a flawless round of golf,” said Paul Casey, who played with Spieth and posted a solid 69. “I played a wonderful round of golf, but it was great to have a front row seat to watch that.” For all the birdies - none longer than 12 feet — the pars make Spieth look so tough to beat. He settled himself early with a

beautiful pitch across the first green to 2 feet. He pumped his fist with a tough pitch over the bunker and to the upper tier on No. 4. He gambled with a 4-iron through a tiny gap in the trees on the 11th and made it pay off with another par. On 16, he kept his card clean by ramming in a 15-foot par putt. By the end of the day, no one could do better. Nine players couldn’t break 80, a group that included Ernie Els, who took six putts from 2 feet on the opening hole for a 9. He played the rest of the day at 1 over. The day ended with a name at the top that was familiar. “I would have signed for 2 under today and not even played the rough, knowing the conditions that were coming up,” Spieth said. “Just scored extremely well, which is something I’ve been struggling with this season. If I can kind of straighten out things with the iron play, hopefully we’ll be in business. But yeah, I’m extremely pleased with that round today. I felt like we stole a few.”

4:40 a.m. (304) NBCSN Soccer EPL, Arsenal at West Ham United (Live) 6:30 a.m. (306) FS1 Soccer DFL, Bayern Munich at VFB Stuttgart (Live) 6:55 a.m. (304) NBCSN Soccer EPL, Chelsea at Swansea City (Live) 7 a.m. (33) USA Soccer EPL, Southampton at Newcastle United (Live) 9 a.m. (311) ESPNU Softball NCAA, Texas A&M at Tennessee (Live) 9:30 a.m. (5) KING Soccer EPL, West Bromwich Albion FC at Manchester City (Live) 9:30 a.m. (13) KCPQ Soccer DFL, FSV Mainz at VFL Wolfsburg(Live) 10 a.m. (313) CBSSD Women’s Lacrosse NCAA, Colgate vs. Navy Site: Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium Annapolis, Md. (Live) 10 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Tennis WTA, Volvo Car Open Semifinal (Live) 11 a.m. (319) PAC12 Football NCAA, Colorado Spring Game (Live) 11 a.m. (2) CBUT Diving, FINA Grand Prix, Men’s & Women’s Synchro Finals (Live) Noon (7) KIRO Golf, Masters Tournament (Live) Noon (26) ESPN Softball NCAA, Kentucky at LSU (Live) Noon (27) ESPN2 Basketball, Nike Hoop Summit, USA vs. The World (Live) 12:30 p.m. (313) CBSSD Lacrosse NCAA, Colgate vs. Navy (Live) 12:30 p.m. (5) KING Hockey NHL, Pittsburgh Penguins at Philadelphia Flyers (Live) 1 p.m. (319) PAC12 Football NCAA, Stanford Spring Game (Live) 1 p.m. (306) FS1 Baseball MLB, Los Angeles Dodgers at San Francisco Giants (Live) 1 p.m. (320) PAC12WA Track & Field NCAA, Team Invitational (Live) 2 p.m. (304) NBCSN Horse Racing, Wood Memorial/ Bluegrass Stakes (Live) 2:30 p.m. (311) ESPNU Softball NCAA, North Carolina State vs. Florida State (Live) 3 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Softball NCAA, Georgia at Missouri (Live) 3:30 p.m. (320) PAC12WA Baseball NCAA, Washington vs. Arizona State (Live) 4 p.m. (2) CBUT Hockey NHL, Toronto Maple Leafs at New Jersey Devils (Live) 4 p.m. (306) FS1 Supercross AMA, (Live) 4 p.m. (304) NBCSN Wrestling, U.S. Olympic Trials (Live) 4:30 p.m. (319) PAC12 Baseball NCAA, Stanford vs. UCLA (Live) 4:30 p.m. (13) KCPQ Auto Racing NASCAR, Duck Commander 500, Sprint Cup Series (Live) 5 p.m. (26) ESPN Hockey NCAA, Frozen Four Championship (Live) 5:30 p.m. (4) KOMO Basketball NBA, Cleveland Cavaliers at Chicago Bulls (Live) 6 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Oakland Athletics at Seattle Mariners (Live) 7 p.m. (2) CBUT Hockey NHL, Edmonton Oilers at Vancouver Canucks (Live) 7:30 p.m. (319) PAC12 Softball NCAA, Stanford vs. UCLA (Live) 8 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Football Arena Football, Arizona Rattlers at Los Angeles Kiss (Live)

5:25 a.m. (304) NBCSN Soccer EPL Leicester City at Sunderland Site: Stadium of Light - Sunderland, England (Live)


SportsRecreation

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

A11

Pirates: Hagan, Small to join siblings at PC ing attack. “That alone is enough to make her valuable, but she has an ability to go forward on the dribble and the vision to set her teammates up. “Sarah will bring the toughness and selflessness every good team needs.” ■ Emelie Small, Defender (Reno, Nev.): The younger sister of Peninsula starter Ellie Small was a four-year starter, three-time all-league defender, team MVP at Reno High School. Her club team, the Nomads, placed second at nationals. “Emelie is a hard-nosed, hard-tackling defender,” Anderson said. “She will help us solidify a back line that has led the league in goals against for the last two years, and with her back there, we will have no drop off at all. “Emelie has the skill to move higher up the field as well, which could give her an opportunity to play next to her sister, Ellie, who will be a sophomore next year. “Emelie is going to bring a great energy to every-

CONTINUED FROM A9 foot and trust that she will help us transition smoothly. “Her teammates are “She has a keen awareness for how to find the soft going to benefit from having spots and play-make in Kelly on the field and I those spaces. Her touch on expect her to help create the ball allows her to keep many goals.” ■ Jayna Morikawa, things close to her foot so Midfielder (Mililani, that when a teammate breaks free she can deliver Hawaii): Two time allleague selection at Mililani an accurate ball. “Because her older sister, High School, which won the 2015 state championship Tori, has been a star here, I and placed second in 2016. know Tati is willing to put “When I first saw Jayna in the hard work required play, I was impressed with to succeed.” her ability to attack down ■ Kelly Kevershan, the wing and deliver accuStriker (Tuscon, Ariz.): rate, intelligent passes into Four-year varsity player the box,” Anderson said. and team MVP at Canyon “She has also shown a del Oro High School. willingness to defend with “Kelly is a clever and dedication and a knack for skilled attacker,” Anderson advancing the ball off the said. dribble. “She has the ability to “She was recruited by a weave through defenses strong local D-II program, without having to commit but fortunately for us, she to one idea. She can hold decided to become the next several possibilities in her in a long line of talented mind as she advances the Hawaiian recruits. ball and is able to make the “She will make those decision that best benefits around her better, and there the attack. really is no higher praise for “This ability will allow a player.” ■ Maddy Parton, us to put the ball on Kelly’s

Striker (Leavenworth): The all-time leading scorer in Cascade High School history is a three-time firstteam all-league striker, twotime league MVP and firstteam All-State. She led her team to a second-place finish at the Class 1A state tournament. “Maddy is a high-level athlete with a good feel for the game,” Anderson said. “She is quick laterally, very strong and very fast. She spent a lot of time getting behind defenses in high school and will do the same at the college level.” ■ Sarah Reiber, Midfielder (Yakima): Was varsity all four years at Davis High School. The 20-goal scorer was a two-time allleague selection who twice was named team captain. “I saw Sarah play last summer and was immediately impressed by her athleticism and explosiveness,” Anderson said. “Since then I have been impressed with her work rate in the midfield and her willingness to do the hard work to disrupt the oppos-

New Pirates assistant hag California roots

M’s: Strong finish for Walker CONTINUED FROM A9

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — California native Dana De Vaughn has joined the coaching staff of the Peninsula College women’s soccer program. De Vaughn leaves another nationallyranked program, San Bernardino Valley College, where De Vaughn she served as an assistant coach since 2013, helping the Wolverines to three straight conference championships. Her coaching resume also includes Legends FC Riverside, Redlands East Valley High School, the Fullerton Rangers FC, Esperanza High School, and Empire Soccer. De Vaughn played soccer at Cal State Fullerton,

where her 2005 and 2006 teams won Big West Conference titles and made it into the NCAA Division I Tournament round of 16. She grew up in Redlands, Calif., and was a four-year letter winner in soccer, cross country and track at Redlands East Valley High. She holds a United States Soccer Federation D License. “Dana brings so much to the program,” head coach Kanyon Anderson said. “She has had a fantastic playing career, she knows the game very well, she has helped build a nationallyranked junior college program in California, and she brings joy to everything she does. We are very fortunate to have her here.” In addition to coaching women’s soccer at Peninsula, De Vaughn will work in the college’s fitness center.

Seahawks announce preseason schedule BY NICK PATTERSON THE [EVERETT] HERALD

The Seattle Seahawks are getting a little variety in their 2016 preseason schedule. The Minnesota Vikings and Dallas Cowboys are on Seattle’s preseason schedule this season, with the Seahawks hosting the Vikings at CenturyLink Field in Week 2 on Aug. 18, then welcoming the Cowboys the following week on a date yet to be determined

between Aug. 25-28. However, there’s one preseason opponent that shows up on Seattle’s schedule like clockwork. The Seahawks conclude the preseason on Sept. 1 at Oakland, the 11th straight season Seattle faces the Raiders in its preseason finale. The Seahawks open the preseason against the Kansas City Chiefs on a date to be determined between Aug. 11-15. All four games will be televised locally on FOX.

what’s NEXT from

The Mariners went on to lose 5-2. “I know I got a little excited at times on Jackie Robinson Day,” he recalled. “I kind of got out of my game. I was overthrowing a little bit. “But I’ve learned from that, and I know I’ve just got to take it in for a second and then refocus and treat it like it’s any other game.” The game at Dodger Stadium followed an even more disastrous outing in his previous start, his first of the season, when he gave up nine runs in 3 1/3 innings at Oakland in a 12-0 loss. “I remember it,” Walker confirmed. “I definitely want to go out there and have a good outing against them [tonight] because last year they got me pretty well. I’d like a little payback this time.”

The games at Oakland and Los Angeles were part of a rough stretch for Walker at the beginning of last year. He was 1-5 with a 7.33 ERA through his first eight starts before finding a comfort zone. “I went through a whole year in the bigs last year, “ he said, “and I went through some ups and downs. I think I matured in that I can control my emotions a little more.” The final four months last season were pretty good: 10-3 with a 3.62 ERA in 20 starts. He strikeouts zoomed and his walks plummeted: 118 and 17 in 126 2/3 innings. Everything suggested Walker had turned the corner. “I’ve seen Taijuan Walker dating back to high school,” general manager Jerry Dipoto said. “That’s a guy with an elite upside. He made great

thing she does and will be successful right away.” ■ Isabel Vega, Defender (Reno, Nev.): Vega made varsity as a freshman, and since then has three times been named all-league as a defender. She was Reed High School’s MVP, and her club team finished second in the nation. “I saw Isabel during her junior year and thought she would be a great college center back,” Anderson said. “Isabel has a fantastic first touch, which allows her to take long balls down and turn them into attacking opportunities. “When a team is able to put a more controlled attack forward, Isabel has the game sense to position herself well and the strength to win the ball back.” ■ Andrea Villalvazo, Midfielder (Reno, Nev.): A four-year varsity starter at North Valley High School, four-time all-league selection, leading scorer all four years and team captain. “Andrea is a strong midfielder with the ability to win the ball back and the

progress last year, and you started to see some of what he was capable of.” Walker’s personal evolution continued this spring when he worked to harness his off-speed pitches — he ditched his cutter for a slider — in an effort to prevent opposing hitters from sitting on his fastball. “I feel that’s always going to be the game plan against me,” he said, “until I show I can throw off-speed pitches for strikes. And I realized in spring training that I need to have a Plan B, and that Plan B is to pitch backwards. “Plan A is always establish the fastball. But if I need to, I feel pretty comfortable right now with my off-speed pitches, that I can pitch backwards.” Now comes the test of doing it in the spotlight. “I think he will be juiced up,” Servais said.

ability to go forward with purpose,” Anderson said. “Add in her strong shot with both feet and a great work ethic and you have a player who can play up top or in the midfield, out wide or in the center. “I am excited to have a player with this diverse skill set. She will offer us the ability to adapt and be creative in finding our best style of play.” ■ Sydney Warren, Forward (Maple Valley): A three-year varsity letter winner and second-team all-league selection for Tahoma, which won the 2015 4A state championship. “When I watch Sydney I see a player with a very high ceiling,” Anderson said. “She is strong, fast, skilled and tenacious. Most importantly, though, she is dedicated to growing. “With her combination of size and speed, Sydney could have had good success simply running hard, but she has a savvy to her game as well.”

“I think you’ll see a really good fastball. The thing with Taijuan is the secondary stuff. Can he harness it, can he get it in the strike zone, and be the complete pitcher?” That’s the plan. “It’s going to be fun,” Walker said. “It’s going to be loud. My mom, brother and sister are coming out. It should be a good one.”

Looking Back It was 39 years ago today — April 8, 1977 — that the Mariners won for the first time in franchise history when Bob Stinson and Larry Milbourne delivered RBI doubles in the ninthinning for a 7-6 walk-off victory over the California Angels. The victory came after the Mariners opened the season with two shutout losses to the Angels.

Carman: Green lures working CONTINUED FROM A9 did well last Friday trolling after a couple hours of going through the tackle Or maybe the water is box to discover what the still a little chilly. trout wanted,” Norden said. Ward Norden, owner of “Small, green-colored Snapper Tackle Company and a former fishery biolo- flatfish lures slowly trolled about 4 feet below the surgist who lives in Quilcene, face turned out to be just was out testing the waters right for catching some recently. nice trout.” “Fishing has been a bit slow at Lake Leland in Hood Canal extension? spite of the plants last week,” Norden said. Ever the optimist, Nor“Fewer than normal den is hoping to see an people are there as well, extended chinook fishery in probably because many Hood Canal. have not yet gotten their “I am still waiting to hear if the [state] will new fishing licenses. delay closing Hood Canal “On the other hand, we

for chinook on April 30 and just let the fishery continue into the July 4 holiday,” Norden said. “That would give sports anglers an opportunity to harvest their share of the 40,000-plus hatcherymarked kings returning to the Skokomish hatchery.

Gun show slated A gun show presented by Big Top Promotions will be held at the Clallam County Fairgrounds on Saturday and Sunday. Show hours are 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, and 9

a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. Modern, antique, military and collectible firearms will be on sale and display, as well as ammunition, knives, accessories and more. Admission is $9, $7 for military members with ID and $14 for couples. Admission is free for those under 18 accompanied by a paid adult.

________ Outdoors columnist Michael Carman appears here Thursdays and Fridays. He can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 57050 or at mcarman@peninsuladailynews. com.

2015 EXHIBITORS GUIDE SPRING 2016

Festival fun for everyone! X Nearly 40 groups, 80 performances on four stages

Eroding climate apathy

X Street Fair with more than 60 food and artisan booths and a beer garden

‘Taming Bigfoot’ challenges residents to confront, cut carbon emissions

X Lessons in tango, swing, contra dance and yoga

Landscape connectivity and climate change

X Turtle Theater — Four shows daily for children X After-hours performances in downtown clubs X Brass Band Parade on Saturday X Open mic with Vicki Helwick X Artists painting to live music

‘Adapt, go extinct or move’

Nonprofits teach about the issues Volunteer opportunities offered

Olympic Mountain glaciers Barometers on a changing climate

X Memorial Day ceremony

Your Peninsula. Your Newspaper.

X And so much more

Tickets and more information online at www.jffa.org A publication of Peninsula Daily News and Sequim Gazette, produced by the advertising department

Supplement to Sequim Gazette and Port Townsend and Jefferson County Leader

Complete information and rules about how to enter your items into the Clallam County Fair. A supplement to the Peninsula Daily News produced by the Advertising Department

360-452-2345

Celebrating our 10th Year! Our magazine format is published quarterly and is one of our most well-read publications.

“Cowboy Boots and Country Roots” is the theme for this year’s Clallam County Fair. Don’t miss this Exhibitor’s Guide geared to fair exhibitors, 4-H’ers and Fairgoers.

PUBLISHES Sequim Gazette: Wednesday, May 18 Peninsula Daily News Wednesday, May 18

PUBLISHES Sequim Gazette: Wednesday, June 8

PUBLISHES Peninsula Daily News Friday, June 17

Advertising Deadline: Thursday, April 21, 2016

Advertising Deadline: Monday, May 9, 2016

In Sequim/Jefferson County, call

360-683-3311

Advertising Deadline: Friday, May 13, 2016

641584218

Talk to your advertising representative about which special sections are best for you In Port Angeles/ Western Clallam, call

The Official Program guide for the 2016 Juan De Fuca Festival, one of the most popular festivals all year. Great way to talk to tourists and locals alike!


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday, April 8-9, 2016 PAGE

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To buy or rent? Weighing the price BY TARA SIEGEL BERNARD THE NEW YORK TIMES

ROB AUSTIN AND his wife, Natalia, have a 10-month-old son, healthy incomes and plenty of cash in the bank for a down payment on a house. But they are happily renting a townhouse in Pasadena, Calif., with no plans to buy for now, given the frothy prices in their area. “As long as there is such a disconnect, where a couple like my wife and me have to put down a gargantuan down payment and still have a large monthly payment to get into a decent, and not necessarily nice, house, that is a game we don’t wish to play,” said Austin, a 39-year-old business manager at a biotechnology company. “When home price-to-income levels come back to a more normal level, when that happens, then we will be the first to jump in. If that never happens, that is OK.” More American households are renting, across all income levels and generations, for different reasons. But when homeownership is the centerpiece of the American dream, most of us have internalized certain ideals: Buying a home builds equity, putting you on the fast track to building wealth. Renting, by contrast, is essentially throwing money to the wind. But with renters now accounting for 37 percent of all households, the highest level since the mid-1960s, according to the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University, more people may be renting for longer. Does that mean people who rent for extended periods, perhaps decades — even a lifetime — are forever at a disadvantage? “Arguing about whether rent versus buy is a better financial decision is like debating active versus passive investment strategies, hedge funds versus mutual funds, Apple versus Google,” said Milo M. Benningfield, a financial planner in San Francisco. “Somebody’s going to be right in terms of higher returns in the future, but we can’t know in advance who that will be — and it will be tough to quantify how much risk was taken along the way.” The arguments in favor of ownership are persuasive, particularly for people who expect to stay in place for at least five to seven years but probably more.

MONICA ALMEIDA/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Rob and Natalia Austin with their 10-month-old son, Brady, at the townhouse they are renting in Pasadena, Calif. A mortgage acts like a forced savings plan, even if you’re paying the bank hundreds of thousands of dollars in interest for the privilege of building equity. Call it the cost of enforcing a positive behavior. Buying also generally protects consumers from rising rents, while traditional mortgage payments remain constant. Then, there is the fact that buyers are using borrowed money to purchase an asset that is likely to appreciate over a long period, though that can backfire as well (see housing market plunge, millions of underwater borrowers, circa 2008). Being able to call a place your own has a real, albeit intangible, value too. How well any household will fare financially by buying or renting really depends on factors no one can predict. Other studies have found that renters who invest their down payment and any savings from renting as opposed to owning often come out ahead. Either way, most financial professionals would caution against viewing a home purchase as an investment, particularly after factoring in the cost of maintenance, taxes, insurance and the high costs of buying and selling, though it’s difficult not to. It may be hard for people living in bubbly markets to believe, but over all, home prices in the United States have risen just 0.37 percent annualized, after inflation, for the past 126 years, according to calcu-

lations by Robert J. Shiller, an economist who received the Nobel in economic science in 2013 and wrote the book on speculative bubbles, Irrational Exuberance. “Disregarding the special amenities that many people value in homeownership,” Shiller said, “it would be hugely better invested in the stock market.” And many people do accumulate substantial equity in their homes, which often becomes a cushy safety net in retirement. A study by the Harvard Joint Center found that, even after the housing crash, the median household who bought a home after 1999 still accrued significant amounts of wealth through 2013 (though whites gained more than African-Americans and Hispanics). Christopher E. Herbert, managing director of Harvard’s Joint Center, said he believed the results could be tied, in large part, to behavioral incentives. “The motivated savings up front and the forced savings over time,” he said of accumulating a down payment and making mortgage payments. There may also be something about many people who buy. As Benningfield pointed out, they may have other attributes that may contribute to their economic success. Renting can still be financially advantageous under certain circumstances. Consider the work in 2012 by the academics Eli Beracha of Florida International University

Peninsula Voices ‘Complainers’ I find it interesting we have Democrats, Republicans and independents who are complaining that certain people have no experience to become the next president, such as Donald Trump. They are senators, congressional representatives and governors. Hearing such remarks, I am assuming these people who are complaining feel they were fully experienced for the jobs they were elected to do from Day 1 and also, for some, to become the next president. A good education and, for some, a military background certainly are great requisites, as well as a record of accomplishments and being a leader over many people. Not everyone has the capability to be a leader. These people are willing to learn, also. Let’s face it, we all learn on the job as we go along. Comparing the experienced complainers’ records

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over the past seven-plus years, I find it strange they are pounding their chests. These same complainers are responsible for the mess our country is in today. They have allowed a runaway national debt, an economy going downhill, our military being reduced, failed foreign policies and an incompetent president who opens our borders to floods of illegals and possibly terrorists to enter our country and rob our taxpayers to the detriment of our military, veterans and our own people in need. Where were these “experienced” people when all of this was going on? Possibly playing golf with the president or too willing to stand down? We all want to believe someone will make America great again and do their job as our next president and elected officials. Shirley Berg, Sequim

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and Ken Johnson of Florida Atlantic University. They simulated a horse race between buyers and renters, and concluded that in many cases, renters came out ahead, at least during the eight-year stretches they studied. Theoretical renters put their down payment in a portfolio that often consisted of more than 50 percent stocks (the professors created a portfolio that approximated the risk of owning a home), and continued to invest any savings from renting. But this assumes that there are savings from renting, which is not always the case, and that the renter is disciplined enough to actually set the money aside. The authors’ point, however, is that people often blindly believe that buying is usually the smarter option. “Most of the public drive to buy is without looking under the hood,” Johnson said. Another study, from HelloWallet, a unit of Morningstar, came to similar conclusions in 2014 when comparing a hypothetical, moderate-income family that bought, with one that rented, in 20 major cities across the country. The study projects that median-income families, or those who earn about $50,000, will often end up with more net wealth if they rent versus own over the 10 years from 2013 to 2022. But any number of variables can quickly shift that calculus, including the price of the home

relative to the rent, whether the family is affluent enough to benefit from tax savings, and the time spent in the home. “The longer you stay, the stronger the argument is for buying, all else equal,” said Aron Szapiro, who conducted the analysis. But he also contends that the tax advantages of homeownership are often oversold, particularly to moderate-income households. If you’re trying to determine the right option, some guideposts may help. Szapiro, for example, found that in households with about $100,000 in earnings, net wealth typically rose more 10 years after buying a home than if they had rented — but only if the annual rent was 6 percent or more of the purchase price. So it would pay to buy a $600,000 home when rent in the area was about $3,000 a month or more. (In a couple of places, including New York and Washington, D.C., he found that it made sense to buy when the cost of renting was a bit lower relative to home prices.) William Bernstein, an investment adviser who has written several books for do-it-yourself investors, offered another rule of thumb: Never pay more than 15 years’ fair rental value for any home, or 180 months of rent. Why 15 years? By his calculations, someone paying more than 180 months of rent might potentially do better by investing in the market, after considering the costs of owning. So if an apartment would rent for $4,000 a month, that means you shouldn’t pay more than $720,000 ($4,000 x 180) for an equivalent property. Perhaps easier to digest, Zillow advocates looking at how long it would take for buyers to break even, when compared with renters who invested their down payment of 20 percent and any savings in the stock market. Not surprisingly, buyers in places like Brooklyn, Washington and Los Angeles had to wait longer, at least four years. Then there’s what you feel in the pit of your stomach. To Austin, house prices in the enclave where he lives in Los Angeles feel as if they are in a bubble, the housing downturn a faded memory. “Many people we know,” he

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CommentaryViewpoints

The Bible meets the salamander AMID ALL THE TRULY awful things state legislatures do, one of the rare bright spots has been the naming of official symbols. Who was ever made Gail unhappy by the designation of a Collins state rock? Tennessee, alas, is screwing up the record. The governor is currently trying to decide whether to sign legislation that would put the Bible on the list of State Things, alongside the salamander (amphibian), milk (beverage), honeybee (agricultural insect), raccoon (wild animal), several variations on the theme of state tree and flower, and nine — nine! — official state songs. The last of which, adopted in 2011, was “Tennessee.” The next question you’re probably asking is why it took nine tries for Tennessee to get a song named “Tennessee,” and the answer is that it actually has two. You have to admit that’s pretty inclusive. On the other hand, picking the Christian holy book as a state symbol seems simultaneously divisive and unnecessary. Not to mention sort of disrespectful to the Bible, which doesn’t usually get included on the same list as the salamander and the smallmouth bass. “It’s been a hard year for diversity and inclusion in Tennessee,” state Sen. Lee Harris, D-Memphis, said in a phone interview. Harris is the Senate minority leader, which means he heads a hearty band of five out of 33 members, an all-time low for his party. Besides the Bible bill, the Legislature recently passed a new Confederate heritage measure, and Wednesday, the House approved a bill aimed at allowing counselors and therapists to deny services to gay or transgender patients. Meanwhile, one member left a DVD in her colleagues’ mailboxes

titled “America’s Mosques Exposed! Video Evidence They Are War Factories.” Feel free to blame this all on Donald Trump. In the great scheme of things, making the Bible the state book may be the least of Tennessee’s problems. But it’s sad to see the state messing with a time-honored, cheerful tradition. For generations, middle school civics classes have studied how a bill becomes a law by petitioning their legislature to honor the otter as state animal, or the blueberry muffin as the official . . . state muffin. (Here’s looking at you, Minnesota.) Then, jovial hearings take place. Serious-minded colleagues complain that the House and Senate are wasting valuable time. This is true only if you labor under the assumption that the lawmakers would otherwise be busy reforming the contract procurement process. Years ago, when I was covering the Connecticut state legislature, a fight between the deer and the whale forces went on for so long that the Senate went into a brief rebellion and voted to name the human being as the official state mammal. It was at that moment that I decided I wanted to spend my life covering politics. The point of the symbol-naming has always been amity and good citizenship. But recently, the cultural wars have intruded. In 2011, Utah became the first state to pick an official state gun, an automatic pistol called the Browning M1911. (“This firearm is Utah,” said the sponsor.) Hot on its heels came Arizona and the Colt revolver, a gun that won the West or — as a few legislators noted — drove out the Native Americans. The momentum kept gathering. Erin McCoy, the executive director of State Symbols USA, a website dedicated to — well, you know — says she misses the days when the only weapon-related designations

involved retired battleships and war memorials. “Now firearms may be the fastest-growing category. I don’t enjoy doing pages for them,” she admitted. There are now seven states with official guns, although to be fair, some are so extremely old and inefficient they really might count as historic artifacts. The exceptions include — yes! — Tennessee, which recently honored a .50-caliber rifle, the Barrett M82/M107. Critics pointed out that the designee has the power to knock down a commercial aircraft, although the debate in the state Senate seemed to suggest that might be a good thing. One supporter noted proudly that witnesses had “seen this thing go a mile and a half through a cinder block to take out its target.” The lone senator to speak against the bill, Jeff Yarbro of Nashville, complimented the weapon maker, a local boy, on his ingenuity. But, he added, when “our elementary school kids are going through looking at the mockingbird, the raccoon, the purple iris, I’m not sure that the Barrett sniper rifle is a necessary addition.” This is not what symbols were made for. Skip the guns and save the state dance. Books seem to be dicey territory, although we can all rally around Massachusetts’ choice of “Make Way for Ducklings.” The next time your state legislators try to stick religious preference into the designations, tell them everybody would be much happier with another rock, legume or fossil. Or they could follow Utah in one of its happier days, and pick an official state cooking pot. Nobody was ever made unhappy by a nod to the Dutch oven.

_________ Gail Collins writes for The New York Times. Her column appears in the PDN every Friday. Email http:// tinyurl.com/gailcollinsmail.

Obama dances while vets suffer WHAT DOES A suffering military veteran have to do to force an unresponsive government to change its ways? How about self-immolating Michelle in front of his VA clinic? Malkin Hello, paperpushers and desk jockeys? Are you there? Would the heat, the smoke and the smell of burning flesh rouse you in the least? Nope. Apparently, even this horror is not enough to move the inert bureaucrats at the Department of Veterans Affairs — let alone the indifferent tango dancer-in-chief. While President Obama sashayed in Buenos Aires two weeks ago, proud Navy veteran Charles Richard Ingram III, 51, made his last life’s journey. He walked 9 miles from his home in Egg Harbor Township, N.J., to the curb in front of the Northfield, N.J., VA clinic on New Road. With a large blue wooden cross looming on the side of a chapel in the background, Ingram stood on the lawn, poured gas all over his body and lit a match. A firefighter told The Daily Beast that the retired chief petty officer, known as “Rich” to family and friends, was “100 percent burned.” A bystander had rushed to his side with blankets to snuff out the flames and first responders arrived within minutes. But it was too late. CPO Ingram leaves behind a grieving wife, two young children ages 3 and 5, and a charred patch of brown and blackened grass 75 feet from the entrance of the VA’s Atlantic County Community

Based Outpatient Clinic. The bloated VA system now employs nearly 400,000 people to carry out its purported “mission of caring.” The clinics were established “to more efficiently and effectively serve eligible veterans and provide care in the most appropriate setting,” according to the feds. But nobody from Ingram’s CBOC — one of 800 such offices run by the VA, which boasts a record $150 billion budget — was there to help on that Saturday when Ingram perished. Why not? Because the facility is closed on weekends. Its daytime, weekday hours (8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.) serve the convenience of the government employees, not of the men and women who put their lives on the line for their country. Area veterans’ advocates and local officials in both political parties have pushed for years to address chronic understaffing and Soviet-era wait times. The Press of Atlantic City reports that there is just one lone psychologist to provide therapy to 200 veterans on any given day. “To make matters worse,” local Democratic state senator Jeff Van Drew (who worked in the VA system as a dentist) pointed out last week, “there are no Veterans Affairs hospitals in the region, so even if a veteran is able to schedule a timely appointment at the nearest VA hospital, he or she would have to travel hours to Philadelphia, Pa., northern New Jersey or Delaware to receive care.” Would it have been too much to ask the VA’s employees to open for just one day of weekend appointments and one weekday of late-night appointments? Apparently, that was too much of a sacrifice for the 8-to-4:30-ers. Vets’ groups petitioned for extended hours for years.

Nothing happened. How about a pilot program to free the VA’s hostages and allow vets to receive health care from personal doctors and local hospitals, as Rep. Frank LoBiondo, R-N.J., has long proposed? There must be no escape hatches, anti-privatization special interests have decreed. All must suffer for the Greater Good. Flacks for the Wilmington, Del., VA Medical Services facility, which oversees Ingram’s South Jersey clinic, downplayed appointment delays and vets’ complaints after Ingram’s sacrificial act. Instead, the bureaucrats blithely touted their “telehealth” services via computer, “group therapy” and “additional social workers.” Nothing to see here, move along. When Buddhist monk Thich Quang Duc burned himself to death on a Saigon street corner to protest abuses by the Diem government in 1963, the world took notice. The monk left behind his crystallized bones, intact heart and an inflamed movement to end repression against his people. American journalists played a key role in amplifying Duc’s message and ensuring that his death wasn’t in vain. Where are the national media voices and advocates for U.S. Navy CPO Charles Ingram and the countless other martyrs victimized by the VA? If a loyal veteran burns himself to the ground in a forest of government bureaucrats, will anybody hear him?

_________ Michelle Malkin’s nationally syndicated column appears in the PDN every Friday. Email malkinblog@gmail.com.

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

1 Western State escapee on the loose BY MARTHA BELLISLE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE — A man accused of torturing a woman to death but found too mentally ill for trial was on the loose Thursday after crawling out a window in a locked, lower-security unit of a Washington state psychiatric hospital already facing federal scrutiny over safety problems. Anthony Garver, 28, escaped Wednesday night with Mark Alexa n d e r Adams, 58, a patient Garver who had been accused of domestic assault in 2014 and was captured Thursday morning, officials said. Authorities believe Garver bought a bus ticket from Seattle across the state to Spokane, and officials there are on alert. North Olympic Peninsula law enforcement are aware of the situation but not under special alert.

Last seen Western State Hospital said the men were discovered missing 45 minutes after they were last seen, but police said it took an hour and a half. There was no immediate way to reconcile the different timelines. Garver was charged in 2013 with tying a 20-yearold woman to her bed with electrical cords, stabbing her 24 times in the chest and slashing her throat, Snohomish County Assistant Prosecutor Craig Matheson said. Garver, who also has a history of running from authorities, was moved to a lower-security unit of the state’s largest psychiatric hospital after a judge said treatment to prepare him to face criminal charges was not working.

The escape is the latest in a litany of problems at the 800-bed hospital south of Tacoma, where violent assaults on both staff and patients have occurred. U.S. regulators have repeatedly cited the facility over safety concerns and threatened to cut millions in federal funding. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services recently extended the hospital’s deadline for fixing the problems from April 1 to May 3. A federal judge also has said the hospital has failed to provide timely competency services to mentally ill people charged with crimes.

lower-security unit are checked every hour, Reyes said. Garver and Adams were not placed in the highsecurity unit because a judge granted a state request to hold them as a danger to themselves or others after treatment failed to restore their ability to understand the criminal charges against them. Officials are conducting a safety review of the hospital and will bring in outside experts to help, Reyes said. “We can never have too many fresh eyes reviewing a situation as serious as this,” Reyes said in a statement. Nursing supervisor Paul Vilja said he was amazed to Got on bus hear the men who escaped A bus driver picked up a were assigned to a unit with man he believed was Garver hourly checks, because some on Wednesday evening, said of the more-dangerous police, who urged anyone who spots him to stay away and contact authorities. Garver has been convicted of multiple charges and twice fled from authorities by stealing a car or leading a high-speed chase. Garver’s lawyer, Jon Scott, said he hopes Garver “is found quickly and safely.” Adams also got on a bus and asked the driver how to get to the airport. Someone recognized Adams, and officers picked him up without incident in a town just south of Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, Lakewood police Lt. Chris Lawler said. The men were last seen at 6 p.m. Wednesday during dinner and found missing 45 minutes later during a routine patient check, said Carla Reyes, assistant director of the Department of Social and Health Services’ Behavioral Health Administration, which oversees mental health services in the state. Police said the absence was discovered at 7:30 p.m. and officers were alerted just after 7:45 p.m. Patients in the hospital’s

Spokane County school district settles rape case BY NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS ASSOCIATED PRESS

Eymann said. The lawsuit was filed in federal court in 2013. The Central Valley School District said it settled the lawsuit “to allow the former student to obtain whatever help and counseling she may need to heal and move forward as the result of these claimed actions of Mr. Cucinotti.”

SPOKANE — The Central Valley School District in Spokane County will pay a $2.5 million settlement to a former student who said she was raped in the sixth grade, a lawyer for the victim said Thursday. The student attended Greenacres Middle School ‘Avoid . . . lengthy trial’ and contended that former The district said in a teacher Anthony Cucinotti press release that it also raped her. hoped to “avoid the burden, time and cost to everyone of Victim now an adult a lengthy trial.” The victim, who is now a Cucinotti began working young adult, said she pur- for Central Valley in 1992. sued the lawsuit against Complaints about his the district to make it clear inappropriate behavior that school officials must do toward female students a better job of protecting started the next year, filed students. by co-workers, students and She said the sexual parents. assaults at the age of 11 Eymann said Cucinotti turned her life upside down. lives somewhere in CaliforThe Associated Press nia and is no longer teachgenerally does not identify ing. alleged sex assault victims. The school district did not admit liability in the settlement. Cucinotti could not be immediately contacted for comment. Cucinotti was placed on paid administrative leave in April 2009 after several students reported that he snapped a girl’s bra strap in class.

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Resigned in 2009 He resigned that same year and eventually surrendered his teaching certificate after a state investigation. Attorney Richard Eymann said the sexual assaults on his client took place in Cucinotti’s classroom after school. The victim did not report the rapes until she was 14,

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patients are in units with checks every 15 minutes. Vilja and other hospital workers objected when the hospital first required the 15-minute checks two years ago because they said staffing levels were not adequate to handle the extra duties. Workers were required to fill out forms for each check but often fell behind, so not all of them were done, Vilja said. The state has tried to fix some of the problems by increasing funding to hire more workers. But the hospital has struggled with recruiting and retaining staffers. The state has a history of underfunding its mental health programs, including its facilities, said Lauren Simonds, executive director for the National Alliance on

Mental Illness Washington. She said she hopes funding added during the recent legislative session will help move the state from being ranked lowest in the nation.

Assaults persistent Despite increased federal scrutiny, assaults have persisted at the hospital, according to records obtained by The Associated Press. A patient with a history of violent behavior choked and punched a mental health technician March 26, according to an internal report. Another report March 23 said a male patient slipped out of his monitors and was found in a bathroom with another male patient, who said he was sexually assaulted.

Injured employees missed 41,301 days of work between 2010 and 2014, and on-the-job injuries forced staff to move to other jobs, like desk work, for 7,760 days during that period, according to state Occupational Safety and Health Administration records. Workers’ compensation insurance paid $6 million in wage and medical costs for claims to injured hospital workers between January 2013 and September 2015, according to records acquired by the AP. More than half of the 700 injuries reported by nurses, psychiatric technicians, counselors, psychiatrists and other workers during that period were caused by violent patient assaults, the records said.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday, April 8-9, 2016 SECTION

WEATHER, DEATHS, COMICS, FAITH In this section

B

Bees, theater and 4x4s set this weekend

U.S. ARMY

Port Angeles High School on Saturday will host The Jazz Ambassadors, the official touring big band of the U.S. Army, based out of Washington, D.C. The concert is at 7 p.m. in the Port Angeles High School Performing Arts Center, 304 E. Park Ave.

PA set for performance from Jazz Ambassadors BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Representing the finest the United States Army has to offer is all in a day’s work for the Jazz Ambassadors, albeit with a little swing in their step. This 19-member ensemble, formed in 1969, is the Army’s official touring big band and has received great acclaim both at home and abroad, organizers say. The band — based in Washington, D.C. — currently is on tour and has appeared in all 50 states, Canada, Mexico, Japan, India and throughout Europe.

PA performance

“We are trying to connect with communities and veterans as well as young people who are looking to maybe find a career in the military. “What we try to do is exercise as much professionalism and expertise as we can with our musical contributions to represent all the excellence found throughout the United States Army.”

Something for everyone Concerts by the Jazz Ambassadors are designed to entertain all types of audiences, Altman said. Area residents “are really going to have a nice evening if they come out,” he said. “We tend to play a little bit of something for everybody.” Custom compositions and arrangements highlight the group’s creative talent and gifted soloists. Its diverse repertoire includes big-band swing, bebop, Latin, contemporary jazz, standards, popular tunes, Dixieland and patriotic selections. “Jazz is an original American art form, and it is very important for us to keep that tradition alive,” Altman said. “We take it very seriously. We try to play a little slice of 100 years of jazz history at each concert. We’ll play things all the way through the swing era and into more modern jazz arrangements.”

At 7 p.m. Saturday, the band will perform at the Port Angeles High School Performing Arts Center, 304 E. Park Ave. The concert is free and open to the public. Tickets are available through the Peninsula Daily News offices in Port Angeles, Sequim and Port Townsend. “We are currently on our spring tour, playing the western U.S.,” said Joshua Johnson, a band member. “We would like to invite you to come out to our concert and talk to some of our outstanding soldier musicians.” The Jazz Ambassadors “are the musical ambassadors of the army, Best of the best and that is essentially because when we go out, we are telling the story of The musicians in the band are the American soldier,” Master Sgt. “the best around,” Altman said. John Altman, a trumpet player and “They are the cream of the crop. road manager for the ensemble, said “Essentially, the musicians that Wednesday afternoon. we are trying to get within the

ranks here are the best that we can find. “We advertise in some of the trade magazines, on our website and through word of mouth.” The audition process is highly selective, Altman said, adding that out of hundreds of applicants, only a few are chosen. “We will weed through those and invite the very best of the best to come in for a live audition, and then we will hire the best [musician] for the job,” he said. Just how long the musicians stay with the band varies, Altman continued. “We are all members of the United States military, so we have to sign up initially for either a threeor four-year enlistment depending on the current hiring guidelines, but a lot of people that get hired in advance realize what an opportunity it is, and many stay for a full 20-year career.” Altman has been with the band for more than 16 years and said he is “definitely planning on finishing my career here with this job.” He said performing with the band “is the most rewarding experience a musician can have because not only do we get to play every day with top-notch musicians, but we get to do so for a very noble cause: representing our soldiers around the world in uniform.” For more information about the band, visit http://tinyurl.com/pdnjaconcert.

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

Seniors to teach steps at dance Tuesday at Peninsula College PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Peninsula College and the Port Angeles Senior & Community Center are teaming up for the 19th straight year to host the Senior Citizens’ Dance at Peninsula College on Tuesday. The dance, which alternates annually between the senior center and the college Pirate Union Building on the Port Angeles campus at 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd., will begin at 7:30 p.m.

Free swim Sunday

A one-woman play, a 4x4 expo and a “Felina Fiesta” auction and luncheon are among the weekend’s activities on the North Olympic Peninsula. For information about performances of “Squabbles” at Olympic Theatre Arts in Sequim, as well as other arts and entertainment news, see Peninsula Spotlight, the Peninsula Daily News’ weekly magazine included with today’s PDN. Information also is available in the interactive calendar at www.peninsula dailynews.com.

PORT TOWNSEND — Mountain View Pool will offer free access this Sunday. The afternoon swim is scheduled from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the pool, 1919 Blaine St. Adult swim is from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. for laps, water walking and exercise. All ages are welcome from 2:15 p.m. to 5 p.m. for open recreational swim. An adult must accompany any child in the water. Noodles and other float toys will be available. Sponsoring this month’s recreation swim is The Business Guides. For information, contact 360-385-7665 or email ascalf@cityofpt.us.

PORT TOWNSEND Conversation Cafe PORT TOWNSEND — “Gifts” will be the topic for Conversation Cafe today. Conversation Cafe meets at 11:45 a.m. every Friday at Alchemy Restaurant at Taylor and Washington streets. Buying food is not required. The gatherings conclude before 1:30 p.m., and all are welcome.

4x4 Expo PORT TOWNSEND — Mud Toy 4x4 Club and Frank’s Automotive will host the 16th annual 4x4 Expo at the Jefferson County Fairgrounds on Saturday and Sunday. Campgrounds will open at noon today at the fairgrounds, 4907 Landes St. There will be hot pay showers on-site and handicapped-accessible restrooms. Events will start at 11 a.m. General admission is $5; children 10 and younger will be admitted free. For information, contact Eric Holm at 360-302-0903 or Adam Cole at 360-8016553.

Hats off to the Y PORT TOWNSEND — The Jefferson County YMCA will host an evening of live music, food, silent and live auctions, games and a fund-a-cause at 5:30 p.m. Saturday. Tickets are $50 per person for the evening at Fort Worden, 200 Battery Way. Attendees are encouraged to dress festively and wear a favorite hat. To purchase a ticket online, visit www.jefferson countyymca.org/hatsoff or call 360-385-5811. For information, contact Sara Ybarra Lopez at 360385-5811 or email ymca summermeals@gmail.com.

Hornets, wasps, bees

Free admission Admission will be free and light refreshments served. Wally’s Boys will perform. “PC’s student leaders from the 1997-98 school year started this annual event,” said Rick Ross, associate dean for athletics and student life. “It’s a great opportunity for people from different generations to come together and share the timeless activity of dance.” It’s common for the

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Sierra Horsley, a Peninsula College student, dances with an unidentified man at the 2015 dance. area’s senior citizens to teach the college students ballroom, swing and polka dancing, as well as other dance steps, Ross said. “Every year, my stu-

dents are a bit nervous about it because most of them don’t know ballroom dance steps,” Ross said, “but every year, they have a great time.”

The event is open to college students and community members of all ages. For more information, email Ross at rross@pencol. edu.

PORT TOWNSEND — “Hornets, Wasps & Bees: When to Run, When to Stop and Watch” is the subject of a presentation at the Friends of Fort Townsend annual meeting Saturday. The presentation will be from 10 a.m. to noon in the Friends Barn at Fort Townsend State Park, 1370 Old Fort Townsend Road. Speaker John Fleckenstein is a zoologist for the Washington Natural Heritage Program. He has worked across the state with animals such as bats, earthworms, bees, birds and fairy shrimp. He said he has learned a few things about “our stinging friends” and will share some of that up-close experience. The meeting is open to all. For more information, phone 360-385-2998.

Ocean lecture set PORT TOWNSEND — A talk on life in extreme ocean environments will be offered at the chapel at Fort Worden State Park from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. Admission is $5 for Port Townsend Marine Science Center members or $10 for nonmembers. Professor John Baross of the University of Washington’s School of Oceanography and Astrobiology will be the presenter. Baross will emphasize the extreme conditions found in submarine hydrothermal vent and sub-seafloor environments. For more information, email lslabaugh@ptmsc.org or phone 360-385-5582.

QUILCENE Audubon field trip QUILCENE — Admiralty Audubon will have a South County field trip Saturday. Participants will meet at the park-and-ride at the intersection of state Highway 104 and Center Road at 7:30 a.m. The field trip is free and open to the public. The field trip will include the East Quilcene Bay, the Big Quilcene River Fish Hatchery, Mount Walker (if the gate is open) and Dosewallips State Park. Participants are urged to wear weather-appropriate clothing and bring a lunch or snacks. For more information, email trip leader Dan Waggoner at danwags57@ gmail.com or phone 360301-1788.

CHIMACUM Free legal clinic CHIMACUM — Clallam-Jefferson County ProBono Lawyers will present the quarterly Jefferson County free legal clinic Saturday. The clinic at the TriArea Community Center, 10 West Valley Road, will offer free drop-in legal advice for members of the public. Attorney volunteers will be available from noon to 3 p.m. to answer legal questions, to direct people to local services that might be able to assist them and to explain the legal process to them. The clinic allows local people to address their legal issues in one-on-one consultations with volunteer lawyers. It is intended to help those who are otherwise unable to financially access an attorney but is open to all those who show up. TURN

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Events: Port Hadlock book sale set Saturday CONTINUED FROM B1 tural and natural resources. He has kept bees for 53 Volunteers will answer questions regarding family years, holds a bachelor’s law, tenant/landlord, public degree in apiculture and pomology, and was a comassistance, estate, bankmercial beekeeper for more ruptcy, employment and than 20 years. creditor issues. The club also is offering It is anticipated demand a beekeeping course. for this clinic will be high, The course costs $20 per so it is recommended that person for members of a attendees arrive on time to beekeeping club. Yearly ensure being seen by an membership in East Jefferattorney. son Beekeeping is $24 per For questions, phone Executive Director Shauna person or $36 per family. For information, contact Rogers at 360-504-2422 or Gail Moa at 360-385-1968 email probonolawyers@ or gailmoa@yahoo.com, or gmail.com. go to www.ejbees.org.

PORT HADLOCK Book sale on tap PORT HADLOCK — Friends of the Jefferson County Library will host a book sale from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. The sale will be at the library at 620 Cedar Ave. For more information, phone Barbara Paulsen at 360-765-3084 or email smithbarbara84@gmail. com.

Beekeeping class PORT HADLOCK — Tim Lawrence, WSU Extension director in Island County, will speak Saturday about the challenges facing honeybees and how beekeepers can cope. The informational meeting will start at 9:30 a.m. at the Jefferson County Library, 620 Cedar Ave. Weather permitting, at 10:30 a.m., participants in the beekeeping classes will take an apiary tour. Lawrence earned a doctorate in environmental science from Ohio State University. He has more than 25 years of Extension Service experience in community development and agricul-

and drop-ins are welcome at the library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. “Memories — real, false and a bit of both — are at the heart of British author Watson’s haunting, twisted debut,” according to an ‘Building Soil’ talk excerpt about the book SEQUIM — “Building from Publishers Weekly. Soil” will be presented at “Christine Lucas awakNash’s Farm Store from ens each morning in Lon2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Satdon with no idea who she urday. is or why she’s in bed with The class is free and a strange man until he open to the public at the tells her that his name is store, 4681 Sequim-Dunge- Ben and they’ve been marness Way. ried for 22 years. Elizabeth Murphy, “Watson handles what author, soil scientist and could have turned into a gardener, will show how to cheap narrative gimmick improve a garden from brilliantly, building to a SEQUIM ground level. chillingly unexpected cliFor more information, max.” CD release party email patty@nashsorganic Copies of Before I Go to SEQUIM — Local Celtic produce.com or phone 360- Sleep are available in vari681-6274. ous formats, including regmusician Mary Turin will ular print, audiobook on celebrate the release of her Spring landscaping CD and downloadable new CD, “Till Now,” at e-book. Wind Rose Cellars from SEQUIM — Joe HolThey can be requested 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. today. trop, executive director of online by visiting the Turin will be joined by the Clallam Conservation library catalog at www. C.J. Henderson on the nols.org. frame drum at the winery, District, will present important aspects of a birdFor more information, 143 W. Washington St. phone 360-683-1161 or Her new CD is her first friendly yard from 10 a.m. email sequim@nols.org. solo effort after many years to noon Saturday at the Dungeness River Audubon of touring and recording Center. Feline Fiesta slated with such bands as Ban“Spring Landscaping for shee in the Kitchen and SEQUIM — Peninsula Birds” will be from 10 a.m. Fret Noir. to noon at the center, 2151 Friends of Animals will host a “Feline Fiesta” lunW. Hendrickson Road. Genealogical DNA cheon and auction with The cost is $5. SEQUIM — Clallam An optional field trip — entertainment by the Hot County Genealogical Socia 2-mile hike at the Dunge- Apple Pie quartet from ety will present a program ness Recreation Area — to noon to 3 p.m. Saturday. The luncheon and aucabout genealogical DNA at see native plants and tion will be in The Cedars the Sequim Library from where they are growing at Dungeness banquet 10 a.m. to noon Saturday. will follow the class. room, 1965 Woodcock Road. The program is free and For more information, Tickets are $35 and can open to the public at the contact Tom Butler at library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. rceducation@olympus.net or be purchased at PFOA, 257509 U.S. Highway 101, Marolyn Russell’s pre360-681-4076. Port Angeles, or Heather sentation will explain how Creek, 122 W. Washington one can use knowledge of Book discussion St., Sequim. different types of DNA to SEQUIM — Before I Go Proceeds benefit the learn more about ethnic to Sleep by S.J. Watson will PFOA rescue animals. origins. be discussed at 3 p.m. SatDonations for the aucRussell is a member of tion are being accepted. the International Society of urday at the Sequim For more information, Genetic Genealogy. Library. phone 360-452-0414, ext. 6; She is the project Preregistration for this email pfoa@olypen.com; or administrator of a y-DNA program is not required, surname group and has been involved with genealogical DNA since 2006. For more information, email askus@clallamcogs. org or phone 360-417-5000.

GUN SHOW SAT & SUN APRIL 9-10

visit www.safehavenpfoa. org.

Free sessions SEQUIM — The Home Depot will host two free sessions this weekend. On Saturday at 10 a.m. will be a spring lawn preparation demonstration. On Sunday at 1 p.m. will be a class about installing laminate flooring. Both classes are free and open to all. For more information, phone 360-582-1620.

Library book sale SEQUIM — The Friends of Sequim Library will hold its monthly book sale from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. The sale is at the Friends building behind the Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. This month, the group has received a collection of books about water gardening, which includes pond designs, planting and maintenance. The pet care section has received new books about the care of dogs, cats and birds, plus dog training and obedience. In fiction, there is a nearly complete set of Annie’s Attic Mysteries, plus some Annie’s Unraveled novels. Janette Oke’s Christianthemed novels also are in stock. A large number of vinyl albums of popular music ranging from the 1960s through the 1980s, plus classical music albums, also is available.

Bake sale and coffee PORT ANGELES — Crestwood Health and Rehabilitation, 1116 E. Lauridsen Blvd., will host a bake sale and coffee hour in the Ivy Room to celebrate Occupational Therapy Month from 10 a.m. to noon today. All proceeds will benefit the resident council to create funds for a raised garden bed and associated materials for the folks of Crestwood, allowing for gardening at a comfortable and wheelchair-accessible height. For more information, contact Katie Irvin at 239776-4695 or kateirvin@ yahoo.com.

PORT ANGELES — Wilder Auto Center will hold a spring RV and truck show from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. today and Saturday. The show will take place at the center, 53 Jetta Way. New 2016 RV models and floor plans, along with the latest model trucks with a variety of packages, will be on display. The public is invited to have free hot dogs and register to win a free iPad and a local shopping spree. For more information, phone 360-633-2046.

Hope After Heroin PORT ANGELES — Hope After Heroin volunteers will pick up garbage on Ediz Hook from noon to 2 p.m. Sunday. All are welcome to join in helping clean up the community. For more information, contact Laurie Blake at HopeAfterHeroin1@gmail. com or 360-808-6584.

Habitat dedication PORT ANGELES — Habitat for Humanity of Clallam County will hold a house dedication at 1:30 p.m. Sunday at 1622 Maloney Court. The public is invited to the ceremony, which will include a tour of the home. For more information, visit www.habitatclallam. org. TURN

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SEQUIM — Walkers are invited to join the Olympic Peninsula Explorers for a breakfast followed by a Dungeness Spit walk Saturday. The breakfast and club meeting will be at Old Mill Cafe at 9 a.m. The breakfast meeting at the restaurant, 721 Carlsborg Road, was planned to allow people to walk out to the spit with favorable tides. All walkers must register inside the QFC store in Sequim, 990-B E. Washington St., between 10:50 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. Maps will be given out at the sign-up. Walkers have the choice of a 3.1-mile, 6.2-mile or 12.4-mile walk. The walk is free unless credit is desired from the American Volkssport Association. Participants will need a national park pass to park a vehicle within the boundaries of the park. The later start time will allow walkers to walk to the New Dungeness Light Station, a 12.4-mile walk with favorable tides. The route includes walking by bluffs overlooking the straits and verdant meadows and out to the Dungeness Spit. There are restrooms at the parking lot. Wheelchairs are not recommended, and no pets are allowed per park regulations. For more information,

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SEQUIM — The Sequim Elks Club will host bingo games from noon to 3 p.m. Sunday. Bingo will be played at the lodge, 143 Port Williams Road. Minimum buy-in for the game is $10, and the Elks will offer popular bingo games, including progressive. Players must be 18 or older. Snacks and refreshments will be available. All proceeds will go to the Elks scholarship program, charities supported by the Elks and lodge operating costs.

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PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

B3

Boat safety seminar Trumpeter set to be planned for Saturday featured in PC finale BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SEQUIM — The North Olympic Sail and Power Squadron on Saturday will offer a free seminar to teach boaters how to safely use propane systems. “It is a big deal around here,” said Tom O’Laughlin, squadron executive officer. “Propane on boats is a sensitive thing” and should be approached with caution, he said.

The seminar, presented by Gordon Bilyard, will be from 10 a.m. to noon at the Gathering Place at SunLand Golf & Country Club, 135 Fairway Drive. It will familiarize participants with the properties of propane, the components of propane systems on boats, system operation and maintenance, and safety considerations, organizers say. Sources for additional information and assistance

to inspect and properly maintain a boat propane system also will be provided. For more information on this clinic or other classes offered by the squadron, contact O’Laughlin at 360-6702798 or visit www.north olympicboaters.com.

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

Olympic Theatre Arts offers children’s classes BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SEQUIM — Olympic Theatre Arts is accepting registration applications for its Children’s Theatre spring classes “On Parade.” “This is such a wonderful opportunity for the children to show off their talents,” said Bonne Smith, event director. “Using short-form performance techniques will sharpen their awareness of capturing their audience and making the most of every moment. Plus, it’s a ton of fun.” There will be two 10-week class sessions available, one on Wednesday afternoons led by Lisa Mantchev and one on Thursday afternoons led by Smith. Class sessions will run from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. beginning April 13 (Wednesdays) or April 14 (Thurs-

days) and finishing June 15 and 16 with a showcase presentation encore of the parade routines for invited guests. Classes are open to children ages 6 through 18. Tuition for each 10-week session is $100, and classes will be held at OTA, 414 N. Sequim Ave. Enrollment is limited. Class registration applications are available online at www.olympictheatrearts. org or through the OTA business office at 414 N. Sequim Ave. The business office is open from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays. The series of classes will take place during the 121st annual Irrigation Festival celebration in Sequim, and the children will prepare short scene work and a variety of show-type routines to be performed in the festival parade May 14.

The Irrigation Festival parade’s theme this year is “Looking to the Future Through the Past.” The OTA entry will be titled “From Howard Wood to OTA: Children’s Theatre Paves the Way.” “Olympic Theatre Arts Children’s Theatre program has brought such creative energy to our mission, which is to entertain, educate and inspire community involvement through experiences in the arts,” said Carol Willis, OTA general manager. “We are very lucky to have these outstanding and dedicated teachers who are helping OTA look to the future as well.” For more information, phone 360-683-7326.

BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Trumpeter Timothy Hudson will be the featured guest during Tuesday’s Maier Hall Concert Series season finale. The concert will begin at 7 p.m. at Maier Performance Hall at Peninsula College, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd. Tickets are $15 for the general public and $5 for students with valid identification. Hudson is the first brass performer to be featured on the Maier Hall Concert Series, according to organizers. He will be accompanied by pianist David Jones.

Carolina Brass

Hudson is the founder and leader of Carolina Brass, a musical ensemble that performs classical recitals and pops concerts. He also has held principal trumpet positions with the Knoxville Symphony, New Mexico Symphony Orchestra and Chamber Orchestra of Northern New York, and has performed with the Oslo Philharmonic, Fort Wayne Philharmonic, North Carolina Symphony, International Orchestra and Camerata Chamber Orchestra. Hudson teaches at Gardner-Webb University in North Carolina and offers clinics and master classes around the world. ________ As an artist and educator, he has worked across Reporter Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. the United States and 56650, or cmcdaniel@peninsula in Mexico, England, New Zealand, the Far East dailynews.com.

Trumpeter Timothy Hudson will be the featured guest during Tuesday’s Maier Hall Concert Series season finale in Port Angeles. and Israel. His recital Tuesday will include a variety of music from several historical periods, including works by George Frideric Handel, Henry Purcell, MarcAntoine Charpentier and Aaron Copland. The West Coast premiere of “Copper Lake Fantasy” by Jones will be featured. Jones composed it for Hudson when the two musicians were classmates at New England Conservatory. Also on the program will be “Elegia,” composed in memory of trumpeter Michael Tunnell, longtime

member of the Louisville Orchestra. Tunnell was a friend and mentor to both Hudson and Jones, they said. Proceeds will benefit the Peninsula College Foundation, which provides support for Peninsula College students and programs through endowed scholarships and donor-designated giving, and delivers additional program and student support through fundraising efforts. Tickets can be purchased online at www.pencol.edu/ cultural-events. For more information, call 360-417-6405.

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PeninsulaNorthwest

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

Events: Joyce Lions are

STUDENTS

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

OF THE

MONTH

set to co-host breakfast CONTINUED FROM B2 can be found at www.face book.com/kiwanisport angeles. BLYN

Auction, dinner BLYN — The Kiwanis Club of Port Angeles’ Spring Auction & Dinner is at 5 p.m. Saturday. The dinner and auction will be at 7 Cedars Casino, 270756 U.S. Highway 101. Along with the live auction, a silent auction, dessert raffle and wine pull are planned. Shuttle service to and from 7 Cedars Casino will be offered. Individual tickets are $50, while a table for eight is $320. Tickets can be purchased at the First Federal downtown branch, 141 W. First St., or from any member of the Kiwanis Club. The service-minded club supports many community events and organizations, including Camp Beausite, Olympic Peninsula Boys & Girls Club, college-bound high school seniors and Kiwanis Kidsfest. For event questions and shuttle scheduling, phone 360-417-3131. Additional information

JOYCE Lions breakfast JOYCE — The Crescent Bay Lions Club will co-host a benefit breakfast with the Port Angeles Lions Club from 8:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. Sunday. Breakfasts are held every Sunday through May 8 at the club on state Highway 112 and Holly Hill Road. This Sunday, the Luck of the Draw band will play during the breakfast. The cost is $7 for adults and $4 for children 12 and younger. The menu includes eggs cooked to order, hot cakes, French toast, biscuits and gravy, hashbrowns, ham, sausage, bacon and coffee. Proceeds help Crescent Bay Lions members support Crescent school yearbooks, scholarships for Crescent High School seniors, holiday food baskets, glasses for the needy and other community projects.

FORKS Spruce up Forks FORKS — Volunteers who want to help clean up the community will meet at First Federal to launch the third annual Spruce Up Forks Community Clean Up at 9 a.m. Saturday. Local clubs, businesses and citizens will wear orange vests and pitch in by picking up litter, window washing, doing landscaping and other activities, starting at the bank at 131 Calawah Way. Volunteers are asked to meet promptly at 9 a.m. for a safety talk, doughnuts, assignments, vests and supplies. There will be a drawing after the cleanup, and two volunteers each will win a gift certificate for dinner for two at Creekside Restaurant at Kalaloch Lodge. To join in the effort, either individually or with a team, or to make a monetary donation, contact the Forks Chamber of Commerce or just show up Saturday. Phone Lissy Andros, chamber executive director, at 360-374-2531 or email director@forkswa.com.

VIVIAN ELVIS HANSEN (2)

Stevens Middle School Top Honor students were honored by the Port Angeles Nor’wester Rotary Club for their excellence in academics, sports and music. Each student was given the opportunity to stand before the Rotary members and talk about their GPA, hobbies, favorite classes and future aspirations. From left are Alex Delgado, Drew Eckard, Madison Ballou, Quentin Wise, Derek Bowechop and Rotarian Steven Lewis.

Students raise money for Make-A-Wish PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — The Port Angeles High School Future Business Leaders of America Chapter and the high school Cheer Team have raised $630 for the

Make-A-Wish Foundation. During halftime for several home varsity basketball games, the two groups provided an opportunity for community members to make a half-court shot and win a free pizza from

Gordy’s Pizza. Participants were charged $1 for the opportunity. Proceeds went to the Make-A-Wish Foundation, said Bernie Brabant, FBLA adviser.

Tickets available at Peninsula Daily News and Sequim Gazette Offices

AN EXCITING EVENING OF FUN FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY

JAZZ AMBASSADORS

Port Angeles High School students were recently honored with a vocational scholarship by the Port Angeles Nor’Wester Rotary Club for their excellence in academics, sports and music. From left are Brian Albright, vocational services/Rotarian, with Madeline Boe and Emily Johnson.

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Stevens Middle School Top Honor students recently were honored by the Port Angeles Nor’wester Rotary Club for their excellence in academics, sports and music. From left are Steven Lewis, vocational services/Rotarian; Kaysey Roberts; Jordyn Ebalo; and Ashley Frantz.

Diana came to Crestwood post surgically for removal of a left frontal lobe brain tumor. She was experiencing progressive weakness and confusion, along with word finding difficulties when she was hospitalized. She arrived with weakness specifically on the side of her body; she was unable to write or tie her shoes as she once had. Within days, Diane was able to maneuver in her wheel chair around the facility, always smiling and willing to work with her occupational, speech and physical therapists. She eventually graduated to using a rolling walker, improvising her balance and endurance in standing to complete valued tasks such as jamming with her husband, Ron, as he would frequently bring in their music book and play Bluegrass tunes. They have spent many years together attending Bluegrass festivals and it was evident that as Diane progressed in her therapy, she was able to easier engage in playing her baritone ukulele or guitar as Ron strummed his mandolin by her side, both singing to their hearts content, bringing smiles and tapping toes to those who stopped to listen. Within a few weeks, Diane progressed to walking without an assistive device and was found many times in occupational therapy doing the “electric slide,” confidently completing the grapevine with ease. By the end of her time at Crestwood, she easily was able to care for herself, completing her basic routine with independence, accessing medical appointments with her husband and socializing within the facility with ease. We wish her the best of luck and will miss her!!

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FaithReligion

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Humans in a ‘religious’ distinction EDITOR’S NOTE: This column originally appeared in the Peninsula Daily News on August 6, 2010.

ISSUES OF FAITH

That is, biologBode ically, I OPERATE WITH a genetivery broad definition of cally, we, religion, as well as a sharp as memdistinction between “being bers of religious” and “belonging to the a religious organization.” human Let me explain. species, “Religion,” as I underhave stand it, has to do with the evolved whole of our life, not just a and are special part or compartstrucment of life; it has to do with our entire world-and- tured as social creatures. And there are many life view. kinds of social organizaAnd what religion is essentially about is how we tions to which one can value things — our deepest belong: clubs, guilds, societies, associations, teams and and highest values, our so forth. “ultimate concerns,” as Such social organizatheologian Paul Tillich puts tions both reflect our it. nature as social beings and Our everyday language help us meet our needs as points to this understandsocial creatures. ing of religion and what it But we are not social means to be “religious” beings because we belong when we say, for example, to some social organization that “Bill polishes his car or another. religiously” or “Sue exerIt’s the other way cises religiously” — that is, around: Social organizawith utmost devotion and tions are created because reverence. we are social beings. Thus, the “religious” So, too, we are religious questions are questions creatures. like these: Biologically, genetically, To what should I ultiwe, as members of the mately devote myself, and what is worthy of my devo- human species, have evolved and are structured tion? as beings who must quesTo what should I give my allegiance, and what is tion the meaning and value of our lives, beings who worthy of such allegiance? What inspires my deep- must orient ourselves within this vast cosmos est reverence, and what is worthy of my reverence? and make some determinaHere are two definitions tion as to how we will live of religion that reflect this our lives and what we will broad understanding of give ourselves to and serve. religion. And so religions and The first is by philosoreligious organizations of pher of religion Frederick many kinds emerge as a Ferre, who writes that way of responding to and “religion is one’s way of dealing with these religious valuing most comprehenneeds and concerns, both sively and intensively.” reflecting our religious (Ferre contrasts religion nature and as attempts to to philosophy, which he deal with that nature. characterizes as “one’s way But again, we are not of thinking most comprereligious beings because we hensively and critically.”) belong to some organized A second definition of religion or another. religion in this broad sense It’s the other way is by my Unitarian colaround: We create religious league, the Rev. Dr. Richard organizations because we S. Gilbert, who writes that are religious beings. “religion is that core of ultiThus, just because indimate meanings, values, viduals don’t belong to an and convictions to which organized religion or find it we commit our lives.” helpful in meeting their What I appreciate about religious needs doesn’t these definitions of religion mean they are less reliis that they succinctly cap- gious. ture the broad general So, in my understanding, scope of the religious enter- one is religious not by virprise while leaving open tue of belonging to a given the particular content of organized religion, or by folthat enterprise. lowing certain ritual pracOr, to put this the other tices, or by holding certain way around, whatever the beliefs about divine beings, core meanings, values and etc. — all of that relates to convictions to which you the content of particular commit your life, that is religions and faiths — your religion . . . whether rather, one is religious by or not you have a name for virtue of belonging to a speit, whether or not it is cies that asks questions related with a particular about how we should live concept of God, whether or and what we should value. not it is connected to a _________ given “religious” instituIssues of Faith is a rotating tion. column by four religious leaders Thus, in this understanding, everyone is “reli- on the North Olympic Peninsula. The Rev. Bruce Bode is minister gious.” of the Quimper Unitarian UniverIn the same way that salist Fellowship in Port Townsend. we are “social beings,” we His email is bruceabode@gmail. com. are “religious beings.”

Bruce

BY LAURIE GOODSTEIN AND JIM YARDLEY THE NEW YORK TIMES

In what could be an important moment for his leadership of the Roman Catholic Church, Pope Francis is scheduled to issue a major document today regarding family issues. It is titled “Amoris Laetitia,” Latin for “The Joy of Love.” In the document, known as an apostolic exhortation, the pope could change church practice on thorny subjects like whether divorced Catholics who remarry without having obtained annulments can receive holy communion. He might address debates over same-sex relationships, cohabitation and polygamy, an issue in Africa. Or, he could sidestep such divisive topics and stick to broader philosophical statements. For the past two years, Francis has guided the church through a sweeping exercise of self-examination that some scholars have compared to the Second Vatican Council. Catholics around the world filled out detailed questionnaires about whether the church meets their families’ needs. Bishops and other church officials spent two tumultuous meetings at the Vatican, known as synods, debating and arguing. The broad topic was whether the Catholic Church should reposition itself, and how. Francis listened, prodded and sometimes steered the process, but he mostly kept his own counsel.

QUEEN OF ANGELS CATHOLIC PARISH

209 West 11th St., Port Angeles

(360) 452-2351 www.clallamcatholic.com Mass Schedule: Saturday Vigil: 5:00 p.m. Sunday 8:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. Tuesday evening 6:00 p.m. Wednesday 12:00 p.m. Thursday-Friday 8:30 a.m. Confession: 30 minutes prior to daily Masses (except Thursday) Weekend Confessions: Saturday 3:30 - 4:30pm, 6:15 p.m.

ST. JOSEPH CATHOLIC PARISH

101 E. Maple St., Sequim

(360) 683-6076 www.clallamcatholic.com Mass Schedule: Saturday Vigil: 5:00 p.m. Sunday 8:30 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Monday, Thursday & Friday 8:30 a.m. Wednesday 12:00 p.m. Spanish Mass every 2nd Sunday 2:00 p.m. Confession: 30 minutes prior to daily Masses (except Thursday) Weekend Confessions: Saturday 3:30 - 4:30pm, 6:15 p.m.

INDEPENDENT BIBLE CHURCH

PORT ANGELES — First United Methodist Church, 110 E. Seventh St., will host Don and Donna Mohl of Fair Grove, Mo., in a free folk mountain music presentation at 10 a.m. Sunday. The duo will perform using biblical and traditional instruments such as hammered dulcimer, bowed psaltery, zither, mountain dulcimer, mandolin and guitar with their voices to provide “a ‘down-home’ family-oriented message of Jesus’ love

and grace,” according to a news release. Disabled access to the church is on Laurel Street at the church parking lot. This musical presentation is free and open to the public. A love offering will be received. CDs, DVDs and handcrafted biblical musical instruments will be available for sale after the program. For further information, phone the church office at 360-452-8971 or email office@pafumc.org

ANDREW MEDICHINI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pope Francis arriving for his weekly audience in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican on Wednesday. Until now. Having led Catholics into such delicate terrain, Francis has stirred hope and fear. Some religious conservatives warn he could destabilize the church and undermine Catholic doctrine. Some liberals, though, are hoping Francis will directly address samesex marriage and contraception in a way that would make the church more responsive to today’s realities. But both sides might be disappointed. Some who study Francis predict the apostolic exhortation will be a broad statement on universal problems affecting families, like poverty, migration, domestic violence, health care, youth unemployment and the neglect of children and the elderly. Francis’ encyclical on the environment, “Laudato Si’,” released in June, was an enormous study in connecting the dots, and experts are expecting a similar sweep in

BETHANY PENTECOSTAL CHURCH E. Fifth & Francis Port Angeles 457-1030 Omer Vigoren, Pastor

SUNDAY: 9:30 a.m. Sunday School 10:45 a.m., 6:30 p.m. Worship Service WED. & SAT.: 7 p.m. Evening Service

More information: www.indbible.org

CHURCH OF CHRIST (360) 457-3839 pacofc.org

Dr. Jerry J. Dean, Minister

A Christ–Centered message for a world weary people SUNDAY: 9:30 a.m. Sunday School 10:45 a.m. Worship Service

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

139 W. 8th Street, Port Angeles 360-452-4781 Pastor: Ted Mattie Pastoral Assistant: Pastor Paul Smithson Worship Hours: 8:30 & 11:00 a.m. Sunday School for all ages Nursery Provided: Both Services

“Where Are You Building Your House?”

HILLCREST BAPTIST CHURCH (SBC)

205 Black Diamond Road, P.A. 360-457-7409 Dr. William Gullick SUNDAY 9:45 a.m. Bible Study, all ages 11 a.m. Worship 6 p.m. Prayer Time Nursery provided WEDNESDAY 6:00 p.m. Bible Study and Prayer Call for more info regarding other church activities.

CHURCH OF CHRIST IN SEQUIM 107 E. Prairie St., Sequim Jerry MacDonald, Minister SUNDAY 10 a.m. Bible Study 11 a.m. Worship WEDNESDAY 7 p.m. Bible Study

No Matter Where You Are on Life’s Journey, You Are Welcome Here

OLYMPIC UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP

417-2665 www.olympicuuf.org 73 Howe Rd., Agnew-Old Olympic to N. Barr Rd., right on Howe Rd. Sunday Service & Childcare April 10, 2016 10:30 AM Speaker: Ms Bridget Laflin

“Too Tired for Spiritual Awakening?” Welcoming Congregation

360-808-1021

PENINSULA Worldwide

ST. ANDREW’S EPISCOPAL

A Bible Based Church Services: Saturday at 1 p.m. Gardiner Community Center 980 Old Gardiner Road

510 E. Park Ave. Port Angeles 360-457-4862 Services Sunday 8:00 and 10:00 a.m. Godly Play for Children 9:00 a.m. Monday 8:15 p.m. “Compline” Wednesday 11:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist

Visitors Welcome For more information 417-0826

www.standrewpa.org

CHURCH OF GOD

Sunday: 116 E. Ahlvers Rd. 8:15 & 11 a.m. Sunday Worship 9:50 a.m. Sunday School for all ages. Nursery available at all Sun. events Saturday: 112 N. Lincoln St. 6:00 p.m. Upper Room Worship Admin. Center: 112 N. Lincoln St. Port Angeles, WA/ 360-452-3351

“Amoris Laetitia.” Francis signaled early on that he wanted the church to re-examine its ministry to those who feel excluded, calling bishops to two synod meetings on the family, in 2014 and 2015. One of the major issues debated was the church policy that bars divorced Catholics who have remarried without seeking a church annulment of their first union from receiving the sacrament of holy communion, a centerpiece of Mass. (How strictly this ban is observed varies widely, depending on local priests and bishops; plenty of remarried Catholics receive holy communion regularly.) Getting an annulment requires appearances before a church tribunal and a fee, and it can take years. Francis streamlined the annulment process last year, but for many, it is still an insurmountable obstacle to full participation in the church. Some dioceses, especially in developing countries, do not have such tribunals, which require judges trained in the church’s canon law. At the synods, many bishops insisted that giving communion to divorced Catholics would undermine a core church doctrine that marriage is indissoluble. But other bishops were intent on finding a way to welcome back the divorced. Now, everyone is looking to Francis to settle the matter. But he may sidestep it, some experts said, by reaffirming church teaching that marriage is permanent, while encouraging flexibility in pastoral practice toward the remarried.

DUNGENESS COMMUNITY CHURCH 683-7333 45 Eberle Lane, Sequim Sunday Services 8:15 and 10 a.m. Tim Richards

UNITY IN THE OLYMPICS

To know Christ and to make Him known.

HOLY TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH (ELCA) 301 E. Lopez Ave., P.A. 360-452-2323 www.htlcpa.com

Pastors Kristin Luana & Olaf Baumann Sunday Worship at 9:30 a.m. Nursery Provided Radio Broadcast on KONP 1450 at 11:00 a.m. most Sundays Sunday School at 10:45 a.m.

www.unityintheolympics.org 2917 E Myrtle, Port Angeles 457-3981 Sunday Services 10:30 a.m. Guest Speakers

FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

7th & Laurel, Port Angeles 360-452-8971 Tom Steffen, Pastor SUNDAY Childcare provided 10 a.m. Folk Mountain Music 11:30 a.m. Potluck MONDAY 12-2 p.m. Clothes Closet WEDNESDAY 1-3 p.m. Clothes Closet FRIDAY 5:30 p.m. Free Dinner

office@pafumc.org www.pafumc.org

PORT ANGELES CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Corner of 2nd & Race P.O. Box 2086 • 457-4839 Pastor Neil Castle

EVERY SUNDAY 9 a.m. Sunday School for all ages 10 a.m. Worship Service Nursery available during AM services EVERY WEDNESDAY 6:30 p.m. Bible Study Invite your friends & neighbors for clear biblical preaching, wonderful fellowship, & the invitation to a lasting, personal relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ.

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH

847 N. Sequim Ave. • 683-4135 www.sequimbible.org WEDNESDAY 6:00 p.m. Youth Groups 6:00 p.m. Bible Study 6:15 p.m. Awana SUNDAY 9:30 a.m. Traditional Worship Children’s Classes 10:30 a.m. Coffee Fellowship 11:00 a.m. Contemporary Worship Children’s Classes ages 3-12 Adult Discipleship Hour 6:00 Bible Study Dave Wiitala, Pastor Shane McCrossen, Family Life Pastor Pat Lynn, Student Ministries Pastor Bible Centered • Family Friendly

(Disciples of Christ) Park and Race, Port Angeles 457-7062 Pastor Joe Gentzler

621225960

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

B5

How pope’s ‘Amoris Laetitia’ could affect families, church

1233 E. Front St., Port Angeles

Folk mountain gospel event set this Sunday

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

SUNDAY: 9:00 a.m. Sunday School for all ages 10:00 a.m. Adult & Children’s Worship


B6

PeninsulaNorthwest

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Peninsula College lists winter honor roll PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — The following Peninsula College students have made the president’s list and honor roll for the 2016 winter quarter. To qualify for the president’s list, a student must be enrolled for at least 12 quarter hours of credit in courses numbered 100 or above, receive no incompletes and earn a college grade-point average for the quarter of not less than 3.90. Honor roll requirements are the same, except for a college GPA of not less than 3.60.

President’s list Nur Izzati Ab-Rahman, Nur Insyira Abd-Rashid, Nur Fatin Abdul-Rahim, Nur Kamilia Abdul-Rani, Travis S. Albers, Helena N. Allencastre, Yohana Alverina, Kelly M. Anders, Weng Ian Ao-Ieong, Ari Stone Athair, Faris Bin Baharuddin, Brittany D. Baker, Aline Becker-Carneiro, Samuel Scott Berneking, Mical Blanchard-Wright, Michelle L. Bolin, Deborah R. Bowen, Stephen Tate Braden, Curtis E. Bradley, Anthony D. Braun, Christian J. Brown, David A. Bureau, Pallas C B. Burhen, Thomas P. Campbell, Morgan V. Carl, Taylor J. Cerna, Hoi Kiu Chan, Cameron J. Chase, Mattie M. Clark,

Elaine E. Cochran, Allegra C. Coggins, Derek Collier, Christina F. Costello, Nika M. Criddle, Nicole L. Criel, Chloe R. Dawson, Alejandro V. Diaz, Karen T. Dybedal, Segopotso E. Eaton, Alan O. Ensastegui, Mercedes M. Flores, Sheila B. Fullingim, Anne E. Gibbs, Nicholas Gibson, Mckenzie D. Ginther, Leah L. Gomez and Alexander Lee Hand. Also, David Harlan, Cassey J. Hartig, Lyndsi J. Hayward, Jensen N. Heike, Donald M. Heil, Joshua J. Henderson, Danielle M. Hendrickson, Kate E. Henninger, Najihah Binti Hidzhir, Umar Shafiq Bin Hisham, Tu Ngoc Lisa Hoang, Jeremiah C. Hobbs, Nicholas R. Hoffman, Savannah E. Hopper, Sierra M. Horsley, Lindsay C. Horsman, Zachary A. Hoskins, Justin J. Houseman, Tahnee J. Hudson, Daniel E. Hull, Adnan Aiman Bin Jaafar, Brianna K. Jackson, Cole D. Jansen, Jillian E. Jenkins, Emily B. Jernigan, Muhammad Irfan Johari, James D. Jones, Arielle G. Kelly and Laura M. Keri. Also, Troy Kirk, Hannah Larrechea, Karinn A. Larsen, April E. Lawson, Kirsty L. Leach, Sharla L. Libera, Ming Chi Liu, Sarai Lopez, Valisa C. Lynch, Harvey Maddux, Abbi M. McKann, James R. McKay, Rochelle D. McKay, Emmanuel Medina, Mohd Ilham

Mohd-Rozie, Jazmina Mohd-Sopian, Alejandro Montanez, Reece W. Moody, David J. Muckley, Kevin McNally, Christin M. Newton, Lan H. Nguyen, Zach A. Nibler, Nur Qistina NorHalim, Sreyya Nove, Palonia B. Olson, Xinzhi Ong, Dennis Oya, Josephine E. Padgett, Karina M. PaupByrnes, Alexander G. Peck, Nicole J. Perez, Anna L. Potter, Nur Farah Irdina Rajdi, Matthew A. Richards, Sydney Jo. Roberts, Brian R. Roe, Emma K. Sackett, Michael D. Salyer, Meghan L. Shamp, Sierra Kaye Shelden, Sierra J. Shelton, Kiera D. Sholty, Amanda N. Signes, Emily Sang Ah Slough and Eleanor K. Small. Also, Jayden L. Sparhawk, Ronald L. Staggs, Miles K. Stayton, Victor Stevenson, Jay C. Stewart, Ziluo Su, Dawn R. Sund, Jordan Yong Jiang Tan, Li L. Tan, Julia C. Tatum, Karen M. Thomas, Holly D. Trucano, Ian K. Tucker, Theresa L. Vanzant, David M. Waggoner, Shuai Wang, Hodge P. Wasson, Hope L. Wegener, Courtney R. Weir, Heather N. Wheeler, Cora M. Whitten, Hendry Widyanto, Anastacia N. Wienecke, Michelle L. Williams, Chelsea E. Winfield, Aileen Winstin, Hadassah G. Winters, Jenny A. Wolfley, Marissa Wonderly, Mengzhi Zhao and Runquan Zhao.

Honor roll Michelle C. Abell-Sietz, Brandi Adamich, Britni N. Allman, Krystle A. Alsassa, Tasha R. Arrington, Syerina Aulia, Craig L. Axelbaum, Laci R. Batchelor, Alicia L. Beck, Matthew M. Becker, Mckenna A. Bell-Duffy, Michelle R. Bennison, Gabriella A. Blair, Beletu B. Brandon, Abriana Buchanan, Mary M. Burk, Preston S. Burroughs, Corinne M. Burwash, Shayna M. Butcher, Kylee J. Butler, Ryley M. Callaghan, Kenneth D. Carr, Bailey K. Casad, Yick Lung Cheng, Yui Sing Cheng, Crystal Churchill, Christopher Cook, Jacqueline F. Cook, Karen M. Corral, Jessica A. Cranor, Amanda M. Critchfield, Marisa L. Delano, Supacha Denprasertsuk, Linh Khanh Do, Madison N. Drew, Molly Earley-Crecelius, Dylan K. Eekhoff, Tracee L. Ellington, Benjamin A. Fanestil, Debra J. Faustini, Noah T. Fulmer, Emily G. Funston, Greta A. Gamble, James Gantz, Brytnee D. Gardner, Ben D. Gastfield, Jasmine L. Gauthun, Kelsey F. Ghere, Naomi F. Gish, Cairene S. Gonzales, Jadeann M. Gorr, Margaret M. Gourley, Zackery Grigsby and Landon G. Groves. Also, Savannah N. Hall, Lacey D. Haller, Logan A. Hankinson, Kevin J. Hanley, Nicole G. Heaton,

July 28, 1920 March 29, 2016 Andrew G. “Andy” Nilles died Tuesday morning, March 29, 2016. Born July 28, 1920, in Del Rio, Washington, Andy was well-known in Sequim as a man who went out of his way to be kind. In 2011, Andy’s concern for the safety of those living in the Vintage Senior Apartments led to the construction of the sidewalk along Brackett Road between those apartments and Walmart. His 2013 wedding to Gladys Salley made local and national news when the couple chose to have the ceremony in the Cocka-Doodle Doughnuts shop in Port Angeles. In his early life, Andy was a successful cattle rancher of black Angus stock in Eastern Washington. In 1965, Andy was named Douglas County Cattleman of the Year. He was also awarded the title of Washington State Range Man of the Year. Andy was active in the Del Rio Grange and served as a Douglas County No. 3 fire chief and fire commissioner. Andy remarried following the death of his first wife, Catherine. Andy and his second wife, Gert, moved to Sequim in the early 1980s. Andy was an active member of the Sequim Elks. After Gert’s death,

Mr. Nilles Andy moved to the Vintage Senior Apartments. Andy soon became the heart of Vintage. He was known for his cooking — clam chowder soup and small loaves of zucchini bread — which he made certain were distributed to his many Vintage friends; he crocheted afghans and hats to give away; he walked dogs when someone became housebound; and much more. The frequent comment was, “Anytime anybody needs anything, they call Andy.” In early 2011, as the nearby Walmart became a superstore, Andy worried that the lack of a safe walkway from the Vintage Senior Apartments to that store could lead to a tragic accident. Andy took action, gathering over 100 signatures on a petition to the Sequim City Council asking that a safe sidewalk be constructed along Brackett Road.

When asked why he became involved, he replied: “I’m trying to do some good before I die.” Andy was persistent. His persistence was rewarded. The sidewalk was completed in less than a year. He thought a bench would be welcome. Today, you can sit on Andy’s bench anytime. When Andy heard that anyone from the Vintage needed a ride to the doctor, he was the taxi, and that is the sweetest story of all. When Gladys Salley asked the Vintage manager if there was anyone who could take her to a medical appointment, she was told: “We will call Andy.” Gladys did not know Andy, but that was soon to change. Andy began to take Gladys for coffee and breakfast at McDonald’s. Soon, he began to drive her all around Sequim, telling her the history of Sequim. Gladys, a native of Monroe, Louisiana, had only been in Sequim for a few years and appreciated the information, as well as the company. At Gladys’ request, those drives often took the couple to the Cock-a-Doodle Doughnuts shop in Port Angeles. The friendship turned into a courtship and then a marriage proposal and a wedding in September 2013 in that very doughnut shop. The story of the wed-

ce Voted 1 Pla 2008 - 2015 Home Best Funeral nty in Clallam Cou

ding of this 93-year-old groom and 90-year-old bride made news beyond the Olympic Peninsula. This newspaper covered the event as well as a news crew from KOMO-TV in Seattle and “The Jay Leno Show” gave the newlyweds a shoutout. The newlyweds immediately drove to the Leavenworth, Washington, area to visit family. Andy was eager to show his new bride the ranch lands near Mansfield where he lived and worked for so many years. The couple made additional visits to family in Texas and California. Andy enjoyed sharing his ranching life with John Stevens, Gladys’ nephew, at his ranch in Bay City, Texas, near Houston. From there, the couple flew to Southern California to drive the famous state Highway 1 along the coast to visit a longtime friend from the Vintage Apartments who was living in Oceanside, California. During his life, Andy unfailingly went out of his way to be kind, as many people throughout this state will agree. Andy is survived by his wife, Gladys; his sisters, Lorena, Mary and Clara; his brother, Ben; his daughter, Darlene (Dale); sons Joe (Dorothy) and Richard (Jean); nine grandchildren; and numerous great-grandchildren. Preceding him in death were his wives Catherine and Gert; and son David.

COL. GERALD BAILEY BOBZIEN April 16, 1928 March 2, 2016 Col. Gerald Bailey Bobzien, an 87-year-old resident of Port Angeles, passed away at home March 2, 2016, due to natural causes. He was born to Clifford Bobzien and Florence Bailey Bobzien on April 16, 1928, in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. He served as a U.S. Marine at the end of World War II and went on to earn a bachelor’s degree in political science from Oklahoma University. After college, Gerald joined the U.S. Army as

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les, is in charge of arrangements. Resident Catherine M. www.harper-ridgeview Galuska died of age-related funeralchapel.com causes at Park View Villas in Port Angeles. She was 87. William Ray Services: A rosary will Heckman be recited at Queen of Angels Church, 209 W. 11th Jan. 28, 1926 — April 4, 2016 St., Port Angeles, at William Ray Heckman 10:20 a.m. today with a died of age-related causes funeral Mass at 11 a.m. at his Port Angeles home. with Pastor Dennis Robb He was 90. officiating. Services: Memorial at A reception in the parish the Port Angeles Masonic hall will be at noon. Temple, 622 S. Lincoln St., A graveside service will at 2 p.m. Saturday, May 7. follow at Ocean View CemDrennan-Ford Funeral etery, 3127 W. 18th St., Port Home, Port Angeles, is in Angeles, at 1:30 p.m. charge of arrangements. Harper-Ridgeview www.drennanford.com Jan. 26, 1929 — March 25, 2016

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an officer. He served in Korea as well as two tours of duty in Vietnam, serving with “The Mighty Ninth.” He received a Bronze Star for two citations of heroism. Col. Bobzien married Norma Jean Vite on June 4, 1949. He enjoyed golfing at Peninsula Golf Club as well as tennis. He is survived by his daughters, Barbara (husband William) Parfitt and Nancy Bobzien; brother Don Bobzien of Oklahoma City; and grandchildren Anne Parfitt and Liam Parfitt. He was preceded in death by his wife, Norma, who passed away in 2012.

Death Notices

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Also, Bailey M. Powers, Margaret C. Prince, Lee J. Rasore, Angela M. Rausch, Jordan A. Reabold, Christopher M. Reis, Joshua Rhoades, Sarah E. Robbins, Ann L. Robertson, Wihinnapewin Robideau, Jill C. Rochna, Nils Rognlien, William B. Ross, Lucas William Rowland, Miguel A. Salguero, Saiful Nizam Salim, John D. Sams, Mason Saunders, Sierra R. Saxe, Sydney M. Scelzi, Kelin Schaafsma, Taylor E. Sebring, Ruochen Shen, Brian M. Soiseth, Nathan M. Spears, Mia Shea Steben, Janelle-Rose Stevenson, Suharto, Amir Huziq Sulaiman, Reannen N. Summers, Chanise M. Sykes, Desmonda Tambunan, Megan N. Thierry, Andrew G. Thomas, Benjamin D. Thomas, Samuel D. Tjepkema, Tenille M. Tosland, Christine D. Vanproyen, Roxanne R. Venske, Heidi E. Vereide, Joanna Vidals, Niklaus A. Von Houck, Austin C. Wagner, Wendy R. Walker, Patra Rasuna Wanandi, Yiding Wang, Cicely C. Warnick, Madalyn J. Warren, Stephanie J. Watts, Rachel I. Webb, Micah W. Weller, Angela M. Wendelken, Cindy M. Westmoreland, Michele M. Whan, Margaret E. Whitehead, Luthfan Wicaksono, Tim C. Wilson, Seth A. Wonderly, Cameron J. Wood, Nicole L. Woody, King Huen Yiu and Coby R. Yoshimura.

Death and Memorial Notice

Death and Memorial Notice ANDREW G. ‘ANDY’ NILLES

Shawnda M. Hicks, Clara S. Hill, Zion D. Hilliker, Leonard J. Hitz, Ariel K. Hodge, Alex M. Holloway, Donika J. Huls, Evan D. Huxtable, Hayden T. James, Pepe Jaquez, Christopher J. Jeffko, Nur Amanina Johari, Jordan G. Johnson, Athaniel J. Johnston, Juan JuanAgustin, Jerrika J. Kalamau, Mary J. Kheriaty, Lily M. Kimple, Morgan M. King, Ashley M. Knight, Victoria L. Kuch, Amber A. Lacey, Baoxin Lai, Makinzie J. Lang, Joseph Larrechea, Amanda E. Larson, Storm I. Laster, Noraniah Binti Launah, Tuan Anh Le, Ho Man Leung, Lok Sun Lew, TzeYu Lin, Yikun Liu, Cole E. Lovekamp, Jianben Luo, Jennifer L. Malone, Jodi L. Marler, Forrest Maynock, Slade Z. McLaughlin, Michael J. McMurray, Jessica N. Meek, Carla M. Meister, Noemi Mendez, Samantha T. Metcalf, Jordanne E. Michael, Ashley L. Miller, Yela E. Minor, Ikram Mohd-Hassan, Nurulain Mohd-Salleh, Nur Ain Sha Mohd-Yasim, Shwu Jia Mok, Shwu Yen Mok, Patricia K. Mosley, Sarah E. Moss, Liam Moynihan, Ryan P. Nestor, Coltan M. Newton, Anh Tu Nguyen, Genevieve G. Orr, Richard A. Overton, Kaylynn M. Parks, Konnor J. Parrish, Lindsey C. Patry, Rose M. Patton, Kathleen V. Perry and Long Chau PhamNguyen.

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North Olympic Peninsula Death Notices and Death and Memorial Notice obituaries appear online at www.peninsuladailynews.com

■ Death and Memorial Notice obituaries chronicle a deceased’s life. Call 360-452-8435 Monday through Friday. A form is at www. peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.” ■ Death Notices, in which summary information about the deceased, including service information and mortuary, appears once at no charge. For further information, call 360-417-3527.


Fun ’n’ Advice

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Dilbert

Classic Doonesbury (1986)

Frank & Ernest

Garfield

DEAR ABBY: I need some advice DEAR ABBY about quitting smoking. I am the father of an only child By the time you and husband to a wonderful wife. Abigail return, the urge But for some reason, I have not Van Buren will have subsided. been able to find the motivation to Mine did. quit. And one more I know smoking is bad for my thing: If you fall off health, and I don’t want to endanger the wagon (and my child’s health any longer. you may), think I have tried the gum, the patch and even prescription meds. about watching My willpower just isn’t strong and your child graduI can’t quit, no matter what I try. ate from high I need the right inspiration. Can school or college, you help me stop this nasty habit? getting married Sick of It in Missouri and playing with your grandchildren. Dear Sick of It: I’ll try. As a forYour chances of doing those mer smoker, I’ll share what worked things will be better if you’re not a for me: cold turkey. smoker. First, clean house. Get rid of all Then get back on that wagon and the cigarettes you have stashed at start over again. home, in your car and at your workThat’s how I quit, and the third place. (Yes, even the pack you “fortime I did it, it worked. (Clearly, I do got” in your jacket pocket.) not have willpower of cast iron.) Realize that your body is satuIf I can do it, believe me, so can rated with nicotine and it must be you. flushed out. Drinking lots of water Please write again in six months for the first month will help you and let me know you’re tobacco-free, accomplish that. Then, choose one day when you too. will go entirely smoke-free. I’m rooting for you. Understand going in that you will crave your “fix.” Dear Abby: Can you really learn When that craving hits, if you to love someone you don’t find physimust put something in your mouth, cally attractive? chew (non-nicotine) gum, go brush Twitter Fan of Abby your teeth or eat a crunchy vegetable (carrot sticks, celery). Dear Twitter Fan: You may If you can manage to do this for learn to love the person for his or her just one day, you can do it for finer qualities, but I don’t think you another one. And then another, etc. Accept that you are an addict and can “learn” to find someone physithat your “sobriety” is something you cally attractive if the chemistry simwill have to cling to with determina- ply isn’t there. ________ tion. Eventually the impulse to grab a Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, cigarette will fade, but every now also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was and then, you may have an urge to founded by her mother, the late Pauline Philsmoke that comes out of left field. lips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. When that happens, get up and Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com. walk out of the room.

by Lynn Johnston

by G.B. Trudeau

by Bob and Tom Thaves

by Jim Davis

The Last Word in Astrology ❘ Red and Rover

Rose is Rose

ARIES (March 21-April 19): A well-thought-out plan will be easy to execute. Plan to celebrate with someone you love. A romantic encounter can turn into a promise that will give you something to look forward to. Mix business with pleasure. 3 stars

by Brian Basset

ling your emotions. Keep busy doing the things that challenge you and can help make you a better person. Altering or updating your image will lift your spirits. Plan a romantic evening or attend a social event. 2 stars

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. TAURUS (April 20-May 22): Ask questions and 20): Let others know what engage in discussions that you are willing to give and will help you better underhow you would like to stand a personal situation move forward. Openness or project you want to purwill help you avoid disapsue. Don’t get angry if pointment later on. Plan a someone is aggressive. A fun adventure with some- compassionate response one you love. 3 stars will bring the best results. 5 stars GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Get involved in someLIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. thing that will make you 22): Dealing with institufeel good. A charitable act tions, property or contracwill result in meeting some- tual matters is favored. one who sparks your inter- Look for alternative ways to est. A partnership will handle assets, or sell off develop that promises possessions that are taking experience and a chance up space and are no lonto put your skills to good ger of use to you. A use. 3 stars change in an important relationship will benefit you CANCER (June 21-July over the long term. 3 stars 22): Expand your interests and change things around SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. at home to accommodate 21): Offering help to the something you enjoy doing. underdog will lead to an Your intuition will not let unusual encounter with you down. Follow your gut someone unique. Your feeling when dealing with insight and compassion will friends and family matters, attract greater interest in and you will get good your personal and profesresults. 4 stars sional life. 3 stars

by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer

ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): SAGITTARIUS (Nov. You’ll have trouble control- 22-Dec. 21): Uncertainty

Dennis the Menace

B7

Smoker who’s tried everything makes last-gasp effort

by Scott Adams

For Better or For Worse

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

by Hank Ketcham

Pickles

by Brian Crane

The Family Circus

by Eugenia Last

can turn into a costly mistake if you believe what others tell you. Ask questions and go to the source in order to get the facts and make wise decisions. Romance is favored. 3 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Keep an open mind when dealing with friends and relatives, but don’t let anyone push you around or take advantage of you. You can make positive changes at home that will add to your comfort or increase your personal profits. 5 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Use your talents to reach your goals, and put more effort into perfecting what you enjoy doing most. Don’t let anyone discourage you from following your dreams. Focus on physical selfimprovements. Embrace personal changes and new beginnings. 2 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Rely on your own efforts to get things done. If you count on others, you will be let down. Reconnect with people you have worked with or enjoyed being around in the past, and you will discover you still have plenty in common. 3 stars

by Bil and Jeff Keane


B8

WeatherWatch

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016 Neah Bay 50/43

Bellingham 68/46 g

Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 64/46

Port Angeles GALE W ATCH 64/44

Forks 65/42

Olympics Freeze level: 11,500 feet

Sequim 67/44

Port Ludlow 70/47

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

National forecast Nation TODAY

Yesterday Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 60 45 0.00 13.24 Forks 65 54 0.00 48.69 Seattle 69 50 0.00 19.68 Sequim 63 45 0.00 5.33 Hoquiam 69 55 0.00 38.86 Victoria 61 48 0.00 15.04 Port Townsend 64 48 **0.00 8.51

Forecast highs for Friday, April 8

Aberdeen 66/45

TONIGHT SATURDAY

Low 44 56/43 Clouds blanket Until the sun the area parts them

Marine Conditions Strait of Juan de Fuca: W morning wind 15 to 25 kt rising to 25 to 35 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft building to 4 to 6 ft. W evening wind 30 to 40 kt easing to 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 5 to 7 ft subsiding to 2 to 4 ft. Ocean: NW morning wind 5 to 15 kt rising to 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft building to 3 to 5 ft. W swell 5 ft at 11 seconds. NW evening wind 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 3 to 5 ft. W swell 8 ft at 12 seconds.

Tides

Last

New

First

SUNDAY

MONDAY

60/43 Expect more partial brightness

56/42 Until more clouds join in

TUESDAY

54/42 And stick around another day

Washington TODAY

Billings 75° | 40°

San Francisco 65° | 55°

Denver 69° | 39°

Chicago 41° | 34°

Atlanta 64° | 48°

El Paso 76° | 55° Houston 81° | 56°

Miami 85° | 66°

Cold

Seattle 74° | 52° Tacoma 76° | 51°

Olympia 78° | 47° Astoria 63° | 50°

ORE.

7:55 p.m. 6:34 a.m. 9:50 p.m. 8:17 a.m.

Nation/World

Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Spokane Atlantic City 76° | 45° Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Yakima Bismarck 80° | 46° Boise Boston Brownsville © 2016 Wunderground.com Buffalo Burlington, Vt.

CANADA Victoria 67° | 48°

Prc

.17 .09

Otlk Rain PCldy Clr Cldy PCldy Clr Rain Clr Rain PCldy PCldy Clr Clr Rain PCldy Cldy Rain

.41 .29 .01 .37 .15 .02

TOMORROW High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 2:13 a.m. 9.8’ 8:51 a.m. -1.5’ 3:04 p.m. 8.5’ 8:57 p.m. 1.1’

SUNDAY High Tide Ht Low Tide 2:56 a.m. 9.7’ 9:40 a.m. 3:58 p.m. 8.1’ 9:44 p.m.

Ht -1.4’ 1.8’

Port Angeles

3:42 a.m. 7.1’ 10:09 a.m. -0.2’ 4:54 p.m. 6.8’ 10:27 p.m. 3.0’

4:18 a.m. 7.1’ 10:55 a.m. -0.7’ 5:54 p.m. 6.9’ 11:18 p.m. 3.7’

4:56 a.m. 7.0’ 11:44 a.m. 6:57 p.m.

-1.0’ 6.9’

Port Townsend

5:19 a.m. 8.8’ 11:22 a.m. -0.2’ 6:31 p.m. 8.4’ 11:40 p.m. 3.3’

5:55 a.m. 8.8’ 7:31 p.m. 8.5’ 12:08 p.m. -0.8’

6:33 a.m. 8.6’ 12:31 a.m. 8:34 p.m. 8.5’ 12:57 p.m.

4.1’ -1.1’

Dungeness Bay*

4:25 a.m. 7.9’ 10:44 a.m. -0.2’ 5:37 p.m. 7.6’ 11:02 p.m. 3.0’

5:01 a.m. 7.9’ 11:30 a.m. -0.7’ 6:37 p.m. 7.7’ 11:53 p.m. 3.7’

5:39 a.m. 7.7’ 7:40 p.m. 7.7’ 12:19 p.m.

-1.0’

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

641567024

IN STOCK NOW! Subaru KOENIG 3501 HWY 101, E. PORT ANGELES

Since 1975

360.457.4444 • 800.786.8041

www.koenigsubaru.com

Warm Stationary

Pressure Low

High

Apr 13 Apr 22

Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonset today Moonrise tomorrow

Lo 40 42 43 37 43 49 46 41 48 43 47 37 43 39 64 44 30

New York 50° | 43°

Detroit 43° | 27°

Washington D.C. 57° | 41°

Los Angeles 66° | 58°

Full

TODAY High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 1:31 a.m. 9.7’ 8:03 a.m. -1.2’ 2:13 p.m. 8.7’ 8:12 p.m. 0.6’

LaPush

Minneapolis 36° | 28°

Fronts

Hi 44 75 75 49 55 67 48 81 53 66 74 56 71 41 83 48 39

The Lower 48

Cloudy

TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:

Cartography by Keith Thorpe / © Peninsula Daily News

Apr 29 May 6

Pt. Cloudy

Seattle 74° | 52°

Almanac Brinnon 74/44

Sunny

-10s

Casper 68 Charleston, S.C. 68 Charleston, W.Va. 71 Charlotte, N.C. 60 Cheyenne 65 Chicago 50 Cincinnati 66 Cleveland 62 Columbia, S.C. 69 Columbus, Ohio 65 Concord, N.H. 43 Dallas-Ft Worth 79 Dayton 64 Denver 71 Des Moines 57 Detroit 55 Duluth 35 El Paso 80 Evansville 68 Fairbanks 51 Fargo 40 Flagstaff 66 Grand Rapids 47 Great Falls 64 Greensboro, N.C. 60 Hartford Spgfld 44 Helena 65 Honolulu 80 Houston 79 Indianapolis 64 Jackson, Miss. 77 Jacksonville 74 Juneau 46 Kansas City 62 Key West 81 Las Vegas 88 Little Rock 74 Los Angeles 88

2016 SUBARU FORESTER

-0s

0s

10s

20s 30s 40s

50s 60s

70s

80s 90s 100s 110s

Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press

24 60 47 51 39 36 45 42 53 44 37 51 43 36 37 41 29 54 46 30 34 29 35 32 51 39 45 70 49 40 47 61 41 38 74 65 49 59

Clr Louisville .13 PCldy Lubbock .05 Rain Memphis .34 PCldy Miami Beach Clr Midland-Odessa .21 Cldy Milwaukee .16 Rain Mpls-St Paul .80 Rain Nashville .46 Clr New Orleans .20 Rain New York City Rain Norfolk, Va. Clr North Platte .16 Rain Oklahoma City Clr Omaha .01 Rain Orlando .17 Cldy Pendleton .23 Snow Philadelphia Cldy Phoenix .20 Cldy Pittsburgh PCldy Portland, Maine .12 Snow Portland, Ore. Cldy Providence .43 Cldy Raleigh-Durham PCldy Rapid City .37 PCldy Reno Rain Richmond Clr Sacramento Cldy St Louis Clr St Petersburg .23 Rain Salt Lake City Clr San Antonio .04 PCldy San Diego .16 Rain San Francisco Clr San Juan, P.R. PCldy Santa Fe Cldy St Ste Marie PCldy Shreveport Cldy Sioux Falls

69 77 72 79 76 48 43 66 77 48 61 67 74 60 78 72 54 97 67 38 74 42 63 64 74 60 88 59 81 63 82 76 86 86 71 35 79 42

49 43 48 69 47 34 33 44 58 44 52 44 44 34 61 42 48 71 45 33 47 40 55 43 46 53 55 42 67 43 48 63 61 74 40 29 46 28

2016 SUBARU LEGACY

à 101 in Thermal, Calif. Ä 9 in Mount Washington, N.H.

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

43 40 Cldy Syracuse PCldy Tampa 82 67 .36 PCldy Topeka 65 48 .10 Clr Tucson 94 69 PCldy Tulsa 73 47 .06 Snow Washington, D.C. 57 51 Rain Wichita 71 49 .19 Cldy Wilkes-Barre 48 43 Clr Wilmington, Del. 51 47 Rain Rain _______ Clr Hi Lo Clr Clr Auckland 69 57 .08 Cldy Beijing 85 44 Clr Berlin 57 36 Rain Brussels 53 40 Cldy Cairo 103 82 Rain Calgary 75 42 .05 Rain Guadalajara 92 55 Clr Hong Kong 79 71 .01 Rain Jerusalem 79 65 .09 PCldy Johannesburg 67 48 Clr Kabul 62 42 PCldy London 54 40 Rain 81 57 Cldy Mexico City 40 23 .36 Rain Montreal 56 43 Cldy Moscow 99 73 Clr New Delhi Paris 56 38 Clr Rio de Janeiro 88 73 Cldy 69 49 Clr Rome .34 Rain San Jose, CRica 85 65 78 64 PCldy Sydney 71 49 .39 Cldy Tokyo 38 22 Clr Toronto Clr Vancouver 71 47

.02 .70

Rain Cldy Clr Cldy PCldy .03 Rain Clr Rain Rain

Otlk Rain Clr PCldy PCldy/Sh PCldy Clr PCldy Sh Clr Cldy/Sh Cldy/Sh PCldy/Sh PCldy Rain/Snow PCldy Hazy PCldy/Sh PCldy Sh/Ts PCldy PCldy PCldy Wind/Snow PCldy

RATES AS LOW AS

0

%

*

APR

*RATES AS LOW AS 0% APR AVAILABLE ON ALL NEW 2016 SUBARU FORESTER MODELS FOR UP TO 36 MONTHS ONLY. RATES AS LOW AS 0% APR AVAILABLE ON ALL NEW 2016 SUBARU LEGACY MODELS FOR UP TO 48 MONTHS ONLY. CANNOT BE COMBINED WITH ANY OTHER INCENTIVE. FINANCING FOR WELL-QUALIFIED APPLICANTS ONLY. LENGTH OF CONTRACT IS LIMITED. SUBJECT TO CREDIT APPROVAL, VEHICLE INSURANCE APPROVAL AND VEHICLE AVAILABILITY. NO DOWN PAYMENT REQUIRED. MUST TAKE DELIVERY FROM RETAILER STOCK BY APRIL 30, 2016. SALE PRICE DOES NOT INCLUDE TAX, LICENSE AND A NEGOTIABLE DEALER DOCUMENTATION FEE UP TO $150 MAY BE ADDED TO THE SALE PRICE. PHOTOS FOR ILLUSTRATION PURPOSES ONLY. NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS. VINS POSTED AT DEALERSHIP. SEE KOENIG SUBARU FOR DETAILS. AD EXPIRES 4/30/15.

641565553



Classified

C2 FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

DOWN 1 Failed miserably 2 Industry leaders 3 Fan letter? 4 Meaning 5 Industry leaders

By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle — horizontally, vertically, diagonally and even backward. Find them, circle each letter of the word and strike it off the list. The leftover letters spell the WONDERWORD. COACHELLA VALLEY MUSIC AND ARTS FESTIVAL Sol.: 11 letters

E M P I R E P O L O C L U B S

S N P E L T T U H S L L I D E

A E T O Y U M A P A A B R T R

I R Z E H L A E B U S A O N E

S N A I R P C N N P Y N O E T

R W D H R T I N O E N D D T A

E W O H S A T E R E Y L O E M I T O S A A O I O G P S P R M A S V A U H I G D S N E N N E G C L M I D O ‫ ګ ګ‬ O F E ‫ ګ ګ‬ S D B U F T U O I R T E L L O E H T W I

I E K A C P U C S E P N A T S

S E C N A D A S E E V M T R T

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

By MaryEllen Uthlaut

6 Prepare tuna, in a way 7 Converse, e.g. 8 Take in 9 Quaker pronoun 10 It may be skillfully created by one who’s all thumbs 11 Rests 12 Acute care letters 15 Eponymous skater Paulsen 17 Ring decision 20 One putting on an act 25 Home of Norway’s royal family 27 Bank holding: Abbr. 28 Carafe kin 29 __ Tin Tin 30 Shaggy-tailed bovid 31 First of September? 32 Lot of trouble? 33 “A Hard Road to Glory” writer 34 Merrie __ England

4/8/16 Thursday’s Puzzle Solved

A M O J A V E U I S S T A G E

O G R E G N U O L C O B C C R 4/8

Annual, April, Bands, Bars, Camping, Court, Cupcake, Dance, Dome, Empire Polo Club, Entertainment, Food, Games, Gobi, Hip-hop, Indio, Lounge, Mojave, Music, Oasis, Outdoor, Passes, Paul, Pinball, Prizes, Raffle, Rock, Rose, Sahara, Security, Shops, Showers, Shuttle, Spectators, Stage, Tent, Theater, Tollett, Twister, Vineyards, Water, Yuma Yesterday’s Answer: Cavalli THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

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

SMIPK ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

35 Plant bristle 36 French narrative poem 37 Like some stocks, briefly 41 Misspoke, as lines 42 Surround 45 Rachmaninoff’s “__-tableaux” 46 Light-sensitive layer

4/8/16

47 __ spoon 49 Upholstered piece 51 Fancy tie 52 Hotel amenity 53 Derby, perhaps 54 Some bills 55 Chances 56 Speck 57 It may be mined 58 Objective reference

WHDERS

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

ACROSS 1 Walks, on scorecards 4 Rehab hurdle 7 Calm 13 “Well, __-di-dah!” 14 Deli choice 15 Ducks’ home 16 Some Anne Rice novels 18 Dupes 19 *Assist Charles M. Schulz? 21 Completely 22 Wapiti 23 ID checker 24 “__ any drop to drink”: Coleridge 26 Surface 32 *Free ticket given to Target Field players? 35 Burn soothers 38 Modern reaction to a riot? 39 Group of species 40 *Timepiece at a stag party? 43 Important Philippines export 44 Bros, e.g. 45 Fraction of a joule 48 Not allow to atrophy 50 “My vegetable love should grow / __ than empires ... ”: Andrew Marvell 53 *Law office? 58 Option play option, in football 59 Home of the god Pan 60 Beverage sometimes served with mint 61 Besides 62 Inning trio 63 Botched (up) 64 Model of industry 65 Put into words

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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

Answer here: Yesterday’s

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: PETTY EVOKE CUSTOM DAINTY Answer: After being so rude to the doctor, he was about to become an — OUT-PATIENT



Classified

SNEAK A PEEK

C4 FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD:

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS s

CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507

s

VISIT: WWW.PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM

T O DAY ’ S H O T T E S T N E W C L A S S I F I E D S ! FURNITURE: Need star ter fur niture? For Sale: Various furniture to be sold together for one low price. Some made n e e d p a i n t e d . B r ow n sectional, large wood coffee table, comfy c h a i r, c u r i o c a b i n e t , washer and dryer, white bookshelf, small desk, small ottoman, end table, kitchen table. All for $700. (503)910-2420.

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

G A R AG E S A L E : Fr i . S a t . , 8 - 3 p m , 8 3 2 W. 1 4 t h . D ay c a r e e s t a t e sale.

CHEV: ‘54, 2 ton steel bed and hoist, grain racks, runs and drives, with parts truck. $750. (360)683-7651

EXPERIENCED dental assistant needed for a small comfortable general dental practice in Port Townsend. Have WA state dental assisting license and CPR/AED cer tificate. Please send resume to info@cunningtondental.com

G A R AG E S A L E : S a t . only, 9-2pm, 646 Osborn Rd. (N. end of Vogt). Skiing, camping, cycling, household and kitchen items, photo, electronics and misc. Cash only.

GARAGE SALE: Sat.Sun., 8-4pm, 1921 W. Hwy 101. Tr uck Town Building. BIG SALE! Many tools and materials including doors, windows, a/c units, compressor, wash maching, RV parts and more. Lots of household items and free stuff.

RUGER: 9mm, Model 0 8 6 0 5 , n eve r f i r e d , $400. 360-460-8149 RUMMAGE and Bake Sale: Sat. only, 9-2 p.m., First Baptist Church, 105 W. 6th. Vendors too!

R U M M AG E S A L E a t Calvary Chapel - Sat. 9 Granite fabricator/in- -3 pm. 91 S Boyce Rd. staller apprentice need- Proceeds fund Mexico ed. Must have valid li- Mission. cense and be a team player. Call 417-5447 SATURN: Sedan, ‘97, between 9-2 M-F ve r y c l e a n , r u n s bu t needs engine work, KEYBOARD: Yamaha, many new parts, great Ez-220, light up music tires. $800/obo. piano keyboard - all in(360)460-4723 struments. Almost new. $135. (360)504-2999. TELESCOPE with tr ipod, Vortex 80mm spotMOTORHOME: South- ting scope, adjustable wind Stor m, ‘96, 30’, tripod, excellent condi51K, great condition, lots tion. $800/obo. of extras. $17,500. (360)797-2114 (360)681-7824

CLASSIFIED@PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM

Want to Hire: Machine consultant. Desire expert in 4-roll plate rolling....both CNC and manual. Want info on design of machines to roll truncated cones and reticulated brass and steel strip metal ....AND....Input for Ringrollers to roll 5� AL channel, 2+� angle iron and steel rope twist material etc. Best to have years o f ex p e r i e n c e r o l l i n g every conceivable material and shape. Vintage Hardware & Lighting 360-379-9030

GARAGE SALE: Sat.9-3 p.m., Sun. 10-2 p.m., 1118 Cedar St. Collections of Winnie the Pooh, OZ and vintage Disney, glassware, linens, dolls and lots of fun stuff. Park on Cedar.

OPERATION MANAGE R : Pa r t - t i m e C F O needed / operation mana g e r. E x p e r i e n c e r e quired, 20 hours a week Batson Enter prises, W h o l e s a l e C o m p a n y. Sequim, WA. (360)681-2381

RIDING mower/tractor: Craftsman 3000, 23hp with 48� mower/bagger, 42� grader blade, 42� Youth Services Asst and lawn sweeper and 10� WANTED: Riding lawnmoldboard plow. $700 RECLINER: Large leath- mowers, working or not. Temp Digitization Asst Positions Available. Info o f f e r s w e l c o m e . er exc. cond. $350/obo. Will pickup for free. @ www.nols.org (360)452-2906 or 460Kenny (360)775-9779 (360)457-7803 8157

3020 Found

3023 Lost

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

FOUND: Cat, female, L O S T : G o l d U n i c o r n gold, small. 4th and K r i n g , Fe b / M a r c h , b e tween PA and Sequim. St. area. (360)457-1215 (360)683-9426

3023 Lost

LOST: Watch, Longines w r i s t wa t c h . Fa r m e r s Market Area P.A. April 2. LOST: 4/5/2016 - Leo, REWARD 360-504-2354 cream colored, male cat 1600 block of W. Laurid- 4026 Employment sen. 360-775-5154. General L O S T: C a t , 1 1 0 0 bl k ADMINISTRATIVE Hwy 101, by Fairmount, DIRECTOR Sassy is mostly white, S e q u i m ’s Fr e e C l i n i c spayed. (360)775-5154 seeks part-time experienced leader. Qualified LOST: Cat, Mister, white applicant will have good -orange, a stumpy tail. communication skills, Hardys and Anytime Fit- experience with developness, 4/5/16. 775-5154 ment and budget management. For further info LOST: DOG, 100 block see website at sequimL o p e z a n d L a u r e l , freeclinic.org. No phone French Bulldog, black- c a l l s . D e a d l i n e A p r i l white. (360)775-5154 15th.

7 CEDARS RESORT IS NOW HIRING FOR THE FOLLOWING PT/FT POSITIONS • F & B Manager (FT) • Cocktail Server(PT) • Deli/Espresso Cashier (PT) • Host/Busser (Seasonal) CAD • Napoli’s Cashier / Attendant (PT) • Slot Cashier/Slot Attendant (PT) • Wine Bar Server (PT Weekends) For more information and to apply online, please visit our website at

www.7cedars resort.com Native American preference for qualified candidates

ACCEPTING APPLICAT I O N S fo r C A R R I E R RO U T E Po r t A n g e l e s Area. Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Interested parties must be 18 yrs of age, have valid Washington State Driver’s License, proof of insurance, and reliable vehicle. Early morning delivery Monday-Friday and Sunday. Apply in person 305 W 1st St, or send resume to tsorensen@ soundpublishing.com NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE. L O C A L S U RV E Y I N G Co. accepting applications for Party Chief, AutoCAD Drafter and Chainman. Willing to train chainman. Send resume to: info@clarkland.com

HOW LONG WILL THIS AD RUN?

BOOKEEPER/Payroll Specialist. C PA f i r m i n S e q u i m seeking bookeeper payroll specialist, PT in April and May and FT beginning in mid-May. Must have minimal 3 yr. worki n g ex p e r i e n c e, s o l i d wor king knowledge in Quickbooks. Send resume to: gery@bell-futch cpas.com

Caregivers: Sherwood Assisted Living is looking for caring and compassionate caregivers to become a par t of our team and join our mission of enhancing the l i ve s o f a g i n g a d u l t s throughout our community. We have a variety of shifts available with c o m p e t i t i v e p ay a n d benefits. Find out more about this fulfilling career opportunity. Apply at 550 CAREGIVERS NEEDED W Hendrickson Road or $ 1 0 0 h i r e o n b o n u s , call Casey, $11.93 hr., benefits. No (360)683-3348 experience. Free training. Caregivers Home Office / Assistant Care. 457-1644, 683Manager 7377, 379-6659 Hearing Health Practice seeking the right indiHOME HEALTH CUSTOMER SERVICE v i d u a l fo r a f u l l - t i m e Full-time, rotating week- Front Office/Assistant ends. Experience with M a n a g e r. M u s t h ave : home health equipment Culture of Caring, Detail and/or college degree Oriented, Team Player, p r e fe r r e d bu t n o t r e - Phones and Microsoft quired. People person a Office Experience. Pay must. Competitive salary commensurate with exand benefits. Apply at perience. Jim’s Pharmacy, 424 E. Email resumes to: jdiottavio@ahaanet.com 2nd St., P.A. EOE.

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

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General

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

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

Deadline: Friday at 4 p.m. Ad 1

Ad 2

Address Phone No

21

$

Mail to:

Peninsula Daily News Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 305 West 1st St., Port Angeles Port Angeles, WA 98362 Sequim Gazette/Peninsula Daily News 147 W. Washington, Sequim or FAX to: (360) 417-3507 NO PHONE CALLS

95

Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com

*Up to 90 Days Maximum (Only $4.00 for each additional line).

EXPERIENCED dental assistant needed for a small comfortable general dental practice in Port Townsend. Have WA state dental assisting license and CPR/AED cer tificate. Please send resume to info@cunningtondental.com Granite fabricator/installer apprentice needed. Must have valid license and be a team player. Call 417-5447 between 9-2 M-F

Sherwood Assisted Livi n g i s l o o k i n g fo r L i censed Nurses, full time, with benefits, great work e nv i r o n m e n t . P r ov i d e nursing services to residents. Coordinate resident care with residents, families, and physicians. Also, looking for par t time nurses. Stop in a fill out an application at 550 W Hendrickson Road or call Donna at 360-6833348

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

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

BECOME A CERTIFIED NURSING ASSISTANT!

Crestwood & Sequim Health and Rehabilitation will be holding in-house CNA Classes beginning May 16, 2016 and spaces are running out!!! If you are interested please visit us online at

www.crestwoodskillednursing.com or www.sequimskillednursing.com or call for more information.

631521908

PeninsulaMARKETPLACE A

Customer Service Specialist 1 - Sequim. Info. @ www.nols.org

P O R TA B L E T O I L E T TECHNICIAN. Full time M-F, some weekends. Bill’s Plumbing, appy in person at: 425 S. 3rd. Ave., Sequim

FREE C.N.A. CLASSES

Call today for the only classified ad you’ll ever need. CALL 452-8435 OR 1-800-826-7714 http://marketplace.peninsuladailynews.com/

Bring your ads to:

All for just

Sheriff’s Office is hiring a FT Food Service/Jail Cook. **************** For a complete list of job descriptions, and to get an application, visit www.clallam.net

OPERATION MANAGE R : Pa r t - t i m e C F O needed / operation mana g e r. E x p e r i e n c e r e quired, 20 hours a week Batson Enter prises, W h o l e s a l e C o m p a n y. Sequim, WA. (360)681-2381

Name

ad. You get a 3 line ad that runs daily until you sell your truck, car, boat or motorcycle.*

IMMEDIATE OPENING

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

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

PARTS TECHNICIAN: Full-time. Sunset Hardware is currently seeking a Parts Tech. Must be familiar with tractors, mowers and other lawn equipment as well as strong computer skills. Med/den benefits, competitive pay depending on exp e r i e n c e. E x c e l l e n t customer service skills a MUST! No calls please, must pass a drug screen, weekend availability required. Please apply in person.

Clallam County Employment Opportunity

CDL DRIVERS: wanted at our Port Angeles location! Must have CDL and clean driving record. Day shift MonFr i w i t h we e k l y OT, b e n e f i t s, 4 0 1 K a n d paid time off. Apply today at www.wasteconnections.com

RUN A FREE AD FOR ITEMS PRICED $200 AND UNDER

Got a vehicle to sell? Nothing moves it faster than a guaranteed classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PROPERTY

www.peninsuladailynews.com

*COMMERCIAL VEHICLES NOT INCLUDED IN THIS SPECIAL

1116 East Lauridsen Blvd., Port Angeles

360.452.9206

02863

&&5jkh7njik5R5 & --#Ĺ€ H* (#(-/& #&3( 1-8 )'

5000900

BOOKEEPER/Payroll Specialist. C PA f i r m i n S e q u i m seeking bookeeper payroll specialist, PT in April and May and FT beginning in mid-May. Must have minimal 3 yr. worki n g ex p e r i e n c e, s o l i d wor king knowledge in Quickbooks. Send reCustomer Service Spesume to: cialist 1 - Sequim. Info. gery@bell-futch @ www.nols.org cpas.com

E-MAIL:

OR

For more information please visit us online at:

650 West Hemlock St., Sequim

360.582.2400

www.crestwoodskillednursing.com www.sequimskillednursing.com


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016 C5

4026 Employment 4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses Momma Clallam County General Wanted Clallam County Clallam County

Want to Hire: Machine consultant. Desire expert in 4-roll plate rolling....both CNC and manual. Want info on design of machines to roll truncated cones and reticulated brass and steel strip metal ....AND....Input for Ringrollers to roll 5� AL channel, 2+� angle iron and steel rope twist material etc. Best to have years o f ex p e r i e n c e r o l l i n g every conceivable material and shape. Vintage Hardware & Lighting 360-379-9030

Welder/Fabricator For in shop, structural steel and ornamental steel fabr icator in Carlsborg. Self-starter, able to work unsuperv i s e d . M u s t h ave a va l i d D L a n d g o o d driving record. Must be detail oriented. Good communication skills r e q ’d . E x p e r i e n c e req’d. MIG / TIG. FT. Wages DOE. Email resume to Kate@Allform Welding.com or fax to 360-6814465. No phone calls

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

105 Homes for Sale Clallam County 4443 sqft 3.5 Baths Custom brick home with Anderson 400 series windows and an air lock style entry. Features include, kitchen w/island & b r e a k fa s t b a r, fo r m a l dining room w/coffered ceiling, large master suite on the main level w/his & hers baths, large office w/oak flooring & built in shelves, large living room & family room each w/ fireplaces. MLS#272074 $499,500 Tom Blore 360-683-4116 PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE BEAUTY ON THE 7TH FAIRWAY 2 BD, 3.5 BA, 3150 SF On 2 lots, master suite has 2 bathrooms w/ private deck, separate guest bedroom & bathroom, rec room w/sliding glass doors to patio, extra 800+ sf bonus room w/bathroom MLS#920788/300568 $318,000 Tyler Conkle lic# 112797 (360) 683-6880 (360) 670-5978 1-800-359-8823 WINDERMERE SUNLAND

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

FSBO: 3Br, 2 Ba, upper Cherry Hill area, 2,000 Sq. ft., deck and carport, mountain and water views, walking distance t o eve r y t h i n g , n e e d s TLC. Great value, Youth Services Asst and $125,000. (360)477-2334. Temp Digitization Asst Positions Available. Info FSBO: Home in 4 Sea@ www.nols.org sons Park. 2 BD, 1 BA, 1,244 sq ft. Char ming 4080 Employment h o m e , a m u s t s e e . $153,000. 360-461-6972 Wanted ADEPT YARD CARE Mowing, weed eating (360)797-1025 Alterations and Sewing. Alterations, mending, hemming and some heavyweight s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o you from me. Call (360)531-2353 ask for B.B. Encircle Plus+ A small household service company. Providing: Homecare, Hospice, 24hr C a r e , h o u s e ke e p i n g , some yard work, VRBO’s, and Windows! EncircleSequim@outlook.com or (360)8087368 ENVIOUS GREENS Currently accepting NEW lawn mowing acc o u n t s. S e q u i m bu s i ness since 2010 (Licensed & Insured) Booked solid in other Depts. Call for a MOWING bid today Owner / Operator Mike: (360)808-9638 Father & Sons’ Landscape Service since 1992. 1 time clean ups, pruning, lawn maintenance, weeding, organic lawn renovations. (360)681-2611 FRUIT TREE EXPERT Ornamental and shrubs too. Book now for year long lawn services also. Established, many references, best rates and senior discounts P. A. a r e a o n l y. L o c a l (360)808-2146 Seamless Gutters! Call A1 NW Gutters today at 360-460-0353 for your free estimate. a1nwguttersllc @gmail.com

Gorgeous Salt Water View This is a rare opportunity for one of the best views in town. 2 Bed / 2 Bath, newly refinished floors, new windows throughout, and newer septic, all on 1.3 acres. MLS#291787 $395,000 Team Powell COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY (360)775-5826 Happy Valley Exceptional Architecture and Design in this expansive 3600 SF custom home in beautiful Happy Valley! Stunning great room with soaring two story ceilings and windows that run from floor to ceiling. Situated on nearly 1.5 acres with a workshop and a three car garage. MLS#300486 $450,000 Jim Hardie Brokers Group Real Estate Professionals (360)775-7146

Just listed! Complete and total privacy in this beautiful wooded 2 br 2 ba home. This home sits on 4.46 acres of seclusion with manicured trails throughout. Home features newer hot water tank, vinyl windows, wood stove, and new flooring. Master b a t h fe a t u r e s a n e w walk-in jetted jacuzzi shower. There is a heated separate studio that could have many uses with attached carport. MLS#300569 $274,900 Craig & Darel Tenhoff 206-853-5033 Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim

Quiet Cul De Sac .21 Acre level lot in PA, n e w e r, q u a l i t y h o m e neighborhood. power & water on property, sewer at street MLS#300333 $39,000 Team Thomsen COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY (360)808-0979

417-2810

RENTALS IN DEMAND OUR SERVICES INCLUDE:

PROPERTY EVALUATION INTERNET MARKETING For Better or For Worse QUALIFIED TENANTS RENT COLLECTION PROPERTY MAINTENANCE INSPECTIONS AUTOMATIC BANK DEPOSITS EASY ONLINE STATEMENT ACCESS

Next to Golf course 3 bdrm, 2 bth Living & family rm wood floors $995 first last damage deposit. (360)477-0710

The

VACANCY FACTOR

is at a HISTORICAL LOW

452-1326

Perfect get away 2.5 pr ivate acres with great water view of the Straits plus some Olympic Mt view. Dug well and power on site. Storage shed with washer & dryer. Will need a septic to build, but totally doable for the right person with this Classic Airstream with a composting toilet. Just listed at $99,000 MLS#300456 Harriet Reyenga Quiet area on (360) 457-0456 westside PA WINDERMERE Quiet area on the westPORT ANGELES side of Port Angeles on an oversized (.24) acre THE ORCHARDS lot with cherry & apple trees. Plenty of room for This condo, located in a g a r a g e & g a r d e n . the well planned comGreat southern exposure munity of The Orchards, on a dead end street. has an open floor plan Kitchen & bath recently w i t h a gr e a t k i t c h e n , remodeled. Save $$ on stainless steel applianccity sewer as this has a es, breakfast bar & granseptic system. Freshly ite counter tops. Tiled p a i n t e d i n s i d e & o u t . flooring and skylights. Room to par k an RV. 2nd Bedroom could be Septic inspection, pump- u s e d a s o f f i c e . T h e ing & root removal com- quality craftsmanship pleted 03/2016. Seller is throughout makes this a replacing the roof by mid lovely home. Just Listed at April. $199,000 MLS#300397 MLS#300381 $120,000 Kathy Love Holly Coburn (360)808-0384 Windermere PORT ANGELES Port Angeles REALTY (360) 457-0456

4 M A N U FA C T U R E D HOMES FOR SALE. Located at the Lake Pleasant Mobile Home and RV Park in Beaver. Offering newer 3,2 and 1 bedroom Manufactured homes available with recent upgrades. Single and double wides available. All in excellent condition and move in ready. Own for as low as $675/m. Pr ices range from $29,950 to $46,950. Financing available OAC Call (360) 808-7120

505 Rental Houses Clallam County Properties by

The

Inc.

The

VACANCY FACTOR

is at a HISTORICAL LOW

452-1326

6005 Antiques & Collectibles

M I S C : Tw o R . R . l a n terns, 1 red, NYC. $160. Inc. 1 clear, C.P. $200. Antique R.R. switch stand, signal light. $350. R.R. caboose light $500. (360)457-0758

VACANCY FACTOR

is at a HISTORICAL LOW

452-1326

BUILDING PERMITS

1111 CAROLINE ST. PORT ANGELES

WA N T E D : 3 b r. , home, in Sequim, Port LUXURY LISTING Angeles, or Port TownPerched on a hill above send, available 4/1/16. G a r d i n e r ove r l o o k i n g N e e d e d fo r 1 y e a r Discovery Bay, 2600 sq. minimum. ft. home offers many up(843)838-1491 or graded features. Kitchen (843)694-1155 has granite counter tops, large center island. Spacious living room w/gran605 Apartments i t e f i r e p l a c e , Fr e n c h Clallam County doors to swim pool/Jac u z z i . Fa m i l y r o o m w/built-in shelving, master bedroom suite w/bay Properties by view, granite fireplace & beautiful bathroom with Inc. jetted tub. SUNLAND MLS#300431/911837 OPPORTUNITY $499,000 3 BD, 2 BA ,1440 SF Walter Clark w/Good Bones, Beautiful 360-797-3653 Pastoral Southern View TOWN & COUNTRY of Mountains, Pr ivate Back Yard, Sunny Patio, One Level w/ Guest Mature Landscaping, Suite This enchanting r ural With Imagination This haven is nestled within a Cutie Could be a Beauty private leafy locale on Queen MLS#872179/292222 5+ acres. Step inside to $199,000 the spacious living room Terry Peterson w/ vaulted ceilings, skylic#107780 lights, & a wood stove. 3 (360) 683-6880 bed/2.75 bath + office. (360) 797-4802 Master suite w/ dual 1-800-359-8823 vanity, shower, & soak WINDERMERE tub. Mother-in-law suite SUNLAND w/ separate kitchen, living room w/ propane Waterview acreage stove, & laundry area. I d y l l i c w h i t e p i c k e t Just listed 2.5 acres with gated circular driveway fenced front yard w/ covered porch. Outbuild- a n d b u i l d i n g s i t e ings, carport, & garage. roughed in. Property is Wooded property could surrounded by trees for 665 Rental be cleared for bar n & total privacy. Power is in Duplex/Multiplexes the road, a well and sepanimals. Minutes from tic will be needed. No boat launch! MLS#300528 $359,900 building restrictions on this one. Great location Kelly Johnson between Sequim & Port Windermere Angeles. Newly listed at Port Angeles $69,500 MLS#300393 (360) 477-5876 Harriet Reyenga Windermere OWN A PEACEFUL Port Angeles RETREAT (360) 457-0456 3 BD 4.5 BA Over 3400 SF w/spa on deck, rec P. A . : R e n o v a t e d 2 room and 2nd finished 308 For Sale bedrooms, 1.5 bath, area each w/separate enclosed garage, W/D Lots & Acreage ba, remodeled master hookups. Mountain bedroom & kitchen, view, centrally located. e m e r g e n c y p r o p a n e View Lot For Sale By No smoking / pets. generator, gated w/code, O w n e r . Po r t A n g e l e s $875 mo. plus deposit. easy maintenance land- High School area, newly (360)457-5304 or cleared building lot. Exscape (360)460-9864 cellent views of the Strait MLS#712366/282163 of Juan de Fuca, and $575,000 Olympic Mountains. 1.5 Deb Kahle C i t y L o t s i n a g r e a t 683 Rooms to Rent lic# 47224 Roomshares neighborhood. Within (360) 683-6880 blocks of High School, (360) 918-3199 Library, Bus lines, gro- P.A. Fur nished room, 1-800-359-8823 c e r y s t o r e s, a n d j u s t untilities included. WINDERMERE (360)457-3027 minutes from downtown. SUNLAND Come see at 218 Lopez PA: 5Br, 1 3/4 bath,360° Avenue. 585-437-2535 1163 Commercial r harbor, strait and moun- o Rentals t a i n V I E W S . $ 3 9 8 K jbstrauss68@gmail.com (360)452-1208 http://lrking.com/b-street311 For Sale home.html Properties by Manufactured Homes

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

by Lynn Johnston

VISIT US AT

NEAR SEQUIM: 4 BR. 2.5 Ba, tri-level, $1200/month and $1200 dep. (707)718-3719

SEQUIM HOME IN SUNLAND (FOR SALE BY OWNER) $269,000. 106 Victoria Ct., Sequim OPEN HOUSE: APRIL 9TH, 16TH, & 23RD 1919 SqFt, Cul-de-sac. 2-3 Bed/2 Bath (Bonus Rm with built-in desk/shelves) Mstr bdrm w/Lg walk-in closet/builtins;Lg Bath w/jetted tub. 2nd Bdrm w/Bath. Sunroom. Cntrl Vac. Laundry Room. Multiple upgrades. Skylights. Wood Burning Fireplace. New Roof. Oversized 2-car Garage. Outdoor Gated Storage. 360-775-5391 or 360-681-2587. (www.FSBO.com/17834 0 for more info)

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TRUCK SHOP MECHANIC, in PA, experienced. MECHANIC WELDER FABRICATOR and DUMP TRUCK DRIVER with transfer experience, located in Quilcene. Wages DOE. Call (360)460-7292 or (360)457-9392

P ro fe s s i o n a l p r i va t e c a r e g i ve r, ove r n i g h t s available. (360)808-7061 or (360)683-0943.

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TREE CLIMBER: Exper i e n c e d , t o p p ay $ $ , Culls, Drunks and Drugg i e s n e e d n o t a p p l y. Contact Crystal. (580)641-6670.

HAND WEEDING: Yard work and hauling. $20/hr. (360) 477-1493

Private Hilltop Home This 5 bed /3.5 bath home on nearly 5 acres sits in harmony with its e nv i r o n m e n t . S p e c i a l touches like stained g l a s s w i n d ow s, wo o d trim, & strong horizontal lines draw inspiration from Frank Lloyd Wright. Kitchen w/ unique prairie style shaker cabinetry. Family room w/ rustic wood stove. Master suite w/ private deck, jetted tub, & walk-in shower. Enjoy stunning salt-water & mountain views from nearly every room. Beautiful low-maintenance landscaping in the front, deck & patio in the back. MLS#300558 $450,000 Kelly Johnson Windermere Port Angeles (360) 477-5876

by Mell Lazarus

6010 Appliances W O O D S TOV E : w i t h modular home rating. $600 call or text (360)797-4088

6035 Cemetery Plots

1329088 04/08

TRANSIT OPERATOR P O R T TO W N S E N D BASE. Jefferson Transit is currently hiring for Transit Operator. Job description, application materials and information are available by mail, on the Jefferson Transit website at jeffersontransit.com, or at the Jefferson Transit office at 63 4 Corners Road, Po r t Tow n s e n d , WA 98368. Please call 360-385-4777 x 107 if you have questions. Applications must be received no later than 5:00 pm on Monday, April 11, 2016. CDL Class B w/passenger endorsement preferred. Jefferson Transit is an equal opportunity employer.

Get Bizy Boys Lawn & Yard Care for Lawn, l o t & f i e l d m ow i n g . Landscape maintenance, trimming, pruning, Pressure washing, h a u l i n g & Tr a c t o r work. Call Tom today 460-7766 Lic# bizybbl868ma

Investment Potential! You won’t find another home like this romantic Tu d o r ove r f l ow i n g w / e l e g a n c e & p a n a c h e. Currently used as a VRBO, this 4 bed/4.5 bath home could be an exceptional investment opportunity. Each room h a s i t s ow n a t t a c h e d bathroom. Private master suite on 3rd floor. Immaculate gourmet kitchen w/ island breakfast bar, range w/ double ovens, wall oven, & much more! Spacious living r o o m w / wo o d s t ove. 2nd story deck w/ salt water views. Situated on a beautifully landscaped corner lot in the heart of Port Angeles. MLS#300518 $549,000 Kelly Johnson Windermere Port Angeles (360) 457-0456

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

The Makah Tribal Council is seeking a Registered Nurse in the Sophie Trettevick Indian Health Center located in Neah Bay, WA. Education Requirements: Must have a degree from a professional nursing program.Open until filled. For a copy of the position description and/or job application please contact tabitha.herda@makah.com or call the Personnel Office at (360) 645-2013.

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Brought to you by Thomas Building Center and Designs by Thomas.

Clallam County Ron Baer and Ron Shults, 496 Parrish Road, demo of doublewide manufactured home, $1,000. Richard Clendening, 712 Ridge View Dr., single family dwelling with attached garage, 125 gal. A/G propane tank & piping, $244,523. Olympic Peninsula Humane Society, 1745 Old Olympic Hwy, new ADA ramp, porch & stairs for existing modular structure, $3,500. Teresa and Thomas Clayton, 93 E. Seashore Lane, 120 gal. propane tank and piping, $7,790. Jacob and Jennifer Bennett, 32 Spotted Owl Lane, addition to single family dwelling; great room and storage loft, $89,545. Jarrod and Denise Huff, 2308 E. Fifth Ave., detached garage, unheated, no plumbing, $44,883. Harold and Karen M. Hawley, 110 Fencebird Lane, remove existing electric cooktop and install new gas cooktop & piping, 25 gal. tank. Gail Lynn Miller, TTE, 1252 Doe Run Road, retaining wall, approx. 200 linear feet, $22,500. Clallam County Rural Fire No. 2, 507 N. Baker St., new manufactured home placement Cornerstone Lodge, 14’ x 54’, $48,800. Ralph and Janet Meyer, 74 Meyer-Andrew Lane, new install of ductless heat pump, in additional dwelling unit, $3,428.

Port Angeles Timothy C. and Darayne E. Albright, 1424 E. Second St., new garage, $50,000. John Rickenbacher, 113 S. Chase St. (B), ductless heat pump, $3,445. Richard and Mary Cameron Trust, 604 S. Ennis St., re-roof, tear off comp, replace, $11,000. Barbara J. Saint, 1228 W. 12th St., repair water damage, remove balcony, $5,000. VMO Properties, 1230 E. First St., 1621 sq. ft. warehouse loading area, $100,000. John M. and Gail T. Ralston, 1113 Highland Ave., new single family residence, 3 bedroom, 2 bath ‘rambler,’ $144,695. -RVHSKXV - DQG &DURO / +ROW ( (LJKWK 6W DGG VHFRQG Ă RRU EDWK Tim Hanshaw, 506 E. Tenth St., 18 ft. x 28 ft. detached garage, $10,000. Rochelle Smith, 2903 W. 18th St., tear off and re-roof, $10,258. Sheila Adams, 1108 Garage E. Eighth St., ductless heat pump in detached garage, $2,950. Mitchell Von Peoderoven, 1002 E. Eighth St., ductless heat pump, $8,575. Daniel V. and Ann M. O’Rourke, 414 E. Fifth St., remove landing, add 11 ft. by 6 ft. deck, sliding door, $2,000. Terry Wollam Richard Brosius A., 2129 W. Eighth St., new insert and plumbing, $5,725. Chet M. Coburn, 3423 McDougal St., single pump ductless heat pump, $3,747.

Sequim City of Sequim, 500 N. Blake Ave., construct access road from Blake Ave. to Rhodefer with parking, $325,000. First State Investors 5200 LLC, 114 S Sequim Ave., one single face wall sign backlit ZLWK à XRUHVFHQW ODPSV DW PDLQ HQWU\ RQ 6 6HTXLP $YH RI VW 6HFXULW\ %DQN 0DU\ 6 'LFNH\ 1 2[IRUG :D\ 8QLW % DGG RQH ¾ À UH GRRU IRU SDVV WKURXJK LQ garage, $1,500. Mikell and Janice Unruh, 852 E. Spruce St., move LPG tank and add line for cookstove, $165. Safeway Inc., No. 1448, 680-F W. Washington St., installation of 9 stainless steel shelving, $4,500.

Jefferson County Edward McGuirk, 41 Molenda Lane, new roof-mounted, grid-tied PV solar panels, $0 valuation. Bruce Gleeman, 3383 West Valley Road, change of use/occupancy from heat shop with loft to dairy factory, $0 valuation. Bruce Gleeman, 3383 West Valley Road, adding plumbing and bathroom, $200. -HIIHUVRQ &RXQW\ &RXQW\ /DQGĂ€ OO 5RDG QHZ FRPPHUFLDO VODE IRU H[LVWLQJ VWRUDJH shed (24 x 25 ft. slab) within existing maintenance building, $0 valuation. -HIIHUVRQ &RXQW\ &RXQW\ /DQGĂ€ OO 5RDG UHORFDWLQJ VKLSSLQJ FRQWDLQHU WKDW KROGV recycling oil collections and antifreeze approx. 110 ft. from existing location on a pilar foundation, $28,000. Bryan Slayton, 151 Fern Gully, new single family residence with attached garage and propane tank, $224,974.

Port Townsend Jefferson County, Fairgrounds, remove frame tent; build new event center, $16,000. Beverly J. Malagon, 1042 Water St., interior staircase and roof access, $32,000. Bay Vista Condominium Condo Assn., 1707 Water St., beam post replacement, $15,000. Timothy Lawson, 1479 S. St., build detached studio/shop, $12,519.36. Timothy Lawson, 1479 S. St., SFR Lot 1, Meridian, $77,933.36. Sheila Smith, 934 Foster St., re-roof residence, $6,000.

Department Reports Area building departments report a total of 38 building permits issued from March 28 to April 3 with a total valuation of $1,590,659: Port Angeles, 14 at $369,395; Sequim, 5 at $340,668; Clallam County, 10 at $467,969; Port Townsend, 6 at $159,453; Jefferson County, 3 at $253,174.

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

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Classified

C6 FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016 6050 Firearms & Ammunition

6080 Home Furnishings

6140 Wanted & Trades

LAZY BOY SECTION- WANTED: Riding lawnAL: 5 piece L-shaped mowers, working or not. sectional with 3 recliners Will pickup for free. Kenny (360)775-9779 and a fold down table , magazine rack with two cup holders. Cloth, pre6135 Yard & 6055 Firewood, dominantly brown, multiGarden c o l o r e d fa b r i c . G o o d Fuel & Stoves condition, no smoking, no dogs allowed on this FIREWOOD: $179 deliv- sofa. $750. HE AMILY ARM ered Sequim-P.A. True (360)301-4154 ARKET cord. 3 cord special $499. (360)582-7910 RECLINER: Large leathOpen for the www.portangelesfire er exc. cond. $350/obo. Season! wood.com (360)457-7803 RUGER: 9mm, Model 0 8 6 0 5 , n eve r f i r e d , $400. 360-460-8149

T F M

6075 Heavy Equipment

6100 Misc. Merchandise

DUMP TRUCK: ‘85, Mack cab over, 5yd double cylinder with loading ramps. $5000/obo or trade (253)348-1755.

IRIS: In bloom, many colors to choose from,, $4-$10 dollars. Mon.Fr i . , 8 - 4 p. m . , 1 8 4 Coulter Rd., Sequim. (360)460-5357

6080 Home Furnishings

MISC: Flatbed utility trailer, $1,800. Mantis r o t o t i l l e r, $ 2 7 5 , o n l y used once. Old Troybuilt FURNITURE: 3 piece rototiller, needs work, l e a t h e r c o u c h , o ve r $50. (360)452-7214 stuffed chair and ottoman. Deep red leather M I S C : O u t b o a r d , ‘ 5 9 with high back cusion- Evinrude 18 hp, Fastwin ing, excellent condition. Golden Jubilee, clean. $1,000 for the set. $250. Senco compres(360)461-0663 sor, PC2016, 1.5 hp 8 gal duel tank. $600. F U R N I T U R E : N e e d Craftsman jointer with star ter fur niture? For stand. $75. Felker Tile Sale: Various furniture to master 10” saw. $500. be sold together for one Concrete snap tie shoes. low price. Some made $1 each. (360)460-2855 n e e d p a i n t e d . B r ow n sectional, large wood MISC: Pride Victor y 4 c o f f e e t a b l e , c o m f y wheel mobility scooter, c h a i r, c u r i o c a b i n e t , n ew b a t t e r i e s . $ 2 7 5 . washer and dryer, white (360)452-2118 bookshelf, small desk, small ottoman, end ta6105 Musical ble, kitchen table. All for Instruments $700. (503)910-2420.

F

MOTHER’S DAY IS COMING

8142 Garage Sales 8183 Garage Sales 7035 General Pets Sequim PA - East ANNUAL PLANT AND RUMMAGE SALE St Joseph Catholic Church Fri. 9-3pm. - Sat. 9-2pm. 121 E. Maple. All proceeds support local charities.

A BARN Sale: Fri. -Sat. 10-4 p.m. Behind Les S c h w a b i n PA . C r a b pots, tools, fur niture, j ew e l r y, h o u s ewa r e s, books and more. Free s o fa . C a l l fo r i n fo. (360)452-7576.

E S TAT E S A L E : S a t . , 8 : 3 0 - 3 p. m . , 4 4 1 W. Crows Nest Lane, Sequim. Fur niture, craft supplies, some tools, motorcycle helmets, household and garden i t e m s, b e a d s, r u bb e r stamps and much more.

Community Yard Sale: Sat April 9th. 2710 Deer Park Rd. Large Items for sale: Quad, RZR 800, custom aluminum hound box, furniture, musical organ, lawn and garden. Early birds welcome.

G A R AG E S A L E : S a t . only, 9-2pm, 646 Osborn R d . ( N . e n d o f Vo g t ) . Skiing, camping, cycling, household and kitchen items, photo, electronics We have the GARAGE TOOL SALE: and misc. Cash only. LARGEST Fri. 9-2 p.m., Sat. 9-1 p.m., 1613 Port Williams SELECTION GARAGE SALE: Sat.Rd. Sequim. Scaffolding, 8-2 p.m., 105 Blue of hanging baskets saws, drills, pump, heat- Sun., Jay Place. Fishing gear, r and much much on the Peninsula emore. hunting equipment, beanie babies, baby items, Come in & order household items. Multi M u l t i Fa m i ly g a r a g e NOW! Family Sale. sale: Sat.-Sun., 8-3:30 pm. 192 McComb Rd. o f f O l d O l y H w y. To o GARAGE SALE: Sat.3931 Old Olympic Hwy many items to list, some- S u n . , 8 : 3 0 - 4 p m , 7 3 5 (Just West of McDonald Creek) Gehrke Rd. Two family thing for everyone. Open Mon-Fri 9am-4pm garage sale. Wide varieR U M M AG E S A L E a t ty of household items, RIDING Calvary Chapel - Sat. 9 tools, furniture, antiques, LAWNMOWERS -3 pm. 91 S Boyce Rd. clothing, etc. $400 to $700. Proceeds fund Mexico TREE and PLANT Sale Call Kenny Mission. Fri.- Sat.,9-4 p.m., 2135 (360)775-9779 Mt. Pleasant Rd. Lots of RIDING mower/tractor: 8180 Garage Sales Rhoddys. PA Central Craftsman 3000, 23hp WANTED: Quality items with 48” mower/bagger, 42” grader blade, 42” GARAGE SALE: Sat.- in good condition for garlawn sweeper and 10” 9-3 p.m., Sun. 10-2 p.m., age sale June 10-11. moldboard plow. $700 1118 Cedar St. Collec- Proceeds benefit WAG, o f f e r s w e l c o m e . t i o n s o f W i n n i e t h e local dog rescue. Ac(360)452-2906 or 460- Pooh, OZ and vintage cepting kitchen, house8157 Disney, glassware, lin- hold items, linens, furniens, dolls and lots of fun t u r e , g a r d e n / o u t d o o r ROTOTILLER: Original stuff. Park on Cedar. furniture etc. Call to arowner Sears 5hp rototilrange pick up. (360)683ler. $150. (360)683-4781 RUMMAGE and Bake 0932 Sale: Sat. only, 9-2 p.m., 8120 Garage Sales First Baptist Church, 105 7030 Horses Jefferson County W. 6th. Vendors too! G A R AG E S A L E : S a t . only, 9-3pm., 461 S. Solmar Dr., Crafts, tools, furniture and more.

417-6710

TABLE: Dining room table, antique, very good condition, 6 chairs, 3 leaves, $900/obo. (360)912-2227

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

R A I N B O W VA C U U M CLEANER E Ser ies. Includes: AquaMate carpet shampooing syst e m ; p ow e r e d c a r p e t nozzle with wand, electrified long hose, electrified upholstery/carpeted stair nozzle, and all original nozzles, brushes and tools. Three water basins. $400. Sequim (360)379-4922.

MIDI KEYBOARD: cont r o l l e r, n e k t a r L X 6 1 , 61-keys. In box, unused. G A R AG E S A L E : Fr i . Extras. Paid $199. $115. Sun., 9-4pm, 192 Hiller 683-1108 Dr. Port Hadlock. Multifa m i l y n e i g h b o r h o o d sale. Garden, boat trail6115 Sporting er, tools, kitchen items, Goods furniture, steamer trunk, shutters. Too much to TELESCOPE with tr i- list. pod, Vortex 80mm spotting scope, adjustable tripod, excellent condi- 8142 Garage Sales tion. $800/obo. Sequim (360)797-2114 D OW N S I Z I N G S A L E : SEE THE MOST Sat. 9-3pm. 42 Quail CURRENT REAL Meadows Dr. Home furESTATE LISTINGS: nishings, furniture, outwww.peninsula dor furniture. And More! dailynews.com No Earlies. Cash Only.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

8182 Garage Sales PA - West G A R AG E S A L E : Fr i . S a t . , 8 - 3 p m , 8 3 2 W. 1 4 t h . D ay c a r e e s t a t e sale. GARAGE SALE: Sat.Sun., 8-4pm, 1921 W. Hwy 101. Tr uck Town Building. BIG SALE! Many tools and materials including doors, windows, a/c units, compressor, wash maching, RV parts and more. Lots of household items and free stuff.

Horse Riding Lessons for Beginners. Blue M e a d ow Fa r m R u s t i c Riding. Learn to horseback ride from the ground up. Private lessons, countr y setting. Schooling horses on site. Located between PA a n d S e q u i m . C a l l now for appt. 360-7755836. Acres of fields & trails WA N T E D : H o r s e b a ck riding lessons from a private party. Your horse, your tack. (360)452-6812

Automobiles 9817 Motorcycles 9292 Others

9832 Tents & Travel Trailers

FREE: (2) Minni lop rex mix does with hutches. (360)775-5998 NEW HOME NEEDED “ S u g a r,” a sw e e t n a tured, full-bred Siamese altered female cat, 5 yrs o f a g e, n e e d s a n ew home by herself with a caring older person or couple. Very quiet creat u r e. R e c e n t l y d e t e r mined she is allergic to poultry and fish, the family she is with cannot manage since other cats are not allergic. Does not have to be indoor cat, but might do better as one. Free deliver y, copies of health records. Photos available. Phone 360-504-5124 or cell 425-343-5378.

ACURA: TL ‘06 excellent condition, one owner, clean car fax, (timing belt, pulley and water pump replaced) new battery. $12,000. (360)928-5500 or (360)808-9800 TENT TRAILER: ‘08 R o c k w o o d Fr e e d o m . Sleeps 8, tip out, stove, gas/elec. fridge, furnace, toilet with shower, king and queen beds with heated mattresses. Outside gas bbq and shower. Great cond. $6,495. (360)452-6304

9802 5th Wheels

9820 Motorhomes

9808 Campers & Canopies

2 0 0 0 ROA D T R E K : Model 200, 20’ Class B, 9 5 K m i l e s o n C h ev y ALPENLITE: ‘99 CimC h a s i s . S o l a r r e a d y. m a r o n L X 8 5 0 , v e r y $20,000. (360)457-1597 clean. $7,000. 681-0182 BORN FREE: ‘05, 22’ RV built for two. 32K miles on V10 Ford engine. $25,000. 417-0451

CAMPER: ‘89, Nor thland, 8’4”, Cab over, fully equipped, excellent condition, always stored inside. $3,000. M OTO R H O M E : A l fa , (360)457-5944 ‘05, 37’, 350 Cat, 2 slides, 4 T.V.’s, 33K ml. WOLFPUP: 2014 $51,000. (360)670-6589 Toyhauler RV, 17’ or (360)457-5601 $9,999. (360)461-4189 MOTORHOME: Southwind Stor m, ‘96, 30’, 51K, great condition, lots of extras. $17,500. (360)681-7824

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

LINCOLN: Mark VII, ‘85, 5.0 engine, fully loaded, new tires, new battery. 77K ml. $2,500 firm. (360)417-5041

SATURN: Sedan, ‘97, ve r y c l e a n , r u n s bu t needs engine work, many new parts, great tires. $800/obo. (360)460-4723

TOYOTA: ‘05 Scion XA. HONDA: ‘87 Aspencade, 65K miles, new tires and loaded with extras. 60K r i m s , t i n t e d , 3 2 m p g . $7,800. (360)912-2727 miles. With gear. $3,750. (360)582-3065. TOYOTA : ‘ 0 7 C a r o l l a HONDA: CRF250R, ‘09, CE, 119K miles, good e x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n , cond., CD player, $7000 r a m p s a n d e x t r a s . obo. (805)636-5562 $3,500. (208)704-8886 VW: ‘71 Super beetle, YA M A H A : ‘ 0 4 , 6 5 0 V needs work, new upholStar Classic. 7,500 origi- stery, tires and wheels. nal miles, shaft drive, ex- $600 worth of new acc e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n , i n - cessories. $1,500. (360)374-2500 cludes saddle bags and sissy bars. $4,800/obo. VW: ‘86 Wolfberg, Cab(253)414-8928 riolet, excellent condion. $6,000. (360)477-3725.

9030 Aviation

Quarter interest in 1967 Piper Cherokee, hangered in PA. $8,500. PACE AREO: ‘89, 34’, B OAT : 1 2 ’ A l u m i n u m (360)460-6606. needs works, new tires, with trailer. $795. (360)461-4189 refrigerator, new seal on 9180 Automobiles roof, generator. $2,000/obo. Classics & Collect. (253)380-8303 C H E V: ‘ 6 9 C o r ve t t e , W I N N E BAG O : ‘ 8 9 , coupe conver tible 350 Class C, 23’ Ford 350, small block, 500 hp, 125 52K ml., well mainmiles on rebuilt motor, t a i n e d , g e n e ra t o r, matching numbers, new$7,500. (360)460-3347 er paint, And much C-DORY ANGLER: ‘91 more. Asking $22,000, with ‘08 Yamaha 50HP 4 room to negotiate. 9832 Tents & s t r o k e , ‘ 1 5 Ya m a h a (360)912-4231 Travel Trailers 9.9HP High Thrust, G P S - f l a s h e r, e l e c t r i c CHEV: ‘83 El Camino, U T I L I T Y T R A I L E R : C a n n o n d ow n r i g g e r s, local stock vehicle, 2012 Eagle, single axle, E Z - L o a d t r a i l e r w i t h champagne bronze. 5”x8”, with loading ramp, power winch. Stored In$3900 firm. 775-4431 exc cond. $1,200/obo. doors $13,500. (360)461-6279 FORD: ‘60 F-100 BBW. (360)461-5719 All original survivor, runs TRAILER: ‘96 18’ Aljo. strong, rusty. Many exSleeps 4, no leaks, new tires, top and awning. 9817 Motorcycles t r a s a n d n e w p a r t s . $2,000. $6,700. (360)477-6719. (360)681-2382 GARAGE SALE ADS HONDA: ‘04, VTX 1800 FORD: ‘62 F150 StepCC road bike, 9,535 mil. Call for details. 360-452-8435 s p e e d o m e t e r 1 5 0 . side. Excellent project vehicle. $900. 1-800-826-7714 $5,500. (360)797-3328. (360)912-2727

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

1-888-813-8545 WILDER AUTO

CHEVY: ‘06 HHR, LT. Red w/silver pinstripe. Excellent cond. 64K m i l e s, o n e ow n e r. $8,000. (360)681-3126

MAZDA: ‘90 Miata, conver tible, red. 120K ml. excellent condition, $4,500 (360)670-9674

5th Wheel: ‘02 Ar tic Fox, 30’, Excellent conPUPPIES: Collie pups, 3 dition. $18,000. (360)374-5534 Lassie’s, 1 male tri color, most at $400. 1 Border 5th WHEEL: ‘95, 22’, Collie pup $350. very clean and dry. New (360)865-7497 roof, vents. $6,800. (360)582-9179

WE BUY USED CARS

Find Your Way

2 0 0 8 S u z u k i V- S t r o m 650. Pr ime condition. 11,800 miles. Original owner. Service records. Ju s t s e r v i c e d . N e e d s nothing. Many extras, including: center stand and gel seat. $5,200 OBO. Scott at (360)461-7051.

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

9434 Pickup Trucks Others CHEV: ‘54, 2 ton steel bed and hoist, grain racks, runs and drives, with parts truck. $750. (360)683-7651

CHEVY: ‘98 Silverado, 4wd, new engine. $5,500. reymaxine5@gmail.com or (360)457-9070

DODGE: ‘00 Dakota, 2 wheel drive, short bed, a l l p o w e r, t o w p k g . $5900. (360)582-9769 TOYOTA: ‘01 Tacoma Regular Cab 2WD - 2.4L 4 Cylinder, 5 Speed Manual, Good Tires, Bedliner, Air Conditioning, CD Stereo, Dual Front Airbags. 68L ml. $7,995 VIN# 5TENL42N81Z836685 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com

9935 General Legals

You Can Count On Us!

641566959

LEGAL NOTICE L E G A L N OT I C E T h e Quinault Family Services Department hereby notifies Jenell Lemieux and S P R I T E : ‘ 6 7 A u s t i n any potential unknown Healey, parts car or pro- fathers of the child born 101 and Deer Park Rd, Port Angeles ject car. $3,500. 928- to Jenell Lemieux on www.wilderauto.com 9774 or 461-7252. 10/02/2008, that their presence is required on Apr il 13, 2016 at the hour of 2:30pm for a hearing on a petition to and terminate your parental th th rights to a child born on 10/02/2008 in the Quinault Children’s Court in Taholah, Grays Harbor Register to Win Free Register to Win County, Washington. For Shopping Spree! Hot Dogs! a Free i-Pad! more information, please call (360) 276-8215, ext. 222 or 390. If you fail to appear for this hearing, the cour t may conduct the hearing in your absence and it may result in the termination of your parental rights. PUB: March 25, April 1, 2016 101 and Deer Park Rd, Port Angeles • You Can Count On Us! 8, Legal No. 687801

Truck RV Show Friday, April 8 and Saturday, April 9 10am-4pm www.peninsuladailynews.com

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Or to advertise your listing call today 360.452.2345

WILDER AUTO

641567007

Come See ALL the New Great RV Floor Plans and New Truck Models!

In Print, Online & Mobile – Customized Search Tools – Online Mapping

(360) 633-2036 • www.wilderauto.com

641583799

2003 DODGE RAM 2500 QUAD CAB SLT 4X4

2011 FORD RANGER SPORT SUPERCAB 4X4

2001 TOYOTA TACOMA REGULAR CAB 2WD

2011 HONDA CR-V EX-L AWD

VIN#3G730697 More photos @ graymotors.com

VIN#BPA34183 More photos @ graymotors.com

VIN#1Z836685 More photos @ graymotors.com

VIN#BC010440 More photos @ graymotors.com

5.7L HEMI V8, AUTO, 17” ALLOYS, BFG ALL-TERRAIN TIRES! TOW, SPRAY-IN BEDLINER, REAR SLIDER, KEYLESS, PWR WINDOWS, LOCKS, MIRRORS & DRV SEAT, CRUISE, TILT, AC, CD, INFO CTR, DUAL FRT AIRBAGS, ONLY 112K MILES! CLEAN CARFAX! SPARKLING CLEAN INSIDE & OUT! SOUNDS & DRIVES GREAT! *

4.0L V6, AUTO, ALLOYS, MATCHING CANOPY, BEDLINER, TOW, KEYLESS, PWR WINDOWS, LOCKS & MIRRORS, CRUISE, TILT, AC, BUCKET SEATS, CENTER CONSOLE, REAR JUMP SEATS, CD/MP3, DUAL FRT AIRBAGS, KBB OF $21,858! CLEAN CARFAX! LIKE-NEW COND INSIDE & OUT! THE LAST YEAR OF THE RANGER IN N. AMERICA! *

2.4L 4 CYL, 5 SPD MAN, GOOD TIRES, BEDLINER, AC, CD, DUAL FRT AIRBAGS, CLEAN CARFAX! IMMACULATELY CLEAN INSIDE & OUT! THIS TRUCK LOOKS & DRIVES LIKE THE DAY IT ROLLED OFF THE FACTORY FLOOR! DON’T MISS OUT ON THIS TACOMA! *

2.4L 4 CYL, AUTO, 17” ALLOYS, SUNROOF, PRIV GLASS, KEYLESS, PWR WINDOWS, LOCKS, MIRRORS & DRV SEAT, HEATED LEATHER SEATS, CRUISE, TILT, AC, 6 CD W/AUX INPUT, DUAL FRT & SIDE AIRBAGS, CLEAN CARFAX! IMMACULATE COND INSIDE & OUT! FULLY LOADED EX-L MODEL! *

www.graymotors.com

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EXTRA CLEAN!

$15,995

GRAY MOTORS Since 1957

CALL 457-4901

1937 E. First, Port Angeles

1-888-457-4901

ONLY 41K MILES!

$18,995

GRAY MOTORS Since 1957

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1937 E. First, Port Angeles

1-888-457-4901

68K ORIG MILES!

$7,995

GRAY MOTORS Since 1957

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1937 E. First, Port Angeles

1-888-457-4901

46,000 MILES!

$21,495

GRAY MOTORS Since 1957

CALL 457-4901

1937 E. First, Port Angeles

1-888-457-4901

*SALE PRICES ARE PLUS TAX, LICENSE AND A NEGOTIABLE $150 DOCUMENTATION FEE. ALL VEHICLES ARE ONE ONLY AND SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. PLEASE SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. THIS AD EXPIRES ONE WEEK FROM DATE OF PUBLICATION.

Dealers, To Advertise Here: Call Vivian Hansen @ 360-452-2345 ext. 3058 TODAY for more information!


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Classified

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016 C7

9434 Pickup Trucks 9434 Pickup Trucks 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Others Others Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County

NISSAN: ‘89 4x4 pickup. The Port of Port Angeles $800 with extra parts. is soliciting sealed bids DEANNA D. NEBERT, as personal representative (360)452-5803. for the John Wayne Ma- of the Estate of Mildred L. Nebert, Plaintiff, v. ANrina Harbormaster and SELM BLOMQUIST an unmarried individual; and D o ck s i d e G r i l l H VAC ANSELM BLOMQUIST as personal representative 9556 SUVs Upgrades. The bid date of THE ESTATE OF ELLEN O. BLOMQUIST; the Others is scheduled for April 19, unknown heirs of said named defendant, if said de2016 at 11:00 AM. All fendant is not living; and all other persons or parties CHEVY: ‘98 Suburban, bids are to be received unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien, or in4 W D. 8 s e a t s , g o o d by the Port of Port An- terest in the real estate described in the Complaint cond., $4,000. geles 338 W. First Street herein; Defendants. NO. 16-2-00121-4 SUMMONS (360)683-7711 Port Angeles, WA 98362 BY PUBLICATION THE STATE OF WASHINGTON on or before this closing TO the said Anselm Blomquist an unmarried indiHONDA: ‘11 CR-V EX-L date and time. There is vidual, if living, and Anselm Blomquist as personal AWD Sport Utility - 2.4L a pre bid walkthrough representative of the Estate of Ellen O. Blomquist; 4 Cylinder, Automatic, scheduled for April 7, and the unknown heirs at law of Ellen O. Blomquist; 17 Inch Alloy Wheels, 2016 at 10:00am at the and Anselm Blomquist, if deceased; and all other Sunroof, Privacy Glass, project location John persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, Keyless Entr y, Power Wayne Marina 2577 W. estate, lien, or interest in the real estate described Windows, Door Locks, Sequim Bay Road Se- in the complaint herein, Defendants: You, and each M i r r o r s , a n d D r i ve r s quim, WA 98382. The of you, are hereby summoned to appear within sixty Seat, Heated Leather FORD: ‘01 Ranger 3.0 Seats, Cruise Control, pre bid walkthrough is (60) days after the date of the first publication of V6, 5 sp. with canopy. Tilt, Air Conditioning, 6 recommended but not this summons, to wit, within sixty days after the 4th 1 0 0 K m i l e s . $ 3 , 8 0 0 . CD Stereo with Auxilliary mandatory. The project day of March, 2016, and defend the above-entitled is for the furnish and in- action in the above-entitled court and answer the (360)457-1289 Input, Dual Front and stall of two (2) complete Complaint of the Plaintiff, DEANNA D. NEBERT, as Side Airbags, Front and ductless split heating personal representative of the Estate of Mildred L. FORD: ‘11 Ranger Sport Rear Side Curtain Airand cooling system at Nebert, and serve a copy of your answer upon the Super Cab 4X4 - 4.0L bags. 46K ml. the JWM (1) Harbormas- undersigned attorneys for Plaintiff, Patrick M. Irwin, V 6 , Au t o m a t i c , A l l oy $21,995 ter Office and (1) Dock- of the Platt Irwin Law Firm, 403 S. Peabody St., Wheels, Matching CanoVIN# py, Bedliner, Tow Pack- JHLRE4H72BC010440 side Grill. The Engineers Port Angles, Washington, 98362 at their office; and estimate for the con- in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be a g e , K e y l e s s E n t r y, Gray Motors struction of this project is rendered against you according to the demand of Power Windows, Door 457-4901 $20,000-$25,000. There the complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of Locks, and Mirrors, graymotors.com is no bid bond required. said court. The object of this action is to Quiet Title Cruise Control, Tilt, Air C o n d i t i o n i n g , B u cke t JEEP: ‘11 Wrangler Ru- P l e a s e c o n t a c t C h r i s in Plaintiff to real estate in Clallam County deSeats, Center Console, bicon. 9500 miles, as R a s mu s s e n - Fa c i l i t i e s scribed as follows: LOT 19 AND 20 IN BLOCK 353 Rear Jump Seats, MP3 new, never off road, au- M a n a g e r a t 3 6 0 - 4 1 7 - OF THE TOWNSITE OF PORT ANGELES, CLALCD Stereo, Dual Front to, A.C., nav., hard top, 3446 or chrisr@portof- LAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON. against the claim Airbags. 41K ml. power windows, steering pa.com. with questions of Defendants and any one of them. PLATT IRWIN $18,995 and locks. Always gar- and to receive bid docu- LAW FIRM By: Patrick M. Irwin, WSBA # 30397, Allison R. Mahaney, WSBA #49237 Of Attorneys ments. VIN# aged. $28,500 PUB: April 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, for Plaintiff 1FTLR4FE5BPA34183 (360)681-0151 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, Pub: March 4, 11, 18, 25, April 1, 8, 2016 Gray Motors Legal No. 686276 457-4901 JEEP: CJ5, ‘80, beauti- 17, 2016 graymotors.com ful condition, Red, soft Legal No. 691737 t o p, d i a m o n d p l a t e. FORD: ‘72 F250. $2000. $8,500 (360)670-9674. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant to the Revised Code of Washington (360)452-4336. 61.24, et seq. TS No.: WA-14-646630-SW APN No.: 0830215001920000 JEEP: Grand Cherokee 0830215001940000 Title Order No.: 02-14054189 Deed of Trust Grantor(s): Laredo, ‘11, 4x4, 29K TERRIE L. TAMBLYN Deed of Trust Grantee(s): MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC ml. lots of extras, clean, REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. (MERS) AS NOMINEE FOR FIRSTLINE $27,500. (360)452-8116. MORTGAGE, INC. Deed of Trust Instrument/Reference No.: 2006 1190804 I. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington, undersigned Trustee, will on 5/13/2016 , at 10:00 AM at the main entrance 9730 Vans & Minivans the to the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 E. 4th Street, Port Angeles, WA sell at Others public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable in the form of credit bid or cash bid in the form of cashier’s check or certified checks from federally or FORD: ‘99 F350 7.3L D O D G E : ‘ 0 2 G r a n d State chartered banks, at the time of sale the following described real property, Powerstroke Turbo Die- Caravan, 200K miles, situated in the County of CLALLAM, State of Washington, to-wit: THE LAND REFERRED TO HEREIN IS SITUATED IN THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM, sel Knapheide 12’ flat- good cond., $1500 obo. STATE OF WASHINGTON, AND DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: THE WEST 62 bed. Solid work truck. (360)808-2898 FEET OF THE EAST 260 FEET OF LOTS 43, 44 AND 45 OF WAIT’S LAKE 6-speed manual transmission, 2WD. 122,460 D O D G E : ‘ 0 3 G r a n d SUTHERLAND SUBDIVISION, AS PER PLAT RECORDED IN VOLUME 4 OF m i l e s. R u n s g o o d . I n Caravan. Good condi- PLATS, PAGE 24, RECORDS OF CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON; AND THAT PORTION OF THE WEST 62 FEET OF THE EAST 198 FEET OF C h i m a c u m . $ 8 , 5 0 0 tion. $2,400/obo. (360)460-6780 LOTS 43, 44 AND 45 OF SAID WAIT’S LAKE SUTHERLAND SUBDIVISION, OBO, Call or text 360LYING WESTERLY OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED LINE: BEGINNING 531-2337. AT THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF LOT 43 OF SAID WAIT’S LAKE SUTHERLAND SUBDIVISION; THENCE NORTH 87°15’03” WEST, ALONG THE FORD: Ranger, ‘03, SOUTH LINE OF SAID LOT 43, A DISTANCE OF 150.17 FEET TO THE Red, single cab TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING OF SAID DESCRIBED LINE; THENCE $3,000. (360)385-5573 NORTH 16°21’11” WEST, A DISTANCE OF 36.53 FEET; THENCE NORTH 10°07’20” EAST, A DISTANCE OF 26.77 FEET; THENCE NORTH 7°54’36” WEST, A DISTANCE OF 43.28 FEET MORE OR LESS TO AN ANGLE POINT IN A CONCRETE WALL AND THE TERMINUS OF SAID DESCRIBED LINE. SITUATE IN CLALLAM COUNTY, STATE OF WASHINGTON. More commonly known as: 211 YEW TREE DRIVE, PORT ANGELES, WA 98363 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 10/31/2006, recorded 11/3/2006, under 2006 1190804 and re-recorded on 1/6/2012 as Instrument Number 2012 1274285 records of CLALLAM County, Washington , from TERRIE L. TAMBLYN, AS HER SEPARATE ESTATE , as Grantor(s), to OLYMPIC NISSAN: ‘85 4x4, Z24 PENINSULA TITLE COMPANY , as Trustee, to secure an obligation in favor of 4 c y l , 5 s p, m a t c h i n g canopy, new tires, runs FORD: ‘06 E450 14’ Box MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. (MERS) AS great!. 203k, new head Truck. ALL RECORDS, NOMINEE FOR FIRSTLINE MORTGAGE, INC. , as Beneficiary, the beneficial at 200k. VERY low VIN W E L L M A I N T ’ D, 7 6 K interest in which was assigned by MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRA(ends in 000008!) third miles, Good tires, Ser- TION SYSTEMS, INC. (MERS) AS NOMINEE FOR FIRSTLINE MORTGAGE, a d u l t o w n e r, a l l n o n vice done Feb 7.TITLE INC. (or by its successors-in-interest and/or assigns, if any), to HSBC BANK smokers. Very straight I N H A N D ! A s k i n g USA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE FOR DEUTSCHE ALT-A SEbody. $4,250. $20,000 Willing to nego- CURITIES, INC. MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST, SERIES 2006-OA1, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES . II. No action commenced by the (360)477-1716 tiate.(202)257-6469 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 ob9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices ligation secured by the Deed of Trust/Mortgage. III. The default(s) for which this foreclosure is made is/are as follows: Failure to pay when due the follo Clallam County Clallam County wing amounts which are now in arrears: $129,441.71 IV. The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: The principal sum of SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR $286,759.62 , together with interest as provided in the Note from 3/1/2009 on, CLALLAM COUNTY and such other costs and fees as are provided by statute. V. The above-deI n r e t h e E s t a t e o f M a r g a r e t scribed real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the obligaD. Owens, Deceased. tion secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. Said sale will be made without warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession or NO. 16-4-00111-4 PROBATE NOTICE TO encumbrances on 5/13/2016 . The defaults referred to in Paragraph III must be CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 cured by 5/2/2016 (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of The personal representative named below has the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time before been appointed as personal representative of this 5/2/2016 (11 days before the sale) the default as set forth in Paragraph III is estate. Any person having a claim against the de- cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. Payment must be in cash or cedent must, before the time the claim would be with cashiers or certified checks from a State or federally chartered bank. The barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limita- sale may be terminated any time after the 5/2/2016 (11 days before the sale tions, present the claim in the manner as provided date) and before the sale, by the Borrower or Grantor or the holder of any rein RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the corded junior lien or encumbrance by paying the principal and interest, plus personal representative or the personal representa- costs, fees and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation tive’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI. A written Notice of Dethe claim and filing the original of the claim with the fault was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grancourt in which the probate proceedings were com- tor at the following address(es): NAME TERRIE L. TAMBLYN, AS HER SEPmenced. The claim must be presented within the ARATE ESTATE ADDRESS 211 YEW TREE DRIVE, PORT ANGELES, WA 98363 by both first class and certified mail, proof of which is in the possession later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal represen- of the Trustee; and the Borrower and Grantor were personally served, if applitative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as cable, with said written Notice of Default or the written Notice of Default was provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in Paragraph I months after the date of first publication of the no- above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. tice. If the claim is not presented within this time These requirements were completed as of 5/15/2015 . VII. The Trustee whose frame, the claim is forever barred, except as other- name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requestwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. ing it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII. This bar is effective as to claims against both the The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. through or under the Grantor of all their interest in the above-described properDate of First Publication: April 8, 2016 ty. IX. Anyone having any objections to this sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring Personal Representative: Wayne Barrett a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such Attorney for Personal Representative: a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Stephen C. Moriarty, WSBA #18810 Trustee’s sale. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS – The purchaser at Address for mailing or service: the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20 th day folPLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM lowing the sale, as against the Grantor under the deed of trust (the owner) and 403 S. Peabody, Port Angeles, WA 98362 anyone having an interest junior to the deed of trust, including occupants who (360) 457-3327 are not tenants. After the 20 th day following the sale the purchaser has the Court of Probate Proceedings: right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under Clallam County Superior Court Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall proProbate Cause Number: 16-4-00111-4 vide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. THIS NOPub: April 8, 15, 22, 2016 Legal No. 692096 TICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME. You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date of this notice to purNO. 16--4-00108-4 sue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONTACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR OR NOTICE TO CREDITORS AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situation IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF and refer you to mediation if you are eligible and it may help you save your THE STATE OF WASHINGTON home. See below for safe sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF: you would like assistance in determining your rights and opportunities to keep CATHERINE M. GALUSKA, your house, you may contact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline Deceased. for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the HousThe Personal Representative named below has ing Finance Commission: Toll-free: 1-877-894-HOME (1-877-894-4663) or been appointed as Personal Representative of this W e b s i t e : h t t p : / / w w w . d f i . w a . g o v / c o n s u m e r s / h o m e o w n e r estate. Any persons having a claim against the De- ship/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm . The United States Departcedent must, before the time the claim would be ment of Housing and Urban Development: Toll-free: 1-800-569-4287 or Nabarred by any otherwise applicable statute of limita- tional Web Site: http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD or for Local counseling tions, present the claim in the manner as provided agencies in Washington: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/inin RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the dex.cfm?webListAction=search&searchstate=WA&filterSvc=dfc The statewide Personal Representative or the Personal Represen- civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors tative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy and attor neys: Telephone: 1-800-606-4819 or Web site: http://nwjusof the claim and filing the original of the claim with tice.org/what-clear . If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trusthe Court. The claim must be presented within the tee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to later of: (1) Thirty days after the Personal Repre- a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser’s sole sentative served or mailed the notice to the creditor and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary’s Agent, or the months after the date of first publication of the No- Beneficiary’s Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through banktice. If the claim is not presented within this time ruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which frame, the claim is forever barred, except as other- case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right’s against the real wise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. property only. QUALITY MAY BE CONSIDERED A DEBT COLLECTOR ATThis bar is effective as to claims against both the TEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBTAND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE As required by law, you are hereby Decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be Date of first publication: April 8, 2016 submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit Personal Representative: Iantha Frazer obligations. Dated: 1/11/2016 Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington, as Attorney for Personal Representative: Trustee By: Christina Contreras, Assistant Secretary Trustee’s Mailing AdCurtis G. Johnson, WSBA #8675 dress: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington C/O Quality Loan Service Address for Mailing or Service: Corp. 411 Ivy Street, San Diego, CA 92101 (866) 645-7711 Trustee’s Physical Law Office of Curtis G. Johnson, P.S. Address: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington 108 1 st Ave South, Suite 230 E. 5th Street 202 Seattle, WA 98104 (866) 925-0241 Sale Line: 916.939.0772 Or Login to: Port Angeles, WA 98362 http://wa.qualityloan.com TS No.: WA-14-646630-SW IDSPub #0098785 (360) 452-3895 4/8/2016 4/29/2016 Pub: April 8, 2016 Legal No.692269 Pub: April 8, 29, 2016 Legal No: 677588 DODGE: ‘03, Ram 2500 Quad Cab SLT 4X4 5.7L HEMI V8, Automatic, 17 Inch Alloy Wheels, BFGoodrich AllTerrain Tires, Tow Package, Spray-In Bedliner, Rear Slider, Keyless Ent r y, Po w e r W i n d o w s , Door Locks, Mirrors, and D r i ve r s S e a t , C r u i s e Control, Tilt, Air Conditioning, CD Stereo, Inform a t i o n C e n t e r, D u a l Front Airbags. 112K ml. $15,995 VIN# 3D7KU28D13G730697 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR PIERCE COUNTY NO. 16-4-00241-5 NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OF PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE AND NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Matter of the Estate of: LELAND FRANCIS STILES, Deceased. NOTICE: The person named below has been appointed personal representative of this estate on the 11th day of February, 2016, in Pierce County Superior Court under Pierce County Cause No. 164-00241-5, but Notice is being published in Clallum County, where decedent resided. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the PierceCountySuperior Court under the Pierce County Cause No. 16-4-00241-5. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(3); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and RCW 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. Date of First Publication in Clallum County: April 8, 2016 Personal Representative: FRANCIS D. STILES Attorney for Personal Representative: GAYLERD B. MASTERS, WSBA #9062 Address for Mailing or Service: Gaylerd B. Masters, P.S. 6240 Tacoma Mall Blvd., Suite 102 Tacoma, WA 98409 Pub: April 8, 15, 22, 2016 Legal No: 692216 REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS/QUALIFICATIONS Clallam County is soliciting proposals from interested parties for Evaluation Template Development and Data Analysis: Chemical Dependency/Mental Health Program Fund Direct Services. Bidders are to submit qualifications and a budget to conduct the proposed work. An informational packet on preparing a bid for the project may be obtained Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., in the Health and Human Ser vices Depar tment, 223 E. 4th Street, Port Angeles, Room 052 (Suite 14). Telephone 360.417.2377 or e-mail nfurford@co.clallam.wa.us with requests. Bids will be received at 223 East 4th Street, Room 150, Port Angeles, Washington until 12:00 noon, Friday, May 6, 2016. They will be opened publicly and acknowledged at the Commissioners Board Meeting at 10:00 a.m., Tuesday, May 10, 2016. The required four copies of the proposal must be clearly marked on the outside of the sealed envelope, “BID - EVALUATION TEMPLATE DEVELOPMENT AND DATA ANALYSIS - CD/MH PROGRAM FUND”. Address envelope to: Board of Clallam County Commissioners, 223 East 4th Street, Suite 4, Port Angeles, Washington 98362, or hand-deliver to 223 East 4th Street, Room 150, Port Angeles, Washington. Bids delivered to other offices and received late by the Commissioners’ Office will not be considered nor will ones received by facsimile or e-mail. Submittals made in an incorrect format will not be considered. Clallam County hereby notifies all that it will affirmatively ensure that in any contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterprises as defined in Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 at 49 CFR Part 23 will be afforded full opportunity to submit proposals in response to this invitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color, national origin, or sex in consideration for an award. PASSED THIS day of 5th day of April 2016 ATTEST: ______________________________________ Trish Holden, CMC, Clerk of the Board BOARD OF CLALLAM COUNTY COMMISSIONERS ______________________________________ Mike Chapman, Chair Pub: April 8, 10, 2016 Legal No.692511 IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM Case No.: 15-2-00850-4 SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff, vs. UNKNOWN HEIRS, SPOUSE, LEGATEES, AND DEVISEES OF VICKY L. FOX, DECEASED; UNKNOWN HEIRS, SPOUSE, LEGATEES, AND DEVISEES OF LES E. FOX AKA LESLIE EARL FOX, DECEASEDMAT_Dfdnt 2 FstMAT_Dfdnt 2 Lst; EVERGREEN FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.; EARL T. FOX ; JUNE FOX ; CHRISTOPHER BEDELL ; WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A.; OCCUPANTS OF THE SUBJECT REAL PROPERTY; ALL OTHER UNKNOWN PERSONS OR PARTIES CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, ESTATE, LIEN, O R I N T E R E S T I N T H E R E A L E S TAT E D E SCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT HEREIN; Defendants. To: UNKNOWN HEIRS, SPOUSE, LEGATEES, AND DEVISEES OF VICKY L. FOX, DECEASED; UNKNOWN HEIRS, SPOUSE, LEGATEES, AND DEVISEES OF LES E. FOX AKA LESLIE EARL FOX, DECEASED; OCCUPANTS OF THE SUBJECT REAL PROPERTY; ALL OTHER UNKNOWN PERSONS OR PARTIES CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, ESTATE, LIEN, OR INTEREST IN THE REAL ESTATE DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT HEREIN THE STATE OF WASHINGTON TO THE SAID DEFENDANTS: You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to wit, within sixty days after the 25th day of March, 2016, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court, and answer the complaint of the Plaintiff, JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorneys for Plaintiff, McCarthy & Holthus, LLP at the office below stated; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. The basis for the complaint is a foreclosure of the property commonly known as 428 Orcas Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362, Clallam County, Washington as a result of a default under the terms of the note and deed of trust. DATED: March 22, 2016 McCarthy & Holthus, LLP ___________________ Christopher A. Luhrs [ ] Wendy Walter, WSBA No. 33809 [ ] Annette Cook, WSBA No. 31450 [x ] Christopher Luhrs, WSBA No. 43175 [ ] Joseph T. McCormick III, WSBA No. 48883 108 1st Avenue South, Ste. 300 Seattle, WA 98104 Attorneys for Plaintiff Pub: March 25, April 1, 8, 15, 22, 29, 2016 Legal No. 689882

TS No WA06000037-15-1 APN 23652 / 03-30-21530620-0000 TO No 150222698-WA-MSO NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE PURSUANT TO THE REVISED CODE OF WASHINGTON CHAPTER 61.24 ET. SEQ. I. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on April 15, 2016, 10:00 AM, at main entrance Clallam County Courthouse, 223 E 4th St, Port Angeles, WA, MTC Financial Inc. dba Trustee Corps, the undersigned Trustee, will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable, in the form of cash, or cashier’s check or certified checks from federally or State chartered banks, at the time of sale the following described real property, situated in the County of Clallam, State of Washington, towit: LOT 62 OF FAIR WEATHER PHASE A, CITY OF SEQUIM SUB 05-003, AS PER PLAT THEREOF RECORDED IN VOLUME 14 OF PLATS, PAGE 99, RECORDS OF CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON. SITUATE IN CLALLAM COUNTY, STATE OF WASHINGTON. APN: 23652 / 03-3021-530620-0000 More commonly known as 51 NIMBUS LANE, SEQUIM, WA 98382 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated as of July 18, 2011, executed by REBECCA R. CANTU, REBECCA R. CANTU AKA REBECCA R RIDEN, A SINGLE WOMAN as Trustor(s), to secure obligations in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. (“MERS”), as designated nominee for USAA FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK, Beneficiary of the security instrument, its successors and assigns, recorded July 18, 2011 as Instrument No. 2011-1268113 and that said Deed of Trust was modified by Modification Agreement and recorded October 20, 2014 as Instrument Number 2014-1313328 and the beneficial interest was assigned to PHH Mortgage Corporation and recorded September 27, 2013 as Instrument Number 2013-1300820 of official records in the Office of the Recorder of Clallam County, Washington. II. No action commenced by PHH Mortgage Corporation, the current Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any Court by reason of the Borrowers’ or Grantors’ default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust/Mortgage. Current Beneficiary: PHH Mortgage Corporation Contact Phone No: 800-750-2518 Address: One Mortgage Way, Mt Laurel, NJ 08054 III. The default(s) for which this foreclosure is made is/are as follows: FAILURE TO PAY WHEN DUE THE FOLLOWING AMOUNTS WHICH ARE NOW IN ARREARS: DELINQUENT PAYMENT INFORMATION From April 1, 2015 To December 7, 2015 Number of Payments 5 $1,200.51 4 $1,200.17 Total $10,803.23 LATE CHARGE INFORMATION April 1, 2015 December 7, 2015 $41.45 PROMISSORY NOTE INFORMATION Note Dated: July 18, 2011 Note Amount: $190,877.00 Interest Paid To: March 1, 2015 Next Due Date: April 1, 2015 IV. The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: The principal sum of $199,749.28, 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 expense of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. Said sale will be made without warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances on April 15, 2016. The defaults referred to in Paragraph III must be cured by April 4, 2016, (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time before April 4, 2016 (11 days before the sale) the default as set forth in Paragraph III is cured and the Trustees’ fees and costs are paid. Payment must be in cash or with cashiers’ or certified checks from a State or federally chartered bank. The sale may be terminated any time after the April 4, 2016 (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrower or Grantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance by paying the principal and interest, plus costs, fees and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust. VI. A written Notice of Default was transmitted by the current Beneficiary, PHH Mortgage Corporation or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following address(es): ADDRESS UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF REBECCA R. CANTU AKA REBECCA R RIDEN AKA REBECCA R. MATLOCK 51 NIMBUS LANE, SEQUIM, WA 98382REBECCA R. CANTU AKA REBECCA R RIDEN AKA REBECCA R. MATLOCK 51 NIMBUS LANE, SEQUIM, WA 98382REBECCA R. CANTU AKA REBECCA R R I D E N A K A R E B E C C A R . M AT L O C K AT T N : DMCSH MATLOCK OFFICER IN CHARGE POST GUARD, 51 NIMBUS LN, SEQUIM, WA 98382 by both first class and certified mail on October 22, 2015, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and the Borrower and Grantor were personally served, if applicable, 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 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 their interest in the above described property. IX. Anyone having any objections to this 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 sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustees’ Sale. X. If the Borrower received a letter under RCW 61.24.031: THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME. You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date on this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONTACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR OR AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situation and refer you to mediation if you might eligible and it may help you save your home. See below for safe sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in determining your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may contact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission: Telephone: (877) 8944663 or (800) 606-4819 Website: www.wshfc.org The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development: Telephone: (800) 569-4287 Website: www.hud.gov The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorneys: Telephone: (800) 6064819 Website: www.homeownership.wa.gov NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS 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 proceedings under the Unlawful Detainer Act, Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060; Dated: December 7,2015 MTC Financial Inc. dba Trustee Corps, as Duly Appointed Successor Trustee By: Jessica Cimarusti, Authorized Signatory MTC Financial Inc. dba Trustee Corps 1700 Seventh Avenue, Suite 2100 Seattle WA 98101 Phone: (800) 409-7530 TDD: (800) 833-6388 For Reinstatement/Pay Off Quotes, contact MTC Financial Inc. DBA Trustee Corps TRUSTEE’S SALE INFORMATION CAN BE OBTAINED ONLINE AT www.insourcelogic.com. Order No. WA15-001881-2, Pub Dates 03/18/2016, 04/08/2016 Pub: March 18, April 8, 2016 Legal No: 688333

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From left, EJ Anderson as Jerry Sloan Cathy Marshall as Mildred Sloan and Peter Greene as Abe Dreyfus will appear live tonight in “Squabbles.” The comedy will be performed throughout the month of April at Olympic Theatre Arts, 414 N. Sequim Ave.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

THE WEEK OF APRIL 8-14, 2016


2

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PS Briefly PA playhouse to host two performances PORT ANGELES — The Port Angeles Community Playhouse, 1235 E. Lauridsen Blvd., this weekend hosts “The Proposal” and “The Bear.” Playwright Anton Chekhov penned the one-act farces, which will be presented by Port Angeles Community Players. Performances will be at 7:30 tonight and Saturday, with a matinee at 2 p.m. Sunday. The plays are known for their fast-paced dialogue and situational humor, organizers say, adding both plays will use the same set. Both plays are directed by Dmitri Gerasimenko, a new Port Angeles resident who is a Russian native and graduate of St. Petersburg State Theatre Academy. He has worked with several professional and community theaters in Minnesota since arriving in the U.S. in 1998. Cast members are Makinzie Lang, John Merton Marrs, Josh Sutcliffe, Clayton Vermulm, Lydia

Wilhelm and Gerasimenko. Tickets are $10 each and available only at the door of the playhouse.

Fiddlers in Sequim SEQUIM — The Sequim Prairie Grange, 290 Macleay Road, on Saturday will host a performance by the Washington Old Time Fiddlers Association. Doors open at 9 a.m., with an open-jam session starting at 9:30 a.m. A business meeting is slated for 11 a.m., with a second open jam session at 1:30 p.m. Free group fiddle lessons for members and nonmembers for those 13 and younger are from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. On-stage performances by association members are from 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. The first 30 minutes will be old-time fiddle tunes, followed by bluegrass, country, vocal and fiddle. This is free and open to the public, although donations are welcome. The Washington Old Time Fiddlers Association is a nonprofit organization dedicated to preserving, promoting and perpetuating the art of traditional old-time fiddle music and

May we help?

associated arts and skills. For more information, visit www.d15.wotfa.org.

Lost in Sound PORT TOWNSEND — Quimper Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 2333 San Juan Ave., on Saturday will host “Lost in Sound,” a story about overcoming the fear, shame and isolation of growing up with untreated, progressive hearing loss, becoming deaf, then hearing again electronically. It is comical, dramatic, thought-provoking and inspirational, organizers say, adding it is a story that will raise awareness about the invisible epidemic that is hearing loss. The performance will be from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Tickets are $10 each and can be purchased online at brown

papertickets.com.

Health showtunes PORT ANGELES — St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, 510 E. Park Ave., on Sunday will host Showtunes for Health, a concert featuring performances by stars of the North Olympic stage plus a singalong with the Coulter pipe organ. The concert will be from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. Entry is by the suggested donation of $10, with proceeds benefiting OlyCAP’s Arts & Minds — a nonprofit prevention and support program for those concerned with early memory loss. For more information, call 360-457-6801 or visit OlyCAP’s Facebook page.

Jolly Sienda PORT LUDLOW —

Jolly Sienda has been chosen by the Port Ludlow Artists’ League as the featured Artist of the Month for April. Her photographs, printed on metal as well as paper, will hang in the lobby of Sound Community Bank, 9500 Oak Bay Road, throughout this month. Sienda’s exhibit will be unveiled during a free public reception from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday. The league’s gallery, located next door to the bank, is also open for the celebration from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. For more information, call 360-473-7999 or send an email to shortline@ cablespeed.com. Sienda said she discovered her passion for photojournalism in 2003 while living in Germany.

She became a freelance writer and photographer for the European Stars and Stripes newspaper — writing travel and human interest stories and capturing unique photos of the places she visited. Sienda said she was fortunate to have consulted with a retired editor and photographer from National Geographic magazine who helped hone her skills. After 30 years of living abroad and on the East Coast, Sienda moved back home to Washington state, residing with her family on the Kitsap Peninsula. She owns and operates Jolly Sienda Photography, www.jollysiendaphoto graphy.com, and is focusing on growing her wedding and portrait business. Chris McDaniel

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Peninsula Spotlight, the North Olympic Peninsula’s weekly entertainment and arts magazine, welcomes items about coming events for its news columns and calendars. Sending information is easy: Email it to news@peninsuladailynews.com in time to arrive 10 days before Friday publication. Fax it to 360-417-3521 no later than 10 days before publication. Mail it to Peninsula Spotlight, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 in time to arrive 10 days before publication. Hand-deliver it to any of our news offices at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles; 1939 E. Sims Way, Port Townsend; or 147-B W. Washington St., Sequim, by 10 days before publication. Photos are always welcome. If you’re emailing a photo, be sure it is at least 150 dots per inch resolution. Questions? Phone 360-452-2345 weekdays.

Photographer Jolly Sienda, who took this photo of the Port Ludlow Marina, is the Port Ludlow Artists’ League’s featured Artist of the Month for April.


PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

3

‘Women in Jeopardy!’ opens tonight in PT rapport as actresses. “We haven’t known each other as long as our characters, but we’ve gone through difficult periods and been with each other through extended challenges,” Aduviso said. Together, they bring the humor and pathos of their real-life friendship to the stage, said Luisa Walmsley, Key City Public Theatre marketing and sales director. “Women In Jeopardy!” is the third annual performance to be collectively sponsored by the 66 Women Producers program.

BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

ELIGIUS WOLODKEWITSCH

Heatherton Gallery Featured Artists

From left, Heather Dudley-Nollette Consuelo Aduviso, David Natale and Jennifer True star in “Women in Jeopardy!” playing this month at the Key City Playhouse, 1128 Lawrence St. Trading their wine glasses for spy glasses following the disappearance of the dentist’s hygienist, imaginations run wild as Mary and Jo — portrayed by Consuelo Aduviso and Heather Dudley-Nollette — try to discover the truth and save their friend in a hilarious off-road adventure, MacLeod says. Aduviso and Dudley-

Nollette are friends in real life, they said. After meeting on the set of Anton Chekhov’s “The Cherry Orchard” in 2008, the actresses bonded over their shared experience as dedicated mothers and performers, they said. Dudley-Nollette describes Aduviso as a layered performer who brings complexity and accessibil-

ity to her role as Mary. “She is a consummate researcher who knows how to dig into the back story and develop a character,” Dudley-Nollette said. “She brings a realness to Mary and doesn’t hide her emotional journey.” On working with Dudley-Nollette, Aduviso said that their personal relationship strengthens their

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PORT TOWNSEND — Friendly dentist or serial killer? That is the question haunting divorcees Mary and Jo — both suspicious of their friend Liz’s new dentist boyfriend — in the play “Women in Jeopardy!” playing this month at the Key City Playhouse, 1128 Lawrence St. “Women in Jeopardy!” runs Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings at 7:30 through May 1, with Sunday matinees at 2:30 p.m. The is Key City’s first main stage production of 2016. Tickets are $20 for Thursdays and Sundays, $24 for Fridays and Saturdays, and $10 for students at any performance. Tickets are available at keycitypublictheatre.org or by calling 360-385-5278. Pay-what-you-wish performances will be at 2:30 p.m. Sunday and at 7:30 p.m. April 14. Fresh off its 2015 world premiere, Wendy MacLeod’s new fun and flirtatious comedy is “Thelma and Louise” meets “The First Wives Club,” MacLeod says.

Inspired by a similar event at the Boise Contemporary Theater, Key City Executive Artistic Director Denise Winter began the program three years ago to give women the opportunity to help produce a live theater performance and to recognize the women of Port Townsend for their support and patronage of the arts. The sponsorship allows Key City to support female playwrights by producing their work and gives actresses and women directors powerful roles on the stage, Winter said.


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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Children’s art show set for Landing mall atrium BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Works of art crafted by area students will be on display this evening at The Landing mall atrium, 115 E. Railroad Ave. The free show, from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., features marine debris sculptures, two-dimensional portraits and props and costumes crafted by students in the Forte After School Club. The club, organized by

Sarah Tucker, offers weekly arts programs to children 6 to 13 years old at the Camp Fire Club clubhouse at Webster Park, 619 E. Fourth St.

Free kids activity Free popcorn and other refreshments will be provided and local artist Monica Quarto will host a free activity for children and their families creating a card using a form of printmaking with one color

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using a clay plate. There also is a giant nest set up for kids to sit in as a photo opportunity. Children participating in the show are Jessica Balser, 8; Emily Balser, 13; Emily Boling, 8; Elliot Collins, 9; Cordelia Dexter, 6; Fern Knobel, 10; Violet Knobel, 7; Trinity Laws, 12; Julianna Quarto, 11; Isabelle Sill, 12; and Celeste Tucker, 12.

Monthlong display The art display will remain throughout the month of April. For more information about the art club, contact Tucker at 360-775-4154 or sarah@tuckerart.com.

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Works of art crafted by area students such as the ones shown here will be on display from 5 to 8 this evening at The Landing mall atrium, 115 E. Railroad Ave.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

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Second Weekend Art Event on tap in PA BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Downtown Port Angeles venues will be featured during the Second Weekend Art Event. The monthly event was founded about 10 years ago by the Port Angeles Arts Council as a coalition of downtown Port Angeles businesses and art galleries to bring attention to the culture and variety offered there, organizers say. Here’s a cross section of events: ■ Bar N9ne, 229 W. First St., will host musical guest Joy in Mudville and local artist Regie Saxerud beginning at 9 p.m. Joy in Mudville features Kim Trennery, Jason Mogi, Paul Stehr-Green and Terry Smith. Their music is rhythmic, harmonic and cleverly arranged. Saxerud has been a professional artist for 35 years.

DIANE URBANI

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This photo by Diane Urbani de la Paz, titled “Sea Sanctified,” will be featured as part of the “Far Out and Up Close” photography exhibit opening Saturday at Studio Bob, 118 ½ E. Front St. Since moving to Port Angeles late in the past decade, she has made her mark in the local art scene, including painting the

mind-bending mural surrounding the entrance to Studio Bob and the Loom on Front Street in downtown Port Angeles, organiz-

ers said. Saxerud’s art fights hard against the mainstream, and at 2FAR, visitors will see her continue

her quest to provide authentic art to authentic people, organizers said. The cover charge is $3. For more information, call 360-797-1999 or visit www.barn9nepa.com. ■ Heatherton Gallery, located inside The Landing mall at 115 E. Railroad Ave., features the works of Janet Piccola and Hideko Goecker from 5 to 7:30 this evening. Piccola moved to the Peninsula with her husband 11/2 years ago from Jackson, Calif. Piccola uses a unique form of heating to burn unusual shadows of various items onto her art pieces, which include bowls, pierced vases and hanging plaques with painted designs. Hideko is a sumi-trained painter on silk, rice paper

and canvas. Her collages of Asian designs utilize colorful paper or fabrics. ■ Karon’s Frame Center, 625 E. Front St., features photographs by Anthony Richards. Richards will be on hand from 6 to 8 tonight to talk about his photography. Richards, 26, of Port Angeles has been an artist all his life. As far back as he can remember, Richards says, he has been hooked on the arts, beginning with sketching and painting, before taking on digital mediums in high school. He says his passion for photography grew throughout the years and in 2009, he helped establish AirshowStuff Magazine, now AirshowStuff.com. TURN

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Family feud made fun

BY CHRIS MCDANIEL

tising jingles and is married to Alice, an equally successful lawyer portrayed SEQUIM — When by Jennifer Horton. extended family moves in Living with the happy together under one roof, it’s couple is the not-so-happy a surefire bet that squabAbe Dreyfus — portrayed bling will commence. by Peter Greene — Jerry’s But the dripping sarcurmudgeon of a father-incasm and witty retorts law. aren’t always awkward and Abe is a funny guy to can be downright hilarious. the audience, but not to That is the case with Jerry, Harwood said. “Squabbles,” which opens The situation is exacertonight at Olympic Theatre bated when Jerry’s mother, Arts, 414 N. Sequim Ave., Mildred — portrayed by says director Larry HarKathy Marshall — loses wood. her house in a fire and “Squabbles” is set to run needs a place to stay. through April 24. Abe and Mildred can’t “ ‘Squabbles’ is a great stand each other and waste comedy that has a wonder- no time in letting the vitful message about life and riol fly on the wings of love as a senior citizen,” whimsical admonishment. Harwood said. The play is set in the Feuding elders 1980s. The characters “are lovIt was written by Marable and they are irascible shall Karp and pits a and they are just confather-in-law against a mother-in-law in a comedic stantly bickering,” Greene said during a recent succession of squabbles. rehearsal. Jerry Sloan, portrayed “It is verbal jousting, by Edwin Anderson, is a and it is a lot of fun,” Marsuccessful writer of adverPENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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shall added. “Both of our characters have a sense of humor — they both have a lot of sarcasm — there is a lot of that dripping throughout and it is just fun,” she said. “We are actually the same character,” Greene said. “We are both acerbic and wise-cracking . . .” “. . . but I am classier,” Marshall said mockingly. “He has no class.” The two actors share good chemistry on the stage, they said, adding this is their first time performing together in leading roles. “This is our first show,” Marshall said, “but we are both seasoned” thespians. When asked about the differences between “Squabbles” and past plays they have appeared in, Greene quipped, “I got the lead.” And he joked, “There is not as much nudity in this one.” “But there are some shenanigans,” Marshall added. Offstage, the two say they get along splendidly, noting their rivalry onstage is just an act. “The dynamic is written for us, and we are just following” the script, Greene said.

The human condition Squabbling “is the human condition,” Greene said.

CHRIS MCDANIEL/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

From left, Peter Greene as Abe DreyfusCathy Marshall as Mildred Sloan and Jim Coventry as Sol Wasserman will appear live tonight in “Squabbles.” But, he added, “there’s hope.” “Everybody squabbles, so if you come and see the progression here, you realize it is OK to squabble,” he said. “It is how you exit the stage of life” that matters. “If you are remembered with that squabbling attitude as an endearment, then you have been successful in your life instead of a crotchety old guy,” Greene said. The social interactions explored by this play should be familiar to the baby boomer generation of retirees living in the area, Marshall said. “They should get a kick out of it.” Harwood agreed. “Every person [older than] 60 should see this play,” he said. “They will love it.” That isn’t to say younger folks won’t enjoy it too, he added.

“ ‘Squabbles’ is probably the funniest play I have ever directed.” Marshall encourages the public to come out and watch the play. “I think it is just a great, fun experience to be a part of this — to enjoy the laughter,” she said. “There are some touching moments — moments people are going to be able to relate with.”

Tickets “If a person waits to buy a ticket until they hear how good it is, it will be too late,” Harwood said. “We will be sold out.” The cast, Harwood added, is “outstanding,” so “don’t miss the show.” Other cast members include Bud Davies as Hector, Monica Ostrom as Mrs. Fisher, Jim Coventry as Mr. Wasserman and Elaine Fredickson as Mrs. Wasserman. Tickets for the show are

$16 for adults, $14 for OTA members and active military, and $10 for youth. Tickets are available online at www.olympic theatrearts.org or at the OTA box office at 414 N. Sequim Ave. The office is open Mondays through Fridays from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. New for this production, OTA is offering pre-show dinners Saturday evenings from 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. by reservation only. Advance-sale dinner tickets are available at the OTA box office for Saturday night ticket holders. The price for the dinner is $18 per seat and will include an entrée, side dish, salad and dessert served buffet-style in the gathering hall before the show. A cash bar also will be available Saturdays up to showtime. For more information, call 360-683-7326.


PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

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Art: Pottery, paintings up for viewing around PA

This pottery crafted by Janet Piccola will be on display from 5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. this evening at Heatherton Gallery, located inside The Landing mall at 115 E. Railroad Ave. as part of the Second Weekend Art Event.

This artwork by Hideko Goecker will be featured from 5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. this evening at Heatherton Gallery, located inside The Landing mall at 115 E. Railroad Ave. as part of Second Weekend Art Walk. Kasuri fabric and her fascination with the dying process and the Japanese use of indigo color in dyeing. Kasuri is a traditional folk textile produced in Japan since at least the middle of the 18th century. Kasuri patterns have distinctive fuzzy edges and look as if they were splashed onto the fabric. The display will be available for viewing all day Saturday with a reception beginning at 4 p.m. and short talk by Lynn beginning at 4:30 p.m. TURN

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641569212

CONTINUED FROM 5 additional glass to create decoration and texture. Today, Richards continues Cleaves sells both finto shoot and design graphics ished jewelry and beads, for AirshowStuff while prac- and will be on hand to ticing drone photography, show her bracelets, neckvideo editing and graphic laces and beads on Friday design in his spare time. Art Walk. Light refreshâ– The Landing Artists ments will be served. Studio, located inside The For more information, Landing mall at 115 E. Rail- call 360-670-9971. road Ave., Suite 103, from 5 â– Cabled Fiber and to 7:30 tonight will host Yarn, 125 W. First St., on Susan Cleaves, a Lampwork Saturday will host an bead and jewelry artist. exhibit of Kasuri, Ikat dyed Cleaves creates beads textiles. by melting glass onto a During the event, textile collector Nita Lynn will give welding rod, which she a presentation about her holds in a torch flame and travels to Japan, collecting turns slowly. She adds


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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Live music Saturday at the Quaker Meetinghouse BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — Musicians Marla Fibish, Bruce Victor and Tim Connell will perform at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Port Townsend Friends Meetinghouse, 1841 Sheridan St. Tickets are $15 in advance online at brown papertickets.com or $20 at the door. In San Francisco, Fibish and Victor formed Noctambule, whose original works of poetry, instrumental pieces and traditional Irish tunes and songs are rendered with an unusual array of stringed instru-

ments in varied tunings such as mandola, mandolin, bouzouki, cittern and tenor guitar. Fibish is well-known in the Irish music world, bringing a musicality and excitement to the tradition that is seldom heard on the mandolin, organizers say. Victor is an eclectic and accomplished guitarist and composer, organizers say. Seemingly resisting any single musical genre, he has been labeled a “poly-stylist” by one of the editors of Acoustic Guitar magazine. He has played with The Sirens of San Francisco, The Triplicates and as a

solo performer. He was the founder of The Acoustic Vortex, a nonprofit musical organization that produced house concerts, mentored youth performers and performed benefit concerts for other nonprofit organizations. He also is a practicing psychiatrist and was a clinical professor of psychiatry in the School of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. For this special concert, Noctambule is joined by Portland, Ore.-based mandolin virtuoso Tim Connell, who is well-known to acoustic music fans as a top-tier

Musicians Bruce Victor and Marla Fibish will jam with special guest Tim Connell, not pictured, Saturday evening at the Port Townsend Friends Meetinghouse, 1841 Sheridan St. mandolinist, touring internationally with Mike Marshall’s Ger Mandolin Orchestra, organizers say. Widely regarded as the top North American inter-

preter of the Brazilian choro style on the mandolin, organizers say he also has developed his own unique voice for the instrument, described in a recent

Mandolin Magazine cover story as “fiery and energetic, soulful and evocative.” For more information, contact Steve Evans at 360-379-3136.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

9

Art: Meet the photographers at Studio Bob CONTINUED FROM 7 The event is free and open to the public. Refreshments will be served. For more information, visit www.cabledfiber studio.com or call 360-5042233.

PS

■ Harbor Art Gallery and Gift Shop, located at 110 E. Railroad Ave., on Saturday will feature the original work of 16 local artists, includes photography, paintings, block prints, sculpture, woodwork, ceramics, glass and jewelry. An artist reception will

be from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday. For more information, visit www.facebook.com/ harborartgallery. ■ Studio Bob, an art gallery/event space located upstairs at 118 1/2 E. Front St., on Saturday will present Blues Crew, a new five-

piece band featuring Johnny Rollston on guitar and Corey Crozier on harmonica. There’s no cover charge for the music set to start at 8 p.m. The Blues Crew’s sets will follow the opening reception for “Far Out and

Elliott’s Antique Emporium (135 E. First Street) — Saturday, 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.: Hawaii Amor (Hawaiian traditional ukulele, sing-a-long).

ern (130 S. Lincoln St.) — Tonight, 8 p.m.: Twisted Roots (acoustic folk, swing, blues).

Up Close,” the current photography exhibition at Studio Bob. The reception is free to the public from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. “Far Out and Up Close” showcases more than 100 photographs from across the Olympic Peninsula and

around the world, from the cameras of Diane Urbani de la Paz and Phil Lusk. The show will have another free reception from noon to 3 p.m. Sunday. For more information, call 415-990-0457 or visit http://tinyurl.com/PDNStudioBob.

Nightlife

Clallam County Port Angeles Bar N9NE (229 W. First St.) — Tonight, 9 p.m.: Joy in Mudville with artist Regie Saxerud (mural artist and more). Saturday, 9 p.m.: Three Too Many (rock with alternative edge, classics) Sunday and Wednesday, 9 p.m.: Karaoke. Thursday, 9 p.m.: Open mic. Castaways Night Club (1213 Marine Drive) — Saturday, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.: Edwin

James Band (country rock). Coo Coo Nest (1017 E. First St.) — Tonight. 9 p.m.: Green River Thrillers, Acid Teeth and Decapitate the Disciples (punk, hard core rock, thrash) Monday, 9 p.m.: Open mic. Tuesday, 9 p.m.: Karaoke with Jared Bauer. The Dam Bar (U.S. Highway 101 and state Highway 112) — Saturday, 8:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.: The Down Town Band (blues, rock). Thursday, 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.: Jam session hosted by Big Al Owen (variety).

Fairmount Restaurant (1127 W. U.S. Highway 101) — Tonight, 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.: Luck of the Draw hosts the open mic session. Tonight, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.: Luck of the Draw with special guests, the Tony Flagg Trio (country, Americana). Sunday, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.: Open mic with Victor Reventlow. The Lazy Moon Craft Tav-

The Metta Room (132 E. Front St ) — Tuesday, 8 p.m.: Jam Night with Rene Simons and Paul Eyestone. Wednesday, 8 p.m.: Open mic hosted by Craig Logue.

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Wheeler Theater, Fort Worden State Park, Port Townsend, WA

OPENING WEEK! 641583798

Squabbles is a play about family members in a comedic succession of squabbles. Jerry Sloan is a successful writer married to an equally successful lawyer. Living with the happy couple is the not so happy Abe Dreyfus, the father-in-law. The situation is exacerbated when Jerry’s mother, Mildred, needs a place to stay. This play is one hilarious confrontation after another until the heart-warming finale. — Directed by Larry Harwood

APRIL 8–24

by Marshall Karp Add dinner service at OTA before the play! Saturdays only. Call for reservations and prices!

“Their sound is as urbane as a Manhattan midnight, and as wild as a Clackmannan winter.”

FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS AT 7:30 P.M. SUNDAYS AT 2:00 P.M.

, Mon–Fri

Scott Alarik, Boston Globe

Performances on the Caldwell Main Stage. THURSDAY PREVIEW

OPENING NIGHT

FREE to members

Followed by Champagne Reception

April 7 at 7:30 p.m.

centrum

April 8 at 7:30 p.m.

Thursday, April 14 at 7:30 p.m.

631565442

PAY-WHAT-YOU-WILL

creativity in community

PURCHASE TICKETS /PERFORMANCE DETAILS

CENTRUM.ORG

(800) 746-1982


10

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Night: More entertainment options available CONTINUED FROM 9 sadors (big band concert) free. Peninsula College (1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd.) — Tuesday, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. (Maier Hall): Timothy Hudson, trumpet soloist. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. (P.U.B. Commons): The Cat’s Meow (jazz for dancers), no cover. Port Angeles High School Auditorium (304 E. Park Ave.) — Saturday, 7 p.m.: U.S Army Field Bands: The Jazz Ambas-

Studio Bob (118-1/2 E. Front St.) — Saturday, 5 p.m. to 10 p.m.: Artists’ reception for “Far Out and Up Close,” photographs by Diane Urbani de la Paz and Phil Lusk. The Blues Crew plays at 8 p.m. Sunday, noon to 3 p.m.: Free artists’ reception for Diane Urbani de la Paz and Phil Lusk.

Sequim, Blyn, Gardiner Bell Creek Bar and Grill

(707 E. Washington St.) — Sunday, 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.: Musical open mic hosted by Dottie Lilly and Vienna Barron (variety). Club Seven at 7 Cedars Casino (270756 U.S. Highway 101) — Tonight, 9 p.m.: Rhythm Nation (top 40 dance band). Saturday, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.: Michael Pratt Band (country, classic rock). 21+ venue. Gardiner Community Center (980 Old Gardiner Road)

— Thursdays, 6 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.: Plus-level square dancing, with phase III and IV round dancing between square dance tips; advanced rounds 5:30 p.m.; intermediate rounds 6:30 p.m.; plus-level workshop 7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m. For more info, phone 360-7978235.

7 p.m. to 9 p.m.: Mary Turin has CD release party (Celtic themed originals). Saturday, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.: The Malcolm Clark Band ( jazzy, rock, blues). Thursday, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.: Bill Volmut (acoustic variety).

Jefferson County

Nourish (1345 S. Sequim Ave.) — Wednesdays, 6:30 p.m. Port Hadlock to 9:30 p.m.: Open mic with VicAjax Cafe (21 N. Water St.) tor Reventlow. Signups at 6 p.m. — Friday, 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.: Trevor Hanson (classical guitar). Rainforest Bar at 7 Cedars Saturday, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.: Jack Casino (270756 U.S. Highway Reid (country & western). 101) — Tonight, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.: Joey James Dean Port Ludlow (country). Saturday, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.: Billy Shew (country). Fireside Room at Resort at Port Ludlow (1 Heron Road) Uncorked Wine Bar at 7 — Thursday, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.: Cedars (270756 U.S. Highway Trevor Hanson (classical guitar). 101) — Saturday, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.: Blue Skyz (smooth jazz) Port Townsend no cover. Alchemy (842 Washington Wind Rose Cellars (143 W. St.) — Monday, 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.: Washington St.) — Tonight, Trevor Hanson (classical guitar).

Port Angeles Community Players Presents

The Proposal The Bear •

&

Disco Bay Detour (282332 Hwy 101) — Tonight, 8 p.m.: Brother Townsend (Americana). Saturday, 8 p.m. to 11 p.m.: Guardian Elephant (rock, soul), no cover. Highway 20 Roadhouse (2152 Sims Way) — Saturday, 9 p.m.: Bread & Gravy (Americana, contemporary, classic rock) no cover. Wednesday, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.: Chicago Bob’s gently amplified blues jam (not an open mike), full food menu, all ages, free. Manresa Castle (651 Cleveland St.) — Sunday, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.: West Coast swing (plus blues, tango dances with instruction), $7. Pourhouse (2231 Washington St.) — Saturday, 8 p.m. to 11 p.m.: Abakis (Ziggy Stardust covers). 21+ venue.

directed by

Quaker Meetinghouse (1841 Sheridan) — Saturday, 7:30 p.m.: Saturday Meetinghouse Concert series to feature “Noctambule,” with Marla Fibish, Bruce Victor and Tim Connell (Irish, international), $15 tickets at noctambulePT.brownpapertickets.com or $20 at the door. For more information, phone Steve Evans at 360-379-3136.

Dmitri Gerasimenko

641584337

Bob Beach

The Cellar Door (940 Water St.) — Tonight, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.: Ethan Perry & the Remedy (indy folk, rock, jazz). Saturday 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.: Goth & Darkwave Night featuring chaosbit, DJ Dark Laundry and DJ Pleather (variety), $5 cover. Sunday, 8 p.m. to 11 p.m.: Marcel & Nakos (bluegrass, folk, country). Monday, 6 p.m.: Open mic hosted by Jack Reid. Wednesday, 9 p.m.: Karaoke with Louis and Selena, no cover. Thursday, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.: Robin Bessier and Full Circle (jazz), no cover. 21+ venue.

two one act comedies

by Anton Chekhov also featuring harmonica virtuoso

The Boiler Room (711 Water St.) — Thursday, 8 p.m.: Open mic. Sign-ups 7 p.m., all ages.

New Port Angeles resident, Native of Russia

Tickets $10 $5 Students & Children at the door

Port Angeles Community Playhouse 1235 E. Lauridsen Blvd.

641565420

April 8 & 9 ~ 7:30pm April 10 ~ 2:00pm

Quimper Grange Hall (1219 Corona St.) — Saturday, 8 p.m. to 11 p.m.: Square dancing with music by Hi-O Revelers from Seattle, calling by Lisa McAvoy from Bellingham. All dances taught, partners not necessary.

TURN

TO

NIGHT/11


PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Night: More CONTINUED FROM 10 $6 for those over 17 years of age. Rosewind Common House (3131 Haines St.) — Sunday, 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.; English Country dance and potluck with Nan Evans calling and Rosewind Country Dance Band, $5 donation. Fragrance-free, no street shoes. For more information, email Dan Post at dan.post@frandango.org. Sirens (823 Water St.) — Tonight, 9 p.m.: Mind Vice (rock with fusion edge) $5. Saturday, 9 p.m.: Satisfi from Portland, OR (original reggae band) $5; Tuesday, 7 p.m.: Fiddler jam session. Wednesday, 9 p.m.: Open mic. Thursday, 9 p.m.: Karaoke with Louis World. Uptown Pub & Grill (1016 Lawrence St.) — Tonight, 9 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.: Saint John & The Revelations (catchy folk, rock, R&B). Saturday, 9 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.: Marcel & the Nakos (folk, blues). Tuesday, 9 p.m.: Open mic (variety; music, jokes, tales) with Jarrod Bramson. This listing, which appears each Friday, announces live entertainment at nightspots in Clallam and Jefferson counties. Email live music information, with location, time and cover charge (if any) by noon on Tuesday to news@peninsuladailynews.com, submit to the PDN online calendar at peninsuladailynews.com, phone 360-417-3527, or fax to 360-417-3521.

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016

11

PS At the Movies Port Angeles “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” (PG-13) — Fearing the actions of Superman (Henry Cavill) are left unchecked, Batman (Ben Affleck) takes on the man of steel, while the world wrestles with what kind of a hero it really needs. With Batman and Superman fighting each other, a new threat, Doomsday, is created by Lex Luthor (Jesse Eisenberg). It’s up to Superman and Batman to set aside their differences along with Wonder Woman (Gal Gadot) to stop Lex Luthor and Doomsday from destroying Metropolis. At Deer Park Cinema. 2-D showtimes: 3:45 p.m. daily, plus 9:45 p.m. tonight and Saturday. 3-D showtimes: 6:45 p.m. daily, plus 12:45 p.m. today through Sunday. “The Boss” (R) — A titan of industry is sent to prison after she’s caught for insider trading. When she emerges ready to rebrand herself as America’s latest sweetheart, not everyone she screwed over is so quick to forgive and forget. Starring Melissa McCarthy. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes: 4:55 p.m. and 7:05 p.m. daily, plus

12:35 p.m. and 2:45 p.m. today through Sunday, and 9:20 p.m. tonight and Saturday. “God’s Not Dead 2” (PG) — When a high school teacher is asked a question in class about Jesus, her response lands her in deep trouble and could expel God from the public square once and for all. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes: 4:05 p.m. and 6:40 p.m. daily, plus 1:30 p.m. today through Sunday, and 9:15 p.m. tonight and Saturday.

Sunday, and 9:35 p.m. tonight and Saturday. 3-D showtimes: 5:05 p.m. daily, plus 12:30 p.m. today through Sunday.

Where to find the cinemas ■ Deer Park Cinema: 360-452-7176. ■ The Rose Theatre: 360-385-1089. ■ Starlight Room: 360-385-1089. ■ Uptown Theatre: 360-385-3883.

Port Townsend “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” (PG-13) — See Port Angeles entry. At Uptown Theatre. Showtimes: 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. today through Sunday, plus 7:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday.

“Eye in the Sky” (R) — Col. Katherine Powell (Helen Mirren), a “My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2” military officer in command of an operation to capture terrorists in (PG-13) — A Portokalos family Kenya, sees her mission escalate secret brings the beloved characters back together for an even big- when a girl enters the kill zone trigger and Greeker wedding. At Deer gering an international dispute over the implications of modern warfare. Park Cinema. Showtimes: At Rose Theatre. Showtimes: 4 5:10 p.m. and 7:15 p.m. daily, plus 1 p.m. and 3:05 p.m. today through p.m. and 6:50 p.m. daily. Sunday, and 9:20 p.m. tonight and “Hello, My Name is Doris” (R) Saturday. — A self-help seminar inspires a “Zootopia” (PG-animated) — In 60-something woman to romantically pursue her younger co-worker. a city of anthropomorphic animals, a fugitive con artist fox and a rookie Starring Sally Field and Max Greenfield. At the Starlight Room. Showbunny cop must work together to uncover a conspiracy. At Deer Park times: 4:15 p.m. and 7:15 p.m. daily. Cinema. 2-D showtimes: 7:20 p.m. “Demolition” (R) — As an daily, plus 2:45 p.m. today through

investment banker (Jake Gyllenhaal) struggles after losing his wife in a tragic car crash, his increasingly confessional series of letters to a vending machine company catch the attention of a customer service rep (Naomi Watts) with whom he forms an unlikely connection. At Rose Theatre. Showtimes: 4:30 p.m. and 7:20 p.m. daily. Women & Film — Choose from 11 contemporary films by the best independent filmmakers working today. Visit www.ptfilmfest.com for detailed information. At Rose Theatre. Showtimes: Saturday and Sunday.

10 FESTIVALS | 46 EVENTS | 125 ARTISTS | 1 EXTRAORDINARY PLACE

SUMMER AT CENTRUM UNRIVALED ARTISTS Grace Kelly, Gerald Clayton, Mollie O’Brien, Anat Cohen, George Cables, Wycliffe Gordon, Wendy MacIsaac, René Marie, Guy Davis, Phil Wiggins, Laurie Lewis, Joel Savoy, Calder String Quartet, Jimmy Duck Holmes and many more.

Centrum.org (800) 746-1982 FORT WORDEN STATE PARK PORT TOWNSEND, WA

CHAMBER MUSIC VOICE WORKS FIDDLE TUNES WRITERS’ CONFERENCE JAZZ ACOUSTIC BLUES UKULELE OLYMPIC MUSIC FESTIVAL

641567271

COMPLETE CATALOG ONLINE NOW.

TICKETS ON SALE: APRIL 15 FOR DONORS MAY 1 FOR PUBLIC PURCHASE AND DONATE ONLINE TODAY



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