Monday
Closing the distance
Sun to shine, but clouds enter in West End B10
Area marathon winners from China, Bellingham B1
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS June 8, 2015 | 75¢
Port Angeles-Sequim-West End
Television Race to Alaska’s actress main leg underway helping area kids Day George starts welding scholarship BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
GARDINER — Not content to sit on her laurels, actress Lynda Day George keeps busy helping to raise scholarship money for area students. The Sequim School Board approved last week a contract for services between Sequim School District, Day George and her stepdaughter Lisa Cronin, establishing the Douglas P. Cronin Welding Scholarship for a student in the amount of $2,500. Day George is a well known actress who appeared Day George in multiple television series, including “Mission: Impossible” in the early 1970s. Douglas was the actress’ longtime husband who died of cancer in December 2010. Day George, 70, also works with the Gardiner Garden Club, which raised $7,000 for scholarships this year alone. “These kids are superb, and they deserve this kind of attention,” Day George said. “And the more of it that they get, the better that it is, because these kids can do a lot that we don’t give them credit for.” She enjoys helping others succeed because “I had some experience succeeding, and I know what it does for you, how it fills you,” she said. Day George’s family was not rich by any means, she said. So when she set out to New York after high school, she made sure to send money back home to help pay the bills. “A great deal of my money went back to Phoenix to help my parents and my brother when he was going to high school,” she said.
Successful model While Day George had initially set out to become a surgeon, that dream went by the wayside when she began making excellent money as a model. TURN
TO
STEVE MULLENSKY/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
A crewman grabs a paddle to help in getting underway in the continuation of the Race to Alaska on Sunday in Victoria.
Next stop is Ketchikan in big 710-mile stretch chikan, Alaska. The race Sunday began with a “Le Mans” style start, in which competitors must run to their boats before they can depart the docks, said Jake Beattie, executive director of the Port Townsend Maritime Center and organizer of the race. For the start of the second leg, all participants, even those in sailboats, were required to make their departure using manpower, since Victoria Harbor doesn’t allow the use of sails inside the harbor, Beattie said.
BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
VICTORIA — With the pool of competitors already down by nearly a quarter after a challenging qualifying leg that eliminated more than a dozen entries, 29 sail and human-powered boats kicked off the second stretch of the inaugural 750-mile Race to Alaska on Sunday. At noon Sunday, only 29 racers departed from Victoria of the 40 originally registered for the 710-mile section of the race from Canada to Ket-
The second leg is the real race, with the finish in Ketchikan, he said.
Simple rules The competition has drawn rowers, sailors, canoers and kayakers from across the country to compete in a contest that has a only few rules: no motors allowed and no help once you start. Grand prize for the first entry to reach Ketchikan is $10,000. TURN
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TV/A6
National magazine to focus on Sequim farm Sequim peony grower is ‘thrilled’ BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — The colorful blooms of Peony Farm will grace the pages of a national magazine next year after a photographer from Garden Design documented the blossoms and their owners, Amy and Michael Hall. Being featured in the magazine is “absolutely” an honor, Amy said after the photo shoot at the farm at 2204 Happy Valley Road last month. “For them to select my farm — I am thrilled.” Thad Orr, editor of the quarterly Garden Design magazine in Calimesa, Calif., said the story
with Ngoc Minh Ngo’s photographs will be published sometime next year in the magazine that publishes in February, April, June and September. “We found out about [the farm] from one of our writers,” Orr said. The magazine, which exists only on subscriptions with no advertising, “features great designers, great horticulture all over the country,” Orr said.
Lifelong dream The recognition is one more satisfaction for Amy, whose flourishing peony farm represents a lifelong dream fulfilled. A colorful English-style garden
surrounds the farmhouse at the 2-acre spread, which also features a small fruit orchard, berry patches, grapes and a vegetable garden. But most of the farm — about 1.5 acres — is dedicated to peonies, a plant native to Asia, Southern Europe and Western North America. Amy now has more than 2,000 blooming plants at the farm after five years of work. “Every year, it just keeps growing and growing,” she said. “We keep adding products as well.” Amy now has about 250 peony species, including hybrids, growing on her land. “When I started, I only had 10 varieties,” she said. TURN
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CHRIS MCDANIEL/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Amy Hall of Sequim checks on her crop of pink Hawaiian
PEONY/A6 coral peonies at Peony Farm.
CUSTOM SPORTS & EVENT APPAREL
INSIDE TODAY’S PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 99th year, 135th issue — 2 sections, 18 pages
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Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Littlest royal christened on estate in July PRINCE WILLIAM AND his wife, Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, will host a special christening ceremony at their English country home next month for their baby daughter. The British royals welcomed their second child, Princess Charlotte, at a hospital in London on May 2, and they subsequently left London to take an extended break at their Sandringham estate in Norfolk, England.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Prince George and Princess Charlotte. The royals will not return to London for the little girl’s baptism, instead hosting the ceremony at a chapel on the estate July 5.
The couple’s son, Prince George, was christened at the Chapel Royal in St James’ Palace in London. The tot celebrates his second birthday two weeks after his sister’s christening July 22. The royal family released the first official photos of Princess Charlotte, photographed by her mother in the arms of her brother. The photos, released Saturday, were taken by Catherine in mid-May at the family’s home. They show Charlotte propped on a pillow, cradled by George. Charlotte wears a white sweater, the prince a white top trimmed in blue.
Passings By The New York Times
RONNIE GILBERT, 88, whose crystalline, bold contralto provided distaff ballast for the seminal folk quartet of the late 1940s and 1950s, the Weavers, died Saturday in Mill Valley, Calif., of age-related causes The Weavers, whose other members were Pete Seeger, Lee Hays and Fred Hellerman, started playing together in the late 1940s. Like-minded musicians with progressive political views, they performed work songs, union songs and gospel songs, and became known for American folk standards like “On Top of Old Smoky,” “Goodnight, Irene,” Woody Guthrie’s “So Long, It’s Been Good to Know Yuh” and “The Hammer Song” (aka “If I Had a Hammer”) by Seeger and Hays. Their voices, especially Ms. Gilbert’s, were powerful, their harmonies were distinctive and their attitude was an enthusiastic embrace of the listener. Together those elements created a sing-along populism that laid the ground-
work for a folk-music boom in the 1950s and 1960s. The Kingston Trio, the Ms. Gilbert Limeliters and Peter, Paul & Mary, among others, were direct musical descendants; slightly more distant relations included Bob Dylan, Joan Baez and Phil Ochs. “We sang songs of hope in that strange time after World War II, when already the world was preparing for Cold War,” Ms. Gilbert recalled in The Weavers: Wasn’t That a Time, a 1982 documentary about the group. “We still had the feeling that if we could sing loud enough and strong enough and hopefully enough, it would make a difference.” In June 1950, the influential pamphlet “Red Channels,” purportedly an expose of the Communist infiltration of the entertainment industry, was published, and it named
Seeger, who had in fact been a member of the Communist Party earlier in his life. The following year the Weavers were investigated by the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, whose purview was to root out subversive citizen threats. The Weavers were blacklisted in 1952. With her husband, Martin Weg, a dentist, Ms. Gilbert moved to California, where they started a family. Then, in 1955, the Weavers’ manager, Harold Leventhal, arranged a concert at Carnegie Hall. It renewed interest in the Weavers, and though Seeger (who died in 2014) left the group a couple of years later, the group with a series of replacements continued to perform and record until 1964, when they gave a farewell concert in Chicago. After the Weavers broke up, Ms. Gilbert spent much of her creative energy in the theater.
SOLUTION TO SUNDAY’S PUZZLE
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL FRIDAY/SATURDAY QUESTION: In recognition of the warmest weekend so far this year, how do you like your hamburgers prepared on the barbecue grill?
Rare Medium rare
40.4%
Well done Don’t eat ’em
30.3% 10.1%
Total votes cast: 1,023 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
Laugh Lines A NEW SURVEY says Washington, D.C., is the fittest city in the country. And it makes sense. Just think of all of the exercise they get running for re-election, walking back statements, dodging questions and jumping to conclusions. That’s all cardio. Seth Meyers
From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News
Judge Ralph C. Bell in Everett today. Clallam County ComLevy’s seat on the Board missioner Arnold Levy was of County Commissioners sentenced to 25 years in automatically was vacated prison by Snohomish with the sentencing. He County Superior Court represented the 2nd District, which is mainly Port Seen Around Angeles and vicinity. Peninsula snapshots Levy was convicted April 27 for misappropriaA SIZABLE POTBELtion of public funds by a LIED pig grazing on the public officer and two Sequim post office ground cover as its owner watches charges of second-degree forgery. from the curb . . . Bell handed Levy WANTED! “Seen Around” 15 years in the state peniitems recalling things seen on the tentiary for the misapproNorth Olympic Peninsula. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box priation conviction, and 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax five years each for the forg360-417-3521; or email news@ ery convictions. The three peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure sentences will run concuryou mention where you saw your rently, the court decreed. “Seen Around.”
16.5%
Medium
Peninsula Lookback 1940 (75 years ago)
2.7%
1965 (50 years ago)
1990 (25 years ago)
Mid-May showed a leveling of the employment upswing that began in February in Clallam and Jefferson counties, said Floyd J. Hill, manager of the Port Angeles office of the state Employment Security Department. For the first time in several years, insured unemployment in the two counties has dropped below 3.5 percent of average covered employment, Hill said. The tourist season and manufacturing companies, especially pulp and paper mills, will get employment levels moving ahead this month by increased benefits to retail trade and service industries, he added.
The waterfront on the southeast portion of Indian Island is now state land. The state Department of Natural Resources exchanged 45 acres on Port Gardiner Bay near Everett with the Navy for 307 of tidelands and uplands in three counties. Of the new state lands, 184 acres are on Indian Island, where the Navy operates an ammunition depot. The other parcels are in Kitsap and Island counties. The Navy will use the Port Gardiner Bay property for expansion of its aircraft carrier base in Everett.
Corrections, clarifications
■ An article on Page A5 Sunday on graveside remembrance services in Gardiner for Medal of Honor recipient Marvin Shields did not include the time of the ceremonies. They will begin at 11 a.m. Wednesday. ■ Holley Carlson’s husband is Dr. Todd Carlson. A report on her Port Townsend School Board resignation in Sunday’s Jefferson County edition misidentified him on Page A4. ■ The America’s Cup final will be raced in Bermuda in 2017. The first major regatta building up to the 2017 sailing race, called the America’s Cup World Series, will be held off England next month. An editing error in Sunday’s On the Waterfront column on Page C10 listed the wrong location and time for the 2017 final.
________ 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 Rex Wilson at 360-417-3530 or email rwilson@peninsuladailynews.com.
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS MONDAY, June 8, the 159th day of 2015. There are 206 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On June 8, 1915, Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan resigned over what he viewed as President Woodrow Wilson’s overly bellicose attitude toward Germany following the sinking of the RMS Lusitania. On this date: ■ In 1864, Abraham Lincoln was nominated for another term as president during the National Union (Republican) Party’s convention in Baltimore. ■ In 1912, the ballet “Daphnis et Chloe” was premiered by the Ballets Russes in Paris.
■ In 1948, the “Texaco Star Theater” made its debut on NBCTV with Milton Berle guest-hosting the first program. Berle was later named the show’s permanent host. ■ In 1967, 34 U.S. servicemen were killed when Israel attacked the USS Liberty, a Navy intelligence-gathering ship in the Mediterranean. Israel later said the Liberty had been mistaken for an Egyptian vessel. ■ In 1972, during the Vietnam War, an Associated Press photographer captured the image of 9-yearold Phan Thi Kim Phuc as she ran naked and severely burned from the scene of a South Vietnamese napalm attack.
■ In 1982, President Ronald Reagan became the first American chief executive to address a joint session of the British Parliament. ■ In 1987, Fawn Hall began testifying at the Iran-Contra hearings, describing how, as secretary to national security aide Oliver L. North, she helped to shred some documents and spirit away others. ■ In 1995, U.S. Marines rescued Capt. Scott O’Grady, whose F-16C fighter jet had been shot down by Bosnian Serbs on June 2. ■ Ten years ago: The Senate confirmed California judge Janice Rogers Brown for the federal appeals court, ending a two-year battle. ■ Five years ago: In several
high-profile Republican primaries, Meg Whitman won the nomination for California governor while Carly Fiorina got the nod to oppose three-term Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer; in Nevada, Sharron Angle won the right to oppose Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. All three ended up losing their respective contests. In South Carolina, political unknown Alvin Greene won the Democratic primary to challenge U.S. Sen. Jim DeMint. Greene lost in November. ■ One year ago: A married couple shot and killed two Las Vegas police officers and an armed bystander who attempted to intervene; the couple then took their own lives.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, June 8, 2015 P A G E
A3 Briefly: Nation wide Ohio River is what ended the flight of a teenage couple authorities believe engaged in a crime spree that crossed into three states. A report released Sunday by the West Virginia State Police DANNEMORA, N.Y. — Two said the 16-year-old boy and murderers who used power tools 15-year-old girl from Ohio to escape from prison must have jumped into the river in Tyler taken days to cut through steel County on Saturday trying to walls and pipes and break flee from authorities. Police said through the bricks, Gov. Andrew the teens realized they couldn’t Cuomo said Sunday as a $100,000 swim all the way across, so reward was posted for information turned back and were captured. leading to their capture. That ended a six-day ordeal Authorities that authorities said involved at were investileast two stolen vehicles, the gating how theft of ammunition from an the inmates Ohio Wal-Mart, an armed robobtained the bery and injuries to a Pennsylpower tools vania police officer. they used in the breakout California jails vote over the weekSACRAMENTO, Calif. — Calend. ifornians voted last fall to reduce Sweat “It was a penalties for certain crimes, a sophisticated decision that abruptly lowered plan,” Cuomo jail populations and promised said. “It took a more money for jail alternative period of time, programs starting next year. no doubt, to But the state is now poised to execute.” spend $500 million for new David county jail construction this year, Sweat, 34, was on top of $2 billion spent for new serving a senjails over the last eight years. tence of life Critics said the Board of without parole Matt State and Community Correcfor the 2002 tions should delay Wednesday’s killing of a vote and give policymakers time sheriff’s deputy. to gauge the long-term effects of Richard Matt, 48, had been Proposition 47. sentenced to 25 years to life for The law approved in Novemkidnapping, killing and dismember treats certain drug and bering his former boss in 1997. property crimes as misdemeanAuthorities acknowledged ors instead of felonies, leading to they did not have a good idea fewer inmates in both state priswhere the convicts could be. ons and county jails. They may have crossed into County sheriffs said the jail Canada or headed to another populations will rebound and state, Cuomo said. the money is needed now to expand program and treatment River stops suspects space in antiquated jails. COLUMBUS, Ohio — The The Associated Press
Search still on following escape from N.Y. prison
Survey: Abortions on decline in most states traceptives and a drop in unintended pregnancies. Some foes of abortion said there has been a shift in societal attitudes, with more women choosing to carry their pregnancies to term. Several of the states that have been most aggressive in passing BY DAVID CRARY anti-abortion laws — including THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Indiana, Missouri, Ohio, and Abortions have declined in Oklahoma — have seen their states where new laws make it abortion numbers drop by more harder to have them — but than 15 percent since 2010. they’ve also waned in states where abortion rights are pro- Similar drops tected, an Associated Press surBut more liberal states such as vey finds. Nearly everywhere, in New York, Washington and Orered states and blue, abortions are gon also had declines of that magdown since 2010. nitude, even as they maintained Explanations vary. Abortion- unrestricted access to abortion. rights advocates attribute it to Nationwide, the AP survey expanded access to effective con- showed a decrease in abortions of
Trend is seen even without stricter laws
about 12 percent since 2010. One major factor has been a decline in the teen pregnancy rate, which in 2010 reached its lowest level in decades. There’s been no official update since then, but the teen birth rate has continued to drop, which experts said signals a similar trend for teen pregnancies. The AP obtained the most recent abortion numbers from the health departments of all 45 states that compile such data on a comprehensive basis. States not compiling such data are California, Maryland, New Jersey, New Hampshire and Wyoming. With one exception, the data was from either 2013 or 2014 — providing a unique nationwide gauge of abortion trends during a wave of anti-abortion laws that gathered strength starting in 2011.
Briefly: World Rescue effort underway after earthquake
without Russia, which was ejected from what was the G-8 last year over its actions in Ukraine. Merkel and President Merkel Barack Obama agreed during a pre-summit bilateral meeting that the duration of sanctions imposed upon Moscow should be “clearly linked to Russia’s full implementation of the Minsk” peace accord agreed in February, the White House said in a statement.
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Rescuers on Malaysia’s highest peak Sunday searched for six climbers after recovering 13 dead from a strong earthquake that had trapped scores of trekkers. One survivor said she waited for a rescue helicopter that never came. A magnitude-5.9 earthquake Friday sent rocks and boulders raining down the trekking routes on 13,435-foot-high Mount Kinabalu in eastern Sabah state on Borneo island. Migrants in Italy Nine of the bodies found SaturROME — Heartened by day were flown out by helicopter, while the other two were brought recent election successes by an anti-immigrant party, Italian down by foot, said district police politicians based in the north official Farhan Lee Abdullah. vowed Sunday not to shelter more migrants saved at sea, G-7 leaders on Russia any even as thousands more were ELMAU, Germany — Gerbeing rescued in the Mediterraman Chancellor Angela Merkel nean from smugglers’ boats in said Sunday she expects a meet- distress. ing of the Group of Seven indusOver the weekend, nearly trialized democracies to produce 6,000 migrants were rescued by a “united signal” that sanctions an array of European military against Russia can only be soft- vessels, including 2,371 who ened if a February peace accord were saved Sunday from 15 for Ukraine is fully impleboats that ran into difficulty mented. shortly after smugglers set off This year’s meeting of the with them from Libyan shores, leading industrialized democra- the Italian coast guard said. cies was the second in a row The Associated Press
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SOLEMN
OBSERVANCE
Rescuers bow during a memorial service near the raised capsized ship Eastern Star on the Yangtze River in southern China on Sunday. China’s state broadcaster reported the death toll from the cruise ship disaster has risen to more than 400 as teams expand the search of the river for dozens more missing.
Surveillance law will let U.S. ratify nuke terrorism treaties THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — Tucked into the surveillance bill that became law was a little-noticed section that will let the United States complete ratification of two longstalled treaties aimed at stopping a frightening scenario: terrorists wielding radioactive bombs. “Today, nearly 2,000 metric tons of weapons-usable nuclear materials remain spread across hundreds of sites around the globe — some of it poorly secured,” said former Sen. Sam Nunn, co-chairman of the Nuclear Threat Initiative, an organization in Washington that works on the issue. “We know that to get the materials needed to build a bomb, terrorists will not necessarily go
Quick Read
where there is the most material. They will go where the material is most vulnerable.” When President Barack Obama signed the surveillance law last Tuesday, attention focused on how it ends the National Security Agency’s bulk collection of Americans’ telephone records. The last drafts of that legislation, however, included 15 paragraphs permitting the U.S. to formally endorse two nuclear terrorism treaties after years of delay. The Senate ratified both treaties in 2008, but it has taken seven years to pass legislation needed to bring U.S. law in line with them. That’s what was needed for the U.S. to complete the ratification process. One treaty is the International
Convention for the Suppression of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism, which took effect in 2007. Nations that sign it pledge to enact laws to criminalize certain nuclear terrorist actions and punish individuals who possess or use radioactive or nuclear material and devices or damage nuclear facilities. The surveillance law also will let the U.S. finish ratification of the 2005 amendment to the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material. The treaty requires nations to enact standards to protect nuclear material while it’s stored and transported domestically, and take criminal action against individuals who try to steal, smuggle or damage facilities.
. . . more news to start your day
West: Elderly man arrested after death of his wife, 83
Nation: McCarthy’s ‘Spy’ tops weekend box office
World: Scattered violence as Mexico holds elections
World: Turkish ruling party seen losing hold on majority
POLICE HAVE ARRESTED an 89-year-old California man on a murder charge in connection with the death of his elderly wife. The Sacramento Sheriff’s Department says Masaharu Ono was booked Friday into the Sacramento County Jail on a single count of murder after sheriff’s deputies were called to the couple’s apartment and found his 83-year-old wife’s body. The Sacramento Bee said Ono reported finding his wife dead inside the Sacramento home. Authorities said that after an investigation, it was determined the woman had injuries that contributed to her death and were suspicious.
MELISSA MCCARTHY NOTCHED her first No. 1 weekend box-office debut as a leading lady with the $30 million opening of her espionage comedy “Spy.” According to studio estimates Sunday, McCarthy’s latest film with director Paul Feig bested a varied field of action, horror and a resurrected HBO series. Last week’s top film, “San Andreas,” the disaster movie starring Dwayne Johnson, slid to second place with $26.4 million. “Insidious: Chapter 3” opened with an estimated $23 million, a strong debut for the low-budget horror prequel.
PROTESTERS BURNED BALLOT boxes in several states of southern Mexico on Sunday in an attempt to disrupt elections seen as a litmus test for President Enrique Peña Nieto’s government. Thousands of soldiers and federal police were guarding polling stations where violence and calls for boycotts threatened to mar elections for 500 seats in the lower house of Congress, nine of 31 governorships and hundreds of mayors and local officials. Midterm elections usually draw light turnout, but attention was unusually high this time as a loose coalition of radical teachers’ unions and activists vowed to block the vote.
IN A REBUKE of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ambitions to expand his powers, Turkish voters stripped his party of its majority in parliament, preliminary election results showed Sunday. With 99.9 percent of the vote counted, Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party, the AKP, had the support of around 41 percent of voters, state-run TRT television said. According to projections, that would give it some 258 seats — 18 below the minimum needed to keep its majority. The setback likely puts an end, for the time being, to Erdogan’s hopes of passing constitutional changes that would have greatly boosted his powers.
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MONDAY, JUNE 8, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Bulldog in mauling is euthanized BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — An American bulldog that savaged an elderly woman in May was euthanized Sunday. “The dog was euthanized earlier this afternoon,” said Mary Beth Wegener, executive director of the Olympic Peninsula Humane Society, late Sunday. On May 27, Duke, a 9-month-old dog owned by Donald Wenzl, attacked Jenelle Vivian Gilbert, 73, at her home on Hansen Road in Port Angeles. Wenzl, 43, is a sergeant who has worked for the past 17 years in the corrections division of the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office. Law enforcement officials declared Duke to be a “dangerous dog” and he was placed on a 10-day rabies quarantine by the Humane Society. At the end of the quarantine, he was euthanized at the request of Wenzl. On May 27, according to the police report, Duke broke a ring on a yard stake to which he was tied while Wenzl was in his home. The dog and a Labrador retriever wandered to the elderly woman’s driveway.
KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
‘FUNCTIONAL
ART’
Peninsula College welding students Jerry Spies, 18, left, and Devon Horn, 19, both of Port Angeles, look over a display of art created by their fellow students as part of an exhibit of “functional art” on the school’s Port Angeles campus. Students were encouraged to pick out and vote on their favorite creation Friday.
‘Courageous,’ ‘professor’ lead to spelling bee titles PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — A “courageous” endeavor and a savvy little “professor” won top honors in the Port Angeles All-City Spelling Bee. James Burkhardt, fifthgrade student at Roosevelt Elementary, placed first in the elementary level bee by spelling the word “courageous” correctly at the citywide bee last Tuesday. Mason Reynolds, a sixthgrade student at Olympic Christian School, placed second. At the middle-school level, Emily Bundy, an eighth-grade student at Queen of Angels, finished first by spelling “professor” correctly. Felicia Che, a Queen of Angels seventh-grade student, placed second. Students from Port Angeles School District elementary and middle schools — Dry Creek, Franklin, Hamilton, Jefferson and Roosevelt elementary schools, and Stevens Middle School — and Queen of Angels and Olympic Christian private schools participated in the competition at the Vern Burton Community Center. The annual bee, sponsored by Soroptimist International Port Angeles-Jet Set and the Friends of the North Olympic Library System, included two contests: the first among fourth-, fifth- and sixth-grade students and the second for
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Duke the American bulldog. and tore her clothing, and she was afraid of the dog. She said she attempted to run back to her house, but Duke grabbed her hand and dragged her to the ground, where he bit her to the head, both legs and both arms. The Labrador retriever did not take part in the attack. The attack caused severe damage to her right arm and hand, and she was treated at Olympic Medical Center. The investigation has been turned over to Lisa Hopper, code compliance and animal control officer for the city of Sequim, to prevent any appearance of a conflict of interest involving the sergeant, Clallam County Sheriff Bill Benedict has said.
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Gilbert, who was walkReporter Arwyn Rice can be ing down the driveway to reached at 360-452-2345, ext. get her mail, told police that 5070, or at arice@peninsuladaily Duke had once nipped her news.com.
Free Tuesday concert to focus on jazz greats PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES SCHOOL DISTRICT
Port Angeles elementary and middle school spelling bee winners are, from left, Felicia Che, middle school second place; Emily Bundy, middle school first place; James Burkhardt, elementary first place; and Mason Reynolds, elementary second place. seventh- and eighth-grade students. Each of the top two winners in both divisions received a trophy and book bags filled with prizes donated by the Friends of the North Olympic Library System. Finalists had participated in “spell downs” in their respective class and school bees and advanced to the annual all-city bee.
Elementary
and alternates among students in the seventh and eighth grades were: ■ Olympic Christian — Mikkiah Brady with alternate Kia Noel. ■ Queen of Angels — First- and second-place winners Bundy and Che, with alternates Emily Sirguy and Makayla Peabody. ■ Stevens Middle School — Darien Woodward, Adam Moore, Rehanna Fangman, Kevin Sommers, Ashlee Seelye, Matthew Tiemersma, Linus Waddell, Isabelle Cottam, Hollund Bailey, Briauna Simpson and Glenn Deckard. Not participating in the finals were Jackson Larsen, Kaya Reynolds, Brandon Gomez, Arthur Murphy, Stewart Koehler and Hannah Stone. Alternates participating in the finals were Dakota Stewart , Donavan Brosseau-Adams, Mackenzie Carney, Sadie Pharr and Glenn Deckard. Other alternates were Angelo Ramos, Triton Edwards, Amberlynn Robertson, Blake Hobbs and finalists Jacob Aldana.
Robbins, Pursha True, Sam Camacho and Blake Parker. ■ Jefferson Elementary — Mikala Thompson, Joseph Hill, Arion Swain, Abigail Moore, Cadance Grossell, Raven Taylor and Isabel Mujica, with alternates Morgan Johnson and David Johnson. ■ Roosevelt Elementary — First-place finisher Burkhardt, Ginger Kardonsky, Mikaya Haller, Bryce Hodgson, Chava Haller, Briauna Simpson, Talia Anderson, Daniel Hornack and Alivia Smith, with alternates Gabby Montana, Austin Seelye, Olivia Carroll, Madeline Montana and Seth Schroeder. ■ Olympic Christian School — Second-place winner Reynolds, Edun Bailey and Sydney Frymyer, with alternates Christina Caples, Emily Landers and Noelani Rediger. ■ Queen of Angels — Sage Glover, Kira Commerton and Aidan Braaten, with alternates Jasmine Jackson, Connor Burnette and Abby Austin.
Participating finalists and alternates among students in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades were: ■ Dry Creek Elementary — Maleeah Casey, Anne Edwards, Connor Judy and Keleia Epley, with alternates Niko Ross, Imagine Bankson, Jayden Bundy and Logan Beebe. ■ Franklin Elementary — Derek Alin and Anneka Joner, with alternates Khali Kennedy and Delfono Martinez-Vasquez. ■ Hamilton Elementary — Joelle Sommers, Xander Maestras, Chelsy Apao, Brooke Coons and Kiera Middle school Woodward, with alternates Participating Mason Balch, Samantha
Doc Reiss Cell: 461-0613 Office: 457-0456
CONCIERGE LEVEL SERVICE
Help improve local senior services. Olympic Area Agency on Aging (O3A) has a Clallam County vacancy on O3A’s Advisory Council. O3A coordinates services for seniors and adults with disabilities in Clallam, Grays Harbor, Jefferson & Pacific Counties. The Advisory Council focuses on aging and long term care services in all four counties. For information contact Carol Ann at 866-720-4863; or email laaseca@dshs.wa.gov. Monthly meetings are in Shelton; mileage reimbursement and lunch included.
Van strikes two signs, overturns at interchange PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
DISCOVERY BAY — An Auburn man was flown to a hospital early Sunday morning after he fell asleep at the wheel on state Highway 104 and his van struck two highway signs near the interchange with U.S. Highway 101. At 4:05 a.m. Rajinder Singh, 42, of Auburn was driving a 2005 GMC van westbound on Highway 104 and took the offramp to northbound Highway 101, according to a State Patrol report. The report said Singh, who was wearing his seat belt, fell asleep at the wheel, lost control of the van, went
off the road to the left and struck a highway sign. Singh steered to the right, entered a ditch where the van struck another highway sign, and it overturned onto its passenger side. The van skidded about 20 feet to its final resting spot on the shoulder of northbound U.S. 101, troopers said. Singh was flown by helicopter to Harborview Medical Center, according to the State Patrol. Singh was not admitted to the hospital, and was possibly treated and released. There was no accessible record for his treatment Sunday, a hospital spokeswoman said.
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PORT ANGELES — The music of Cole Porter, Thelonious Monk and George and Ira Gershwin will fill Maier Hall this Tuesday night, and it won’t cost a penny to get in and listen. The Peninsula College Jazz Ensemble, a 20-piece outfit featuring players from across the North Olympic Peninsula, will give a free concert at 7 p.m. at Maier Hall on the southeastern side of the college’s main campus at 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd. Singer Robbin Eaves will offer the Gershwins’ “(Our) Love is Here to Stay” with a trumpet-saxophonerhythm combo, and the full band will perform “Embraceable You,” as well as Jerome Kern’s “ Yesterdays.”
The concert also promises a medley inspired by Artie Shaw: Porter’s “What Is This Thing Called Love” and “Begin the Beguine” and Romberg and Hammerstein’s “Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise.” “We will do Jimmy Van Heusen’s ‘Here’s That Rainy Day,’ which features Steve Swanson — regular trumpeter with our band now, formerly of the Buddy Rich Big Band and Lionel Hampton Band — and Freddie Hubbard’s ‘Povo,’ a jazzrock classic from 1970,” added David P. Jones, leader of the jazz ensemble. For information about Tuesday’s performance and other musical events at Peninsula College, visit www.pencol.edu or phone Jones at 360-417-6405.
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MONDAY, JUNE 8, 2015
A5
Military budget debate to resume PENINSULA DAILY NEWS NEWS SERVICES
WASHINGTON — The House will take up a bill this week to reauthorize the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, while the Senate will resume debate on the 2016 military budget.
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ABOUT SCIENCE
Roland Mabrey, 4, dressed in his space suit, reads a science book with his mother, Kristan Mabrey of Port Angeles, during a session of learning science through art at the Port Angeles Public Library over the weekend. The Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture in Seattle brought a collection of hands-on activities to the library, allowing children and parents fun ways to explore science and nature.
Sen. Hargrove helps hammer budget deal BY JAMES CASEY PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
OLYMPIA — The Legislature’s minorities rule — by compromising majority rule. After majority legislative leaders couldn’t reach agreement on how much money Washington state would raise — and spend — for the next two years, minority politicians took up the task late last week. According to state Sen. Jim Hargrove, Hoquiam Democrat, they succeeded Friday afternoon, then began hard-knuckled negotiations. Hargrove and state Reps. Steve Tharinger and Kevin Van De Wege, both of Sequim, represent the 24th District that includes all of Clallam and Jefferson counties and most of Grays Harbor County. The Legislature had been stalemated between House Democrats’ insistence on raising revenues and Senate Republicans’ promise of imposing no new taxes. Lawmakers went into one overtime session at the end of April and another after Memorial Day. If they don’t break the impasse by July 1, state government may shut down. “So, the governor requested that the two minorities [Senate Democrats and House Republicans] go off and try to set the size of the box, of the budget,” Hargrove said. Despite being a minority member, he still carries considerable clout after serving in the Senate since 1993 following three consecutive terms in the state House. He participated in the process.
Eye on Olympia
Hargrove
agreed to meet in the middle of the $640 million gap between the Senate and House operating budgets,
Hargrove said. Senators cut tax exemptions to ante up another $320 million, and Democrats cut their spending by an equal amount. Whereas the respective majority leaders of both chambers hadn’t done much but “trade paper,” as Hargrove put it, over the last two weeks, the minority negotiators cut all the “strings” that had been tied to both budget proposals. The Senate’s dropping new tax exemptions, he said, “put a whole lot more money on the table from their perspective.” But will it be enough to fully fund the budget? “I doubt it,” Hargrove said.
Taxes could rise
“Nothing has been specifically dropped; nothing has been specifically added,” he said. Still on the table is Hargrove’s own proposal for a one-tenth of 1 percent increase in the capital gains tax he said would fall on 7,500 state taxpayers and Tharinger’s modifications of the Business and Occupation Tax to increase revenue while easing the impact on start-up businesses. Met in the middle “There are some hard The opposing sides decisions to make,” HarTake the Peninsula Daily News on the road with you online so you’re never left without North Olympic Peninsula news and deals!
Think inside the box “I think what they’ve done is to define the size of the box,” Tharinger said, referring to the amount of the biennial outlay of around $38.2 billion. “What happens inside that box, I think, is subject to a fair amount of discussion. There’s a lot of work left,” he said. “It takes a few days to do the paperwork and hold the hearing and write the bills. “I think we’re still looking at the third or fourth week of June” for the Legislature to declare sine die, meaning to adjourn the session. Meanwhile, neither Hargrove nor Tharinger would speculate on whether the Legislature would meet the state Supreme Court’s mandate to replace local levies with state funding as the mainstay of public education. That order, called the McCleary decision, says the Legislature must reform school funding by 2018 and show progress toward that goal or face sanctions for contempt of court. What penalties the court — one branch of state government — might impose on the Legislature — an independent branch — remains unknown.
_______ Reporter James Casey can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5074, or at jcasey@peninsula dailynews.com.
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grove said. “At least they’re in the room talking.” Hargrove said legislators might reach a tentative agreement by the end of this week. On the other side of the Capitol, however, Tharinger said it would probably take lawmakers the rest of the month to hammer out the legal boilerplate and rivet together the details.
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■ BAN ON TRAVEL TO CUBA: Voting 176 for and 247 against, the House on June 4 refused to uphold an executive order by President Barack Obama in January that would end a decades-long ban on most Americans’ travel to Cuba. The vote retained lan-
■ CALIFORNIA OILSPILL COMPENSATION: Voting 155 for and 223 against, the House on June 1 defeated a bid by Democrats to require the pipeline company responsible for an oil spill last month near Santa Barbara,
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■ CURBS ON DOMESTIC SURVEILLANCE: By a vote of 67 for and 32 against, the Senate on June 2 gave final congressional approval to a bipartisan bill (HR 2048) that would end the National Security Agency’s collection and storage of bulk data on Americans’ phone calls and other telecommunications under Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act. Under the bill, when the government requests Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court permission to search telecom records involving U.S. citizens, it must provide specific information — short of probable cause — to identify its target in the context of a terrorism investigation. The government would then obtain its desired records as metadata (numbers, time and duration of the call) from telephonecompany logs. Overall, the bill renews three sections of the USA Patriot Act that expired June 1. A yes vote was to send the bill to President Obama, who signed it into law. Cantwell and Murray voted yes.
■ STRYKER COMBAT VEHICLES: Voting 61 for and 34 against, the Senate on June 4 provided $371 million in the fiscal 2016 military budget (HR 1735) for adding firepower to the Army’s heavily armored, rapid-deployment Stryker combat vehicle. The upgrade would consist, in part, of replacing the Stryker’s 50-caliber machine gun with a 30-millimeter cannon at a projected cost of $3.8 million per vehicle. The $612 billion Department of Defense authorization bill remained in debate. A yes vote was to adopt the amendment. Cantwell and Murray voted yes.
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■ STATE LAWS ON MEDICAL MARIJUANA: The House on June 3 voted, 242 for and 186 against, to prohibit federal lawenforcement authorities from interfering with state laws that permit marijuana to be cultivated, distributed, possessed and used for medicinal purposes. The District of Columbia, Guam and 39 states have such laws. Under federal law, the use, sale and possession of marijuana are criminal offenses. This amendment was added to a bill (HR 2578), later passed, that would authorize $51.4 billion in fiscal 2016 for the departments of Justice and Commerce, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the National Science Foundation and other agencies. A yes vote was to bar federal interference with ■ PANEL ON CIVIL state medical-marijuana LIBERTIES: Voting 42 for laws. and 56 against, the Senate Kilmer voted yes. on June 2 refused to weaken a “friend of the court” panel ■ MANAGEMENT OF of civil-liberties specialists COMMERCIAL FISH- established by HR 2048 ING: Voting 225 for and (above) to advise the For152 against, the House on eign Intelligence SurveilJune 1 passed a bill (HR lance Court. 1335) to extend through fisWhen the court weighs a cal 2019 the federal law for novel or significant interregulating commercial fish- pretation of the law, this ing in coastal waters rang- panel would have standing ing from three to 200 miles to make arguments, possioffshore. bly in opposition to the govThe law was enacted in ernment’s petition. 1976 to conserve stocks and This amendment sought prevent overfishing while to keep the panel but holprotecting declining species low out its authority. and fragile habitats. A yes vote was to weaken This bill gives regional the civil-liberties panel. councils rather than federal Cantwell and Murray authorities authority to set voted no. catch limits, based on what
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Websites following our state and national legislators: ■ Followthemoney. org — Campaign donors by industry, ZIP code and more ■ Vote-Smart.org — How special interest groups rate legislators on the issues.
Calif., to compensate fishing interests and others suffering economic losses as a result of the discharge of about 100,000 gallons of crude into the Pacific Ocean. Fishing has been suspended indefinitely in a 138,000-square-mile area. This vote occurred during debate on HR 1335 (above). A yes vote was to adopt the motion, which, had it prevailed, would have immediately amended the bill. Kilmer voted yes.
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guage in HR 2577 to keep the ban in place until the Cuban government has settled thousands of property claims filed by U.S. citizens. The underlying bill, which was later passed, authorizes a fiscal 2016 budget of $55.3 billion for several departments and agencies including the Department of Transportation. Under the order issued by Obama in January, Americans can avoid having to obtain a Treasury Department license to visit Cuba if they state broadly their travel is for educational or religious reasons or some other approved purpose. A yes vote was to lift the Cuba travel ban. Kilmer voted yes.
they judge to be sound science. Critics said the bill would scrap federally administered 10-year plans to restore depleted stocks while downplaying laws such as the National Marine Sanctuaries Act, Endangered Species Act and National Environmental Policy Act. A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate. Kilmer voted no.
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Jefferson and Clallam counties are represented in the part-time state Legislature by Rep. Kevin Van De Wege, D-Sequim, the House majority whip; Rep. Steve Tharinger, D-Sequim; and Sen. Jim Hargrove, D-Hoquiam. Write Van De Wege and Tharinger at P.O. Box 40600 (Hargrove at P.O. Box 40424), Olympia, WA 98504; email them at vandewege. kevin@leg.wa.gov; tharinger. steve@leg.wa.gov; hargrove. jim@leg.wa.gov. Or you can call the Legislative Hotline, 800-5626000, from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mondays through Fridays (closed on holidays and from noon to 1 p.m.) and leave a detailed message, which will be emailed to Van De Wege, Tharinger, Hargrove or to all three. Links to other state officials: http://tinyurl.com/ pdn-linksofficials.
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“Eye on Congress” is published in the Peninsula Daily News every Monday when Congress is in session about activities, roll call votes and legislation in the House and Senate. The North Olympic Peninsula’s legislators in Washington, D.C., are Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Mountlake Terrace), Sen. Patty Murray (D-Seattle) and Rep. Derek Kilmer (D-Gig Harbor). Contact information — The address for Cantwell and Murray is U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C. 20510; Kilmer, U.S. House, Washington, D.C. 20515. Phone Cantwell at 202224-3441 (fax, 202-2280514); Murray, 202-2242621 (fax, 202-224-0238); Kilmer, 202-225-5916. Email via their websites: cantwell.senate.gov; murray. senate.gov; kilmer.house.gov. Kilmer’s North Olympic Peninsula is located at 332 E. Fifth St. in Port Angeles. Hours are 9 a.m. to noon Tuesdays and from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays. It is staffed by Judith Morris, who can be contacted at judith.morris@ mail.house.gov or 360-7973623.
Eye on Congress
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PeninsulaNorthwest
MONDAY, JUNE 8, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TV: Meeting
‘Duke’ Wayne CONTINUED FROM A1
STEVE MULLENSKY/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
In literally a running start, contestants in the race run down a ramp to their vessels Sunday in Victoria. The landmark Fairmont Empress Hotel is in the background.
Race: Individual vessels will
require individual navigation CONTINUED FROM A1 the website’s tracking map. However, once out of the Second place gets a set of harbor and sailboats were steak knives. able to unfurl their sails, All entrants receive a most of the early leaders T-shirt and bragging rights. fell behind quickly. Entries included multiBy 5:30 p.m. the leaders hulled sailboats, kayaks, Elsie Piddock, FreeBurd canoes, and custom-built and Turn Point Design led boats that defied typical the pack. categories. The next official stop for To track the race and for the racers is the first wayother information, visit the point at Seymour Narrows. race website at www.r2ak. com. Seymour Narrows According to the trackNo one was certain how ing site, the muscle-working start allowed the Soggy long it would take the fastBeavers team, in a six-per- est competitors to reach son modified outrigger Seymour Narrows, nor how canoe with a sail, to lead many would reach the locathe race out of the harbor, tion, which is about 200 followed by Blackfish on a miles away off the coast of trimaran with a crew of British Columbia by the most direct water routes. three. There is no set route Team Coastal Express, Un-cruise and Puffin were through the Inside Passage to Alaska, and competitors just behind the leaders. Brodern was the last out are expected to choose of the harbor, according to routes to take advantage of
their individual boats’ strengths, so the trip may be longer. Race organizers have also said the race would be affected by tides, currents, unpredictable winds and possible storms. It has been estimated the entire race could take as long as two weeks.
Drop-outs Of the 75 craft that registered for the race, 53 started the race from Port Townsend last Thursday. Only 40 successfully reached Victoria. The 40-mile route from Port Townsend to Victoria took between 9 hours, 18 minutes for the fastest finisher, and 21 hours, 30 minutes for the slowest. The Golden Oldies was the fastest finisher in the 40-mile first leg. Not all signed on for the
Meets the ‘Duke’
entire trip. Of the 53 starters, 20 entered only the first leg of the race, and 12 reached Vancouver after the start at the Port Townsend Maritime Center. The first-leg trip across the Strait of Juan de Fuca was designed to eliminate those who were not ready for the entire 750-mile race. One of those who dropped out was a man whose vessel capsized at about 8:22 a.m. Thursday. The skipper of the TriRaid 560 trimaran, Mark Dussell, was rescued by the Coast Guard, and his boat was returned to shore.
________ Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5070, or at arice@peninsuladailynews.com. PDN Reporter Chris McDaniel contributed to this report.
PA Coast Guard crew hoists ailing seaman from ship PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — A Coast Guard helicopter crew from the Port Angeles air station hoisted an ailing crewman from a cargo ship off Port Townsend and flew him to a Seattle hospital on
Death Notices Edwin Hartley Maybee March 1, 1926 — June 5, 2015
Port Angeles resident Edwin Hartley Maybee died of age-related causes at home surrounded by family. He was 89. A complete obituary will follow. Services: Funeral service will be at 1 p.m. Thursday, June 11, at Independent Bible Church, 116 Ahlvers Road, with Pastor Mike Jones officiating. Burial will follow at Mount Angeles Memorial Park, 45 Monroe Road, Port Angeles. Drennan-Ford Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. www.drennanford.com
Saturday. The MH-65 Dolphin helicopter crew safely hoisted the man, who was not identified by the Coast Guard, and transported him to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle.
The master of the 700foot Horizon Tacoma contacted dispatchers at Coast Guard Sector Puget Sound in Seattle, requesting assistance for the 72-year-old crewman reportedly suffering chest pains.
That success was soon followed by a career in television. Her career began with guest roles on many television series of the 1960s and ’70s, including “Route 66,” “Flipper,” “Here Come the Brides,” “The Green Hornet,” “Mannix,” “The Fugitive,” “The Virginian” and “Bonanza.” Her first major role was as Amelia Cole in the 19701971 television series, “The Silent Force.” In 1971, Day George, she was circa 1966 cast as Lisa Casey in “Mission: Impossible,” getting a Golden Globe nomination in 1972 and an Emmy Award nomination in 1973. In 1970, she was cast in a role for the John Wayne film “Chisum,” which was filmed in Mexico.
The helicopter crew launched at 12:25 p.m. Saturday, flew to the entrance of Admiralty Inlet and completed hoist operations at 12:40 p.m. Weather conditions were reported as clear.
She said she will never forget meeting the “Duke” for the first time. Wayne has a connection to the North Olympic Peninsula as well, as he owned land on Sequim Bay. After his death in 1979, his family donated some of that land, and the marina on Sequim Bay is named after him. “I am standing there and I am looking at this man, and I am thinking, ‘oh my God! It is John Wayne,” she recalled. “And I start to cry.” Disconcerted, Wayne said, “‘what’s the matter little lady?’ He loved it, he thought it was funny.” After they got to know each other better, Wayne would spit tobacco juice on her skirt, she recalled with a laugh. “He used chaw, and so did most of the other guys that were out there.” During a break in the filming, she said Wayne came to a party held at Day George’s home in Mexico, a bottle of his favorite brand of tequila — Sauza Conmemorativo — in hand. It was on that night Day George said she showed the Duke she could “drink him under the table.” “He and the stunt guys, they all played dollar poker.
He would say ‘shots,’ and that was it. You had it. You drank it.” She was able to keep Wayne up with him through the first bottle, and he retrieved another from his truck. She knew she was able to hold her own better than the rest “because they were all ripped, and I wasn’t because I had things to do,” she said. “I had to clean up after this.” What “killed him was I said, ‘can I have one more?’ We never had to do that again. I had to let him know I was no sissy. Just because I cried doesn’t mean I was a sissy.”
Later appearances Day George went on to appear in “The House on Greenapple Road,” “Mayday at 40,000 Feet!” and “Cruise Into Terror.” She also appeared on “The F.B.I.,” “McCloud,” “Love Boat,” and “Vega$.” One of her favorite roles was guest-starring on television’s “Wonder Woman” in 1976 as the villain Fausta Grables, the Nazi Wonder Woman. While Day George has lived through many great times and rubbed elbows with many movie and TV stars, she doesn’t miss those days. She prefers to look forward. “I did that already,” she said, noting her life’s work now is to provide for the youth of tomorrow so they can have adventures of their own. “That is very important,” she said. “Those things are far more important than what I did in the past. “Although, what I did in the past created a pathway for me to be able to do this. But that is why we work. That is why we have our profession so that we can do the next thing.” And she strives to “keep a clean heart and keep my feet going in the right direction, one at a time.”
________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews. com.
Peonies: Light pink variety popular CONTINUED FROM A1 they would not grow in San Diego because they need Amy worked as a loan colder winters to develop officer when she and her their rootstock. The weather in Sequim, husband moved to the Sequim area from San however, is perfect for peony Diego, Calif., about 13 years cultivation. So in 2009, she planted ago. She was laid off from about 170 herbaceous peony Countrywide Financial roots in her Happy Valley when it was purchased by yard, and set out to create a Bank of America during the thriving business. She established a webGreat Recession. That’s when she decided site for the farm, www. to do what she really ILovePeonies.com, and filled it with information about wanted to do. Amy had adored peonies how to buy and nurture the ever since moving to the plants. Then she compiled a catUnited States from the Philippines in 1967 — she alog for farm visitors to remembers seeing them in pore over. Since 2010, her business romantic movies — but — much like her beloved peonies — has blossomed. Amy has had success selling dormant peony roots to local customers and folks from across the state. The roots are planted in
home gardens in the fall and will bloom in the late spring or early summer after the stems break ground in February or March. “Basically from February to August, I start getting orders for peonies, and then they are delivered in the fall between October and November because that is when the peonies are dormant, and that is when we can dig them up and we can ship them,” she said.
flowers when they are in bloom. “I do not sell the flowers because the visitors like to see the flowers, and I don’t want to rob them of that pleasure,” she said. “We plant them in November,” she said. “Come February, they are starting to come up. They are breaking ground. “From then on, they just keep growing taller and taller. Between the months of May and June, they start to flower.”
Coral charm
Flowers in bloom
The most popular variety of peony among her customers seems to be the coral charm, which has white-tolight-pink petals. These are followed in popularity by the red and pink varieties. Amy does not sell the
The different varieties bloom at different times, meaning there will beautiful flowers on display at her farm through the early summer. “They have two months of blooming period, and in that two months there are
WANTED:
seven blooming cycles,” Amy said. “So, during that twomonth period, every seven to 10 days there is a new peony that is opening.” The public can view the peony blossoms at the farm through June 30. A few miles southeast of the Third Avenue overpass on U.S. Highway 101, the farm is open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays to Sundays. For more information, phone 360-808-4099 or visit www.ilovepeonies.com.
________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews. com. Features Editor Diane Urbani De La Paz and Managing Editor Leah Leach contributed to this report.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, June 8, 2015 PAGE
A7
How employers trap good workers I
N OLDEN DAYS, THE WAY YOU kept good workers was to pay them more. That’s no longer the case in many jobs. Companies have been using “noncompete” agreements to stop these workers from seeking better compensation at rival companies. Originally designed Froma to stop tech whizzes from taking company Harrop secrets to higher bidders, these noncompete agreements are being forced on workers loading boxes at warehouses or assembling sandwiches so that they can’t go to the warehouse or sandwich shop down the block. Such agreements have been challenged at Jimmy John’s sandwich franchise and Subway, among others. According to The Huffington Post, the Jimmy John’s contract forbids an employee to work at any company making more than 10 percent of revenues “from selling submarine, hero-type, deli-style, pita and/or wrapped or rolled sandwiches” within 3 miles of a Jimmy John’s (anywhere in the country) for two years. The practice is outrageous, and a new bill before Congress would bar noncompete contracts for jobs paying less than $15 an hour. Introduced by Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., and Rep. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., the legislation is aptly named the MOVE Act, which stands for the Mobility and Opportunity for Vulnerable Employees Act.
T
HE NEED FOR SUCH protections is truly a sign of these times. It reflects the increasingly
AP” JAUME “K
skewed balance of power favoring top dogs over their delivery truck drivers. Hotshot execs keep telling us that their companies have to pay them a zillion dollars an hour to attract rare talent such as theirs. You know, the supply and demand thing. When brilliant execs themselves are in short supply, you have to pay more for them. But somehow, respect for the labor market’s law of supply and demand fades the lower down the corporate ladder you go. So here you have guys making $15 an hour and doing a good enough job that a company across town might pay them $17 an hour to do the same thing. But they can’t go. Rather than give them a raise, employers wave these agreements workers had to sign as a condition of being hired. Lower-skilled workers rarely challenge them, although they can. (The employer has to demonstrate that the workers could expose privileged infor-
CAPDEVILA
TOONS /CAGLE CAR
mation to its competitors.) Some companies are paying off former employers to get higher-skilled workers out of noncompete agreements. California has virtually banned all types of them.
Companies demand these agreements because, why not? Only 10 percent of job applicants try to negotiate for higher pay in return for accepting restrictions on their ability to seek employment elsewhere, according to the working paper. ORE THAN 19 MILLION Those with more ordinary skills are workers are now covered by such assumed to be less combative and more contracts, according to a working accepting of whatever they’re offered. paper by Evan Starr at the University of They just want the job. Illinois and Norman Bishara and James J. They may get the job, but it’s one with Prescott, both at the University of Michirather tight strings. gan. The MOVE Act would cut the strings For obvious reasons, knowledge-intenfor those lower down the pay scale. sive positions are likeliest to come with If it passed, many employers wanting noncompete agreements. to keep their most prized workers would But the paper found that more than 10 have to do it the old-fashioned way — by percent of repair jobs also require “nonpaying them more. competes,” as do 11 percent of jobs in pro________ duction (tailors, machine operators) and Froma Harrop is a columnist for the nearly 12 percent in personal services Providence (R.I.) Journal. Her column (barbers, gym instructors, manicurists). appears Mondays. Noncompete agreements do reduce Contact her at fharrop@gmail.com or in worker turnover, an expense for busicare of Creators Syndicate Inc., 737 Third nesses. But so do higher wages and superior working conditions. St., Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.
M
Boarding school for inner-city kids ON A WARM Saturday in late May 2008, my wife, Ann, talked me into going to an auditorium in Baltimore to watch a lottery. It was no ordinary lottery. Numbered balls were Thomas L. cranked out of a bingo Friedman machine, and the winners got a ticket to a better life. It was the lottery to choose the first 80 students to attend a new public collegeprep boarding school: the SEED School of Maryland based in Baltimore. (My wife chairs the foundation behind the SEED schools.) SEED Maryland — SEED already had a branch in the District of Columbia — was admitting boys and girls from some of the toughest streets and dysfunctional schools in Maryland, and particularly Baltimore, beginning in sixth grade. Five days a week, they would live at the school in a dormitory with counselors — insulated from the turmoil of their neighborhoods — and take buses home on weekends. On May 30, I attended the graduation of that first class. In a city that has made headlines lately for police brutality against African-Americans and inner-city rage, the graduation was a balm. The audience was packed with mostly African-Americans who had come to see, in many cases, the first in their families graduate from high school and head to a four-year college. But it was also filled with supporters, funders and teachers of all races. Starting such a school, per-
suading parents to send their kids to the first class, persuading kids to live away from home and take buses back all over Maryland every weekend, was hard. And the black and white SEED community did that hard work together. As the saying goes: “If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.” Unfortunately, not everyone made it to the finish line: Of the 80 who won the lottery that day in 2008, only 29 stuck it out or made it from sixth grade to graduation. The good news is that the graduates are going to the University of Virginia, the University of Wisconsin, University of Michigan, USC, Villanova and others. One is joining the Coast Guard. Several things struck me. One was the kindness with which the young men and women who had been living together in dorms since sixth grade treated one another. The class valedictorian, Stephanie Keyaka, who is going to Penn State, spoke touchingly about her classmates in her speech and seemed to speak for all when she said, “Today we say goodbye to the world of lockers without locks, to the world of having the confidence to leave a laptop in a hallway certain that it will be there when we return.” The next phase will not be so nurturing, she added, but that didn’t matter — SEED left them all with a lot of “grit.” Then she concluded: “SEED’s greatness, however, doesn’t lie in what SEED did do, but what SEED did not do for us. SEED never made us feel inadequate; SEED never discouraged us from daring to dream. . . . “And, most importantly, there was never a time when we felt
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unwanted or unloved.” When I asked Devin Tingle, who’s going to the Illinois Institute of Technology, what he took most from SEED, he cited the summer science internships and the fact that “this school teaches eight core values,” which he then ticked off: “respect, responsibility, self-determination, self-discipline, empathy, compassion, perseverance and integrity. This school teaches these core values from sixth grade until we graduate.” I asked Education Secretary Arne Duncan what he thought generally about the public boarding school model, which is expensive. He said, “Some kids need six hours a day, some nine, some 12 to 13,” but some clearly would benefit from a more “24/7” school/ community environment. “I went to Baltimore and talked to teachers after the riots,” Duncan added. “The number of kids living with no family member is stunning. “But who is there 24/7? The gangs.
“At a certain point, you need love and structure, and either traditional societal institutions provide that or somebody else does. “We get outcompeted by the gangs, who are there every day on those corners.” So quality public boarding schools need to be “part of a portfolio of options for kids.” All the SEED graduates seemed to have some family present at the ceremony. Indeed, these kids are visibly bearing the hopes of a lot of people. (I was in the men’s room and overheard a father telling his young child that he had to learn to go “pee-pee” so he could attend nursery school next fall and one day be like his sibling who just graduated SEED.) The incoming CEO of SEED, Lesley Poole, remarked to me: “I passed a family coming in, and I turned to them and asked: ‘Do you have a student graduating?’ “And they said, ‘Yes, and we are so excited.’ “What you see today is a vic-
NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ LEAH LEACH, managing editor/news, 360-417-3531 lleach@peninsuladailynews.com ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, news editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5064 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com ■ LEE HORTON, sports editor; 360-417-3525; lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com ■ DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ, features editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5062 durbanidelapaz@peninsuladailynews.com ■ General news information: 360-417-3527 From Jefferson County and West End, 800-826-7714, ext. 5250 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com News fax: 360-417-3521 ■ Sequim office: 147 W. Washington St., 98382; 360-681-2390 CHRIS MCDANIEL, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way, 98368; 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com
tory for not just the students graduating, but also for a community. “No family just has the mom or the grandmother here. There are cousins and neighbors — people who were skeptical of this whole model. . . . “Dreams are coming true today, and not just the dream of high school graduation, but the dream of college graduation. “At a time when our country is facing a number of challenges and so many places where it is clear we don’t agree — and the fear among some people that the American dream is not for everybody — for them, the American dream may just be one step and one day closer.”
________ Thomas L. Friedman is a three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The New York Times. His column appears in the Peninsula Daily News on Mondays. Contact Friedman via www. facebook.com/thomaslfriedman.
HAVE YOUR SAY We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” guest opinion columns of no more than 550 words that focus on local community lifestyle issues. Please — send us only one letter or column per month. Letters and guest columns published become the property of Peninsula Daily News, and it reserves the right to reject, condense or edit for clarity or when information stated as fact cannot be substantiated. Letters published in other newspapers or websites, anonymous letters, letters advocating boycotts, letters to other people, mass mailings and commercial appeals are not published. We will not publish letters that impugn the personal character of people or of groups of people. Include your name, street address and — for verification purposes — day and evening telephone numbers. Email to letters@peninsuladailynews.com, fax to 360-417-3521, or mail to Letters, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Sunday RANTS & RAVES 24-hour hotline: 360-417-3506
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MONDAY, JUNE 8, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
WSU sewing camp set in PA
CAPPING THEIR PREP CAREERS
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Members of the Forks High School Class of 2015 toss their caps at the end of Saturday night’s commencement ceremonies in the high school gymnasium. A total of 70 Spartans graduated. The class valedictorian is Brooke Jacoby, and the salutatorian is Brooke Peterson. Speakers at the ceremony included Brenda King and Wendy Bennett.
PORT ANGELES — Washington State University Extension will offer its second annual Clallam County 4-H CTA Sewing Day Camp on July 28-31. Clallam County 4-H and WSU clothing textile advisers will present beginners’ and continuing camps for youth ages 8-18. This day camp will be held mornings at Viking Sew and Vac, 707 E. First St. The cost is $45 per youth. Scholarships are available. Classes will be filled on a first-registered-and-paid basis. The registration deadline is June 18. For details and to register, phone Jenny Schmidt, 4-H program coordinator, at 360417-2398 or email jenny.schmidt@wsu.edu.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, June 8, 2015 SECTION
CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, WEATHER In this section
B Triple Crown
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Victor Espinoza celebrates atop American Pharoah after winning the Belmont Stakes on Saturday. American Pharoah is the first horse to win the Triple Crown since Affirmed won it in 1978.
American Pharoah will keep racing
DAVE LOGAN (2)/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Yusheng Ni, far left, of China runs with the front of the pack at the beginning of the North Olympic Discovery Marathon at Agnew Fields on Sunday. Ni went on to win the marathon.
Ni and Wu finish first Beijing man winner of marathon BY LEE HORTON PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
BY BETH HARRIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — A hero’s welcome greeted Triple Crown winner American Pharoah in Kentucky on Sunday, the first of many such receptions expected for the sporting world’s newest superstar. The 3-year-old colt has more racing in his future, along with an avalanche of publicity and money-making opportunities after pulling off the first sweep of the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont in 37 years. Before leaving Belmont Park, trainer Bob Baffert led American Pharoah onto a patch of grass outside of, fittingly, Barn 1 on a sunny and warm morning. It was only hours after his frontrunning, 5½-length victory, but the low-key champ appeared to enjoy the attention, dutifully posing for photographers and patiently letting bystanders pet him.
‘A really sweet horse’ “He’s a really sweet horse,” Baffert said. “We’re going to share him with everybody.” There were celebrity visits, too, for the newest member of racing’s elite club. Fellow Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott stopped by for a close-up look at American Pharoah, much like Baffert visited Mott’s barn in the mid-1990s to see Cigar, who won 16 consecutive races. American Pharoah arrived in Louisville, Ky., later in the day, and was greeted by hundreds of cheering fans at Churchill Downs, his home in between Triple Crown races. Jockey Victor Espinoza threw out the first pitch at Yankee Stadium, where Baffert attended the game.
Rest then more racing Next up for racing’s 12th Triple Crown winner is some well-deserved downtime, having run in and won five Grade 1 races in nearly 2½ months. That’s a compressed schedule for a racehorse, most of which have at least 30 days between starts. “It’s ridiculously insane what he did yesterday,” Baffert said Sunday. “It was a beautiful moment.” Owner Ahmed Zayat pledged to keep the horse in training, at least through the end of the year. Before the Belmont, Zayat sold breeding rights to American Pharoah to Coolmore Ashford Stud near Versailles, Kentucky. The family has said it received offers higher than $20 million, but the terms of the deal haven’t been disclosed. “They have zero say until he retires,” Zayat said. “We owe it to the sport to do the right thing. Money plays an important factor in this game. “I’ve already sold the breeding rights, but it is my genuine desire, as a fan, as someone who loves horses, to race him as long as I possibly can.” TURN
TO
TRIPLE/B4
PORT ANGELES — Yusheng Ni crossed the finish line with his thumbs raised. Ni, from Beijing, China, was the first finisher, and for the next few minutes he received verbal and literal pats on the back from strangers. A few minutes later, Ni saw his friend Phillip Xiu, who was holding a camera and taking photos of Ni. After talking to Xiu for a few seconds in a language he understood, Ni finally find out that he won the North Olympic Discovery Marathon. “Number one! Number one! Number one!” Ni shouted as he raised his arms. Ni doesn’t speak English, but he knows the language of winning. Ni out-ran the 259 runners Sunday to become the marathon’s 13th winner, finishing with a time of 3 hours, 5 minutes and 29.62 seconds. And he had plenty of energy to spare. “No tired,” Ni said, with Xiu serving as an interpreter. It was the second marathon in seven days for the 44-yearold. He placed 94th at the Rock ’N’ Roll San Diego Marathon on May 31 with a time of 3:12:52. On Sunday, Ni completed the marathon more than eight minutes ahead of second-place finisher Adam Reid of San Francisco (3:13:52.61). The women’s marathon was much closer. Taia Sean Wu of Bellingham won with a time of 3:13:57.53, less than a second ahead of her
Taia Sean Wu, right, of Bellingham sprints to the finish line ahead of Kaitlyn Spees to win the women’s marathon. Scripps College teammate, Kait- kicked in together,” Wu said. “We were together the whole lyn Spees of Oakland, Calif. time.” (3:13:58.34). Both were running their first “Kaitlyn pulled me from like Mile 15 to Mile 26, and then we marathons, having just finished
their senior seasons with the Claremont-Mudd-Scripps track and field team (they also ran cross country for the Athenas). TURN
TO
MARATHON/B3
Archer, Rays shut down Mariners BY TIM BOOTH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Seattle’s Willie Bloomquist watches his helmet bounce up after he slammed it down after striking out to end the seventh inning of Sunday’s 3-1 loss to Tampa Bay.
SEATTLE — Chris Archer reached into his locker and grabbed the first T-shirt he could find. Appropriately, “Make History” was written across the front. “I’ve worn this shirt since spring training,” Archer said. “It was literally the only shirt here other than my button-up that I’m going to wear on the plane and I haven’t showered yet.” Archer made his share of history Sunday, becoming the first pitcher in more than 100 years to reach double-digits in strikeouts without a walk in three straight starts, leading the Tampa Bay Rays over the Seattle Mariners 3-1. Archer (7-4) fanned 11 with zero walks in seven innings. STATS found no other pitcher with such a string in its research dating to 1914.
“It’s cool, man. It shows you the power of your mind. The less you focus on things you can’t control, a lot of times the better the outcome is,” Archer said. “When I’m out there I’m not thinking about strikeouts even when I ‘need’ a strikeout. I’m just trying to execute every pitch and if you do that and simplify it to that, you start to do great things.” Archer had five three-ball counts and gave up six hits, along with an unearned run. After striking out 12 against Seattle on May 27 and 15 vs. the Angels last Tuesday, he won his fourth straight decision overall. Archer said while the strikeout totals are impressive, the fact he’s gone 23 innings without issuing a walk is more important. Archer just missed becoming the first pitcher since Randy Johnson in 2001 with 12 or more strikeouts in three straight games. TURN
TO
M’S/B4
B2
SportsRecreation
MONDAY, JUNE 8, 2015
Today’s
Latest sports headlines can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.
Scoreboard Calendar
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”
SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY
Today No events scheduled.
Tuesday Baseball: North Kitsap AAA Legion at Wilder, 6 p.m.; Olympic Crosscutters at Steilacoom, 6 p.m.
Baseball Rays 3, Mariners 1 Sunday’s Game Seattle ab r hbi Elmore 3b 2 1 1 0 AJcksn cf Guyer lf 3 0 0 0 S.Smith lf DeJess ph 0 0 0 1 N.Cruz rf Kiermr cf 0 0 0 0 Seager 3b JButler dh 4 0 2 0 Trumo dh Forsyth 2b 4 0 1 1 Morrsn 1b SouzJr rf 4 0 0 0 BMiller ss Mahtok cf-lf 4 1 1 1 Blmqst 2b Frnkln ss-1b 4 0 0 0 Sucre c Rivera 1b-c 3 0 0 0 Weeks ph BWilsn c 3 0 0 0 Zunino c Longori pr 0 1 0 0 ACarer ss 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 3 5 3 Totals Tampa Bay
ab r hbi 4010 4010 4120 4000 4000 4010 4011 3010 2000 1000 0000
Kiermr cf JButler dh DeJess lf Forsyth 2b SouzJr rf ACarer ss Elmore 3b Frnkln 1b Rivera c Totals
Saturday’s Game Seattle ab r hbi ab r hbi 3 1 2 0 AJcksn cf 4121 4 0 0 0 Cano 2b 4000 3 0 0 0 N.Cruz rf 4020 4 0 0 0 Seager 3b 3000 4 0 0 0 Trumo dh 4000 2 0 0 0 S.Smith lf 2110 3 0 1 0 Ackley pr-lf 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 Morrsn 1b 4030 3 0 0 0 Blmqst ss 3011 Zunino c 2000 29 1 3 0 Totals 30 2 9 2
Tampa Bay 000 001 000—1 Seattle 000 100 10x—2 DP—Tampa Bay 1, Seattle 1. LOB—Tampa Bay 4, Seattle 8. 2B—A.Jackson (6), S.Smith (13). 3B—Kiermaier (4). HR—A.Jackson (3). SB—Kiermaier 2 (4). CS—Ackley (2), Morrison (1). IP H R ER BB SO Tampa Bay Colome 6 7 1 1 3 2 Geltz L,1-2 2 2 1 1 1 2 Seattle F.Hernandez W,9-2 7 2 1 1 3 6 Lowe H,3 1 1 0 0 0 1 Ca.Smith S,1-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 WP—F.Hernandez 2. Umpires—Home, John Tumpane; First, Doug Eddings; Second, Jim Wolf; Third, Adrian Johnson. T—2:45. A—31,106 (47,574).
American League Houston Texas Los Angeles Seattle Oakland New York Tampa Bay Toronto Boston Baltimore
West Division W L 34 23 30 26 28 28 25 31 23 35 East Division W L 31 25 30 27 27 30 26 31 25 30
Pct .596 .536 .500 .446 .397
GB — 3½ 5½ 8½ 11½
Pct GB .554 — .526 1½ .474 4½ .456 5½ .455 5½
10 a.m. (27) ESPN2 (311) ESPNU Baseball NCAA, Division I Tournament, Super Regional (Live) 1 p.m. (13) KCPQ Women’s Soccer FIFA, Sweden vs. Nigeria, World Cup, Group D (Live) 1 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Baseball NCAA, Division I Tournament, Super Regional (Live) 4 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Baseball NCAA, Division I Tournament, Super Regional (Live) 4:30 p.m. (306) FS1 Women’s Soccer FIFA, United States vs. Australia, World Cup Group D (Live) 5 p.m. (2) CBUT (304) NBCSN Hockey NHL, Tampa Bay Lightning at Chicago Blackhawks, Stanley Cup Finals, Game 3 (Live) 5 p.m. (26) ESPN Baseball NCAA, Division I Tournament, Super Regional (Live) 7 p.m. (306) FS1 Women’s Soccer FIFA, Japan vs. Switzerland, World Cup, Group C (Live)
Hockey NHL Playoff Glance
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
THROW
IT IN THE AIR
Switzerland’s Stan Wawrinka throws his racket as he defeats Serbia’s Novak Djokovic in their final match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris on Sunday. Wawrinka won 4-6, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4. See story on Page B4.
Mariners 2, Rays 1 Tampa Bay
Today
9-20 (Clark 3-3, Montgomery 3-6, O’Hea 2-4, Bird 1-1, Bishop 0-2, Loyd 0-4). Fouled Out— None. Rebounds—Los Angeles 40 (Lavender 12), Seattle 45 (Langhorne 9). Assists—Los Angeles 17 (Phillips 5), Seattle 21 (Bird, Montgomery 5). Total Fouls—Los Angeles 15, Seattle 14. A—9,686 (9,686).
34 1 7 1
Tampa Bay 100 000 110—3 Seattle 000 000 100—1 E—Elmore (2), Franklin (2), Seager (5), B. Miller (5). DP—Tampa Bay 1, Seattle 1. LOB— Tampa Bay 4, Seattle 6. 2B—S.Smith (14). HR—Mahtook (2). CS—A.Jackson (6), N.Cruz (2). S—Elmore. SF—DeJesus. IP H R ER BB SO Tampa Bay Archer W,7-4 7 6 1 0 0 11 McGee H,6 1 0 0 0 0 1 Jepsen S,4-6 1 1 0 0 0 1 Seattle Montgomery L,0-1 7 5 2 2 1 3 1/ 1 0 0 0 Wilhelmsen 3 0 2/ Nuno 0 0 0 1 3 0 Beimel 1 0 0 0 0 1 Umpires—Home, Doug Eddings; First, Jim Wolf; Second, Adrian Johnson; Third, John Tumpane. T—2:46. A—27,906 (47,574).
SPORTS ON TV
FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Chicago 1, Tampa Bay 1 Wednesday, June 3: Chicago 2, Tampa Bay 1 Saturday: Tampa Bay 4, Chicago 3 Today: Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m. Wednesday: Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m. Saturday, June 13: Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m. x-Monday, June 15: Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 17: Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m.
Transactions BASEBALL
Central Division W L Minnesota 32 23 Kansas City 30 23 Detroit 29 28 Cleveland 27 28 Chicago 25 29
Pct GB .582 — .566 1 .509 4 .491 5 .463 6½
Saturday’s Games Toronto 7, Houston 2 Milwaukee 4, Minnesota 2 Texas 4, Kansas City 2 Boston 4, Oakland 2 Cleveland 2, Baltimore 1 Detroit 7, Chicago White Sox 1 N.Y. Yankees 8, L.A. Angels 2 Seattle 2, Tampa Bay 1 Sunday’s Games L.A. Angels at N.Y. Yankees, late. Houston at Toronto, late. Baltimore at Cleveland, late. Oakland at Boston, late. Detroit at Chicago White Sox, late. Milwaukee at Minnesota, late. Texas at Kansas City, late. Tampa Bay at Seattle, late. Today’s Games Miami (Hand 1-1) at Toronto (Estrada 2-3), 4:07 p.m. Houston (McCullers 2-0) at Chicago White Sox (Sale 5-2), 5:10 p.m. Kansas City (J.Vargas 4-2) at Minnesota (P. Hughes 4-5), 5:10 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Boston at Baltimore, 4:05 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Yankees, 4:05 p.m. Miami at Toronto, 4:07 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Detroit, 4:08 p.m. L.A. Angels at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m. Seattle at Cleveland, 4:10 p.m. Houston at Chicago White Sox, 5:10 p.m. Kansas City at Minnesota, 5:10 p.m. Texas at Oakland, 7:05 p.m.
National League West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 32 24 .571 — San Francisco 32 25 .561 ½
San Diego Arizona Colorado
29 28 27 28 25 29 East Division W L Washington 30 26 New York 30 27 Atlanta 27 28 Miami 23 33 Philadelphia 21 36 Central Division W L St. Louis 37 19 Pittsburgh 30 25 Chicago 29 25 Cincinnati 23 31 Milwaukee 20 36
.509 3½ .491 4½ .463 6 Pct GB .536 — .526 ½ .491 2½ .411 7 .368 9½ Pct GB .661 — .545 6½ .537 7 .426 13 .357 17
Saturday’s Games Chicago Cubs 4, Washington 2 Milwaukee 4, Minnesota 2 San Francisco 7, Philadelphia 5 Colorado 10, Miami 5 San Diego 9, Cincinnati 7 Atlanta 5, Pittsburgh 4 Arizona 2, N.Y. Mets 1 L.A. Dodgers 2, St. Louis 0 Sunday’s Games San Diego at Cincinnati, late. Pittsburgh at Atlanta, late. San Francisco at Philadelphia, late. Milwaukee at Minnesota, late. Chicago Cubs at Washington, late. Miami at Colorado, late. N.Y. Mets at Arizona, late. St. Louis at L.A. Dodgers, late. Today’s Games Milwaukee (Nelson 2-6) at Pittsburgh (Burnett 6-1), 4:05 p.m. Miami (Hand 1-1) at Toronto (Estrada 2-3), 4:07 p.m. Philadelphia (Hamels 5-4) at Cincinnati (Leake 2-4), 4:10 p.m. San Diego (Kennedy 3-5) at Atlanta (S.Miller 5-2), 4:10 p.m. St. Louis (Lackey 4-3) at Colorado (Hale 1-0), 5:40 p.m. Arizona (R.De La Rosa 4-2) at L.A. Dodgers (Bolsinger 3-1), 7:10 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Yankees, 4:05 p.m. Miami at Toronto, 4:07 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Detroit, 4:08 p.m. Philadelphia at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. San Diego at Atlanta, 4:10 p.m. San Francisco at N.Y. Mets, 4:10 p.m. St. Louis at Colorado, 5:40 p.m. Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 7:10 p.m.
Basketball NBA Playoff Glance FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Golden State 1, Cleveland 0 Thursday, June 4: Golden State 108, Cleveland 100, OT Sunday: Cleveland at Golden State, late. Tuesday: Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. Thursday: Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. x-Sunday, June 14: Cleveland at Golden State, 5 p.m. x-Tuesday, June 16: Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. x-Friday, June 19: Cleveland at Golden State, 6 p.m.
Storm 86, Sparks 61 Saturday’s Game LOS ANGELES (61) Abdi 0-8 1-2 1, Lavender 5-18 0-0 10, Tolo 1-2 1-2 3, Beard 8-16 4-4 20, Phillips 3-10 3-3 11, Johnson 0-5 0-0 0, Lacy 3-4 0-0 7, Hoover 2-2 0-0 5, Hamson 1-2 2-2 4. Totals 23-67 11-13 61. SEATTLE (86) O’Hea 3-6 0-0 8, Bishop 1-6 0-0 2, Langhorne 9-12 0-4 18, Loyd 2-10 3-6 7, Bird 5-9 0-0 11, Hollingsworth 2-3 0-0 4, Tokashiki 1-4 4-4 6, Montgomery 6-10 4-5 19, Clark 4-4 0-0 11, Mosqueda-Lewis 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 33-64 11-19 86. Los Angeles 18 14 13 16—61 Seattle 20 15 22 29—86 3-Point Goals—Los Angeles 4-22 (Phillips 2-7, Hoover 1-1, Lacy 1-2, Beard 0-1, Tolo 0-1, Lavender 0-1, Johnson 0-4, Abdi 0-5), Seattle
American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Optioned INF Rey Navarro to Norfolk (IL). Reinstated RHP Bud Norris from the 15-day DL. CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Placed LHP Dan Jennings on the 15-day DL, retroactive to Friday. Selected the contract of RHP Junior Guerra from Charlotte (IL). CLEVELAND INDIANS — Assigned 1B/OF Jerry Sands outright to Columbus (IL). HOUSTON ASTROS — Sent RHP Brad Peacock to Corpus Christi (TL) for a rehab assignment. LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Recalled RHP Drew Rucinski from Salt Lake (PCL). TAMPA BAY RAYS — Optioned RHP Andrew Bellatti to Durham (IL). Recalled LHP Enny Romero from Durham. TEXAS RANGERS — Placed RHP Ross Ohlendorf on the 15-day DL, retroactive to Thursday. Recalled RHP Spencer Patton from Round Rock (PCL). Sent RHP Neftali Feliz to Round Rock for a rehab assignment. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Optioned RHP Dominic Leone to Mobile (SL). Reinstated RHP David Hernandez from the 15-day DL. CHICAGO CUBS — Optioned OF Matt Szczur to Iowa (PCL). CINCINNATI REDS — Optioned RHP Jumbo Diaz to Louisville (IL). Selected the contract of RHP Nate Adcock from Louisville. COLORADO ROCKIES — Sent INF Charlie Culberson outright to Albuquerque (PCL). LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Assigned LHP David Huff outright to Oklahoma City (PCL). MIAMI MARLINS — Assigned C Jhonatan Solano outright to New Orleans (PCL). Sent RHP Jose Fernandez to Jupiter (FSL) for a rehab assignment. PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Sent SS Justin Sellers to Indianapolis (IL) for a rehab assignment. SAN DIEGO PADRES — Optioned OF Abraham Almonte to El Paso (PCL). Reinstated OF Melvin Upton Jr. from the 15-day DL. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Sent RHP Doug Fister to Syracuse (IL) and LHP Sammy Solis to Harrisburg (EL) for rehab assignments.
Tiger Woods humbled, but not in panic, over shooting 85 BY DOUG FERGUSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DUBLIN, Ohio — One day after the worst score of his career, Tiger Woods played the final round of the Memorial just like it was any other Sunday. He wore his red shirt. He played at the same pace. He tossed blades of grass in the air to judge the wind and crouched to read important putts. The only difference was he played as a single. He even removed a flagstick by himself when his caddie was busy raking a bunker. “Just because I’m in last place doesn’t change how I play golf,” he said. “Whether it’s the first day or last day, doesn’t matter. Play all out.” All out didn’t get him much. Woods followed his 85 with a rough finish — two double bogeys over the last four holes — for a 2-over 74. He finished in last place at Muirfield Village, a course where he has won five times, and posted the highest 72-hole score of his career at 302.
He conceded that it was humbling to shoot an 85 before thousands of fans, with nowhere to hide. But he didn’t sound as though he was about to panic about his future. Woods chalked the score up to working on a new swing, and one of those days where he couldn’t make up his mind which swing he had. “This is a lonely sport,” Woods said. “The manager is not going to come in and bring the righty or bring the lefty. You’ve just got to play through it. And that’s one of the hardest things about the game of golf, and it’s also one of the best things about the game of golf. When you’re on, no one is going to slow you down. When you’re off, no one is going to pick you up, either. It’s one of those sports that’s tough. Deal with it. “For us, unfortunately, you have those days and they’re five hours long,” he said. Sunday was just under three hours as a single. He made the turn in 34 with three birdies, two of them on the
par 5s. He hit five straight fairways at one point — four of them with the driver. It was the finish that did him in. Woods hit one poor chip, and it cost him. After his wedge spun off the front of the green at the par-5 15th, he bladed a pitch about 30 feet above the hole and threeputted for double bogey. On the 18th, he got too much air under a 3-wood and had to play a big hook around the tree. It found a back bunker, and he had no chance to stay on the green. Woods laughed when he saw the lie he had in the rough. He chopped it out some 6 feet and two-putted for a double bogey. “I was expecting to grind,” he said. “That to me is the fun part, going out there and just grinding and fighting for everything I possibly can out there — after shooting whatever I shot yesterday, to be able to go back out there and get to 3-under par and keep fighting.” Woods talks a lot about being stuck between patterns of his old
swing and the new one he is trying to develop with Chris Como. That’s part of the process, and one he knows well. This is the fifth time he has changed his swing since his rookie year in 1996. Even so, he never had a score anywhere near 85 whether he was going from Butch Harmon to Hank Haney, or from Haney to Sean Foley. Woods has as many rounds in the 80s as in the 60s this year — two each. Asked if his score Saturday felt like an 85, Woods replied, “It felt higher.” But he played Sunday as though the third round never happened. And progress often includes a few — or 85 — steps back. “I had to go through those painful moments, just like I did at Torrey Pines and Phoenix, to be able to make the leap I did at Augusta,” he said. The reference was to his 82 in the Phoenix Open and pulling out after 11 holes at Torrey Pines, leading to a two-month hiatus
from competition until he could play the game to his standards. He returned at Augusta National with hardly a trace of his shortgame woes and tied for 17th. “Yesterday was the same thing,” Woods said. “It was just unfortunately on a golf course like this where you can’t get away with much. It kicked my butt pretty hard.” Woods developed a blister on the forefinger of his left hand this week. He said he probably would only putt for the next few days to let it heal, and then start working on his game for the U.S. Open. The one positive was that his 85 happened on Saturday, and not Sunday. Imagine going into Chambers Bay with the most recent score his highest ever. “That would have been a lot more disconcerting, if I had shot yesterday’s round today,” he said. “We would have had to probably do a little bit more work than what I’m going to have to do now. We know that it’s close.”
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Marathon: Roughriders win a pair of races CONTINUED FROM B1 “This is our first postcollege race,” Wu said. “Our coach doesn’t let us run them during college, so you have to be done with the program, and then you’re allowed to do one. “A lot of people on the team, after they finish their last season, will run a marathon around this time. “We’ve already trained for the whole season, so it’s kind of nice.” Their marathon-specific training was short — “You shouldn’t ask us that. Like, a week and a half,” Wu said — but their season of track training was enough to finish ahead of every other runner, besides Ni and Reid. The end, though, was a struggle. “I felt pretty good until Mile 22-and-a-half, and then was like, OK, OK — OK, I’m ready,” Wu said. Wu moved around gingerly after the race but had a hard time pin-pointing her pain. “My left foot hurts, I guess,” she said. Spees seemed mostly unaffected by the previous 3 hours and 13 minutes. “I’m pretending I’m not getting tendinitis,” Spees said. Wu laughed and said, “Don’t put that in the paper: The second-place finisher is pretending she doesn’t have tendinitis but actually does.” Due to damage to Railroad Bridge in Sequim earlier this year, the marathon’s course was altered this year and included a couple of out-and-back stretches. Wu didn’t mind. “I loved them. It was a nice way to break up the course, and also it was so cool to be able to see people and be able to cheer for people. Everyone was so nice,” Wu said. “It was really fun. I definitely would do this mara-
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Rose Waterfield of Centralia shows off the medal she was awarded. Waterfield ran the halfmarathon while wearing a tutu. Port Angeles High School who earned medals in the 1,600- and 3,200-meter races at the Class 2A state championships late last month, was the winner of the half-marathon with a time of 1:17:13. Kristi Houk of Port Orchard was the female half-marathon winner with a time of 1:28:25. The Peninsula’s top female finisher was Sequim’s Emily Ellefson, who was fifth (1:40:20). Port Angeles freshman runner Gracie Long made a habit of winning races during her first high school cross country and track and field seasons. Butler, Long win That continued Sunday Peter Butler, a senior at when she was the overall thon again.” Amanda Bender of Seattle was the third female finisher of the marathon with a time of 3:26:00. Colby Wait of Port Angeles was the top finisher from the North Olympic Peninsula, placing 10th in the men’s race with a time of 3:26:07. Ash Laydon of Port Angeles was the Peninsula’s first female finisher with a time of 4:27:59, which placed her 40th in the women’s division. The marathon had 112 male and 147 female participants.
Marathon winner Yusheng Ni puts two thumbs in the air as he crosses the finish line. winner of the 5-kilometer race with a time of 19:23. “It was kind of hard. I hadn’t really been training that much,” said Long, who, like Butler, earned two medals at the state meet last month. Connor Coatney of Port Angeles was the top male finisher of the 5K, finishing
in 21 minutes and placing 10th. Don Young of Port Townsend was the overall winner of the 10K with a time of 40:06. Seattle’s Angela Wishaar was the top female 10K finisher (44:37). Lara Malpass of Port Angeles placed second (45:37) in the
women’s division. PAHS Running Club won the marathon relay with a time of 2:55:32. See the complete results for all races at www.tinyurl. com/NODM2015.
________ Sports Editor Lee Horton can be reached at 360-417-3525 or at lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com.
Alex Morgan soars between World Cups Documents reveal new details from Hope Solo’s arrest BY ANNE M. PETERSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WINNIPEG, Manitoba — Alex Morgan was a bright-eyed Cal grad for her first World Cup back in 2011 and instantly became a star. Now she’s a savvy vet, handling her fame with aplomb as she prepares for her World Cup sequel. The U.S. opens the World Cup Monday against Australia in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Morgan’s star rose quickly following her performance in Germany four years ago. As the youngest player on the U.S. World Cup team she became a super sub with a goal and an assist in the final against Japan. She has since become one of the most recognized players on the U.S. team. She’s a spokeswoman for ChapStick and she’s on boxes of Cocoa Pebbles. She has appeared in Sports Illustrated’s swimsuit edition twice and she has even been animated for “The Simpsons.” But she really just wants to play soccer. “I don’t get wrapped up in that because I don’t want to dwell on something like a commercial or doing something off the field,” she said recently. “I don’t want to dwell on something like that too long. I don’t want to think, ‘Wow that’s really cool, that’s me.’ Once I start to think like that, then I’ve changed my focus from what I do on the field to what I do off the field.” The past four years have been a whirlwind for the 24-year-old striker. She became the first American player with both a goal and an assist in a final during the United States’ loss to Japan in the World Cup and was fully established as a starter by the next summer when the London Olympics rolled
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
U.S. women’s soccer team forward Alex Morgan stretches during practice in Winnipeg, Manitoba last week. around. She scored an extra-time game-winner in a semifinal against Canada that sent the U.S. into the final against Japan in London and an eventual Olympic gold medal. While her ascent may appear quick, Morgan believes it was just part of her career’s progression. “I’ve had a couple of injuries in between the Olympics and now, but I feel like for me, it’s almost been building blocks, it’s never been like I’ve been thrown into something all of the sudden,” she said. “I feel like I’ve had a good amount of time to prepare and realize what I’ve been getting into.” Morgan was considered a rising star even before Germany. She was the leading scorer in each of her four years at California from 2007-10, and she even graduated a semester early with
a degree in political economy. Her 45 career goals tie her for third on Cal’s alltime list. She grabbed international attention in 2008 when she scored the winning goal for the U.S. in the U-20 World Cup final against North Korea. Morgan has struggled with a few inopportune injures over the past year and a half. Late in 2013 she injured her left ankle during training camp, then injured it again during the group stage of CONCACAF qualifying last fall. “That was probably the hardest thing about being injured, that I wanted nothing more than to be on the field and to help my team succeed on the field and win. But you feel helpless in a way,” she said. Morgan is sitting out a send-off tour for the United States as it makes its final preparations for the World
Cup in Canada next month. She has what she calls a minor bone bruise in her left knee, and no one is taking any chances with her readiness. Coach Jill Ellis said Morgan is too important to the team. “She kind of came on as a super sub and now she’s established herself as a starter, an integral part of our team. I think she’s taken on more responsibility, more of a leadership role,” Ellis said. To date, Morgan has 51 goals and 32 assists in 84 international appearances. Earlier this year in a 1-0 victory over England, she scored in her 79th international match to become the third-fastest American woman to reach the 50-goal mark behind Michelle Akers (49 games) and Abby Wambach (64). Given how she’s looked recently, there’s no need to be concerned about the layoff. She is certainly at the level she needs to be for the competition, said Paul Riley, coach of Morgan’s NWSL team, the Portland Thorns. Morgan was with the Thorns for about two weeks and played in one match before leaving for training camp with the U.S. team. “She looked brilliant in practice,” Riley said. “It’s the best I’ve ever seen her.” Off the field, Morgan is a newlywed. On New Year’s Eve she married her longtime boyfriend Servando Carrasco, a midfielder for Major League Soccer’s Sporting KC and a fellow Cal alum. All told, Morgan is in a good place — despite the pesky knee bruise — and ready to prove herself on soccer’s biggest stage. “I think there’s another level for myself,” Morgan said. “That’s why I’m so excited for this year, because I think I’ll see that, and I’ll be able to show people that.”
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
KIRKLAND — U.S. women’s goalkeeper Hope Solo was combative with officers after her arrest last year on accusations that she assaulted her half-sister and her teenage nephew, an incident where authorities described Solo as the “primary aggressor,” according to an ESPN report Sunday. Solo initially faced two misdemeanor counts of domestic violence in the altercation at her half-sister’s house last June, though those charges were dismissed on procedural grounds earlier this year. Solo, who had pleaded not guilty, portrayed herself as a victim in interviews after the dismissal of the case. The network said the report was based on police records, two sworn depositions obtained by “Outside the Lines,” other documents and interviews with one of Solo’s alleged victims. It says Solo had been drinking when she arrived at the home of her half-sister, Teresa Obert, and was the aggressor in the altercation, including slamming the teenager’s head into the floor. The report also says that Solo was so combative after her arrest that she had to be forced to the ground by police and that she insulted officers. According to the report, Solo suggested that two jailers were having sex and called another officer a “14-year-old boy.” When asked to remove a necklace, Solo told the officer that the piece of jewelry was worth more than he made in a year, the ESPN report said. Solo’s lawyer, in response to a question from ESPN
about the reports, responded with a statement saying: “Police reports and other court documents clearly demonstrate that the alleged victims radically changed their stories on multiple occasions and twice refused to answer questions under oath, despite court orders. Had the case proceeded to trial and the witnesses been cross-examined under oath subject to the penalty of perjury, the defense would have proven that Teresa’s son, not Hope, was the true aggressor, and that Hope suffered a concussion as a result of her nephew’s unlawful conduct.” Representatives for Solo pointed to the statement from the attorney. The U.S. women’s team and its star goalkeeper are scheduled to begin play in the World Cup on Monday night with a match against Australia in Winnipeg, Manitoba. At a news conference Sunday in advance of the match, coach Jill Ellis was asked about the report. “Hope’s been fantastic. That was a long time ago. I’ll be honest, we’ve moved on,” Ellis said. “She’s been a fantastic player and teammate. None of that has even resonated with us, and I’m sure many of the player aren’t aware of it.” Ellis said she has no plans to address the team about it. “I know our team. We have each other’s backs. I’ll be honest, it something that was a long time ago. We’ve certainly put it to bed and our focus is tomorrow evening,” Ellis said. Solo was not made available to reporters, but she was at practice, laughing and joking with teammates.
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Wawrinka wins French, denies Djokovic career Slam BY HOWARD FENDRICH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PARIS — Moments before his third French Open final in four years, Novak Djokovic jogged in a stadium hallway, near a poster of the Coupe des Mousquetaires, the silver trophy awarded to the men’s champion at the only major tournament he has never won. This time, it would be Stan Wawrinka standing between the No. 1-seeded Djokovic and the title at Roland Garros that the 28-year-old Serb needs for a career Grand Slam. And once again, Djokovic came up one victory shy, stopped by the eighthseeded Wawrinka and his magical, one-handed backhand. Wawrinka won his first French Open championship and second major title by stunning Djokovic 4-6, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4 in a superbly played match Sunday. “One day, you will win Roland Garros,” Wawrinka told Djokovic during the post-match ceremony. “You deserve it.” Wawrinka had exited in the first round in Paris a year ago. And he had lost 17 of his past 20 matches against Djokovic. But Wawrinka would not relent on this sunlit afternoon, com-
piling twice as many winners, 60 to 30. That beautiful backhand of his was a big reason; one even made its way around the net post before landing on the red clay. Another backhand earned the match’s last break, to 5-4 in the fourth set. And, fittingly, yet another finished the match and allowed the 30-year-old Wawrinka, so long in the shadow of his Swiss Davis Cup teammate and good friend Roger Federer, to add to the championship he won at last year’s Australian Open. “No question,” said Djokovic, who entered with a 28-match winning streak, “one of the best one-handed backhands that I have seen in tennis.” When Djokovic received the silver plate given to the losing finalist, the spectators gave him an unusually long ovation. Djokovic shook his head and his eyes welled with tears. “Obviously was not easy to stand there as a runnerup again,” Djokovic said, “but I lost to a better player who played some courageous tennis.” Wawrinka was making his 11th French Open appearance, equaling Federer and Andre Agassi for most attempts before
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
French Open winner Stan Wawrinka, right, looks at Serbia’s Novak Djokovic as he leaves the podium after the men’s final. winning it. This was also Djokovic’s 11th French Open. He has won eight Grand Slam titles, with five at the Australian Open, two at Wimbledon and one at the U.S. Open. But he must wait for another year if he’s to become the eighth man in tennis history with at least one title from each major. Djokovic came up short against Rafael Nadal in the 2012 and 2014 finals, but he cleared that hurdle this year, defeating the ninetime champion in the quar-
terfinals. Djokovic eliminated No. 3 Andy Murray in a two-day, five-set semifinal that concluded about 25 hours before Sunday’s start. “Maybe in some important moments, I didn’t feel I had that explosivity in the legs, but, look, at the end of the day, [Wawrinka] was just a better player,” Djokovic said. Normally, it’s the sliding, stretching, body-contorting brand of defense Djokovic delights in that wears down opponents, but he looked spent by the end Sunday,
when the finalists repeatedly engaged in lengthy baseline exchanges that went 20, 30, even 40 strokes. When he clinched the first set, Djokovic swiveled to look toward his coaches, Boris Becker and Marian Vajda. Djokovic stood tall and bellowed. The trophy, propped on the wooden edge of the president’s box, stood but a few feet away, glistening. At that moment, it was but two sets away. So close, yet so far. Wawrinka broke to take the second set when
Djokovic faltered on a 23-stroke point, slapping a backhand long. Djokovic reared back and spiked his racket off the court, caught it, and, unsatisfied, slammed it down a second time, mangling the thing. That drew derisive whistles from spectators and a warning from the chair umpire. “You go through emotions,” Djokovic said. “Of course I was more nervous than any other match.” By now, Wawrinka was the aggressor, and his shots kept finding their appointed marks. Djokovic made one last stand, with zero unforced errors on the way to a 3-0 lead in the fourth set. Wawrinka, though, reeled off six of the last seven games. When it was over, Wawrinka tossed his racket overhead. At the net, Djokovic patted the 2015 French Open champion on the cheek. Djokovic said later it sometimes seems as if all the attention others pay to his pursuit of a title in Paris neglects to take into account that there are others, such as Wawrinka, just as intent to win. “It feels like I’m the only player who wants to win this trophy, and nobody wants to win it as much as I do,” Djokovic said. “This is completely untrue.”
M’s: Cruz misreads sign, gets caught stealing CONTINUED FROM B1 “I guess he’s putting himself in his own class now,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “Very impressive. He just keeps giving us opportunities to win over and over.” Archer struck out at least one batter in every inning. Nelson Cruz and Brad Miller were the only two not to go down on strikes against the hardthrowing righty. “I’m glad watching him from center field, left field,
the stands, the dugout, the on-deck circle, I’m glad I don’t ever have to face him. That guy is a special, special pitcher,” Rays’ outfielder Mikie Mahtook said. Seattle was poised to get to Archer in the fourth inning when Seth Smith led off with a double and Cruz added an infield single to put runners on the corners with no outs. Archer struck out Kyle Seager and Mark Trumbo on six pitches. With Logan Morrison at the plate, Cruz attempted a delayed steal of second but was caught in a rundown
and couldn’t stay in it long enough for Smith to score. Cruz said he misread a sign on the play. “It was a fake and I went,” Cruz said. “I just tried to make something up in that situation.” Seattle also had runners on first and second and no outs in the seventh but Miller’s RBI single was all it would get, set up by Nick Franklin’s error. Mahtook hit a solo home run and Logan Forsythe had an RBI single against Mike Montgomery (0-1), who pitched well against
his former club, but got little run support. Montgomery’s one walk led to the first run of the game. Jake Elmore walked in the top of the first, and scored from second base on Forsythe’s soft liner into center field. Mahtook homered with one out in the seventh.
Struggling Seattle Seattle fell a seasonworst seven games below .500 and closed out a miserable 11-game homestand 2-9. Pitching was rarely the
problem for the Mariners, it was a lack of hitting. They failed to score more than three runs in any game of the stay at Safeco Field, scoring a total of 21 runs.
Trainer’s room ■ Mariners: RHP Hisashi Iwakuma threw a second bullpen session on Sunday as he continues to recover from back and side muscle injuries. He will have at least one more bullpen. ■ Rays: 3B Evan Longoria was out of the starting lineup for the second
straight game but came on as a pinch-runner in the eighth.
Up next ■ Mariners: Seattle has an off day on Monday before starting an eightgame road trip in Cleveland. Roenis Elias (2-3) starts the opener against the Indians. ■ Rays: Tampa Bay has an off day Monday before opening a homestand against the Los Angeles Angels. Nathan Kearns (3-2) will start the opener.
Triple: Potential races CONTINUED FROM B1 American Pharoah will serve stud duty. The colt was named Zayat will leave it up to Baffert to map out a sched- champion 2-year-old last year and is a cinch to lock ule. up similar honors as a Among the races under 3-year-old. consideration are the Jim But all that racing Dandy at Saratoga in “wears on them and evenupstate New York on Aug. 1; the Haskell Invitational tually it catches up,” said Baffert, who understands at Monmouth in New JerZayat’s eventual desire to sey on Aug. 2; the Pacific Classic at Del Mar on Aug. retire American Pharoah to the breeding shed. 22; and the Travers at “This way they get Saratoga on Aug. 29. With a newfound legacy rewarded,” Baffert jokingly told The Associated Press to protect, Baffert vowed recently. “They get to have American Pharoah would be properly prepared for sex with 200 mares a year.” his next race, saying, “He’ll Should anything happen tell me.” to the colt in future races, The Haskell might have Zayat is covered by an an edge because Baffert insurance policy for which has won it a record seven the rates are “incredibly times and Zayat lives in high,” Baffert said recently. Teaneck, N.J. Zayat, who has invested “He’s an athlete. We tens of millions of dollars have to keep him moving,” into his breeding, buying Baffert said. “He’s so happy and racing operation, when he’s on that track.” believes it’s not always The ultimate goal would about money when you’re be the $5 million Breeders’ passionate about someCup Classic, to be run thing. Oct. 31 at Keeneland in “We are not thinking Lexington, Ky., the cradle here of value or money,” he of American racing and said. “When the horse is ready, we will not be scared breeding and near where
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of running him to lose or not. It’s all about the fans and this belongs to history.” Off the racetrack, Zayat figures to have marketing and merchandising opportunities to sort through. Just what kind of offers he receives and deals he cuts are uncharted territory since American Pharoah is the first Triple Crown winner in the Internet and social media age. Secretariat, the 1973 Triple Crown winner, was featured on major nonsports magazine covers and the U.S. Postal Service issued a stamp in his honor. He remains a pop culture touchstone for even non-racing fans, and merchandise featuring him sold at Belmont Park on Saturday. Judging by the crowd’s reaction to history, American Pharoah seems likely to be a popular champion, having cemented his legacy in New York, where the public is not easily won over. “Everybody was on board with this horse,” Baffert said. “I was pretty in awe of him myself.”
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Dilbert
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❘
Classic Doonesbury (1982)
Frank & Ernest
Garfield
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DEAR ABBY: In recent conversations with my daughter, who is away in college, she opened up to me that she is hooking up. She introduced herself to this guy two weeks ago, and she’s already having sex with him. I tried to caution her about the dangers of such relationships and how harmful they can be physically and emotionally. She sounded annoyed and said it is her body and she has a right to do whatever she pleases. I am shocked and disappointed. She’s the first person in our family to go to college. If I tell her father, he would disown her. I am beside myself. My younger daughter will soon be applying to college, and now I’m wondering whether I should allow her to go away, given her sister’s behavior. How should I handle this? Should I tell her father? Stressed Out in New York
by Lynn Johnston
❘
by G.B. Trudeau
DEAR ABBY first. Abby, my son is Van Buren in charge of the company. I don’t understand why she would marry someone she feels this way about. I struggle with whether to talk to my son about it or not. I’m afraid he will say something to her and she will be upset with me. He is a happy young man, and it seems his fiancee only wants to change him. He’s almost 30, and I don’t see him changing to her satisfaction. Please advise. Biting My Tongue for Now in Arizona
Abigail
Dear Stressed Out: When you are less emotional, talk with your daughter and advise her to visit the student health center to be checked for STDs and get on a program of birth control. Your daughter is no longer a child. She is a young woman, and sexual activity among college students is not unheard of. While I agree with you that hopping into bed with someone you have known for only two weeks is premature, if she’s able to maintain her grade-point average, there is no reason to alarm her father. If she isn’t, then bring her home. I assume you have discussed sex and family standards with your younger daughter. If that’s the case, it would be unfair to punish or restrict her because you are disappointed in her older sister.
by Bob and Tom Thaves
by Jim Davis
Dear Biting: Your son’s fiancee is complaining to the wrong person. Before talking to your son about her complaints, talk to her about them and suggest she talk to him. If your son is happy in his job, happy with his employers and being well-compensated for his work ethic and ability, she should be happy for him, not embarrassed. It’s important that he know how she feels before the wedding because if he learns about it afterward, there will be problems. However, if she’s unwilling to communicate her feelings to your son, then let him know she has “concerns” about his job and suggest he discuss them with her before they say any “I do’s.”
________
Dear Abby: My soon-to-be daughter-in-law complains about my son to me. She’s not happy with his job or his boss, but he is. She says he embarrasses her and gets upset when his work must come
Red and Rover
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by Brian Basset
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TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Consider the best way to offer help before making a commitment. Your kindness and generosity will result in greater recognition, attracting people who are interested in your ideas, plans and projects. Form an alliance with someone who has just as much to contribute as you. 2 stars
by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer
ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
Dennis the Menace
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by Hank Ketcham
Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, the late Pauline Phillips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.
The Last Word in Astrology ❘ ARIES (March 21-April 19): Let your imagination and intuition guide you to success. Listening to intriguing offers will pique your interest and help you use your skills masterfully. Speak up and take action, and positive changes will occur. 4 stars
Rose is Rose
B5
Daughter needs a reality check
by Scott Adams
For Better or For Worse
MONDAY, JUNE 8, 2015
Pickles
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by Brian Crane
by Eugenia Last
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Lifestyle changes can be made if you are quick to take action. Check out opportunities in different geographical locations. Help someone facing a dilemma and you will be rewarded for your thoughtfulness. Protect your money and your possessions. 3 stars VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Keep your wits about you. Not everyone will have your best interests at heart. Speak on your own behalf and don’t trust anyone to take care of your responsibilities. Emotional matters will escalate based on false information. 3 stars
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Opportunity will knock, but before you take a leap of faith, consider what’s necessary and what isn’t. You will prosper more if you follow your own path and invest in your ideas rather than contribute to someone else’s agenda. 2 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Valuable information will come your way regarding a partnership opportunity. Share some of your ideas, but save the best until you negotiate a deal that is worth your while. Be up-front and willing to move forward alone if necessary. 4 stars
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Refrain from sharing personal information or letting everyone know what you are up to. A colleague will try to take credit for your work. Don’t let your emotions spin out of control, which could make you look bad. Fight back using intellect and diplomacy. 2 stars
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Listen, observe and contribute your point of view. You can make progress if you are detailed and precise. Implement your creative ideas in your work and you will generate a buzz. Common interests will bring someone of interest closer to you. 3 stars
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You can make home improvements, adjust your time and make changes to the way you earn and save. Greater discipline will be yours, and if you follow through, the gains you make will reduce stress and enhance your standard of living. 3 stars
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Take on a new project that infringes on your comfort zone. The growth and knowledge you will obtain will be worth any discomfort you undergo. Avoid gossip or sharing your true feelings. Be creative and compassionate, not conniving. 5 stars
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Fix up your surroundings or do something that will improve your health. Explore new techniques that can help you live better. Do your own research and you will save money and avoid disappointment. Avoid indulgence. 5 stars
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Keep your thoughts to yourself and work alone if possible. Someone will look for any excuse to make you look bad. Avoid arguments and stick to the truth no matter what anyone else does or says. Don’t initiate change if you aren’t fully prepared. 3 stars
The Family Circus
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by Bil and Jeff Keane
Classified
B6 MONDAY, JUNE 8, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Peninsula MARKETPLACE Reach The North Olympic Peninsula & The World
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Visit | www.peninsuladailynews.com Call: 360.452.8435 or 800.826.7714 | Fax: 360.417.3507 In Person: 305 W. 1st St., Port Angeles s Office Hours: Monday thru Friday – 8AM to 5PM s
4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale General General Wanted Clallam County
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T O D AY ’ S H O T T E S T N E W C L A S S I F I E D S !
INVERSION TABLE: IronMan Atis 4000. Like new heavy duty. $150. (360)417-2699
PRIVATE HOME: Private home, private room, 35 yrs experience, 24 hour loving care for senior lady. (360)461-9804.
Employment 3010 Announcements 4026 General SCRIPTURES ONLY Seeks Contacts 797-1536 or 417-6980
3020 Found FOUND: Ring. At the Relay for Life yard sale 5/31. Email to identify. malogue@mail.com
3023 Lost LOST: Cat. Classic tabby, clipped ear, chipped. S. Bagley Creek Rd., 6/3. (360)457-2018 LOST: Golden heart on chain. Downtown, Safeway area. (360)928-9921
4026 Employment General
7 Cedars Resort is now hiring for the following positions: Busser/Host, Cocktail Server, Cook, Deli/Espresso Cashier, Grocery Cashier, Dishwasher, Groundskeeper, Line Cook, Dishwasher, Napoli’s Cashier, Bartender, Carts & Range Attendant, System Administrator I, Table Games Dealer, Totem Rewards Customer Service Representative, and Valet Attendant. For more Info and to apply online, please visit our website at. www.7cedarsresort. com ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS for CARRIER ROUTE Port Angeles 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 tsipe@peninsuladailynews.com. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE. BARN ASSISTANT. Part time. Position requires knowledge and experience in equine health issues. Must be mature, dependable and in good physical condition. Job may include heavy lifting and bending. 7:30am to 11:30am M-F. Hourly wage $10.00. Send resume’ and references to patiwgn@olypen.com. Background check required.
CAREGIVERS NEEDED We will train. Benefits provided. Contact Cherrie, (360)683-3348
CASHIER/DELI COOK: Must be 21. Experience preferred. Full time. (360)928-3043
DRIVING ROUTES Clean driving record, lifting involved. Apply in person: Olympic Springs 253 Business Park Loop Carlsborg, WA 98324. DUMP TRUCK DRIVER: With Rd construction experience. (360)460-7292
Employment Opportunities Cancer Center Openings : Medical Office Nurse Coordinator(RN) Infusion Nurse (RN) Patient Navigator Ass’t Clinic Openings: Medical Assistant Medical Office Nurse Coordinator (RN) Medical Office Ass’t. Orthopedic Clinic Supervisor Hospital Openings: CS Tech-Central Core Physical Therapist Ultrasonographer C.N.A. Dietitian Clinical Educator (RN) Social Work Care Mgr Pt. Experience Coordinator Home Health Openings: Lifeline/Medical Record Ass’t OccupationalTherapist For details on these and other positions, and to apply online, visit www.olympicmedical.org. EOE
LOG TRUCK DRIVER: Experienced only. (360)460-7292 LUBE TECH Full-time, valid WSDL required. Apply at 110 Golf Course, P.A. MEDICAL ASSISTANT 4 Dr. family practice is recruiting for a medial assistant to join our team. Please respond if you enjoy working with a team, respond well to a fast pace, and have compassion for others. Back office exp. preferred. Active WA. state license required. Competitive wage/benefits. Submit cover letter and resume to Peninsula Daily News PDN#. 719 Port Agneles, WA 98362
The Quilcene School District is accepting applications for the following positions: Administrative Secretary. Certificated position: K-12 Special Education Resource Specialist. Call 360.765.3363 for application materials or download from website www.quilcene.wednet.edu. EOE
PHYSICAL THERAPIST See Therapeuticassociates.com for job description and application
4040 Employment Media
PREP COOK: Apply in person at Jose’s Famous Salsa 126 East Washington St. Sequim.
LIFESTYLES EDITOR The Daily World at Aberdeen, Wash., has an opening for a Lifestyles editor. We are looking for someone who has an eye for design and a knack for finding the stories and trends that shed light on what life is like in our community. The section also includes arts and entertainment news. The ideal candidate will have a bright, lively writing style, a talent for social media and be skilled in InDesign. Magazine experience would also be a plus. Aberdeen is on the Washington Coast, an hour from the Olympic Rain Forest and two hours from Seattle. This is a full-time position. Benefits include, but are not limited to, paid vacation, medical, vision, dental and life insurance and a 401(K) plan with a company match. Send a cover letter, resume and writing and design samples to: hr@soundpublishing.com To learn more about us, please visit us on the web at www.soundpublishing.com. The Daily World is an equal opportunity employer.
Program Specialist 4 Chemical Dependency Permanent position available now at Clallam Bay Corrections Center Salary: $3819-$5010 mo Plus Benefits. Apply online: www.careers.wa.gov. For further information please call Laura at (360)963-3208 EOE Quileute Tribal School Openings. The Quileute Tribal School is recruiting for the following positions: School Bus driver, 7/8 grade class teacher. (WASHINGTON STATE CERTIFIED) Postings are open until filled. Contact Mark Jacobson at (360)374-5609 or mark.jacobson@ quileutenation.org. for application and details. Quileute/Native American preference guidelines apply. SECURITY OFFICER Qual: Auth to work in the US. 21+ years of age. HS Dip or GED. Stable work history. Pass background. Health benefits and paid time off! APPLY at www.whelansecurity.com or call (253)237-0582.
4080 Employment Wanted All your lawn care needs. Mowing, edging, pruning, hauling. Reasonable rates. (360)683-7702
Support Staff To work with adults with developmental disabilities, no experience necessary, $10 hr. Apply in person at 1020 Caroline St. M-F 8-4 p.m.
Alterations and Sewing. Alterations, mending, hemming and some heavyweight sewing available to you from me. Call (360)531-2353 ask for B.B.
Westport L.L.C. has an opportunity for an Account Specialist. For complete job description and to apply, please visit www.westportyachts.com/careers
A Plus Lawn Service. Comprehensive service including thatching and edging with professional Results. Here today here tomorrow. Book now. Senior Discounts. P A only. Local call (360) 808-2146
The Hoh Indian Tribe has the following openings: Family Outreach Coordinator, Administrative Assistant. The positions are based in Forks, Wa. Applicants should send a cover letter, resume, and three professional references to Hoh Indian Tribe C/O Human Resources P.O. Box 2196 Forks, WA 98331. Electronic applications can be sent to hr@hohtribe-nsn.org . For full announcement, go to www.hohtribe-nsn.org. Questions or additional information, contact Darel Maxfield 360-3745415. Opening Closes 6/19/2015.
Mowing Lawns, lots and fields. Trimming, pruning of shrubs and trees. Landscape maintenance, pressure washing, light hauling and more. FREE QUOTES. Tom 360460-7766. License: bizybbl868ma
105 Homes for Sale Clallam County 5.14 acres On Lower Elwha Rd across from Gandalf Rd. A treed level land in a great neighborhood, ready for your home. MLS#290166 $91,500 Team Powell UPTOWN REALTY (360) 775-5826 Beautiful Home, Beautiful View Enjoy panoramic views of the Strait from this well maintained 4 br, 2 ba, 2,808 sf. home. Lovely custom architectural features and upgraded appliances, new chefs gas cook top! Radiant heat and a beautiful stained glass entry. Beautiful landscaped yard provides privacy, covered patio with gazebo, and secluded hot tub area. Greenhouse, tool shed, and underground watering system. Home Warranty Protection Plan provided by seller! MLS#290702 $369,500 Sherry Grimes UPTOWN REALTY (360) 417-2786 Be-Enchanted Custom-built quality log home in a park-like setting on 2.8 acres with more land available. Covered porch, decks on all levels, great size garage with shop and extra outbldg, dog run, propane fireplace, 3 br, 3 ba, 2,300 sf. MLS#291009 $375,000 Ania Pendergrass 360-461-3973 Remax Evergreen Colonial Beauty Welcome to yester-year gorgeous and well maintained 1930s home, 2,448 sf, 3-plus br, 2 ba, a must see to appreciate the many wonderful features of the past as well as modern touches to enjoy a style of living few homes provide. Fenced in backyard with greenhouse, detached 2-car garage. MLS#291046 $270,000 Ania Pendergrass 360-461-3973 Remax Evergreen Complete Remodel Gem This charming 5 br, 3 ba, 2,768 sf. craftsman was completely gutted and remodeled in 2014. The brand new open concept kitchen / dining / family room features an eating bar, wet bar, wood stove and huge TV viewing area. 3 sets of double French doors add elegance. Private cedar deck and fenced back yard add privacy. Upper level has a peek-a-boo view of the Straits. 1 car garage + covered carport. MLS#290207 $228,000 Sherry Grimes UPTOWN REALTY (360)808-0979 Private Cabin Reborn 2003! EVERYTHING UPDATED! 820 sf., 1 br., 1 ba., basement/workshop, 3.61 acres, landscaped and partially wooded, fenced garden with berries, fruit and green house, skylights energy efficient windows, private trail leads to Discovery Trail, excellent well / 4 br septic MLS#290944 $219,000 Team Thomsen UPTOWN REALTY (360)808-0979
CUTE BUNGALOW 2 br., 1 ba, 986 St., New windows, paint and carpet, additional room in garage, all major appliances and ceiling fan, separate dining room and laundry room. MLS#794886/291048 $142,500 TEAM SCHMIDT (360) 460-0331 WINDERMERE SUNLAND Cute, clean home With retro touch! New paint, new roof, new cutters. Bonus room downstairs with bar even! Must see this move-in ready home to fully appreciate. MLS#282123 $199,900 Thelma Durham (360)460-8222 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
Double Wide in 55+ Park! Beautifully Maintained, 1100 sf., 3 br, 2 ba, beds and baths at both ends, all appliances included, deck with partial water view, storage shed with electricity, adjacent to greenbelt. MLS#282339 $42,000 Jean Irvine UPTOWN REALTY (360) 417-2797 HOME SWEET HOME This 3 br 3 ba home calls Port Angeles home with great city location. Borders Olympic National Park and backs up to Peabody Creek Canyon with trail access. You’ll love the convenient location of this quiet neighborhood with well cared for homes. Both levels feature a nice brick fireplace for added enjoyment. Extra large finished garage with separate workshop / hobby area. Large fenced private yard, with fruit trees and even a place to park your RV! MLS#290533 $214,900 Ed Sumpter Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim 360-683-3900 Just Completed 3 br., 2 ba., 1,564 sf. home in The Village at Cedar Ridge. Open concept floor plan, 9’ ceilings. Gourmet kitchen includes SS appliances, granite countertops, and skylight. MLS#290531/763982 $266,900 Alan Burwell Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360)460-0790 PRIVACY AND DUAL VIEWS Architect designed 4 br, 3.5 ba cottage style home on 5 acres in the gated community of Maletti Hill. Chef’s kitchen with DCS commercial grade propane range, built ins and pull outs. Living room with floor to ceiling windows to enjoy the views, old growth cedar planked vaulted ceilings, large stone fireplace and oak built ins. Master suite with water views and access to the expansive deck with double views of the Strait of Juan de Fuca and the Olympic Mountains. MLS#291052 $789,000 Terry Neske (360) 477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507 VISIT: WWW.PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM OR
E-MAIL:
CLASSIFIED@PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM DEADLINES: Noon the weekday before publication. ADDRESS/HOURS: 305 West First Street/P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays CORRECTIONS AND CANCELLATIONS: Corrections--the newspaper accepts responsibility for errors only on the first day of publication. Please read your ad carefully and report any errors promptly. Cancellations--Please keep your cancellation number. Billing adjustments cannot be made without it.
105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Location, Style and Views! Top of the hill central location in town with panoramic water view and mtn. view, 3,050 sf., 4 br, 2.5 ba, elegant hardwood floors, 2 fireplaces, 2 pellets stoves, sun room, large deck, gorgeous mature landscaping, classy, spacious and comfortable. MLS#290991 $319,900 Ania Pendergrass 360-461-3973 Remax Evergreen MOUNTAIN VIEW 3 br., 1.5 ba., 1,921 sf., Recently painted in and out, new carpet, new deck and patio cover, neat and trim yard, updated electrical, full security / fire alarm system, oversized 2 car garage, storage room, attic storage. MLS#795583/291058 $289,500 Tyler Conkle (360) 670-5978 WINDERMERE SUNLAND Neat and Clean 3 br., rambler with huge fenced yard. Home has updated kitchen spacious living and family rooms and wonderful neighborhood. MLS#290952 $169,900 Jennifer Holcomb (360)460-3831 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
NEW ON THE MARKET Open room concept with well-laid out kitchen. Lots of sunny Southern exposure. Nicely landscaped, fenced yard w/deck in backyard. Fruit trees & berries. Many improvements made to home over past 5 years. MLS#291018/792589 $189,720 Heidi Hansen Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360)477-5322 Ready Soon! 2 br., 2 ba, 1,741 sf., in Cedar Ridge. Open concept living / dining room extends out to the 135 sf. Covered outdoor room. Granite counters in the kitchen and master bath. MLS#290532/764020 $299,500 Alan Burwell Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360)460-0790 Sweeping Water View 2,878 sf., 3 br, 3 ba, large sunny rooms, master suite with fireplace, amazing storage and even more amazing water view! Private fenced in backyard, basement with separate kitchen and bath, wet bar, sunroom, 2 car garage, just waiting for a new owner to make it “home”. MLS#290984 $245,000 Ania Pendergrass 360-461-3973 Remax Evergreen
SMALL ESTATE Beautifully restored perfect for entertaining with updated kitchen and large rooms! Mature landscaping with multiple outdoor living spaces on 2.34 acres. Views from every room, including the Olympic Mountains and lights of Victoria. 4 br, 2.5 ba, 2 fireplaces, an attached, rentable guest suite with private bath and deck, adjacent to award winning Camaraderie Cellars winery. MLS#290612/768697 $474,000 Debra Haller (360) 477-7669 TOWN & COUNTRY TASTEFULLY REMODELED! 3 br. home on 1.5 lots with partial water and mountain views located near Shane Park. Open floor plan with large living room featuring durable laminate floors and electric fireplace insert with tile surround, eat in kitchen with tile counter tops and French doors to the spacious back deck. Master bedroom with bay window and large walk in closet with built in vanity. Huge fenced in back yard with fruit trees. MLS#291081 $175,000 Kelly Johnson (360)477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES Views abound! Solana, your place in the sun. The tree lined streets of the Solana Community feature aweinspiring views of Sequim Bay, the shipping lanes in the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Mount Baker and the Cascades, San Juan Islands and Protection Island. Friendly neighborhood with inviting clubhouse with kitchen, gathering room, exercise room, patio with fireplace, pool and spa. Located minutes from John Wayne Marina and Olympic National Park. Public utilities available. Estate lot .40+ acres. MLS#291063/291064 $142,500 Each Kelly Johnson (360)477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
Water View Beautiful 2,904 sf daylight basement style home on 1/3 acre with views of Dungeness Bay and the Strait. Features include cherry hardwood or tile flooring, all bedrooms on the main level, main and master baths with double sinks, propane fireplace in the living room, large workshop plus hobby room on the lower level. . MLS#290927 $385,000 Tom Blore 360-683-7814 PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE
WATER VIEW 3 br., 3.5 ba., 2,436 sf. Multi-level, master suite with 2 baths and office space, lower level rec room, bonus rm and bath, kitchen with stainless appliances, pull outs, pantry, 3 decks, pet friendly low maintenance yard. MLS#759157/290458 $349,900 Deb Kahle (360) 460-0331 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
311 For Sale Manufactured Homes MOBILE: Sequim older nice double wide, quiet senior park. Master bedroom and bath with whirlpool, small bedroom with bath and walk-in shower. Corner lot with nice back yard, trees, flowers, bluebirds and happiness. Must see. $24,500/obo. (719)382-8356
505 Rental Houses Clallam County Properties by
Inc.
RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS
452-1326
(360)
417-2810
HOUSES/APT IN PORT ANGELES
A 1BD/1BA...... $575/M A 2BD/1BA.......$675/M H 1/1 DUPLEX..$600/M A 2/1.5 TWNHS $750/M H 2BD/1BA....$750/M H 2/1 JOYCE....$775/M A 2/1.5 TWNHS $825/M H 2/1 JOYCE....$900/M H 2BD/2BA..$1100/M H 3BD/2BA..$1100/M A PENTHOUSE .$1400/M COMPLETE LIST @
561329060
DENTAL HYGENIEST Part-time. Send resume: forksfamily dental@gmail.com
CO-OCCURRING DISORDERS PROGRAM Join our team of professionals providing quality services to residents of our community. Both positions FT/benefits. • Program Coordinator: Licensed Mental Health or Social Worker; meets WAC 246-811-049 requirements. • Chemical Dependency Professional: Licensed CDP; behavioral health or related degree plus 2 years experience. Resume and cover letter to: PBH, 118 E. 8th Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362EOE http://peninsulabehavioral.org
Northwest Maritime Center is seeking a 28 hr/week Facility Technician. This position is responsible for the safety, functionality and appearance of the Northwest Maritime Center. Full job description can be found at: http://nwmaritime.org/about/staff/jobopportunities/facilitymanager-position//. Please send resume and cover letter to eileen@nwmaritime.org. NWMC is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Position closes when filled.
Young Couple Early 60’s available for seasonal cleanup, weeding, trimming, mulching & moss removal. We specialize in complete garden restorations. Excellent references. 457-1213
TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD:
5000900
FOUND: Watch on Dungeness River near the dike. Call to describe. (360)390-8258.
CNA: Ideally available for all shifts, including weekends. Apply in person at Park View Villas, 8th & G Streets, P.A.
Needs You! (360)461-1843
The Department of Corrections is seeking a highly motivated & qualified individual for the permanent position of Fiscal Technician 2 at Clallam Bay Corrections Center. Pay starts at $2,241 Monthly, plus full benefits. Apply online. Closes 6/14/2015 www.careers.wa.gov. For further information please call Laura at (360)963-3208 EOE
PRIVATE HOME: Private home, private room, 35 yrs experience, 24 hour loving care for senior lady. (360)461-9804.
Custom Home Large living room with rock-face propane fireplace, breakfast nook in kitchen and formal dining. Master suite has two vanities and walk in closet. Guest BRs share Jack and Jill bath. Den with French doors. Kitchen has Corian counters, propane range. 1ac, RV parking and over sized garage. MLS#290187/739712 $429,500 Heidi Hansen Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360)477-5322
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
SNEAK A PEEK PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
1111 Caroline St. Port Angeles
Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle –– horizontally, vertically, diagonally, even backward. Find them and CIRCLE THEIR LETTERS ONLY. DO NOT CIRCLE THE WORD. The leftover letters spell the Wonderword. SHIRATAKI NOODLES Solution: 7 letters
G E L A T I N O U S P I C E S DOWN 1 Simple fastener 2 Unconscious state 3 Approved 4 Airport breeze indicator 5 High-tech eye surgery 6 Hard puzzle 7 Get some shuteye 8 Norwegian capital 9 The Hulk’s co-creator 10 Hispanic grocery 11 Region 12 Backside 13 Dodgers manager Mattingly 21 Puppy bites 22 Large cloth sign 25 Camera attachment 26 “When __ Eyes Are Smiling” 27 Wrangler’s rope 29 Kemo Sabe sidekick 30 Skivvies brand 31 A couple of times 32 Senate staffers 33 Marsh grasses 35 Think highly of 39 Author Umberto 41 Set free
6/8/15
Friday’s Puzzle Solved Saturday’s Puzzle Solved
SEQUIM: 3 Br., 2 ba, close to town. $1,200 mo. (360)808-7778.
Properties by
Inc.
RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS
452-1326
605 Apartments Clallam County
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
P.A.: 2 Br. 1 bath, carport, no smoking, no pets. $750.+ dep. (360)457-7012.
1163 Commercial Rentals
Properties by
Inc.
RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS
452-1326
OFFICE FOR RENT Office in downtown Sequim Gazette building for sub-lease. 448-sq-foot, 2nd floor office for $500 a month. Perfect for accountant or other professional. Shared downstairs conference room, restroom. Contact John Brewer, publisher, (360)417-3500.
6005 Antiques & Collectibles CAMERAS: (1) Leica Model M3 with all the books. $1,000. (1) Rolleiflex, Planar 2.8E with all the books. $850. (360)683-3015
6010 Appliances
P.A.: Attractive, spacious 1 Br., $570, 2 Br., $665. New carpet, vert blinds, pvt patio, updated appliances, laundry rms, views, on-site mgr. Ask about our current discount. www.olympicsquare.com 457-7200.
MISC: Kenmore refrigerator, top freezer with icemaker. $175. Kenmore stove, 30” slide in. $125. Kitchen Aid dishwasher, SS interior. $125. Kenmore microwave, over range, cream color, exhaust fan. $75. All have been inspected and in working order at time of delivery. (360)582-1215.
U R A U O E A T R B O R I R T
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Absorbs, Asian, Bake, Boil, Cook, Dietary, Dishes, Drain, Dry Roast, Fettuccine, Fiber, Gelatinous, Glucomannan, Japanese, Konjac Yam, Konjaku, Konnyaku, Low-fat, Marinara, Meat, Mild, Natural, Pasta, Pesto, Plant, Poultry, Recipe, Refrigerate, Rice, Rinse, Sauce, Seafood, Soft, Soup, Spaghetti, Spices, Stock, Supermarket, Texture, Thin Yesterday’s Answer: Massages 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.
NUTSG ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
KRINB ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
44 Rubbed roughly 45 Golfer Mickelson 47 “Search me” 48 Had a heart-toheart 52 Like Buffalo wings, eating-wise 53 Scheme 54 Nevada gambling mecca 55 Devoid of artwork, as walls 56 Opera solo
BALER: New Holland 575, 14 x 18. All options, exc. cond. $12,500/obo. (360)732-4545
SEQUIM: Furnished 1 Br. $380, plus $350 deposit, plus electric. (360)417-9478
East PA: 3 br, 2 ba, SW view, updated, move-in ready, 1,768 sf., plus basement, 2-car garage, no yard work $1150./mo (360)808-3721
S Y A P U T A C W R E F R S K Y ګ O F ګ O I ګ C B ګ A F A K E A N A
© 2015 Universal Uclick
By Gareth Bain
505 Rental Houses 683 Rooms to Rent 6045 Farm Fencing Clallam County Roomshares & Equipment
Central PA: Upstairs 2 Br. 2 BA. No smoking, pets maybe. First / last / dep. $825/mo. (360)4575089
N L T O P D I S H E S E K E T
FORD: Tractor N9 with blade. $3,000.firm. (360)452-2615 SAWMILL: Mobile dimension portable sawmill for sale. Model 128 hydrostatic . 250 hours. Cuts up to a 20 foot log. With trailer. Never been moved. Very good condition. One owner. Sequim. $24,000. 360-4609751
6050 Firearms & Ammunition GUN: Ruger GP100, 357, 4” barrel, laser. $550. (360)460-4491. GUNS: Springfield XDM, 40 cal. $500. Springfield XDM, 9 mm. $500. Springfield XDS, 45 cal, 3.3 with laser. $550. Never been fired. (360)460-4491. WE BUY FIREARMS CASH ON THE SPOT ~~~ ANY & ALL ~~~ TOP $$$ PAID INCLUDING ESTATES AND OR ENTIRE COLLECTIONS Call 360-477-9659
6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves FIREWOOD: $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special $499. Gilbert, 808-3293 montesbg@hotmail.com or www.portangelesfire wood.com
6075 Heavy Equipment MISC: John Deere 550G dozer, wide track, wide blade, $15,000. John Deere 490E excavator, wide track, $22,000. JCB 214S backhoe, extendahoe, 3 buckets and forks, $20,000. All in good working condition. (360)460-4081
6080 Home Furnishings
57 List entry 58 Common opening time 59 In a short time, poetically 60 “America’s largest classroom” network ... or, read as a plural, a hint to 20-, 28-, 46- and 53Across 6115 Sporting Goods
LOVE SEAT with ottoman. Doing some redecorating in our den so we are going to be parting with this love seat and ottoman which is only 4 years old. Both are in excellent condition. $375. (360)808-7922.
BIKE: Two wheel recumbent, E-Z-1 super cruiser. Great condition, fun. $325. (360)477-1972.
MISC: Thomsonville China Cabinet, $1,200. China, set of 12, Spring Valley pattern, $800. Thomsonville Hutch, $500. (360)461-0743
MISC: Band saw, 17” 2 blades, fence with foot brake. $600. Bowl lathe will turn up to 72”, with tools and accessories. $5,000. Burl Planer, any size burls. $2,000. (360)457-7129
Model Home furniture and accessories, dinette sets, patio, office, file cabinets, chairs, new in box dishwashers, and ranges, Grandfather clock, (2) 3’ glass doors, (24) 4’ X 8’ X 1/2” cement backer boards. (360)910-2272
6100 Misc. Merchandise MISC: Honda, gas generator, EU 8500. $2,000. Diesel generator DA7000SS, $4,000. Honda gas air compressor. 155 PSI. $500. 6.5 HP gas trash pump. $500. All best offer. All contractor grade. All demos. (360)379-1123 SCOOTER: Go-Go Elite Traveller. Like new, used, 3 months indoors only. $900/obo. (360)457-7691 VHS TAPES: Large collection of movies and shows from TV. Over 1200 tapes. $100 for all or make offer. (360)681-2535
6115 Sporting Goods CAMP GEAR: Tent with ground cover REI trail dome-2, mattress, 2, inflatable, inflator pump, 12 vdc, camp stove, 2 burner, propane. Inflatable PFD adult, never used. $200 Cash, firm, no partials. (360)6836311. Leave message if no answer.
6/8/15
Momma
SINCEK
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
ACROSS 1 Sourpuss’ expression 6 Greek god of love 10 Shakespeare’s nickname, with “the” 14 Finnish telecommunications giant 15 Egg holder 16 Three-part cookie 17 Chorus in church 18 Cuba, to Cubans 19 Campus head 20 Ursine kiddie-lit character with a battered suitcase 23 Low-fat, as milk 24 Fall behind 25 Missile storage facility 28 “Love Is a Battlefield” rocker 34 Tracks down, as a UPS package 36 Bakery fixture 37 LPGA golfer Michelle 38 Puts on the line 39 Termination 40 Skip over in pronunciation 42 Biblical beast 43 Ambassador’s skill 45 Valued (at) 46 Superman’s “dressing room” 49 Truman’s first lady 50 Higher than, in poetry 51 Parisian lover’s word 53 Venerated dancer 60 Answered a charge 61 __ horse: long shot 62 Prom gown material 63 Fillet’s lack 64 New York canal 65 Court reporter 66 Sheltered Greek promenade 67 Like a battery needing a charge 68 Saudi Arabia neighbor
MONDAY, JUNE 8, 2015 B7
TOCIXE Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Yesterday's
❘
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: PRIOR GUESS BEFALL KITTEN Answer: The soccer team’s goalie was amazing. He was a — KEEPER
by Mell Lazarus
6125 Tools
TOOLS: 20” 4 knife planer, $800. Plunge router, $195. 2 routers, $100/ea. Carbide saw blades, $10 and up. 10” Table saw, $450. 180’ of Maple kiln dried, no defects. $3 a board foot. Complete Shop smith with band saw, biscuit cutter, sanding belt and misc. tools, $3,000. Call for more information. Kitchen cabinets (Free). (360)582-1215
6140 Wanted & Trades WANTED: Honda mini 70cc or 50cc trail bike. (360)457-0814 WANTED Manual Hoyer lift. (360)452-9622 WANTED: Old tools and hand planes. Call Les at (360)385-0822 WANTED: Riding lawnmowers, working or not. Will pickup for free. Kenny (360)775-9779
6135 Yard & Garden ROCKS: Landscaping. Various sizes, two types. $25-$500. Delivery and set up for an additional fee. (360)683-8332 ROTOTILLER: Craftsman 5hp. $200. (360)683-3967
8120 Garage Sales Jefferson County STORAGE UNIT SALES: Quilcene MiniStorage, 294700 HWY 101, Quilcene, WA will sale units #17, 24 & 37 to the highest sealed bidder on June 19, 2015. The units will be opened for viewers at 9:00 am till 10:30 am. Winner of the sealed bids will have 10 days to remove contents. For more information contact Jean Morris @360-301-3377 or morrishjean@gmail.com.
8180 Garage Sales PA - Central SELLERS WANTED For the Community Garage Sale. Sale is June 13, 9am-3pm, Clallam County Fairgrounds. Call 360-417-2551 for more information.
8183 Garage Sales PA - East AUCTION: Bayview Mini Storage; 1:00 Thursday, June 11, 2015, at 62 S. Bayview, P.A. Unit B-22, Jackie Reaume and Unit B-95, Johanna Bowechop. Call 452-2400 to verify. WANTED: Quality items in good condition for garage sale June 19-20. Proceeds benefit WAG, local dog rescue. Accepting kitchen, household items, linens furniture, garden/outdoor furniture etc. Call to arrange pick up (360)683-0932
7020 Dogs
MINI Australian shepherd Purebred Puppy’s, raised with family, smart, loving. 1st shots, wormed. Many colors. $550 & up. 360-2613354
7025 Farm Animals & Livestock BULL: White Face / Limousin approx. 1 year old. Located on the east side of Sequim. (360)683-2304
7035 General Pets CAT: Male, smart black and White, “Oreo” 3 yrs., $1.00 (360)457-6374.
7035 General Pets 9820 Motorhomes
JUST TOO CUTE MINIAUSSIE PUPPIES: ready on June 17. 6 merles, 4 black tris. ASDR registrable,shots, dewormed, well socialized on our hobby farm. (360)385-1981 or 500emil@gmail.com
LAB: Yellow, male 3yr old pure bread, free to good home. Local Number (509)952-7258.
MOTORHOMES: Looking for clean low miles ‘06 and newer, 25’ to 35’ motor homes. Contact Joel at Price Ford. (360)457-3333
POODLES: Standard Parti. 3 females, 1 male, $900. (360)670-9674
7045 Tack, Feed & Supplies Horse Trailer: 2 horse straight load, Thoroughbred height. Tandem axle, new tires. $1,500. 417-7685 weekdays.
9820 Motorhomes MOTORHOME: ‘85 Class C, 3,000k mi on motor and tires. $3,000 obo. (360)808-1134
ENGLISH MASTIFF Puppies. $550 and up. House raised with our family, variety of colors. Large sweet gentle giants. Call to see our big cute babies. Will have 1st shots and worming. 360.562.1584
MOTORHOME: Class A, Damon ‘95 Intruder. 34’, Diesel 230 Cummins turboed after cool, with 6 speed Allison, Oshgosh frame, 80k miles, no slides, plus more! $19,000./obo. (360)683-8142
MOTORHOME: ‘96 30ft. Southwind Storm. 51k miles. Custom interior, Roadmaster towing system, Banks Power Pack and other extras. Very nice cond. $18,500. (360)681-7824 RV: ‘93 Winnebago. Class A, very good condition, 88k mi., 454 eng., lots of storage, full bedroom, high rise toilet, self leveling jacks. $18,000. (360)457-3979
WINNEBAGO ‘02, BRAVE, 33’,. Class A, Model 32V, Ford V10 gas engine with 2 slides, Onan Generator, rear camera, tow package, levelers. Sleeps two, dinner for 4, party for six, 42.8K miles, $29,800. (407)435-8157 NO TEXTING
WINNEBAGO: ‘87 Chieftain, 27’, 37,250 orig. miles, low hours on generator, nicely equipped kitchen, includes TV and microwave. New very comfortable queen mattress, lots of extras. $10,500. (360)461-3088
91190150
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B8 MONDAY, JUNE 8, 2015
561210231 6-7
SERVICE
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EEK BUILDER AGLE CR S E Specializing in Decks • Patios and Porches
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-$% t 1MBTNB t 1SPKFDUJPO t $35 7JOUBHF "VEJP &RVJQNFOU 29667464
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451054676
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431015297
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551139687
Open 7 Days • Mon-Sat 10-5 p.m. Sun 10-4 p.m. 4911 Sequim Dungeness Way (in Dungeness, just past Nash’s)
457-6582 808-0439
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4A1161355
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Lic.#FLAWKTS873OE
Removal of popcorn or acoustic ceilings Water Damage Smoke Damage Removal of wallpaper Repair of cracks and holes Texture to match Orange Peel - Knock Down - Hand Trowel
Over 25 Years Experience
Grounds Maintenance Specialist • Mowing • Trimming • Pruning • Tractor Work • Landscaping • Spring Sprinkler Fire Up • Fall Cleanup and Pruning
Painting & Pressure Washing
45769373
I Fix Driveways,
We go that extra mile for your tree needs • Tree Removal • Tree Trimming • View Enhancement
flawktreeservice@yahoo.com Show us Any written estimate and we will match or beat that estimate!
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NEXT ISSUE Peninsula Daily News: Friday, July 17 Sequim Gazette: Wednesday, July 15 Advertising Deadline: Friday, June 19, 2015
Spring hikes on the Peninsula Living with multiple sclerosis Caring for children with autism Growing epidemic of sleep apnea
MARCH 2015
volume 11, issue 1
Produced by Peninsula Daily News and Sequim Gazette Advertising Department
NEXT ISSUE Peninsula Daily News Sunday, June 21 Sequim Gazette: Wednesday, June 24 Advertising Deadline: Friday, May 29, 2015 Our quarterly publication on healthly lifestyles, exercise, nutrition & traditional and alternative medicine.
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4 6 8 10
Classified
Peninsula Daily News
9050 Marine Miscellaneous TRAILER: ‘96 Shorelander, galvanized, fits 19-21’ boat, many new parts. $850/obo. (360)460-9285
Monday, June 8, 2015 B9
9180 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles Classics & Collect. Others Others LINCOLN: ‘74 Continental Mark IV. 460cc, no rust or dents. $2,500. Good condition (360)457-5236.
9817 Motorcycles AIR PURIFIER: Hybrid GP Germicidal, Sharper Image. $150. 775-0855.
BOOKS: How-to craft books, 24 volumes. $30. (360)452-7721
AMMO: 1,000 rounds. .22 long rifle. $150. (360)417-8227
BOW: Parker Genesis, Camo, right hand,arrows and quiver, used twice. $150. (360)732-4626.
AMMUNITION: 22 long rifle, 100 round box. $15. (360)460-2260 Antique: Burgandy, settee, wood trim, 5’4” long, 2’ deep. $125. (360)374-4298 ART: Illinois 1st Pheasand stamp print A/P with signed governor stamp. $200. 461-7365
CAGES: (3) Small animal cages. $25 ea. (360)565-6045 CANOE SHELL: Fiberglass, no wood, 17’x33”, yellow. $35. (360)385-2679 CD’s: In travel case. Rock and roll. $60obo (360)452-6842
ART: Kipness framed litho “August Shadows” #66/250, sacrifice. $200. (360)461-7365
CHAIN SAW BAR:, New Oregon 32” 3/8 pitch, skip tooth chisel bit. $90.(360)640-0556
ART: Print by Nagel, Casa Lupita, framed 25”x33”. $75. 565-8039
CHAINSAW: Poulan chainsaw with cover, 42cc, 18 inch bar, runs. $80. (949)232-3392
ART: Print by Nagel, Park South Gallery, framed 22”x30”. $75. (360)565-8039 ART: Rie Munoz “Mending the Nets” very nice, mat and frame. $125. (360)681-7579 BARREL: Rain barrel. $25. (360)417-2056 BBQ: CharBroil tabletop gas barbecue, new in box. $25.00 (928)750-8634 BED: Double air bed, paid $200. will sell for $100. 928-9659 BED: Electric hospital bed, 3 years old. $200 o.b.o. (360)417-1134 BED: Electric, hospital folding bed, excellent condition. $100. (360)683-4361 BED FRAME: Queen size, metal, on wheels, new. $40. 683-2589 BENCH: Bedroon bench, floral cushion, brass legs, 48” X 18” X 20”. $50. 775-0855 BENCH: Outdoor 6’ bench, metal bottom, wood top, needs paint. $20. (360)457-8106 BIKE CART: Cover for child. $50. 683-0146 BIKE: CycleOps mag bike trainer, great condition. $100. (360)301-6000 BIKE: Indoor exercise bike, good for light/moderate exercise. $25. (360)681-4916 BOAT: 1965 Sea King boat, 15 ft, great shape. $200.obo. 775-9631 BOATING TUBE: Towable, big slice airhead, good condition. $75. (360)640-1978 BOATS: (4) boats for sale, very low prices. $200. and under. (360)461-6699 BOBBLEHEAD: Ken Griffey Jr., ‘13 Mariners Hall of Fame, new. $50. (360)457-5790
CHAIR: Folding deck chair, deluxe model, stainless steal frame. $130. (360)379-1344 CHAIR: Maple rocking chair, ladder back, cushioned seat. $35. (360)683-0791 CHAIRS: 2 oak, pressed back vintage chairs, non-matching. $40.00 ea (360)452-7721. CHAIR: Small log chair, for rustic home, very charming, must see. $150. (360)504-2112 CHAIR: Vintage, wood, needs upholstery, set and back. $25. (360)683-7994
FREE: Upper and lower kitchen cabinets, sink, garbage disposal, bathroom vanity. 582-1215 FRIDGE: Mini fridge and freezer, works good. $75.obo (360)775-9631 FURNITURE SET: Patio set, 2 chairs, love seat, glass top table. $125. (360)681-7579
ROCKING CHAIR: Antique oak rocking chair with padded seat. $75. (360)504-2112
GAS CANS: 5 gallon plastic. $6 each, or 3 for $15. (360)681-0235. GAS GRILL: Decent condition, 21”x13” grill area, no gas tank. $10. (360)683-7520
SEWING MACHINE: Singer sewing machine in cabinet, vintage. $50. (360)683-0146
GOLF CLUBS: Lynx, (9) irons, (3) woods, putter, bag, good cond. $95. (360)681-3811
SHIRT: Deadliest catch t-shirt, Signed by Capt, Colburn. $50.obo (208)704-8886
GPS: Lowrance iFinder, 12 channel, hand held receiver. $70. (360)379-1344
SHOES: Ladies, tennis shoes., size 8, like new. $20. (360)204-2160
GUITAR: Art and Luither, new small adult size. $175. (360)732-4626.
SLEEPING PAD: Therm-A-Rest 72” self inflating sleeping pad, like new. $35. 683-5284
HOUSE PLANT: Huge room size Dutchmen’s pipe, very rare, heavy. $50. (360)417-2641
SNOW CABLES: Fit most passenger cars. $10. (360)681-7153
LADDER: Aluminum step ladder, 8’ combo extension. $50. (360)683-0033 LIGHT BULBS: Compact, fluorescent, in original boxes. $1 ea. (360)683-2589 METAL DETECTOR: Whites 6000/di series 2. $175. o.b.o. 452-6842
STOVE: GE electric, glass top, self cleaning oven, power supply cord. $50. 683-0791 TABLE: Oval glass table 5’x4’ with a metal base. $60. (360)681-8808
SUZUKI: ‘00 600 Katana. 5k ml. $2,200. (707)241-5977
TABLES: (2) Dining tables, small, solid wood, old. $35 ea. (360)565-6045
SUZUKI: ‘96, 1400 Special Edition, lots of chrome beautiful bike. $2,500. (360)457-6540 or (360)452-644.
TABLE SAW: Craftsman table saw with stand. $50. 460-2260
9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect.
COT: Folding metal Army cot, 1951 vintage. $20. (360)457-2909
MISC: Twist ab workout chair, new. $50. (360)385-3659
TABLESAW: Toolcraft 10” $50. Ryobi 10” mitersaw $20. 452-9685
DESK: Oak, large, 6 drawers, 4’ X 3’, new condition. $50. (360)683-4361
MISC: Tyent water ionizer, for your health. $200. (360)385-3659
TABLE: Side or foyer table, very good condition. $55. (360)681-3225
BMW: ‘07 Z4 3.0 SI Roadster. 47K miles, well maintained, like new. $20,000. (360)477-4573
MISC: Womens 2XL coat $5. Dress size 26 $5. (2) outfits size 26 $10. ea. (360)477-9962
TAILGATE: 5th wheel plastic tailgate for Ford 2001 pickup. $100. (360)452-2929
DISH: Hors D’ouvres holder, Bob White by Red Wing. $30. (360)683-9295 DOG CARRIER: Medium. $75. (360)417-2056 DOOR: Antique swinging wood door with glass panels, unique, nice! $60. (360)452-8264 DRESSER: 3 drawer dresser, two doors. $95. (360)670-2946 DRYER: Sears Elite gas dryer. $85. (360)316-9204 DRY SUIT: NSR Triton, size large, good condition, needs collar seal repair. $25. 681-4916 DVD/VCR: Magnavox recorder, in-line recording, no tuner, in box. $60. (360)683-0033 FLIP FLOPS Size 8, like new, $10. (360)504-2160
MOTOR: Century 1hp Electric and Pump Volt 230/115. Price. $55. (360)681-8808 MOTORCYCLE GEAR : Motorcycle jacket and pants First Gear XL $100. (360)808-1519 MOTORCYCLE GEAR : Tank bag, magnetic, tourmaster Cortech series. $50. (360)808-1519 PALLET: Custom made cord wood pallet, 11’ x 25”, excellet, have pics. $80. (360)452-8264 PIANO: 1910 upright Schaeffer, dark wood, with bench, U-haul. $100. (360)928-3566 PIN STABILIZER: 5th wheel king pin stabilizer. $50. (360)452-2929
PLANTS: Feverfew, columbine, grape hyacinth, and strawberry. (2) for $1. (360)437-2537
FREE: Hot tub cover, like new, brown, 85”x85” (360)681-3274
E E A D SS FFRREE
PUB TABLE: 4 chairs. $125. (360)457-6374.
TENT: Large Northpole family tent with awning. $80. (949)232-3392
TRUNK: Black with metal trim, 24” X 21” X 36”, vintage. $100. 683-7994
9808 Campers & Canopies
RV: ‘91 Toyota 21’.V-6, Cruise control, overdrive, 90K miles. $9,900. (360)477-4295
TENT TRAILER: Coachman ‘11 Clipper 126 Sport. Pop up, Queen bed on each end. Fridge, stove, stereo, furnace, hot water heater, excellent condition. Very little use. Table with bench seats, sofa and table that folds into bed. Must see to appreciate! $6,500. Call (360)640-2574 or (360)640-0403. TRAILER: Nash, ‘95 26’. Excellent cond. Garaged, no water damage. Solar panels, 4 batteries, sleeps 8. $5,200. (360)670-8240
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
5TH WHEEL: Alpenlite, ‘83, 19’ well maintained, everything works. $2,700. (808)-895-5634
BAYLINER: ‘79 Victoria, 2 br cabin cruiser. Great cond. Newer engine and outdrive. New upholstry. $6,500 obo. (360)912-4922
NOMAD: ‘98, 25’, with slide, good condition, everything works well. $7,000. (360)681-4861.
BOAT: Glassply, 18’, 90 hp ENV. 15 hp. kicker, ready to fish. $4,700. (360)808-4692
CADILLAC: ‘59 Sedan de Ville. Original, licensed and runs. $3,259. (360)461-0527
TV: Vizio 20” LCD HDTV, works great. $35. obo. (928)750-8634 VACUUM: Shark Infinity bagless vacuum cleaner. $80. (949)241-0371 VCR/DVD: Selling for $75. (360)928-9659 WASHER DRIVE BELT Fits Maytag A712 and Others (2new, 2used) $15 (360)928-0164. WASHER MOTOR: 2 Speed, with harness. Fits Maytag incl, A712, $60 (360)928-0164. WATER SKIS: Obrien sport cut free carve water skis. $50. (949)241-0371 WINDOW: White vinyl 4’x4’ slider, two pane argon. $40. 640-0556
CADILLAC: ‘87 El Dorado. V8, front wheel drive, power steering, brakes, locks, windows, mirrors, seats, cruise control. Luxury leather interior. Smoke free. Newer tires. 77,750 miles. As is: $2,195. (360)452-1469 CHEV: ‘00 SS Camaro. Super Sport package. New, wheels, tires, battery and license. Flow master exhaust system, T.top, black leather interior , cherry red. NEVER ABUSED! 81K ml. $6,000. (360)457-9331
WOODSTOVE: Redishbrown, new seal and brick, good cond. Will deliver. $200. 461-6699
Mail to: Bring your ads to: Peninsula Daily News Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 305 West 1st St., PA Port Angeles, WA 98362 or FAX to: (360)417-3507 Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com
NO PHONE CALLS
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
BOAT: ‘11, Grandy, 12’, rowing / sailing skiff, built by the boat school in 2011. Includes the full sailing package, with oars and trailer. Good shape. $4,000/obo. (360)850-2234
BOAT: ‘96 Sea Doo Jet boat. $4,500. (360)452-3213
BOAT: 16’ Fiberglass ‘78 Larson, 40 horse Mercury motor, Eagle Depth finder, with Trailer & 2 life vests. $2,000. 417-7685 weekdays.
BOAT: 18’ Raider 182 Pro-sport, loaded equip. power Honda 90 hp fuel filter/separator, 9.9 hp trolling, radar chart plotter fish finder elec downriggers, full canvas, EZ load trailer. $18,500. (360)477-7265 BOAT: 19’ Fiberglass, trailer, 140 hp motor. $2,800. 683-3577 BOAT: ‘90 19’ Arima Searanger. 2 Scotty elec. down riggers, 150 Honda 4 stroke motor. $16,500 (360)461-6608
5A246724
• 2 Ads Per Week • No Pets, Livestock, • 3 Lines Garage Sales • Private Party Only or Firewood
BUICK: ‘66 Skylark Custom Convertible, Custom paint, Ready for Summer.$16,500. 683-3408
TIRES: (4) 265/70/R17, about 40% wear. $200. (360)683-2914
D A S E E D R A E F E E R E F FR Monday and Tuesdays For items $200 and under
9802 5th Wheels
MOTORCYCLE: ‘98 Honda, 1100 ST, Red. (360)452-9829
MISC: Rug hooking frame plus 10 boxes of wool, some cut. $25. (360)582-9703
FREE: Fridge, Freezer combo, white, Whirlpool. (360)683-6645
TRAVEL TRAILER: Lance, ‘11 Model 2285, 28’ single slide-out, A/C, 18’ power awning, new tires, microwave, TV, many other upgrades. $18,000. Contact info: nkarr43@gmail.com or (435)-656-2093
HONDA: ‘82, AspenCade, 1100A., 60K ml. Two tone brown, excellent condition, garaged. $1,999. (360)301-2209.
COMPUTER DESK: (3) piece corner desk with adjustable chair. $60. (360)457-8106
PLANT: San Pedro type cactus, 7 ft tall in pot, pics avail. $15. (360)681-7568
TRAVEL TRAILER: ‘06 , Thor , Dutchmen/Rainier model 18/SC trailer for sale , good condition please contact us at (360)732-4271
HONDA: ‘06 1300 VTXR, 7,700 ml., saddle bags, passenger seat, crash bars. Great touring bike. $4,100. (360)477-9527
YAMAHA: ‘05 Yamaha YZ 125, runs great. $1,300 (360)461-9054
FREE: Concrete and rocks separated and ready to haul. (360)417-8227
TRAILER: ‘99 Sierra, 25’, needs TLC. $7,000/obo. 417-0803.
HONDA: ‘02, 750 Shadow Spirt. $3,200./obo (360)477-4355
TABLES: (2) small round night stands or end tables. $30 each or both for $50. 457-1389
BOBBLEHEAD: Lou Piniella ‘14 Mariners Hall of Fame, new. $20. (360)457-5790
9832 Tents & Travel Trailers
HARLEY DAVIDSON ‘03, Road King Classic, anniversary edition, exc. cond. with extras. 29K ml., $8,500. (360)775-0370
MISC: Mechanics creeper, and free drop cord light. $14. 681-0235.
FREE: 6 HP Lawn mower with bag, not running. (360)582-9703
9820 Motorhomes
HARLEY: ‘06 Custom Deluxe. 25K miles. Comes with extras: rear seat, windshield, sissy bar. New tires. Harley Custom Paint #123 of 150. Immaculate condition. $12,500. Call Lil John Kartes. (360)460-5273
CLOTHES: Boys, size 2T, like new. $10 for all. (360)477-9962
BOBBLEHEAD: Ken Griffey Jr., ‘95, slide model, new. $25. (360)681-3811
BOOKENDS: Cast iron, Civil War figures. $25 pr. (360)683-9295
RIMS: (4) GMC, 6 lugs, 16”, steel, no rust, clean. $75. (360)452-9685
SEWING MACHINE: EuroPro sew-n-go, portable, just serviced. $30. (360)477-5718
PLANT: Acrurensis succulent plant, 7 ft tall in pot, pics avail, U-haul. $15. (360)681-7568
BOOKCASE: Solid wood, dark finish. $100. (360)670-2946
REAR BAGGER: Twin rear bagger for a Cub Cadet. $100. 457-2909
BOAT: Glassply 17’, good cond., excellent fishing and crabbing setup, great running 90hp Yamaha and 15hp Evinrude elec start, power tilt, new pot puller with pots. 4,800. (360)775-4082 BOAT HOUSE: 20’x36’ long, P.A. $2,500/obo. 457-6107 or 775-4821 BOAT: Monk 42’ Tri cabin, 1961. Great live aboard, pristine. Diesel, full electronics. $39,000. Boat house available. Port Angeles. (520)664-5698 BOAT: Searay, 18’, fun family boat. $6,500. (360)457-3743 or (360)460-0862
FORD: 1929-30 Custom Model A Roadster. Perfect interior, very clean, runs great on Nissan pickup running gear. Owner sunny day driver only. Teal green, black fenders vinyl top. $28,500 Real eye catcher. (360)775-7520 or (360)457-3161. FORD: 1929 Model A Roadster, full fendered, all mustang running gear. $18,500. 460-8610
FORD: 1950 Original Convertible. Beige interior and top on burgundy restoration featured in Bulb Horn magazine. Appeared in ads ran by Bon Marche. Mechanically sound and clean. Owner restored. $29,500. (360)775-7520 or (360)457-3161. FORD: 1952 Pickup, Mustang front, 302, C4, 9” Ford rearend. $8,500. 460-8610
BOAT: Tollycraft, ‘77, 26’ Sedan, well equipped and maintained classic, trailer, dingy and more. See at 1518 W. 11th alley. $20,000/obo. (360)457-9162
GMC: ‘71 Stepside pick up. Restored, 350 engine, 4 speed manual, New tires and wheels. Perfect paint and bed. For sale $17,500 obo or trade for Rialta/Chinook RV or late model convertable. 452-5891 or (206)618-5268.
DURABOAT: 14’, with Calkins trailer, 8hp Mercury, great condition. $2,000. 683-5843.
JEEP: 1945 Willys Military. Restored, not show. $10,000 obo. (360)928-3419
M.G.: ‘78 Midget MK II, 53K ml. exc. cond. always garaged, new top. $5,200. (360)457-1389.
SEAT: ‘69, 600D. Made in Spain, Everything redone. $12,000/obo. (360)379-0593 VW BEETLE: 1969 Convertible. Must sell this 1969 VW Convertible with a lots of spare parts, manuals and specialty VW tools. This is a restorable car, and none of the legendary charm of VW’s has been lost with this rig. The engine still runs, although the car hasn’t been driven in three years. Title clean and clear! No trades just cash. If you are interested, I can provide LOTS more details and pictures. $2,500. Please call (605)224-4334.
9292 Automobiles Others
CHEVY: ‘80 Monza 2+2. V-8, 350 c.i. engine, Alum. manifold, Holley carb., alum. radiator and trans. cooler, A.T. floor console, Posi 3:08, 5 stud axels and hubs, front and rear sway bars, disc brakes, pwr. steering. New Auto Meter gauges, paint and tires. $3,800 (REDUCED). Located in Quilcene, WA. Call Brad (360)774-0915.
CHEVY: Volt, ‘13, Black with premium package. Mint condition with less than 5,800 miles on it! Includes leather seats, navigation, ABS brakes, alloy wheels, automatic temperature control, and much more. Still under warranty! $23,000. Call 360-457-4635
GMC: ‘14 Savana 2500 LS Cargo Van 4.8L V8, Automatic, Good Tires, Traction Control, Power Windows and Door Locks, Passenger Protection Cage, Cruise Control, Tilt, Air Conditioning, AM/FM Stereo, Information Center, Dual Front Airbags. 3K ml. $23,995. GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com HONDA: ‘06 Accord. Clean, low mileage. $10,000 OBO cash. (360)374-5060
JEEP: ‘06 Liberty Renegade 4X4 Sport Utility - 3.7L V6, Automatic, Lift Kit, Eagle Alloy Wheels, New Oversize Wrangler Duratrac Tires, Matching Spare Wheel and Tire,Factory Rock Sliders, Tow Package, Roof Rack, Sunroof, Tinted Windows, Keyless Entry, Power Windows, Door Locks, and Mirrors, Power Heated Leather Seats, Cruise Control, Tilt, Air Conditioning, 6CD Stereo, Information Center, Dual Front and Side Airbags. 66K ml. $12,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com
MAZDA: ‘02 Miata, 6 speed, hardtop, new brakes, timing belt, coolest car on the Peninsula. $8,500. (360)683-0146.
MAZDA: ‘99 Miata, Custom leather seats, excellent condition. $6,300. (360)461-0929
FORD: ‘92 Thunderbird. Low mileage. $2,000. (360)461-2809 or 4610533
PONTIAC: 05’ Vibe. New tires, tuned up, runs great. 132k Mi. $3,200. (360)461-4898
9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County NOTICE A public Budget Hearing to be conducted by the Board of Directors of the Sequim School District will be held on June 15, 2015 at 6:00 p.m. The Board of Directors shall consider adopting a revision to the school district’s Capital Projects Fund 2014-15 Budget at a regular Board Meeting on June 15, 2015 at 6:00 p.m. The meeting will be held in the board room located at 503 N. Sequim Avenue, Sequim, Washington. Copies of said budget are on file in the district administration office located at 503 N. Sequim Avenue, and will be furnished to any person upon request. Any person may appear at the meetings and be heard for or against the budget or any part thereof. Kelly Shea, Supt. Sequim School District No. 323 503 N. Sequim Avenue Sequim, WA 98382 Pub: June 1, 8, 2015 Legal No. 634958 SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR CLALLAM COUNTY CAUSE NO. 15-2-00439-8 SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION JOHN W. WARRICK and RUTH JENKINS, trustees of the WARRICK-JENKINS LIVING TRUST DATED MAY 17, 1993, Plaintiffs, v. CLALLAM COUNTY, a Washington municipal corporation; and all other persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real estate described in the complaint herein, Defendants: The State of Washington to the unknown Defendants, and all other persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title estate, lien, or interest in the real estate described in the complaint herein, Defendants: You, and each of you, are hereby summoned to appear within sixty (60) days after the date of first publication of this summons, to wit, within sixty (60) days after the 8th day of June, 2015, and defend the above-entitled action in the above-entitled court and answer the complaint of Plaintiffs and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorneys for Plaintiffs, at their office below stated; and, in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demands of the complaint in this action which has been filed with the clerk of said court. The object of this action is to quiet title in Plaintiffs to real estate in Clallam County, Washington, described as: Parcel 14 of Lake Farm, a survey recorded March 30, 1990 in Volume 17 of surveys, page 69 under Auditor’s File No. 631024 and specifically including the following: That portion of the following described property which immediately abuts that portion of the eastern survey line of Parcel 14 which is contained within the northwest quarter of Section 10, Township 30 North, Range 5 West, W.M., of Lake Farm Survey, recorded March 30, 1990 in Volume 17 of Surveys, page 69 under Auditor’s File No. 631024, which consists of a strip of land 30 feet in width for road purposes in Government Lot 4, Section 10, Township 30 North, Range 5 West, W.M., described as follows: Beginning at the southwest corner of Government Lot 4 and Engineer’s Station P.I. 11+59.61 at which point the right of way is 30 feet left; thence north 89° 42’10” east 1186.00 feet on the south line of said Government Lot 4 to Engineer’s Station P.C. 22+94.06 at which point the right of way is 30 feet on the left; thence on a 48° curve to the left and having a central angle of 89°52’36” a distance of 93.62 feet at which point the right of way is 30 feet on the left and extends 49.26 feet right to the southeast corner of the Government Lot 4; thence continuing on the above curve 93.62 feet to Engineer’s Station P.T. 24+81.30 on the east line of Government Lot 4 and at which point the right of way is 30 feet to the left; thence north 0°10’26” west 1200.24 feet to the northeast corner of said Government Lot 4 and at which point the right of way is 30 feet to the left. Situate in the County of Clallam, State of Washington, against the claim of the Defendants and any one of them. Date of First Publication: June 8, 2015 Attorneys for Plaintiff: Christopher J. Riffle, WSBA #41332 PLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM 403 S. Peabody St. Port Angeles, WA 98362 360-457-3327 Court of Proceedings: Clallam County Superior Court Cause No.: 15-2-00439-8 PUB: June 8, 15, 22, 29, 6, 13, 2015 Legal No. 637991
MERCURY: ‘02 Grand Marquis LS Sedan 4.6L V8, Automatic, Alloy Wheels, Good Tires, Keyless Entry, Power Windows, Door Locks, and Mirrors, Leather Seats, Cruise Control, Tilt, Air Conditioning, Automatic Climate Control, Cassette Stereo, Dual Front Airbags. 84K ml. $5,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com SCION: ‘06, TC, 138K mi., new tires, brakes, alignmnet, sunroof. $5,800. (360)912-2727
SUZUKI: ‘06 Forenza Sedan - 2.0L 4 Cyl., Automatic, Tinted Windows, Power Windows, Door Locks, and Mirrors, Tilt Wheel, Air Conditioning, CD Stereo, Dual Front Airbags.50K ml. $5,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com THUNDERBIRD: ‘96, classic, runs great, reduced, 140K ml. $2400/obo. 775-6681. TOYOTA: ‘05 Corolla, 105k ml. exc. cond. sun roof, rear spoiler. $7,500. (360)452-7241.
9434 Pickup Trucks Others CHEVY: ‘76 3/4 Ton pick-up GREAT ENGINE New 454, carb, battery, radiator, fuel pump, turbo 400, short shaft. Must take entire truck. $2,000/obo. Before 6pm (360)461-6870 CHEVY: ‘88, K1500, 4x4 Pickup, 132K mi., well maintained 5 speed. $3,500. (360)600-1817. CHEVY: ‘94 Half Ton, Z71. $3000. (360)452-4336
9556 SUVs Others
FORD: ‘11, Explorer Limited. 79,500 miles. Excellent Condition. 4-wheel drive, loaded w/ options: nav system, touch screen, parking assist, remote locks and start, back-up camera $28,000. (360)797-3247. HONDA: ‘97 Passport LX, 113K ml., auto, 4 wd, sunroof, 1 owner, very clean, recent maint., well maintained. $4,500/obo. (360)3012812 or (360)385-3647 JEEP: ‘01 Grand Cherokee LTD. 153k mi., ex cond. All service papers. Black w/ bone interior. $5650 obo. (360)4574898 or (360)504-5633. JEEP: ‘80 CJ5. Straight 6 engine, runs good, good tires, new battery, soft top. $3800 obo. (360)808-8445 JEEP: ‘84 Grand Cherokee, wrecked nose clip. $800/obo 360-912-2727 JEEP: ‘97, Wrangler, Sahara. Low mileage, recent engine work. Some rust, runs well. Removable top and doors. Must sell. $2900. In Sequim. (303)330-4801. TOYOTA: ‘10 RAV4, excellent condition, red. for info. (360)477-4127
9730 Vans & Minivans Others DODGE: ‘06 Van, 67K ml., seats 6, extra spare tire, AC, roof top rack, tailer hitch, new battery. $5,999. (360)683-6034. FORD: ‘06 Passenger van. V-8, 350, Runs excellent, good tires. $6,500 obo. 460-2282
DODGE: ‘93 Cummins. 2x4 with protech flatbed. 135k mi. $12,000. (360)271-6521.
TOYOTA: ‘06 Sienna, seats 8, V6, 50K ml. $14,500. (360)681-3561
GMC: ‘91 Sierra 2500. 130k miles. Great engine. $3,000. (360)797-3487 after pm.
9931 Legal Notices Clallam County
NISSAN: ‘11 Frontier P/U, stick shift, 2 wheel drive, extended cab, 49K ml., $13,500. (360)681-3561
9931 Legal Notices Clallam County
AUCTION: Bayview Mini Storage; 1:00 Thursday, June 11, 2015, at 62 S. Bayview, P.A. Unit B-22, Jackie Reaume and Unit B-95, Johanna Bowechop. Call 452-2400 to verify. Pub: June 7, 8, 2015 Legal No:637768
REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS
Clallam County Health and Human Services, Developmental Disabilities is seeking applications to a Request for Qualifications (RFQ) for provision of employment and related services for eligible adults with developmental disabilities.
In order to contract with Clallam County, an agency must respond to the RFQ. This RFQ is a solicitation for qualifications and is not an offer, is not a guarantee, nor it it a promise that the solicited qualifications will result in services to be contracted by Clallam County. The specific services which may be contracted for include: 1. 2. 3. 4.
Individual Supported Employment Community Access Transition Services Individual Technical Assistance Benefits Analysis Other Technical Assistance
An informational packet and application for preparing the Request for Qualification may be obtained Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., from: Timothy Bruce/Nan Furford 223 East 4th Street, Suite 14 Port Angeles, WA 98362 (360) 417-2428/417-2377 Or electronically from nfurford@co.clallam.wa.us PASSED THIS 2nd day of June, 2015 ________________________________ Trish Holden, CMC, Clerk of the Board ________________________________ Mike Chapman, Vice Chair Pub: June 8, 15, 2015 Legal No.637209
No. 15-4-00176-1 NONPROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS (RCW 11.42.030) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM Estate of MICHAEL DARWIN HICKS, Decedent. The Notice Agent named below has elected to give notice to creditors of the above-named Decedent. As of the date of the filing of a copy of this Notice with the Court, the Notice Agent has no knowledge of any other person acting as Notice Agent or of the appointment of a Personal Representative of the Decedent’s estate in the State of Washington. According to the records of the Court as are available on the date of the filing of this Notice with the Court, a cause number regarding the Decedent has not been issued to any other Notice Agent and a Personal Representative of the Decedent’s estate has not been appointed. 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 11.42.070 by serving on or mailing to the Notice Agent or the Notice Agent’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the Court in which the Notice Agent’s Declaration and Oath were filed. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty (30) days after the Notice Agent served or mailed the Notice to the creditor as provided under 11.42.020(2)(c); or (2) four (4) months after the date of the first publication of the Notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim if forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.42.050 and 11.42.606. this bar is effective as to claims against both the Decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets.
Date of first publication: May 24, 2015 The Notice Agent declares under penalty of perjury pursuant to the laws of the State of Washington that the foregoing is true and correct. EXECUTED the 15th day of May, 2015, at Port Angeles, Washington. ___________________________ Jean M. Hicks Notice Agent Attorney for Notice Agent: ROBERT W. STROHMEYER Attorney at Law PMB 27 132 Deer Park Road Port Angeles, Washington 98362 Tel: (360) 457-9525 Fax: (360) 452-1168 PUB: May 25, June 1, 8, 2015 Legal No:634616
B10
WeatherWatch
MONDAY, JUNE 8, 2015 Neah Bay 60/49
Yesterday
➡
g Bellingham 75/54
Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 74 48 0.00 13.54 Forks 72 45 0.00 38.90 Seattle 85 61 0.00 16.46 Sequim 81 53 0.00 7.55 Hoquiam 68 52 0.00 19.76 Victoria 78 50 0.00 13.50 Port Townsend 78 48 **0.00 8.28
Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 67/50
Port Angeles 66/51 Sequim Olympics Freeze level: 15,000 feet 72/51
Forks 76/48
Port Ludlow 72/50
Last
New
First
Forecast highs for Monday, June 8
Sunny
➡
★
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
Billings 92° | 61°
San Francisco 72° | 54°
Minneapolis 82° | 61°
Denver 81° | 53°
Chicago 83° | 68°
FRIDAY
El Paso 94° | 69° Houston 93° | 72°
63/52 62/50 Cooler than over Some clouds with the sun the weekend
Marine Conditions
CANADA
Seattle 83° | 58° Olympia 88° | 55°
Spokane 93° | 61°
Tacoma 85° | 59° Yakima 100° | 64°
Astoria 70° | 53°
ORE.
© 2015 Wunderground.com
TODAY
Port Angeles Port Townsend Dungeness Bay*
9:11 p.m. 5:14 a.m. 1:23 a.m. 1:17 p.m.
Nation/World
Victoria 76° | 55°
Ocean: NNW wind 8 to 15 kt. WNW swell 6 ft at 8 seconds. Wind waves 1 to 2 ft. Tonight, NNW wind 8 to 13 kt becoming variable and less than 5 kt. WNW swell 7 ft. Wind waves 1 to 2 ft.
LaPush
64/53 Weekend looks good, too
Washington TODAY
Strait of Juan de Fuca: Light wind becoming W 10 to 20 kt in the afternoon. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft in the afternoon. Tonight, W wind 15 to 25 kt, easing to 5 to 15 kt after midnight. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft subsiding to 1 or 2 ft late.
Tides
63/53 Weather still in a delightful rut
Hi 71 86 84 59 84 89 74 90 80 80 90 76 89 67 89 67
Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo
TOMORROW
Warm Stationary
Pressure Low
High
June 16 June 24 July 1
Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise tomorrow Moonset tomorrow
Lo Prc Otlk 40 Clr 59 PCldy 64 PCldy 50 M Cldy 63 Cldy 72 PCldy 50 Clr 64 PCldy 64 PCldy 56 PCldy 67 PCldy 54 .17 PCldy 60 Clr 53 Clr 75 PCldy 46 PCldy
WEDNESDAY
High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 4:57 a.m. 7.2’ 11:44 a.m. -0.6’ 6:23 p.m. 7.4’
High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 6:06 a.m. 6.7’ 12:26 a.m. 2.2’ 7:17 p.m. 7.7’ 12:38 p.m. 0.0’
High Tide Ht 7:23 a.m. 6.2’ 8:12 p.m. 8.0’
Low Tide 1:37 a.m. 1:37 p.m.
Ht 1.7’ 0.6’
6:57 a.m. 4.8 9:06 p.m. 7.2’
2:37 a.m. 4.3’ 1:43 p.m. -0.1’
8:21 a.m. 4.4’ 9:47 p.m. 7.2’
3:48 a.m. 3.4’ 2:39 p.m. 0.9’
10:01 a.m. 4.2’ 10:28 p.m. 7.1’
4:49 a.m. 3:39 p.m.
2.4’ 2.0’
8:34 a.m. 5.9’ 10:43 p.m. 8.9’
3:50 a.m. 4.8’ 2:56 p.m. -0.1’
9:58 a.m. 5.4’ 11:24 p.m. 8.9’
5:01 a.m. 3.8’ 3:52 p.m. 1.0’
11:38 a.m. 5.2’
6:02 a.m. 4:52 p.m.
2.7’ 2.2’
7:40 a.m. 5.3’ 9:49 p.m. 8.0’
3:12 a.m. 4.3’ 2:18 p.m. -0.1’
9:04 a.m. 4.9’ 10:30 p.m. 8.0’
4:23 a.m. 3.4’ 3:14 p.m. 0.9’
10:44 a.m. 4.7’ 11:11 p.m. 7.9’
5:24 a.m. 4:14 p.m.
2.4’ 2.0’
*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
-10s
-0s
0s
10s
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
70s 80s 90s 100s 110s
Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press
Burlington, Vt. Casper Charleston, S.C. Charleston, W.Va. Charlotte, N.C. Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbia, S.C. Columbus, Ohio Concord, N.H. Dallas-Ft Worth Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth El Paso Evansville Fairbanks Fargo Flagstaff Grand Rapids Great Falls Greensboro, N.C. Hartford Spgfld Helena Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jackson, Miss. Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Key West Las Vegas Little Rock
66 74 91 81 90 75 71 80 67 92 79 74 92 78 76 77 72 59 97 87 66 74 65 73 80 87 77 84 85 93 76 91 89 53 84 87 90 90
42 53 71 59 67 50 55 58 51 68 56 38 71 60 53 68 51 47 73 66 45 55 34 56 52 65 46 56 75 72 62 71 66 49 75 75 71 71
.21
.17
.48 .30 .04 .01 .58
.42 .12
PCldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Rain Rain PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Clr PCldy PCldy Rain Cldy Rain Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Clr Rain PCldy Cldy Clr PCldy PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Rain Rain PCldy Clr PCldy
Ä 28 in Saranac Lake, N.Y.
Atlanta 88° | 68°
Fronts
June 9
Red Bluff and Redding, Calif.
Washington D.C. 90° | 63°
Los Angeles 84° | 63°
Full
à 102 in
New York 79° | 58°
Detroit 79° | 66°
Miami 87° | 76°
★
Low 51 Nearly a quarter-moon
Cloudy
TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:
Cold
★
Pt. Cloudy
Seattle 83° | 57°
Cartography by Keith Thorpe / © Peninsula Daily News
TONIGHT
The Lower 48
National forecast Nation TODAY
Almanac
Brinnon 82/51
Aberdeen 73/50
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Los Angeles Louisville Lubbock Memphis Miami Beach Midland-Odessa Milwaukee Mpls-St Paul Nashville New Orleans New York City Norfolk, Va. North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Pendleton Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, Maine Portland, Ore. Providence Raleigh-Durham Rapid City Reno Richmond Sacramento St Louis St Petersburg Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Juan, P.R. Santa Fe St Ste Marie Shreveport
72 86 85 89 87 90 63 79 91 91 76 77 84 90 85 91 90 81 97 76 73 88 74 88 76 83 86 89 85 87 79 89 71 74 92 85 64 94
60 65 64 73 73 67 50 67 67 76 55 62 58 70 69 71 58 58 73 53 43 63 50 62 59 55 62 59 73 76 54 71 63 57 79 50 48 71
.02 .73
.20 .05
.03
.34 .37
Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Rain PCldy Clr PCldy Clr Clr Cldy Clr Cldy PCldy Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr Clr Clr PCldy Cldy PCldy Clr Clr PCldy Rain Cldy PCldy Cldy Clr PCldy PCldy Rain PCldy
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
Sioux Falls Syracuse Tampa Topeka Tucson Tulsa Washington, D.C. Wichita Wilkes-Barre Wilmington, Del.
81 68 86 87 99 94 85 92 77 81
64 43 74 75 68 75 67 72 47 58
.56
Cldy PCldy Rain Rain Clr Clr PCldy Clr Clr Clr
_______ Hi Lo Auckland 61 51 Beijing 90 71 Berlin 69 48 Brussels 64 43 Cairo 102 73 Calgary 85 52 Guadalajara 87 64 Hong Kong 90 82 Jerusalem 95 65 Johannesburg 63 35 Kabul 88 50 London 64 45 Mexico City 76 52 Montreal 74 61 Moscow 69 52 New Delhi 108 89 Paris 70 48 Rio de Janeiro 82 68 Rome 83 62 San Jose, CRica 76 65 Sydney 71 52 Tokyo 81 69 Toronto 68 55 Vancouver 74 55
Otlk Sh Cldy/Hazy PCldy PCldy Clr Clr Ts Ts Clr Clr PCldy Sh Ts Rain/Wind Clr Hazy PCldy Clr PCldy Ts PCldy Cldy Sh Clr
Briefly . . . ation to the council’s various scholarship funds. The fruit is freshly picked from an Eastern Washington orchard and delivered to Port Townsend The Jefferson County 4-H for pickup in mid-August. Council is selling peaches and Each case weighs between nectarines to raise funds to bene- 20 and 25 pounds, and costs $22 fit Jefferson County 4-H clubs and each. projects, with special considerThese freestone peaches and
4-H fundraising with peaches
semi-freestone nectarines are grown pesticide-free. The deadline for orders is July 15. Buyers will be contacted with the exact date for pickup. For more information including ordering information, email 4-H council member Beth Crouch at fruitsale@outlook.com.
Orchid society to meet SEQUIM —The Olympic Peninsula Orchid Society will meet at Sinclair Place, 680 Prairie St., at 1 p.m. Thursday. The program will be a round-table discussion of successes, failures, what is happening and information
learned. This meeting is for any level of orchid enthusiasts. Bring stories and orchids to share with others. Guests are welcome. For further information, phone 360-385-3723. Peninsula Daily News
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