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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS May 19, 2015 | 75¢
Port Angeles-Sequim-West End
Big teachers’ rally message: fund schools North Olympic Peninsula. “It’s a great turnout,” said Barry Burnett, president of the Port Angeles teachers’ union, said of Monday’s midday rally. The two Clallam County locals of the Washington Education Association represent 217 teachers in Port Angeles and 175 in Sequim. BY ARWYN RICE Many passing cars on South PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Lincoln Street honked their supPORT ANGELES — More port to the teachers, who cheered than 300 Port Angeles and and waved their signs with each Sequim teachers, administrators, honk. parents, students and a School Board member turned out for an ‘Go back to work’ education-funding rally at VeterOne driver yelled, “Go back to ans Park on Monday. work.” The two districts are among Teachers ignored the com57 statewide in which teacher ment, while adults and children unions voted to join a “rolling played Frisbee on the Clallam walkout” in protest of what they County Courthouse lawn, chatted say is the state Legislature’s inac- and listened to speeches and tion to fully fund kindergarten- music amid signs that said “Teach through-grade 12 education as More, Test Less,” “No More required by a state Supreme Crowded Classrooms” and “Fund Court decision. Education Now.” Chimacum teachers held a The state Supreme Court walkout and rally Friday — the ordered full funding of K-12 eduonly other one scheduled on the cation in the state’s public schools
PA-Sequim effort draws more than 300
ARWYN RICE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Washington Education Association teachers who staged a one-day walkout in Port Angeles and Sequim schools Monday gather to hear speakers at Port Angeles’ Veterans Park. by 2018 in its 2012 McCleary ruling, in which Stephanie McCleary, now Chimacum schools’ human resources director and a Sequim native, was the lead plaintiff. The court cited legislators in September for contempt for making no progress toward the goal and gave them until the end of
the legislative session this year to show progress or risk sanctions. The Legislature is now in a special session to consider education funding. Teachers at the rally asked how the Legislature is going to be held accountable. “If they’re held in contempt,
who is going to jail? If we did that, we would go to jail,” said Buddy Bear, a social studies teacher at Port Angeles High School and member of the Washington Education Association board of directors. TURN
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Bridge repair job to cut Hook access BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PAUL GOTTLIEB/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
This tiny bridge over a Nippon Paper Industries canal will cause a 24-hour closure of Ediz Hook access in Port Angeles soon.
PORT ANGELES — Ediz Hook will be closed to motorized traffic for 24 hours at some point within the next several weeks while the city repairs a tiny bridge that provides the only vehicle access to the area. An exact date for the work is still to be determined as the work is in the planning stages, but it is expected to take place by June 30. Nippon Paper Industries USA, Coast Guard Air Station/Sector Field Office Port Angeles and the Puget Sound Pilots station are all situated beyond the bridge. City officials are still discussing Hook-access issues with
affected parties, including a rowing club and other organizations that tie up at a city-owned boat ramp on the Hook, Public Works Director Craig Fulton said Monday. The Hook, beloved by pedestrians, bicyclists and beach walkers, will continue to be accessible to cyclists and walkers. The 25-foot-long, 27-foot-wide bridge is “absolutely” safe, Fulton said. It straddles a former log canal that snakes from Port Angeles Harbor to a former log pond. But the structure is being undermined by soil erosion under the approach on the north side of the span, closest to Nippon. TURN
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Return of the Fish Wars: Part 3
Environmentalists take tribal hatchery to court EDITOR’S NOTE: From time to time, we run articles from other news media on their views of our local issues. A staff writer for Al Jazeera America did an investigation into the Elwha dam removals — and how a hatchery has pitted environmentalists against the Lower Elwha Klallam tribe. This article below is the third in a four-part series this week taken from Al Jazeera’s report. The first two articles were published Sunday and Monday.
Your Brain on T.V.
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BY E. TAMMY KIM AL JAZEERA AMERICA
PORT ANGELES — The new Lower Elwha Klallam tribal hatchery opened in 2011. In photos, the immense complex — off-limits to journalists during the current litigation — looks sleek and state of the art, equipped with incubation ponds, rearing “raceways” and a canal out to the river. It’s a point of pride for the Elwha people, whose four fulltime workers trap, gaff, fertilize,
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feed, move and tag millions of juvenile fish every year. This year the tribal hatchery will release 175,000 native steelhead, 425,000 coho salmon, more than 1 million chum salmon and 3 million pink salmon. The nearby state hatchery will send nearly 3 million young chinook salmon into the Elwha and its tributaries. What the tribe sees as beautiful and necessary, hatchery opponents say is destructive and illegal.
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Your Peninsula. Your Newspaper.
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Genetic worries “In just one generation, you can do a lot of harm,” says Kurt Beardslee, executive director of Wild Fish Conservancy. “We are extremely sympathetic toward [the tribe], but they have a vested interest in harvesting soon and having income.” TURN
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The state’s nearby hatchery, which only breeds chinook, was immune from the suit because of an earlier consent decree.
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The lawsuit brought by Wild Fish Conservancy, the Federation of Fly Fishers’ Steelhead Committee, Wild Salmon Rivers and the Wild Steelhead Coalition takes aim at the tribe’s breeding of steelhead, which number between 500 and 1,000 in the Elwha and are notoriously difficult to breed in hatcheries. The nonprofits argue that putting hatchery fish in the newly undammed Elwha will “irreparably harm” threatened steelhead, in violation of the federal Endangered Species Act.
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TUESDAY, MAY 19, 2015
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Copyright © 2015, Michael Mepham Editorial Services
www.peninsuladailynews.com This is a QR (Quick Response) code taking the user to the North Olympic Peninsula’s No. 1 website* — peninsuladailynews.com. The QR code can be scanned with a smartphone or tablet equipped with an app available for free from numerous sources. QR codes appearing in news articles or advertisements in the PDN can instantly direct the smartphone user to additional information on the web. *Source: Quantcast Inc.
PORT ANGELES main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 General information: 360-452-2345 Toll-free from Jefferson County and West End: 800-826-7714 Fax: 360-417-3521 Lobby hours: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday ■ See Commentary page for names, telephone numbers and email addresses of key executives and contact people. SEQUIM news office: 360-681-2390 147-B W. Washington St. Sequim, WA 98382 JEFFERSON COUNTY news office: 360-385-2335 1939 E. Sims Way Port Townsend, WA 98368
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Newsroom, sports CONTACTS! To report news: 360-417-3531, or one of our local offices: Sequim, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052; Jefferson County/Port Townsend, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550; West End/Forks, 800-826-7714, ext. 5052 Sports desk/reporting a sports score: 360-417-3525 Letters to Editor: 360-417-3527 Club news, “Seen Around” items, subjects not listed above: 360-417-3527 To purchase PDN photos: www.peninsuladailynews.com, click on “Photo Gallery.” Permission to reprint or reuse articles: 360-417-3530 To locate a recent article: 360-417-3527
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS (ISSN 1050-7000, USPS No. 438.580), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Black Press Group Ltd./Sound Publishing Inc., published each morning Sunday through Friday at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. POSTMASTER: Periodicals postage paid at Port Angeles, WA. Send address changes to Circulation Department, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Contents copyright © 2015, Peninsula Daily News MEMBER
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Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Unfinished Welles flick may see light IT WAS MEANT to be his masterpiece to rival “Citizen Kane.” But Orson Welles’ final film “The Other Side of the Wind” — billed as his big cineWelles matic comeback after years of living in Europe — was to be left unfinished. The movie was beset by legal problems and chaos following the filming from 1970-1976, and the negatives never made it to the screen by the time of his death in 1985. Years later, they were located — near-forgotten — collecting dust in a warehouse outside of Paris. And 39 years after the filming wrapped, the full movie — a self-reflexive tale about a legendary director making a career comeback, played by John Huston — will finally see
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SMELLING
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Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II speaks with her grandson Prince Harry at the Royal Horticultural Society Chelsea Flower Show 2015 in London on Monday Horticulturists from around the world are displaying their garden designs at the Royal Hospital in Chelsea, London. the light of day. This month, producers launched a 40-day crowdfunding campaign with the goal of raising $2 million to help complete the film with a planned 2015 release to coincide with the 100th anniversary of Welles’ birth. “This is so exciting for
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL
the world. It will absolutely become a classic film,” said producer Filip Jan Rymsza, who’s at the Cannes Film Festival. “It’s an expensive undertaking, and so we thought crowdfunding would be an excellent way to raise the funds for the editing and finishing the film.”
SUNDAY’S QUESTION: Which form of longdistance mass transportation do you feel safest in? Airliner Train Bus
Passings By The Associated Press
ELISABETH BING, 100, who helped lead a natural childbirth movement that revolutionized how babies were born in the United States, died Friday at her home in New York. Her death was confirmed by her son, Peter. Ms. Bing taught women and their Ms. Bing spouses to make informed childbirth choices for more than 50 years. She began her crusade at a time when hospital rooms were often cold and impersonal, women in labor were heavily sedated and men were expected to remain in the waiting room, pacing. Ms. Bing pushed for change. She worked directly with obstetricians, introducing them to the socalled natural childbirth methods developed by Dr. Fernand Lamaze, which incorporated relaxation techniques in lieu of anesthesia and enabled a
mother to see her child coming into the world. Along with Marjorie Karmel, Ms. Bing helped found Lamaze International, a nonprofit educational organization. She became known as “the mother of Lamaze,” championing the technique in her book Six Practical Lessons for an Easier Childbirth (1967) and on the lecture and television talk-show circuits.
_______ ORTHEIA BARNESKENNERLY, 70, Detroit R&B and jazz singer, who opened for Motown greats like Stevie Wonder and later entered the ministry, has died. Ms. Barnes-Kennerly died Friday in St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands, where she went for a performance, friend and bass player Ralphe Armstrong told the Detroit Free Press. He said she had at least two strokes in recent years and died of heart failure.
Ms. BarnesKennerly recorded in the 1960s for Detroit’s Mickay Records and Ms. BarnesCoral Kennerly Records, a Decca Records label. While never signing with Motown, she opened for a number of its stars, including Wonder, Marvin Gaye and Gladys Knight. She later turned her career toward speaking and the ministry.
46.6% 14.1% 4.2%
Ship/ferry
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Undecided
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Total votes cast: 601 Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.
Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications
■ Jefferson Healthcare commissioners will meet Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. at 2500 W. Sims Way, Suite 302, Port Townsend. An item in Eye on Jefferson on Page A5 of Sunday’s Jefferson County edition listed an incorrect
meeting location.
_________ 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 rex.wilson @peninsuladailynews.com.
Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News
1940 (75 years ago)
Fishing interests would have commercial rights of way in an amendment to a bill that seeks to authorize federal acquisition of a strip of Pacific coastal land and the Queets River valley for Olympic National Seen Around Park. Peninsula snapshots U.S. Rep. Mon C. Wallgren, D-Everett, whose conA PUD METER reader gressional district includes on Monroe Road in uninJefferson and Clallam corporated Port Angeles, counties, said adoption of doing her job under the Laugh Lines the bill he introduced a watchful eye of the home’s potbellied pig . . . year ago also will provide THE U.S. UNEMthe guarantee of logging PLOYMENT rate is the WANTED! “Seen Around” rights of way across the lowest it’s been in nearly items recalling things seen on the Queets corridor. North Olympic Peninsula. Send seven years. It especially will prethem to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box The job sector that has seen the most growth is in 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax vent the interruption of 360-417-3521; or email news@ commercial fishing on the the field of Republican peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure presidential candidates. Kalaloch beach, Wallgren you mention where you saw your Conan O’Brien “Seen Around.” said.
1965 (50 years ago) Seventeen Clallam County residents discussed at a public hearing topics that will soon directly affect 15,000 county residents — and indirectly involve twice that number. Subjects brought up as the hearing on the county comprehensive plan before the Board of Commissioners included keeping East End farmland for agriculture use, bringing more tourist and industry to the county, and what to do about portions of U.S. Highway 101 and state Highway 112. An Indian Valley resident wanted to know what should be done to relieve the “bottleneck” on U.S. 101 around Lake Crescent in Olympic National Park. M.G. Poole, who heads
the consulting firm for the comprehensive plan, said he believes the state will “beef up” Highway 112 to relieve traffic along the lake.
1990 (25 years ago) More than 8,500 rubber ducks are sponsored in the Great Dungeness Duck Derby, to be held in conjunction with the Sequim Irrigation Festival. The fundraiser for the Olympic Memorial Hospital Foundation and Sequim Rotary Club will be held at 2 p.m. upstream of the Dungeness Schoolhouse. Each racing duck has a number, and winning ducks will share in $20,000 worth of prizes, including a 1990 car or truck, said Bruce Skinner of the hospital foundation.
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS TUESDAY, May 19, the 139th day of 2015. There are 226 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On May 19, 1935, T.E. Lawrence, also known as “Lawrence of Arabia,” died in Dorset, England, six days after being injured in a motorcycle crash. On this date: ■ In A.D. 715, Pope Gregory II assumed the papacy. ■ In 1536, Anne Boleyn, the second wife of England’s King Henry VIII, was beheaded after being convicted of adultery. ■ In 1780, a mysterious darkness enveloped much of New England and part of Canada in the early afternoon.
■ In 1913, California Gov. Hiram Johnson signed the WebbHartley Law prohibiting “aliens ineligible to citizenship” from owning farm land, a measure targeting Asian immigrants, particularly Japanese. ■ In 1943, in his second wartime address to the U.S. Congress, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill pledged his country’s full support in the fight against Japan. ■ In 1962, actress Marilyn Monroe sang “Happy Birthday to You” to President John F. Kennedy during a Democratic fundraiser at New York’s Madison Square Garden. ■ In 1973, Secretariat won the Preakness Stakes, the second of
his Triple Crown victories. ■ In 1992, in a case that drew much notoriety, Mary Jo Buttafuoco of Massapequa, N.Y., was shot and seriously wounded by her husband Joey’s teenage lover, Amy Fisher. Vice President Dan Quayle sparked controversy by criticizing the CBS sitcom “Murphy Brown” for having its title character, played by Candice Bergen, decide to have a child out of wedlock. ■ In 1994, former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis died in New York at age 64. ■ Ten years ago: Republicans and Democrats tangled over President George W. Bush’s judicial nominees and the Senate’s filibus-
ter rules, with Democrats accusing Bush of trying to “rewrite the Constitution” and Republicans accusing Democrats of “unprecedented obstruction.” ■ Five years ago: Rioters in Bangkok torched the stock exchange and other landmark buildings after an army assault on an anti-government encampment ended a two-month siege. ■ One year ago: The U.S. charged five Chinese military officials with hacking into U.S. companies’ computers to steal vital trade secrets, intensifying already rising tensions. A federal judge threw out Oregon’s same-sex marriage ban that had been approved by voters.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, May 19, 2015 P A G E
A3 Briefly: Nation Those who died in Yosemite were trying to fly LOS ANGELES — Two extreme athletes in wingsuits who leaped to their deaths from a cliff in Yosemite National Park were trying to fly through a notch in a ridgeline and were airborne for about 15 seconds when they slammed into a rocky outcropping, a friend said Monday. Dean Potter, 43, and his climbing partner, Graham Hunt, 29, were both experienced at flying in wingsuits — the most Potter extreme form of BASE jumping, which is itself a sport so dangerous that enthusiasts keep lists of the dead. Professional climber Alex Honnold, who knew both men, confirmed Monday that their bodies were found in the notch they were trying to fly through Saturday after jumping off Taft Point, a promontory about 3,500 feet above the valley floor.
Oil and water in Calif. SAN FRANCISCO — California regulators are adding to their list of oil and gas wells that may be contaminating federally protected supplies of drinking water. The moves comes in an ongoing state review of more than 2,500 oilfield wells that state
regulators improperly allowed to inject fluid into protected underground water aquifers. State regulators tell the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in a letter released Monday that 53 of those oilfield wells may be contaminating nearby water wells. Twenty-three of those water wells are in Kern and Tulare counties and have already been shut down. The state said it will let oil companies do more testing before regulators decide whether to immediately shut the other 30.
Appeal targets venue BOSTON — Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s appeal of his death sentence is likely to focus on the judge’s refusal to move the trial out of Boston and the prosecution’s barrage of heartbreaking testimony from more than a dozen victims of the attack. While the case will probably take years to wend its way through the courts, legal observers said there are some obvious grounds for challenging the punishment handed out by the jury Friday to the 21-year-old former college student for the 2013 bombing that killed three people and wounded more than 260. Tsarnaev’s lawyers fought to get the trial moved, warning that too many people had personal connections to the marathon or the tragedy and that the anguish in Boston was just too powerful to find an impartial jury. But U.S. District Judge George O’Toole Jr. rejected all four change-of-venue motions, and a federal appeals court backed him, 2-1. The Associated Press
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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CHARGED IN BIKER SHOOTOUT IN
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Motorcycles remain parked and strewn about Monday outside a Waco, Texas, restaurant as authorities investigate Sunday’s shootout in which nine were killed and 18 were wounded. About 170 members of the rival motorcycle gangs were charged with engaging in organized crime Monday. The crowd of suspects was so large that authorities opened a convention center to hold them all before they were arrested. McLennan County Justice of the Peace W.H. Peterson set bond at $1 million for each.
Obama cuts military gear for local police Equipment for war, not U.S. cities, he says BY JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS THE NEW YORK TIMES
Briefly: World ISIS militants take city, throw bodies in river BAGHDAD — Islamic State militants searched door-to-door for policemen and pro-government fighters and threw bodies in the Euphrates River in a bloody purge Monday after capturing the strategic city of Ramadi, their biggest victory since overrunning much of northern and western Iraq last year. Some 500 civilians and soldiers died in the extremist killing spree since the final push for Ramadi began Friday, authorities said. Responding to a call from Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, hundreds of Iranian-allied Shiite militiamen rushed to a military base near Ramadi, the capital of overwhelmingly Sunni Anbar province, to prepare for an assault to try to retake the city, Anbar officials said.
Mudslide kills 52 SALGAR, Colombia — An avalanche of mud and debris roared down an alpine town in western Colombia before dawn Monday, killing at least 52 people in a flood and mudslide triggered by heavy rains.
Residents were stirred from bed in the dead of the night by a loud rumble and neighbors’ shouts of “The river! The river!” as mod- Santos estly built homes and bridges plunged into the Libordiana ravine. The disaster hit around 3 a.m. local time (midnight Sunday PDT) in Salgar, about 60 miles southwest of Medellin. President Juan Manuel Santos, who traveled to the town to oversee relief efforts, said several children appear to have lost their parents.
Prince, Sinn Fein set DUBLIN — The Irish nationalist Sinn Fein party says its two senior figures will meet Prince Charles during his visit this week to Ireland in another groundbreaking event for peacemaking. Charles and his wife, Camilla, are scheduled to arrive Tuesday in the western Irish city of Galway for a four-day visit. Charles will meet with Sinn Fein leaders Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness. The Associated Press
CAMDEN, N.J. — President Barack Obama on Monday banned the federal provision of some types of military-style equipment to local police departments and sharply restricted the availability of others. The ban is part of Obama’s push to ease tensions between law enforcement and minority communities in reaction to the crises in Baltimore, Ferguson, Mo., and other cities. He took the action after a task force he created in January decided that police departments should be barred from using federal funds to acquire items that include tracked armored vehicles, the highest-caliber firearms and ammunition, and camouflage uniforms. Obama promoted the effort on Monday during a visit to Camden, N.J. The city, racked by poverty and crime, has become a national model for better relations between the police and citizens after replacing its beleaguered police force with a county-run system that prioritizes community ties.
Ferguson cited Obama held up Camden as a counterpoint to places like Ferguson, where the killing of a young black man by a white police officer last summer and the violent protests that followed exposed longsimmering hostility between law enforcement agencies and minorities in cities around the country. “Camden and its people still face some very big challenges, but the city is on to something —
Quick Read
THE NEW YORK TIMES
Police officers in military-style equipment confront a man in Ferguson, Mo., last year. you’ve made real progress in just two years,” Obama told about 300 people at a Salvation Army facility along the Delaware River waterfront. Obama “If it’s working here, it can work anywhere.” The American Civil Liberties Union’s New Jersey branch expressed concern Monday that the shift in Camden has been toward more arrests and tickets for low-level offenses such as riding a bicycle without a bell or lights, disorderly conduct and failure to maintain lights on a vehicle. And complaints of the use of excessive force by the police rose sharply last year to 65, the group said, with about two-thirds of those dismissed by the department. Obama also moved to crack down on overly aggressive police tactics with the announcement of new equipment restrictions. “We’ve seen how militarized gear can sometimes give people a
feeling like there’s an occupying force, as opposed to a force that’s part of the community that’s protecting them and serving them,” Obama said, adding that such equipment can “alienate and intimidate” communities and “send the wrong message.” “So we’re going to prohibit some equipment made for the battlefield that is not appropriate for local police departments,” Obama said. His decision drew criticism from some law enforcement officials, who said the president was depriving police officers of equipment they need to protect themselves while confronting unrest in their communities. “That equipment is used for a protective reason, not an offensive purpose,” Chuck Canterbury, national president of the Fraternal Order of Police, said. “Putting those on restricted lists and making it so you’re going to have to justify having that equipment gives the connotation that the police shouldn’t have that protection, and the fact is, a riot can happen in any city in America.”
. . . more news to start your day
West: Arizona deeply cuts welfare amid budget deficit
Nation: Authorities unsure if ill-fated train was hit first
Nation: Mom guilty of killing, dismembering son
World: U.N. leader frets Egyptian death sentences
FACING A $1 BILLION budget deficit, Arizona’s Republican-led Legislature has reduced the lifetime limit for welfare recipients to the shortest window in the nation. Low-income families on welfare will now have benefits cut off after 12 months. As a result, the Arizona Department of Economic Security will drop at least 1,600 families — including more than 2,700 children — from the state’s federally funded welfare program when the budget year begins in July. The $9 million cuts reflect a mood among the lawmakers that welfare other assistance programs keep the poor from getting back on their feet.
FEDERAL AUTHORITIES SAID Monday they’re unsure anything struck the windshield of an Amtrak train minutes before a deadly derailment in Philadelphia last week, adding another twist to the investigation the day trains started running to New York again. The National Transportation Safety Board said it has not ruled out the possibility an object may have struck the windshield but is uncertain the locomotive was hit at all before the May 12 derailment, which killed eight people and injured more than 200 others. Investigators said they are certain that a gunshot did not strike the train.
A JURY IN Michigan on Monday found a 61-year-old woman guilty of killing and dismembering her adult son, rejecting her testimony that a masked armed man killed him and kept her hostage for five days. A Macomb County Circuit Court jury convicted Donna Scrivo of first-degree murder and mutilation of a body. Scrivo filed a missing person’s report in January 2014, telling authorities that 32-year-old Ramsay Scrivo left their St. Clair Shores home and failed to return. Bags containing his body parts were found a few days later in St. Clair County, northeast of Detroit. An electric saw was in one of the bags.
SECRETARY-GENERAL BAN Kimoon is raising “serious concern” at the death sentences against ousted Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi and 105 others. U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said Monday that Ban reaffirmed the United Nations’ position against the death penalty. An Egyptian court sentenced Morsi, who led the now outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, and the others to death Saturday over a mass prison break during the 2011 uprising that ousted longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak. Haq said Ban will monitor the appeals process very closely.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Briefly . . . between Fifth and Sixth streets stretching from I Street to B Street will be limited starting today due to work on electrical lines. There will be brief road closures, according to a PORT ANGELES — news release from the city Options for recreational Public Works and Utilities shellfish harvesting in Department. Clallam County have The project includes expanded now that tests installing new poles and have shown Strait of Juan higher capacity overhead de Fuca beaches from Cape lines. Flattery east to Pillar Point The work is expected to to be safe. last about a month. Previously closed to For more information, some species due to marine contact Electrical Engibiotoxins, this stretch of neering Specialist Brian beaches is now open to the Anders at 360-417-4708 or harvest of all shellfish, banders@cityofpa.us. according to a news release from the Clallam County Quilt raffle Department of Health and PORT ANGELES — Human Services. The Clallam County HisThe update from the torical Society is raffling off state Department of a quilt, “Tulips and Health means Strait beaches from Cape Flattery Stripes,” as a fundraiser for the society. east to the Jefferson The quilt has been County line, including Dungeness Bay, are open to donated by Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Club. the harvest of all species. The winning raffle numThe only exceptions are ber will be picked Sunday, Sequim Bay and Discovery June 7, at the society’s Bay, where butter and varnish clams remain off-limits. annual meeting. Five tickets cost $10. Previously announced Mail raffle money to closures to all species in P.O. Box 1327, Port AngeJefferson County — stretching from Dabob Bay les, WA 98362; or drop off money at the Museum at to the Mason County line — remain in effect because the Carnegie, 207 S. Lincoln St., between 1 p.m. of high levels of the marine and 4 p.m. Wednesdays biotoxin that causes potenthrough Saturdays or at tially deadly paralytic the Lincoln High School shellfish poisoning. This office, 924 W. Ninth St., includes Quilcene Bay. between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. Also in Jefferson, Kilisut Mondays through Fridays. Harbor, including Mystery Include your name, Bay, and Port Ludlow, address and phone number including Mats Mats Bay, with raffle money. remain closed to butter and For more information, varnish clam harvesting. phone Kathy Estes at 360For complete listings on 452-2662 or email artifact@ shellfish biotoxin closures, olypen.com. check the safety map at Peninsula Daily News www.doh.wa.gov/Shellfish Safety.htm or phone 800How’s the fishing? 562-5632.
More Clallam beaches open for shellfish
SGT. RANDY PIEPER/CLALLAM COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE
Tess Gallagher, holding her dog Husie, speaks with Clallam County Sheriff’s Sgt. Lyman Moores and search-and-rescue volunteer Kelly Thomas after rescuing the dog after it had fallen down a bluff Sunday evening.
PA poet’s dog rescued after tumble down 300-foot bluff BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — A dog was recovering with his famed owner Monday, a day after the animal fell down a steep bluff and had to be retrieved by a search-andrescue team. On Sunday evening, Husie, an 11-year-old Bichon Frise-Maltese, was in the backyard of his owner, noted poet Tess Gallagher, when the dog stumbled through brush at the edge of a bluff at the back of the property and fell about 300 feet, according to the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office. Gallagher’s yard in the 2700 block of East Bay Street borders the bluffs above the Olympic Discovery Trail, overlooking the
Strait of Juan de Fuca. Clallam County Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue team members responded to a 9-1-1 call that came in at 7:27 p.m. and reached Gallagher’s home at about 8:50 p.m. The bluffs at that location are very steep and more than 300 feet high, said Sgt. John Keegan of the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office.
Barks heard The dog fell most of the way down the bluff and could be heard barking occasionally in the thick brush and trees. “It was easier to go down than to go up,” Keegan said. According to Sgt. Randy Pieper, Search and Rescue volunteer member Kelly
Thomas was lowered about 300 feet on a rope by a team led by Search and Rescue Coordinator Sgt. Lyman Moores. Husie, shaken and dirty, was eventually located by Thomas, and team members pulled Thomas and Husie back to the top, where the small dog was reunited with Gallagher at about 10:15 p.m., Pieper said. On Monday afternoon, Husie was being seen at a veterinary clinic for evaluation and treatment, Gallagher said. “He’s struggling. It was a terrible fall. He has a ways back,” she said. Gallagher, the recipient of two National Endowment for the Arts awards among other honors, has published many works in
addition to being a former lecturer at several universities. She is the widow of the late acclaimed author Raymond Carver, who is buried at Ocean View Cemetery in Port Angeles. She was acknowledged at last February’s Academy Awards ceremony by Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, director of “Birdman: Or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance),” which won Best Picture and six other Oscars. The film opens with a Carver poem and then wends its way through one of his stories about love based on his story “What We Talk About When We Talk About Love.” Carver, 50, died of lung PA alley work PORT ANGELES — cancer in Port Angeles in Public access to the alley 1988.
Michael Carman reports. Fridays in
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Public hearing set on Clallam herbicide law BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Herbicides may be used to eradicate certain noxious weeds and invasive roadside plants in Clallam County. The three commissioners will hold a public hearing today on a proposed ordinance that would update a 1990 resolution that banned Roundup and other types of herbicides along the county’s 500-mile road system. Presently, noxious weeds and aggressive, non-native plants are mowed by the road department or pulled from the ground by inmate work crews. That works for certain species, but the method has proven ineffective against wild carrot and other invasive plants, County Engineer Ross Tyler has said. Officials stressed Monday that the proposed ordinance to allow herbicides would not result in immediate spraying. A work plan must first be developed by the road department, Noxious Weed Coordinator Cathy Lucero and the Noxious Weed Control Board, a five-member regulatory panel.
CHRIS MCDANIEL/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Deputy Mayor Dennis Smith, center, cuts a ribbon to open of the new Sequim Civic Center. From left are Police Chief Bill Dickinson, City Manager Steve Burkett, Council Member Ken Hays, Smith and council members Erik Erichsen, Genaveve Starr and Laura DuBois. Mayor Candace Pratt was out of town.
New Sequim Civic Center opens doors BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — The newly constructed $14.5 million Sequim Civic Center officially opened for business Monday morning. A ribbon-cutting ceremony Monday followed city employees finishing their move to the new facility last week, a process that started in mid-April. “I think this really makes a statement about the future of Sequim to have a building like this and one that is going to last another 30, 40 or 50 years,” City Manager Steve Burkett said during the gathering.
‘An investment’ “It is about an investment in downtown [and] about the economic stability of the future.” A red ribbon at the entrance of the building, located at 152 W. Cedar St., was cut by Deputy Mayor Dennis Smith. Mayor Candace Pratt could not officiate the ceremony because she was out of town Monday. “We are very, very excited about this,” Smith said. “It has been going on
for many months . . . and watching it come to this culmination is just awesome.” The 33,000-square-foot facility puts the police station and most other city departments under one roof, eliminating the need to rent space in buildings scattered throughout Sequim. “It is a big change from being spread all over the city,” Burkett said. The City Council has been meeting in the Transit Center, 190 W. Cedar St. The council will meet for their last meeting there Monday before moving permanently to the new council chambers at the Civic Center. The new building will help city staff and residents “meet and communicate more effectively,” Burkett said. And there is plenty of room for growth. Altogether, there is space in the new Civic Center for 20 new employees if needed in the future. The Sequim Police Department had previously been in a cramped corner of the Sequim Village Shopping Center on West Washington Street. This will be “the first
dedicated police station in the city’s 102-year history,” said Police Chief Bill Dickinson.
Service award To commemorate the opening of the new station, yellow police crime scene tape was cut by Pat Johansen of Sequim. Johansen also received a Citizen’s Service Award from the Sequim Police Department commemorating her involvement “to help drive the public safety sales tax” that helped fund the construction of the new police station, Dickinson said. In August 2012, Sequim residents voted to establish a public safety tax, which raised the city sales tax by 0.01 percent and was dedicated to building the new police station. This increase in the overall sales tax rate became effective Jan. 1, 2013. “If it were not for her help, we would never ever have gotten a new police station.”
Annual update The work plan would be updated annually to comply with state regulations. “That means that we don’t just let this gather dust on the counter,” Lucero told commissioners in their Monday work session. “It means every year we get feedback from the public.” The public hearing on
the ordinance that would initiate the work plan will begin shortly after 10:30 a.m. today in Room 160 at the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 E. Fourth St. Clallam County’s 25-year-old ban on herbicides has become a barrier for the road department to comply with state requirements, Lucero said. Mowing, she added, is causing some noxious weeds to spread faster than they normally would. “We’ve hit a wall as to what can be done with those tools,” Lucero said. “The old resolution doesn’t acknowledge that times have changed, best management practices have changed. There’s new things out there that we can do: targeted, more selective things.”
Unwanted greenery The ordinance covers noxious weeds and other non-native, invasive species on a county specific list of plants. It does not cover run-of-the-mill weeds like dandelions. “It is not an ordinary, garden variety, the whole world, sky-is-the-limit kind of thing,” Lucero said of the ordinance. “It really is not about allowing broadcast spray, because there’s no point in broadcast spray. It’s not about keeping the trees out of the right-of-way. It’s not about keeping the grass out of the ditches.” The limited use of herbicides along county roads could help prevent the spread of noxious weeds onto private property. “Noxious weeds don’t
respect jurisdictional boundaries,” Lucero said. The spread of wild carrot could damage valuable crops in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley, Tyler has said. “This just puts one more tool back in the toolshed.” Tyler told commissioners. “Then it makes sense for the weed board and us to invest the money, which is time, in developing the plan.” Commissioner Mike Chapman said the work plan should come before the ordinance. “You’re asking me, as one commissioner, to give you authority without telling the public how you’re going to exercise that authority,” Chapman told Tyler and Lucero. “I want to delay it until I see a plan.” “I think the public needs to see ‘Oh, you’re only talking about X and B and Y, not Z,” Chapman added. “They don’t know that. They just read ‘Herbicide spraying is now going to be allowed in some form.’ It scares the hell out of people. And honestly, it scares me, too.” Chapman said he would be comfortable with “some measure of herbicides, potentially, on some plants that just can’t be eradicated.” “But I’m not comfortable, as one commissioner, just giving blanket authority,” he said. Said Board Chairman Jim McEntire: “I think we can come up with a plan of action tomorrow, post hearing, that gets us to the point where the public is with the program, as it were.”
________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsula dailynews.com.
Arctic drilling protesters block Seattle port access BY PHUONG LE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEATTLE — A few hundred critics of oil drilling in the Arctic Ocean blocked entrances for several hours Monday to a seaport terminal where Royal Dutch Shell’s massive floating drill rig will be loaded up before heading to the waters off Alaska this summer. Protesters holding banners and flags marched across a bridge to Terminal 5, temporarily closing the road during Monday morning’s commute. Once at the terminal, they spread out across the entrances and rallied, danced and spoke for several hours before leaving the site in the early afternoon.
plishing meaningful work in preparation for exploration offshore Alaska this summer.” There were minimal operations at Terminal 5 “so there’s not much to block,” Port of Seattle spokesman Peter McGraw said.
Closed gates
The operator of Terminal 18, a major hub of port activity where the march began, closed those gates in anticipation of the demonstration, he said. Officials have been urging people to exercise their First Amendment rights safely, and “that’s what we’ve been seeing so far,” McGraw said. The activists said they are concerned about the Peaceful demonstration risk of an oil spill in the
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On Monday, protesters of all ages sang, rapped and danced at the vehicle gate of Terminal 5. They chanted and held signs saying “Climate Justice For All” and “You Shell Not Pass.” Lisa Marcus, 58, a musician who participated in Saturday’s protest, turned up with her “Love the planet” sign for another day of activism Monday.
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Organizers had prepared to engage in civil disobedience to stop work on the Polar Pioneer drill rig, but Seattle police said Monday afternoon that no one had been arrested and the demonstration remained peaceful. A few dozen officers followed the march on foot and bicycle and kept watch at the terminal. The mass demonstration was the latest protest of the 400-foot Polar Pioneer’s arrival in Seattle. Protesters greeted the rig Thursday, and then hundreds of activists in kayaks and other vessels turned out Saturday for a protest dubbed the “Paddle in Seattle.” Shell spokesman Curtis Smith said in an email that the “activities of the day were anticipated and did not stop crews from accom-
remote Arctic waters and the effects that tapping new frontiers of oil and gas reserves will have on global warming. Officials in Alaska have touted the economic benefits that drilling could bring there and to the Pacific Northwest.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Hatchery: Fight
for tribal facility
CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Jefferson Healthcare CEO Mike Glenn finishes his remarks at the groundbreaking of the new emergency services building Monday in Port Townsend.
Jefferson Healthcare breaks ground on new emergency services facility BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — Jefferson Healthcare’s new Emergency and Special Services building is part of a community wide face-lift and will impact more than just local health care, according to the hospital’s CEO. “What is quietly happening in our community is a massive invest-
ment in education, health and wellness, health care and many other social services important to our quality of life,” Mike Glenn said during a ceremonial groundbreaking for the new facility Monday. “While this building is a huge deal for Jefferson Healthcare, it’s just part of the picture for Jefferson County, and we need to keep focused on all the other pieces until our work is done.”
Aside from the 50,000 squarefoot, $20 million building that could open for patients as soon as next summer, Glenn cited Peninsula College — scheduled to open its new branch in fall 2016 — and the YMCA’s new facility as partners in this progress. “This building is not only an investment in Jefferson Healthcare, it’s an investment in Jefferson County,” Glenn said.
Hearing on recreational pot scheduled Wednesday in PT BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
according to County Administrator Philip Morley. If the commissioners make any changes to the Planning Commission document, they will schedule their own public hearing for June 8, Morley said. The schedule is in place to finish deliberations before the June 11 expiration of a moratorium on new permits for recreational marijuana businesses. If the commissioners approve the document Thursday, that would immediately end the moratorium.
The most tolerant regulation areas for marijuana businesses are designated rural village areas, which are Brinnon and Quilcene. Aside from the general matrix, the report includes a detailed breakdown of where such businesses are allowed in the Port Hadlock area. After the approval of Initiative 502 in 2012, Jefferson County addressed marijuana as any other agricultural product but public input led to the institution of a six-month moratorium on Aug. 11. When that moratorium was set to expire, the Department of Community Development requested an extension as it had not been able to develop a policy together with the Planning Commission. In February, the commissioners approved a four-month extension to the moratorium while allowing current applicants to move through the permitting process. To view the draft plan document, go to http://tinyurl.com/PDN-Planning.
PORT TOWNSEND — After a year of uncertainty about regulations for recreational marijuana businesses, a solution could take shape as soon as this week. The Jefferson County Planning Commission is holding a public hearing to solicit public comment about changes to the county’s Unified Development Code that will control where marijuana-related businesses can operate. The meeting takes place at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Tri-Area Community Center, 10 West Valley Road, Proposed, prohibited locales Chimacum. The document outlines proposed and prohibited locations put into a Used in planning document matrix listing the location on the left The public testimony will be incor- column and the size of the parcel porated into the planning document across the top. At the crossing of the two columns, and possibly approved at a special meeting of the Jefferson County there is an indication whether the Board of Commissioners at 10 a.m. businesses will be allowed or prohibThursday in chambers, 1820 Jefferson ited. For instance, the businesses will be St. ________ At that time, the commissioners prohibited at all golf facilities and will consider the recommendations of outdoor gun ranges, while they are Jefferson County Reporter Charlie Bermant the Planning Commission, which will allowable in most bed and breakfast can be reached at 360-385-2335 or at charlie. bermant@peninsuladailynews.com. result from the Wednesday meeting, locations.
Teachers: Problems widespread CONTINUED FROM A1 ers said the state funding issues and legislative misTeachers and education management of education supporters are feeling pain, are widespread, including anger and frustration, Bear such issues as large class sizes, student testing taksaid. On Monday, rally speak- ing more class time and a
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year. Port Angeles students’ last day will be June 15, and Sequim students will have a last day of class June 18. Graduating seniors at Port Angeles and Sequim high schools will not be required to attend the makeup day. Chimacum will require seniors to attend school June 8, two days after their scheduled graduation June 6, to claim their diplomas. For the remainder of Chimacum students, the last day of school will be June 15 instead of June 12.
Teachers are allies, not the enemy, and need to be treated as such, she said. Methner noted that a nearly $10 billion tax break for Boeing took just three days, while education funding remains elusive. Each district has sched________ uled a makeup day in June Reporter Arwyn Rice can be so students and teachers reached at 360-452-2345, ext. can complete the state- 5070, or at arice@peninsuladaily mandated 180-day school news.com. 541275754
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lack of cost of living increases for several years. Sarah Methner, chairwoman of the Port Angeles School Board, spoke at the event in support of the teachers’ goals. “We are tired of waiting and waiting,” Methner said.
CONTINUED FROM A1 (who asked to remain anonymous for fear of retaliaIndependent ecologist tion) point to dissent in the Jack Stanford, an expert ranks. They say that many fishwitness for the plaintiffs, told the district court that eries biologists employed by the tribe’s hatchery “will the Lower Elwha and the most likely cause severe National Park Service and long lasting harm” to oppose the hatchery but feel pressure to support the native Elwha steelhead. Sport fishing purists tribe. “Any time you ever critiagree. “A lot of these hatchery cize a tribe — and I totally fish that they’re raising on understand this — people the Elwha are just little think there is a racist elerags — little rats compared ment to it,” says Beardslee. According to Kerry to the beautiful wild fish that nature has made for Naish, a University of hatcheries thousands of years,” says Washington Dave Steinbaugh, a diehard expert not involved in the fly fisherman who owns the case, the science is unclear Port Angeles store Waters at best. To prove genetic loss, West. The plaintiffs point to “you need lots and lots of studies of Pacific salmon generations. You need to be suggesting that hatchery able to sample every four to fish do tend to be geneti- five years for steelhead.” Another problem, Naish cally inferior. In several rivers, manu- says, is that in rivers like factured salmon — and the Elwha, where hatchersteelhead in particular — ies have existed for a cenhave had trouble mating tury, so-called wild fish may and avoiding predators in in fact be hatchery descendants. the wild. In March 2014, the disGiven all this, plaintiffs say, the tribe should either trict court ruled for the fedshut down its hatchery or eral defendants on most reduce production from mil- counts, allowing the tribe to lions to tens of thousands of continue its work at the hatchery. steelhead per year. But the judge did find The problem with the plaintiffs’ evidence, say the that the government failed federal agencies being sued, to consider the option of is that it can’t predict what releasing fewer fish into the Elwha. will happen on the Elwha. The plaintiffs’ other Brian Winter, the National Park Service sci- claims are now pending entist leading the Elwha before the Ninth Circuit restoration, stated in an Court of Appeals NEXT, final article, on affidavit that, assuming the worst-case scenario — WEDNESDAY: An echo of unrelenting sediment flows the Fish Wars? and blocked upstream habi___________ tat — hatcheries would be E. Tammy Kim is a staff the only lifeline for local features writer for Al Jazeera fish. America. Email: tammy.kim@
200,000 fish die Yet even the best hatcheries are fragile. In July 2013, a problem with the water pump at the new tribal hatchery killed more than 200,000 coho and steelhead. In their pleadings, the federal defendants express unyielding support for the hatchery. But river watchers and one scientist directly involved in the restoration
aljazeera.net. This story is used with permission from Al Jazeera America, a cable and satellite news television channel that is owned by the Al Jazeera Media Network, which is partly funded by the House of Thani, the ruling family of Qatar. The channel competes with CNN, MSNBC and Fox News Channel. The entire Al Jazeera America report, “Return of the fish wars: Hatchery pits environmentalists against tribe,” is online at http://tinyurl.com/pdnhatchery.
Bridge: Steel CONTINUED FROM A1 24-hour period, but we are going to let that communiAs a precaution, steel cation continue and come plates have been placed on up with a solution,” he said. Nippon’s 160 hourly and the roadway across a concrete slab on the approach salaried workers park their to the bridge and the abut- cars south of the bridge and take a pedestrian walkway ment. The eroded portion will around the span and to the backfilled as a temporary mill. The bridge is the only fix until 2016, when the abutments would be rebuilt access for the trucks that under a $600,000 project in deliver supplies and other the city’s proposed capital goods to the plant, which facilities plan. manufactures paper for “With the steel plates telephone books and newsdown, there is no urgency to print for newspapers expedite this in the coming including the Peninsula days,” Fulton said. Daily News. “We were looking at vari“We will plan our operaous alternatives on how we tions accordingly to have can speed this up. minimal impact and con“We looked at closing one lane of the bridge, but the tinue running,” mill Manbridge is so narrow that we ager Steve Johnson said wouldn’t be able to do the Monday in an email. Johnson said in a later work and keep one lane interview that the city has open at the same time.” The bridge was installed given company officials by the mill’s previous owner, enough time to prepare for Crown Zellarbach Corp., as the disruption. “We’ll be fine,” he said. a part of a new channel that was constructed between Puget Sound Pilots the harbor and log pond. Seattle-based Puget Coast Guard Sound Pilots, which operThe bridge is next to ates the only pilot station in Nippon and about 2-3 miles the Puget Sound Region, is west of the Coast Guard located just outside the station at 1 Ediz Hook Coast Guard station. David Grobschmit, presiRoad. The station is staffed by dent of the organization, 290 personnel, none of said Monday he was whom live on-site, said Lt. unaware of the project. He said pilot station perDana Warr, spokesman for the 13th Coast Guard Dis- sonnel should be able to have a vehicle on the north trict in Seattle. The closure has raised side of the bridge that concerns that don’t appear would take them to the stainsurmountable, Warr said tion or, if need be, they could get picked up at Port AngeMonday. “We expressed our con- les Boat Haven by a pilotcerns on closing it for a station boat.
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Stand Down stands up for veterans “EVERYONE GETS OUT of the service. “It’s like jumping out of a tree, and it’s the job of those of us who land on our feet to help those who land on their heads.” So explained John Braasch on the purpose of the recent Stand Down in Forks. Braasch is with Voices for Veterans, a nonprofit organization created by and for serving military veterans on the North Olympic Peninsula. On May 7, the Elks Lodge in Forks hosted the first of three 2015 Stand Downs sponsored by Voices for Veterans. The next two are July 27 in Port Townsend and Oct. 1 in Port Angeles. The Elks Lodge was set up like a job fair, with stations and tables in every room as well as a huge tent and three trailers outside.
WEST END NEIGHBOR
according to the Voices website Barker (www. voicesfor veterans.org). They come here for the same reasons as many others do: It’s beautiful, there is the lure of the outdoors and there are fewer people overall. However, the same situation faces veterans as does any other resident of the Peninsula — it’s a long way to the hub of services only available in the Seattle area and along the Interstate 5 corridor. “If we didn’t have these Stand Downs, veterHelping all veterans ans would Stand Downs were created to have to drive help veterans meet with providers hundreds of of services as well as tend to as miles to get many immediate needs of individ- their veterans’ ual vets as possible. services,” “Stand down” is an American Braasch said. military term referring to the act “Many of retreating worn-out soldiers in World War II combat zones back to a secure vets can’t drive base for some much-needed at night,” thus Braasch medical/dental care, rest, hygiene, the problem is mail, food and supplies. even greater for them. Stand Downs sponsored by So Voices for Veterans has convarious groups are now held in centrated on bringing providers to every state. Many focus on helpPeninsula veterans. ing only homeless veterans. At the event in Forks, some of However, the Peninsula’s the 25 available service providers events are designed to be more included U.S. Veterans Affairs inclusive, feeling that camaradehealth care enrollment officials, rie for all veterans is an essential Red Cross, Northwest Veterans part of everyone’s well-being. Resource Center, Sarge’s Place, Stand downs are open to every WorkSource, Volunteers in Mediveteran. cine of the Olympics and PeninNobody is asked for Social sula Behavioral Health, among Security numbers or a DD214, the others. Defense Department form showThere were two barber’s chairs ing discharge from active duty. for haircuts, books, pet food and The veterans at these events lots of clothes for everyone in a can identify an imposter with a veteran’s immediate family. brief conversation. “We use the clothes as a hook Statistically speaking, the to get them in to access services,” Forks event assisted 120 veterans said Braasch. from many generations. In order for a veteran to take Of them, 15 were homeless — advantage of free clothes or and four of the homeless were hygiene products, he/she must women. have a sheet signed by at least Residing on the Peninsula is three service providers. the highest concentration, per “I am impressed by all the sercapita, of veterans to civilians vices offered here,” said Clallam County Commissioner Bill Peach than anywhere in the state,
Zorina
ZORINA BARKER (3)/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Paul Keller, left, and Joe Fore Jr. put a true West End flavor to the Forks Stand Down with the Voices for Veterans trailer of supplies for “tree vets” — those in the woods.
Veterans’ aid
Veteran David Kummer gets gets a haircut by volunteer Vanessa Pulsipher of Fringe Hair Studios of Port Angeles. in a conversation with Braasch. Peach is an Army veteran. Joe Fore Jr. and Paul Keller, also veterans, were outside at a trailer where homeless vets camping in the forests can get needed supplies — everything from backpacks and sleeping bags to flashlights and can openers. “The veterans we help [on the West End] are really suffering, both mentally and physically,” said Fore of these “tree vets.” “I like to help them,” added Keller. “I like to see them smile.” “There are a lot of civilians
here who have vets in their families who volunteer their time because they want to give back to the vets in their community,” said Cheri Tinker of Sarge’s Place, providers of housing for homeless veterans on the West End. “I’m here because of my dad,” said Terrie “Boom” Huffman. “I brought him a couple of years ago, and now I volunteer.” Venay Money, aka “Big Momma,” was running the clothing/toiletries department. “What we really dispense here is hugs for our veterans,” she said.
NORTH OLYMPIC PENINSULA one-day Stand Downs for the rest of 2015: ■ July 27, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Port Townsend Elks Lodge, 555 Otto St., Port Townsend (since 2007). ■ Oct. 1, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Clallam County Fairgrounds, Port Angeles (since 2004). Peninsula Daily News
“We try to make it like a family reunion, where everyone walking through the door is a long-lost cousin,” said Braasch.
________ Zorina Barker is a longtime West End resident whose column, West End Neighbor appears every other Tuesday. Submit items and ideas for the column to her at zorinabarker81@ gmail.com or phone her at 360327-3702. Her next column will appear June 2.
Extremes of the Pacific Crest Trail THE PACIFIC CREST Trail is arguably America’s greatest hiking trail, a 2,650-mile serpentine path running through desert and wilderness from the Mexican border to the Canadian border. The trail meanders Nicholas through cactus Kristof and redwoods, challenging humans with rivers and snowfields, rattlesnakes and bears. It’s a trail of extremes. Hiking it with my daughter near the Mexican border this month, we sweltered on our first day in soaring temperatures and a 20-mile dry section through the desert. Six days and a bit more than 150 miles later, near the town of Idyllwild, Calif., we shivered in 30-degree temperatures as the heavens dumped snow on us. The trail is a triumph of serenity and solitude. Except that, these days, the solitude is getting crowded.
Apparently, in part because of the book and movie versions of Wild, about Cheryl Strayed’s journey of discovery and self-repair on her hike, some areas of the trail feel as busy as a Scout jamboree. I’ve been backpacking the Pacific Crest Trail since I was a kid, inspired by the first person to complete a through-hike from Canada to Mexico, Eric Ryback, who wrote a book published in 1971 about his feat. My 17-year-old daughter and I aim to eventually hike the full trail, section by section, in this narrow window in which she is strong enough and I’m not yet decrepit. Last year, we completed Oregon and Washington, and this month’s section took us through the southernmost part of California desert. Fewer people have hiked the full Pacific Crest Trail than have reached the summit of Mount Everest. Yet, this year, so many want to hike it that a limit has been placed on permits so that no more than 50 through-hikers can begin at the Mexican border each day.
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Another memoir may add to the mystique. In Girl in the Woods, scheduled for publication in September — with a possible television spinoff — Aspen Matis recounts how she was raped on the second day of college and then fled campus to seek healing on a Pacific Crest Trail through-hike. She starved and suffered on the trail but also found redemption — and, yes, her future husband by the 2,000 mile mark. (I wonder if women don’t have the edge in trail memoirs. Male hikers project toughness, female hikers vulnerability. (Ask a man resting on a trailside log how he’s doing, and he’ll boast of how many miles he has walked. (Ask a woman, and she’ll confide about her blisters, mosquito bites and insecurities.) Most would-be through-hikers will probably drop out — one woman gave up this year on the first day, after 13 miles — but hundreds are expected to walk every step of the way to Canada. Old hands fret that these neophytes don’t know what they’re doing (The Wall Street Journal
quoted one woman this month who had never spent a night outdoors until she began her Wildinspired hike) and could endanger themselves. The trail begins at the Mexican border with a 20-mile dry stretch, and my daughter and I ran across five inexperienced men who had all separately run out of water on that stretch and become dehydrated. We encountered another hazard in the form of a rattlesnake that my daughter almost stepped on. Yet, in the end, most hikers do just fine, apart from blisters and a few lost toenails, and it’s hard to begrudge anyone the chance for a bit of nature therapy in the Cathedral of Wilderness. It’s striking that hikers come to the trail for solitary reflection, yet often end up coalescing into groups — because we are social animals, and solitude is so much more fun when you have somebody to share it with. There’s a hobo spirit on the trail, with no social distinctions and everybody helping everyone else. One example of this generosity
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
is the work of “trail angels” who lug water, soda, hamburgers, cookies or other treats to places where a road intersects a trail, to delight exhausted backpackers. This is controversial, partly because animals also dine on treats that are left out, and it’s also not exactly wilderness when you come across a cooler with soda. Still, all this generosity and mutual assistance is truly heartwarming. At about the 140-mile mark, my daughter and I came across a trail angel “library” — a glass-protected bookshelf of paperbacks for any hikers needing to weather out a snowstorm. Professor Robert Putnam of Harvard may be right that an unfortunate fragmentation of society has left us Americans “bowling alone.” But, on the brighter side, we’re “hiking together.”
________ Nicholas Kristof is a twotime Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The New York Times. Email him via http://tinyurl. com/nkristof.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, May 19, 2015 SECTION
CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, BUSINESS, WEATHER In this section
B Mariners
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mariners starting pitcher James Paxton (65) currently has a 20-inning scoreless streak.
Paxton looking a lot like an ace THREE WEEKS AFTER he was pitching like somebody headed for some remedial work in the minors, James Paxton is resembling the ace scouts once projected him to be. The Mariners left-hander held John the Boston Red McGrath Sox to five hits through eight innings Sunday in a 5-0 victory notable for its crisp pace. Paxton wasted no time following a game plan that called for fastballs, fastballs and more fastballs. And while he didn’t often make hitters swing and miss, efficiency was part of the plan, too. Two strikeouts, two walks, 22 outs on balls put in play: It didn’t look dominant, but by the time he threw his final pitch — a 97 milean-hour fastball that concluded a three-up, three-down eighth inning — the Mariners were virtually assured of wrapping up their homestand at 6-3, with Paxton winning twice. This would be same Paxton who, after failing to pitch through the fifth inning against the Minnesota Twins on April 25, talked Next Game about the need to make an Today adjustment with vs. Orioles his delivery. at Baltimore Seems he was Time: 4 p.m. rotating wrong — whatever that On TV: ROOT means — and suspected his mechanical difficulties were affecting his velocity. True confession: As Paxton detailed what he had done wrong that April afternoon, I nodded and pretended to jot down his words in my notebook. But I didn’t know what he was talking about and, as it turns out, neither did Lloyd McClendon. When a power pitcher such as Paxton is throwing between 94 and 98 mph, McClendon noted Sunday, “it has nothing to do with mechanics. It has everything to do with commanding the fastball and believing in it. It’s a hard pitch to hit. “Hitting is real hard. Don’t make it easier. Just go at them.” A few minutes later, in the Mariners clubhouse, Paxton wasn’t budging from an insistence that the early-season struggles were rooted in faulty mechanics, and that his recent breakthrough — 20 consecutive scoreless innings since May 5 — can be explained by improved mechanics. “I was long on the backside,” he said, “which was causing me to change my delivery on each pitch a little bit.” TURN
TO
MCGRATH/B3
LEE HORTON/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Tom Wahl runs toward the finish line of the North Olympic Discovery Marathon on Saturday near City Pier in Port Angeles. Buddy Bear, left, and Steve Blakeman, follow on their bikes, as they did for the entire marathon.
Marathon’s first finisher Tom Wahl runs early after cancer diagnosis BY LEE HORTON PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Tom Wahl is the first finisher of this year’s North Olympic Discovery Marathon. He won’t receive a medal — in fact, he says his time of 4 hours, 25 minutes was the worst of the 24 marathons he has run — but the former Port Angeles High School football coach finished the 26.2-mile course three weeks before any-
one else. Last month, Wahl, 57, was diagnosed with prostate cancer. The 13th annual North Olympic Discovery Marathon is Sunday, June 7, but Wahl needs to have an operation June 3. “It’s intermediate stages right now. That’s why they wanted to get me in as quick as possible,” Wahl said while sitting on a bench near City Pier minutes after finishing the marathon Saturday afternoon.
“I found out four weeks ago so . . . we’re moving as quick as we can and so it’s pretty urgent. It’s not in the early stages. “But there’s been better and there’s worse. They use a scale, and on a scale of one to 10 [10 being the worst], I’m at a sevenlevel right now.” Wahl had participated in each of the previous 12 North Olympic Discovery Marathons, and months ago had started preparing to run this year’s race. “I’ve done this every year, and it means a lot to me to do it,” he said. “I don’t know what else to do. I was already training for it, and . . . it’s one of those challenges that I’ve found to be motivating
to help me to kind of stay fit.” His cancer diagnosis made running this year particularly meaningful. “Every year, I’ve worn a shirt for the American Cancer Society, and it’s always said, ‘I’m running for your life,’” Wahl said, pointing to his white shirt with black lettering. “That’s meaningful to me, too. I originally started doing that because of family members who had cancer, and so to be in the situation where I’m fighting that battle myself has especially made it meaningful, and I just felt like I needed to come out and do this.” TURN
TO
WAHL/B3
Railroad Bridge damage forces route change This year’s race has two gut-and-backs BY LEE HORTON PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Last year, the North Olympic Discovery Marathon’s new route drew rave reviews. It was a point-to-point course that, for the first time in its history, began in Blyn and ended at City Pier in Port Angeles.
Marathon But flooding of the Dungeness River in February caused damage to Railroad Bridge in Sequim, and it became clear over the next several weeks that the bridge would not be repaired in time for the marathon’s 13th running on Sunday, June 7. So, another new route was needed. “Because of the bridge
being out, we had to avoid the bridge,” co-Event Director Victoria Jones said. Jones is running this year’s race with Michelle Little. The two have taken over for founder Larry Little, Michelle’s husband. The marathon will begin the morning of June 7 at the Agnew soccer fields at the southeast corner of Old Olympic Highway and Barr Road. It features two out-andback stretches in the first half of the race.
The first is fairly short, veering from the Olympic Discovery Trail at North Barr Road, and then coming back. The second out-and-back is much longer. Runners leave the Olympic Discovery Trail near Siebert Creek, go under Old Olympic Highway, then veer right onto Wild Currant Way. They take a left onto Gehrke Road, run past the Lazy J tree farm and then take a right at Finn Hall Road. TURN
TO
MARATHON/B3
M’s Miller named AL Player of Week BY CHRISTIAN CAPLE MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE
SEATTLE — Brad Miller vows not to think when he plays. He isn’t good at it, he says. The last week, then, must have produced as few in-game thoughts as possible. Miller on Monday was named the American League Player of the Week for May 11-17. Miller hit .429 (9 for 21) with six runs scored, three doubles, four home runs and five RBI in six games. He posted a .500 onbase percentage and slugged 1.143 for a 1.643 OPS. Miller has hit four home runs over his past five games, after hitting one home run in the first 30 games of the season. Over the course of the week Miller started three games at designated hitter, two at shortstop and made his debut in left field. TURN
TO
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Brad Miller doubles in a run against the Oakland Athletics earlier this month. Miller
M’S/B3 batted .429 and hit four home runs last week.
B2
SportsRecreation
TUESDAY, MAY 19, 2015
Today’s
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Scoreboard Calendar
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”
SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY
Today Boys Golf: Sequim and Port Angeles at Class 2A District 2/3 Tournament, at Gold Mountain Golf Club, Olympic Course, 9:30 a.m.; Chimacum and Port Townsend at Class 1A West Central District Tournament, at Gold Mountain Golf Club, Olympic Course, 11 a.m. Girls Golf: Sequim at Class 2A District 2/3 Tournament, at Gold Mountain Golf Club, Cascade Course, 9:30 a.m.
Wednesday Thursday
Preps Track and Field 2A SUB-DISTRICT MEET Saturday at Bremerton District Qualifiers (Top 5) GIRLS
BOYS
4 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Seattle Mariners at Baltimore Orioles (Live) 5 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Bowling USBC, Queens Tournament (Live) 5 p.m. (304) NBCSN Hockey NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs (Live) 6 p.m. (2) CBUT Hockey NHL, Chicago Blackhawks at Anaheim Ducks, Stanley Cup Playoffs, Western Conference Final, Game 2 (Live) 6 p.m. (26) ESPN Basketball NBA, Playoffs (Live) 7 p.m. (320) PAC-12 Baseball NCAA, Oregon vs. Oregon State (Live)
4 a.m. (47) GOLF LET, Turkish Airlines Open, Final Round (Live)
Track and Field: Clallam Bay, Crescent and Neah Bay at Class 1B Tri-District Championships, at Port Angeles, 3:15 p.m. Softball: Class 1B Bi-District Tournament: Rainier Christian-Naselle winner at Quilcene, semifinal, 4 p.m.
Team scores—1. North Kitsap 121, 2. Sequim 120.5, 3. Kingston 78, 4. Olympic 73, 5. Port Angeles 67.5, 6. Bremerton 63, 7. North Mason 53. 100—1. Moroles, Miguel (Seq) 11.45; 2. Myers, Nick (King) 11.66; 3. Watson, Antonya (Brem) 11.68; 4. Whittaker, Zachary (NK) 11.76; 5. Springer, Jason (Seq) 11.86. 200—1. Allen, Corey (NM) 23.02; 2. Reiners, Terry (NM) 23.14; 3. Larson, Jack (King) 23.29; 4. DeGuzman, Jarod (NK) 23.35; 5. Moroles, Miguel (Seq) 23.50. 400—1. Elmore, Jaleel (Oly) 50.40; 2. Larson, Jack (King) 50.90; 3. Rouser, Garrett (King) 51.44; 4. Reiners, Terry (NM)
Today
Wednesday
No events scheduled.
Team scores—1. North Kitsap 163, 2. Olympic 99, 3. Sequim 89.33, 4. Port Angeles 80.16, 5. Bremerton 76.50, 6. North Mason 64, 7. Kingston 38. 100—1. Foresha, Christine (Brem) 12.55; 2. Monzon, Danielle R (Oly) 12.58; 3. Daviscourt, Tegan (NM) 12.74; 4. Watson, Somiya (Brem) 12.89 4; 5. Selembo, Jasmine (NK) 13. 200—1. Foresha, Christine (Brem) 25.83; 2. Daviscourt, Tegan (NM) 25.85; 3. George, Briann (NK) 27.32; 4. Woods, Mercedes (Seq) 27.46; 5. Morin, Brooke (NM) 28.22. 400—1. George, Briann (NK) 1:01.13; 2. Bigelow, Sara (NK) 1:02; 3. Whitcher-Thoman, D (Brem) 1:03.67; 4. Beeson, Emma (Seq) 1:06.35; 5. Breda, Isabella (NM) 1:07.99. 800—1. Shreffler, Waverly (Seq) 2:21.05; 2. Shipley, Emily (NK) 2:29; 3. Shafer, Katherine (NK) 2:30.84; 4. Boon, Maeve (King) 2:32.29; 5. Lamoureux, Elysabe (Brem) 2:35.07. 1,600—1. Long, Gracie (PA) 5:22.50; 2. Wolfe, Raven (NM) 5:26.33; 3. Uffens, Hannah (NK) 5:53.67; 4. Nance, Izumi (King) 5:57.86; 5. Mead, Caitlyn (NM) 6:01.82. 3,200—1. Long, Gracie (PA) 12:09.07; 2. Capuano, Alissa (Oly) 12:32.59; 3. Dougherty, Maddie (PA) 12:42.39; 4. Johnston, Halle (NK) 12:43.59; 5. Mead, Caitlyn (NM) 12:54.55. 100H— 1. Seaman, Taylor (King) 15.92; 2. Vest, Ashley (NK) 17.23; 3. Rogers, Katelyn (Seq) 17.77; 4. Clark, Mattie (Seq) 17.78; 5. Ketch, Yuko (Melis (NK) 18.28. 300H—1. Seaman, Taylor (King) 47.43; 2. Vest, Ashley (NK) 49.28; 3. Molello, Erin (NK) 49.82; 4. McCorkle, Morgan (Oly) 50.09; 5. Windus, Alyssa (NK) 53.48. 4x100—1. Bremerton (Watson, Foresha, King, WhitcherThoman) 50.83; 2. Olympic (Abrigo, Barr, Holladay, Monzon) 51.0; 3. North Kitsap (Vest, Bigelow, Seferos, Selembo) 51.70; 4. North Mason (Shumaker, Morin, Reiners, Daviscourt) 52.39; 5. Sequim (Radford, Woods, Beeson, Busby) 53.42. 4x200—1. North Mason (Shumaker, Morin, Reiners, Daviscourt) 1:50.03; 2. Sequim (Shreffler, Happe, Woods, Vereide) 1:51.01; 3. North Kitsap (George, Molello, Crowley, Waterman) 1:51.77; 4. Bremerton (Watson, Whitcher-Thoman, King, Lamoureux) 1:53.24; 5. Port Angeles (Farnam, St. George, Burwell, Lyamba) 1:57.72. 4x400—1. North Kitsap (Bigelow, Shipley, Uffens, Shafer) 4:13.79; 2. Sequim (Shreffler, Breckenridge, Woods, Vereide) 4:15.44; 3. Bremerton (Whitcher-Thoman, Lamoureux, Smith, Foresha) 4:31.08; 4. Port Angeles (Farnam, Long, Raber, St. George) 4:33.37; 5. Kingston (Powar, Boon, Spooner, Seaman) 4:34.73. High Jump—1. Darrow, Rebecca (NK) 5-02; 2. George, Cora (Brem) 4-10; 3. (tie) Long, Gracie (PA) 4-08; 3. (tie) Armstrong, Alyse (Seq) 4-08; 3. (tie) Owens, Zoe (PA) 4-08. Pole Vault—1. Seferos, Chloe (NK) 10-06; 2. Armstrong, Alyse (Seq) 8-06; 3. van Dyken, Emily (Seq) 8-00; 4. (tie) Dougherty, Maddie (PA) 7-06; 4. (tie) Pavlock, Kiomi (Brem) 7-06. Long Jump—1. Monzon, Danielle (Oly) 16-06.25; 2. McCorkle, Morgan (Oly) 16-00.75; 3. Selembo, Jasmine (NK) 15-03.25; 4. Vereide, Heidi (Seq) 14-09.50; 5. Holladay, Kristian (Oly) 14-06.50. Triple Jump—1. Monzon, Danielle (Oly) 34-09.50; 2. McCorkle, Morgan (Oly) 34-06; 3. Owens, Zoe (PA) 34-03; 4. Selembo, Jasmine (NK) 33-08.50; 5. Waterman, Hannah (NK) 32-00.50. Shot Put—1. Adams, Sierra (Oly) 35-01.25; 2. Edwards, Devin (PA) 31-04.50; 3. Armstrong, Cheryl (Seq) 31-02.25; 4. Sevillano, Macrina (NK) 29-02.50; 5. Aaro, Amber (Brem) 28-04.75. Discus Throw—1. Adams, Sierra (Oly) 99-11; 2. Aaro, Amber (Brem) 93-08; 3. Raber, Cami (PA) 92-05; 4. Moriarity, Mary (NK) 91-10; 5. Campbell, Lily (NM) 90-04. Javelin—1. Campbell, Lily (NM) 99-07; 2. Moriarity, Mary (NK) 98-07; 3. Owens, Zoe (PA) 92-08; 4. Keller, Adele (NK) 91-03; 5. Armstrong, Cheryl (Seq) 82-03.
SPORTS ON TV
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ANOTHER
SCARY CRASH IN INDY
James Hinchcliffe hits the wall in the third turn during practice for the Indianapolis 500 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis on Monday. Hinchcliffe underwent surgery at Indiana University Methodist Hospital on an injury to his upper left thigh suffered in the crash. He was in stable condition late Monday afternoon. Hinchcliffe’s was the fourth frightening wreck at practice for the Indianapolis 500. Helio Castroneves and Josef Newgarden went airborne in crashes last week that raised concerns about the safety of the new oval aero kits. And on Sunday, Ed Carpenter flipped his car on its side in practice leading up to Indy 500 qualifying before IndyCar officials announced changes to reduce power and speeds. 51.71; 5. Allen, Corey (NM) 52.10. 800—1. Crowell, Sean (NK) 2:02.19; 2. McLean, Demetrius (Oly) 2:03.29; 3. Burton, Joshua (Brem) 2:03.43; 4. Crowley, Dutton (NK) 2:03.71; 5. Ellingsen, Brooks (NK) 2:05.57. 1,600—1. Butler, Peter (PA) 4:29.61; 2. Despain, Brendon (Seq) 4:31.77; 3. Winn, Alexander (King) 4:32.53; 4. Shindler, Simon (PA) 4:33.06; 5. Nettleton, Austin (NK) 4:34.35. 3,200—1. Butler, Peter (PA) 9:49.10; 2. Despain, Brendon (Seq) 9:49.37; 3. Cobb, Mikey (Seq) 10:10.81; 4. Shindler, Simon (PA) 10:12.63; 5. Simon, Andrew (King) 10:30.03. 110H—1. Herrera, Oscar (Seq) 15.23; 2. Rouser, Garrett (King) 15.65; 3. Neary, Christian (Oly) 16.36; 4. Andrews, Christoph (NK) 16.64; 5. Garland, Braden (NM) 17.65. 300H—1. Rouser, Garrett (King) 38.96; 2. Herrera, Oscar (Seq) 39.56; 3. Neary, Christian (Oly) 41.47; 4. Garland, Braden (NM) 44.37; 5. Grogan, Ryan (NM) 44.90. 4x100—1. North Mason (Williams, Allen, Poulton, Preston, Reiners) 44.48; 2. Sequim; (Moroles, Barry, Springer, Herrera‚ 44.55; 3. Olympic (Ferraro, Elmore, Wilson, McGee) 44.66; 4. North Kitsap (Whittaker, Andrews, Benson, DeGuzman 45.06; 5. Kingston (Junt, Johnson, Dawson, Dillow, Rovick) 46.94. 4x400—1. Sequim (Stoddard, Barry, Habner, Springer) 3:27.27; 2. Kingston (J. Larson, English, H. Larson, Myers) 3:29.16; 3. North Kitsap (DeGuzman, Crowley, Crowell, Nettleton) 3:29.96; 4. Olympic (Szathmary, Elmore, Neary, McLean) 3:30.98; 5. Bremerton (Burton, Rush, Rylie, Ransom) 3:40.6. High Jump—1. Rowe, Christopher (Brem) 6-04; 2. Oliver, Jackson (Seq) J6-04; 3. English, Max (King) 6-02; 4. Wilson, DeMarco (Oly) 6-00; 5. Rush, David (Brem) 5-10. Pole Vault—1. Smith, Jesse (Brem) 13-03; 2. Wilson, Brandon (NK) 12-00; 3. Burton, Sam (PA) J12-00; 4. Allen, Ryan (NK) 11-06; 5. Stoudermire, Javon (Brem) J11-06. Long Jump—1. McGee, Keshun (Oly) 21-02; 2. Whittaker, Zachary (NK) 21-01.50; 3. Andrews, Christoph (NK) 19-05.25; 4. Pedesclaux, Japrea (Brem) 18-09; 5. Warren, Kainen (NK) 18-08.75. Triple Jump—1. Whittaker, Zachary (NK) 46-00.25; 2. McGee, Keshun (Oly) 44-07.50; 3. Wilson, DeMarco (Oly) 42-06.25; 4. Warren, Kainen (NK) 42-03.50; 5. Barry, Alex (Seq) 41-07.25. Shot Put—1. Riders, Tim (Brem) 45-09; 2. Robbins, Matt (PA) 45-03.50; 3. Adams, Austin (Seq) 40-08.50; 4. Stracener, Tanner (NK) 40-07.25; 5. Sanchez, Marcelo (NK) 39-11.50. Discus—1. Van Rossen, Paul (PA) 118-06; 2. Habner, Logan (Seq) 116-04; 3. Whitaker, Chris (Seq) 115-02; 4. Crowell, Sean (NK) 114-09; 5. Evans, Bob (NK) 113-04. Javelin—1. Barry, Alex (Seq) 182-04; 2. Kibodeaux, Deven (NK) 144-00; 3. Millsap, Taylor (PA) 141-07; 4. Tom, Christian (NK) 139-06; 5. Kuch, Kody (PA) 139-01.
1A SUB-DISTRICT MEET Saturday at Bremerton District Qualifiers (Top 3) GIRLS Team scores—1. Klahowya 97, 2. Coupeville 74, 3. Port Townsend 45, 4. Chimacum 23. 100—1. Hurlburt, Sylvia (Coup) 13.34; 2. Smith, Savannah (Kla) 13.78; 3. Byrd, Jordan (Kla) 14.00.
200—1. Stone, Makana (Coup) 26.97; 2. Hurlburt, Sylvia (Coup) 27.57; 3. Etzell, Marisa (Coup) 28.28. 400—1. Stone, Makana (Coup) 1:00.69; 2. Grindstaff, Claire (Kla) 1:07.56; 3. Winter, Ari (PT) 1:09.11. 800—1. Rouse, Holly (Kla) 2:39.42; 2. Trailer, Hanna (PT) 2:45.95; 3. Parker, Abby (Coup) 2:47.27. 1,600—1. Trailer, Hanna (PT) 5:46.18; 2. Rouse, Holly (Kla) 5:58.10; 3. Pastori, Cassandra (Kla) 6:06.23. 3,200—1. Rouse, Holly (Kla) 12:48.09; 2. Pastori, Cassandra (Kla) 13:06.31; 3. Bayne, Lauren (Coup) 13:10.19. 100H—1. Powell, Erika (Kla) 18.95; 2. King, Genna (Kla) 19.77; 3. Franklin, Emily (PT) 22.09. 300H—1. Powell, Erika (Kla) 55.70; 2. King, Genna (Kla) 58.20; 3. Wischhoefer, Brean (Kla) 1:03.87. 4x100—1. Coupeville (Burrow-Testroet, Hurlburt, Stone, Pelroy) 52.14; 2. Chimacum (Hamilton, Castillo, Yaley, Leoso) 54.56; 3. Klahowya (Byrd, King, Prior, Hendricks) 57.47. 4x200—1. Coupeville (Burrow-Testroet, Wenzel, Hurlburt, Etzell) 1:49.93; 2. Klahowya (Grindstaff, Powell, Hendricks, Smith) 1:57.42; 3. Chimacum (Hamilton, Castillo, Yaley, Leoso) 1:58.04. 4x400—1. Klahowa (Grindstaff, Rouse, Hendricks, Smith) 4:53.14; 2. Port Townsend (S. Lynch, K. Kunz, M. Kunz, B. Lynch) 5:41.75. High Jump—1. Wines, Sira (PT) 4-04; 1. Bayne, Lauren (Coup) 4-04. Long Jump—1. Hamilton, Alyssa (Chim) 13-11; 2. Byrd, Jordan (Kla) 13-06.50; 3. Fletcher, Emily (Chim) 12-01.25. Triple Jump—1. Burrow-Testroet, L (Coup) 27-03.50; 2. Wines, Sira (PT) 26-11. Shot Put—1. Lawrence, Skyler (Coup) 29-07.75; 2. Click, Ruth (Kla) 28-11.75; 3. Snyder, Shenoa (PT) 27-06.25. Discus—1. Snyder, Shenoa (PT) 91-09; 2. Lawrence, Skyler (Coup) 86-11; 3. Click, Ruth (Kla) 80-03. Javelin—1. Castillo, Bailey (Chim) 103-08; 2. Wines, Sira (PT) 86-09; 3. Hallam, Naika (Coup) 78-11.
BOYS Team scores—1. Port Townsend 95, 2. Klahowya 92, 3. Chimacum 34, 4. Coupeville 28. 100—1. Weidner, Koby (PT) 11.28; 2. Constantine, Cameron (PT) 11.59; 3. Streett, Mark (PT) 11.85. 200—1. Weidner, Koby (PT) 23.20; 2. Constantine, Cameron (PT) 23.36; 3. Helmstadter, Jared (Coup) 24.18. 400—1. Mazelli, Trent (Kla) 52.44; 2. Streett, Mark (PT) 53.22; 3. Johnston, Brian (Kla) 53.23. 800—1. Mazelli, Trent (Kla) 2:02.47; 2. LaBrie, Brennan (PT) 2:03.51; 3. Noble, TJ (Chim) 2:22.24. 1,600—1. Mazelli, Trent (Kla) 4:30.37; 2. Clarke, Ryan (PT) 4:30.84; 3. LaBrie, Brennan (PT) 4:38.81. 3,200—1. Clarke, Ryan (PT) 10:19.10; 2. Ganowski, Nicholas (Kla) 11:26.33; 3. Duran, Jesus (PT) 11:37.49. 110H—1. Hamblet, Gavin (Kla) 18.88; 2. Brown, Alex (PT) 20.46; 3. Hester, Jesse (Coup) 22.83. 300H—1. Hamblet, Gavin (Kla) 44.30; 2. Johnston, Brian (Kla) 44.72; 3. Brown, Alex (PT) 48.30. 4x100—1. Port Townsend (Weidner, Streett, Constantine, Wilson) 45.78; 2. Chimacum (Torres, Noble, Caldwell, Hartnett) 46.93; 3. Klahowya (Wischhoefer, Hamblet, Snow, Hence) 47.58.
4x400—1. Klahowya (Johnston, Hamblet, Hence, Mazelli), 3:42.31; 2. Port Townsend (Streett, LaBrie, Weidner, Constantine) 3:47.78; 3. Chimacum (Torres, Cottier, Caldwell, Noble) 3:57.23. High Jump—1. Wilson, Zach (PT) 5-04; 2. Thompson, Connor (Coup) J5-04; 3. McKinney, Dallas (Kla) 5-02. Pole Vault—1. Vellay, Trenton (Kla) 9-0. Long Jump—1. Johnston, Brian (Kla) 18-11; 2. Dances, Seren (PT) 18-07; 3. Torres, Matt (Chim) 17-04.50. Triple Jump—1. Dances, Seren (PT) 40-10.50; 2. Thompson, Connor (Coup) 37-08; 3. Wischhoefer, Austin (Kla) 33-09.50. Shot Put—1. Noel, Trevon (Chim) 40-03; 2. Martin, Dalton (Coup) 39-00; 3. Winkley, Devyn (Chim) 33-07.25. Discus—1. Martin, Dalton (Coup) 133-05; 2. Noel, Trevon (Chim) 119-02; 3. Seton, Jeff (PT) 108-07. Javelin—1. Seton, Jeff (PT) 140-09; 2. Gherna, James (Kla) 129-11; 3. Sevilla, Chris (Chim) 119-03.
Area Sports BMX Racing Port Angeles BMX Track Sunday 4 Strider 1. Isaiah Charles 2. Makaylie Albin 3. Wyatt Stamper 15 Cruiser 1. Riley Zappen 2. Kayli Williams 3. Cash “Smash” Coleman 56-60 Cruiser 1. Danny “Bionic Man” Bushnell 2. Scott Gulisao 3. George Williams 4. Robert Williams 6 Novice 1. Kyah Weiss 2. Benjamin Clemens 3. Ben-Jam Keeler 9 Novice 1. Joseph Clemens 2. Brayden Martin 3. Carlos Moreno 10 Intermediate 1. Deacon Charles 2. Cholena Morrison 3. Bryce Hodgson 4. Hunter Hodgson 12 Intermediate 1. Aydon Weiss 2. Jaxon Bourm
3. Taylor Coleman 14 Intermediate 1. Tysin Williams 2. Riley Zappen 3. Ty Bourm 8 Expert 1. Jesse Vail 2. Jaron Tolliver 3. Rily Pippin 28-35 Expert 1. Kristopher Tofanelli 2. Christian Shadbolt 3. Kayli Williams 7-8 Local Open 1. Jesse Vail 2. Cash “Smash” Coleman 3. Benjamin Clemens 4. Ben-Jam Keeler 11-12 Local Open 1. Aydon Weiss 2. Taylor Coleman 3. Joseph Clemens 26-30 Local Open 1 Kristopher Tofanelli 2 Tysin Williams 3 Christian Shadbolt
Softball Port Angeles Parks and Recreation Corrected Standings Women’s Division W L Chix & Stix 6 0 Law Office of Alan Millet 5 1 Elwha Bravettes 3 1 Shirley’s Cafe 3 2 California Horizon 2 4 Harbinger Winery 2 4 Lincoln Street Coffee 1 4 Airport Garden Center 0 6 Men’s Gold Division W L 7 Cedars Casino 5 0 Angeles Plumbing 4 0 Rain Seafood 3 3 Stamper Chiropractic 3 3 Elwha Bravez 3 3 Moose Lodge Bulls 2 4 Smuggler’s Landing 2 4 Own Up Landscape 0 5 Men’s Silver Division W L Evergreen Collision 6 0 Ace Michael’s Inc. 5 1 D-12/Elwha River Casino 4 2 U.S. Coast Guard 2 3 America’s Elite 2 4 Coburn’s Cafe 1 4 Basic Ballers 1 5
Transactions BASEBALL American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Assigned RHP Raul Fernandez outright to Birmingham (SL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Agreed to terms with LHP Omar Duran on a minor league contract. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Designated LHP Jeff Francis for assignment. Selected the contract of RHP Todd Redmond from Buffalo (IL). National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Agreed to terms with RHP Seth Webster on a minor league contract. MIAMI MARLINS — Named Dan Jennings manager and Mike Goff bench coach. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Recalled RHP Hector Neris from Lehigh Valley (IL). SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Designated RHP Erik Cordier for assignment.
What offseason? Key NFL owners meetings this week BY BARRY WILNER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO — What offseason? There hasn’t been a week — make that a day — since the Super Bowl that the NFL hasn’t made news. As the owners gather this week at their spring meetings, their plate couldn’t be much fuller. While recent headlines have centered on Tom Brady, the Patriots and deflated footballs, there is plenty else the owners will discuss. For sure, Brady’s suspension, the Patriots’ punishment and the repercussions will be a topic, in many ways an awkward one. Patriots owner Robert Kraft is among the most influential men in the sport, something of a mentor to Commissioner Roger Goodell through the years. Now, that relationship has hit a significant hurdle. That the so-called “Deflategate” crisis has come in the wake of so many personal conduct mat-
ters means the owners have lots more to think about and talk about than finances, future Super Bowl sites, and extra points. “The NFL is in an unusual situation at this time and it relates back to the last few years of activities,” said Marc Ganis, president of Chicago-based consulting firm SportsCorp and confidant of many owners. “It’s part of the double-edged sword of having great success. With great success comes great attention. “I believe there is now investigation fatigue by everyone: by the fans, by the players, the league office, the owners, the teams.” Still, the deflated football matter won’t go away anytime soon, and it won’t be ignored in San Francisco. With Goodell on hand, he won’t be hearing Brady’s appeal of his four-game suspension until Thursday at the earliest. Goodell can only hope that “Deflategate” doesn’t get in the way of other key business.
Such as: ■ Whether the NFL will change how extra points are attempted. Three proposals have been made. The Patriots want PAT kicks to come from the 15-yard line and 2-point conversions from the 2. The Eagles want the same distance on the kick, but the 2-point conversion to come from the 1, and if the defensive teams causes a turnover and take it to the other end zone, it gets the two points. The powerful competition committee proposes the 15-yard line for the kick, the 2 for the 2-point conversion, and the defensive team being allowed to score on a turnover. ■ Cities seeking to host Super Bowls beyond the 2018 game in Minneapolis will have their bids revealed. The next series of title games were opened for bidding on May 1. With the success of the New York outdoor game in February 2014, other cold-weather cities
without domes are expected to be considered. Conjecture has included Washington, Philadelphia, Kansas City and Denver, but really no city with the proper infrastructure should be discounted. Also certain to be interested are Indianapolis, which hosted a super Super Bowl week in 2012, and Atlanta, where a new stadium will be ready long before the next available game is bid upon. ■ Television. The Thursday night package on CBS has only this year to run, and there are other potential machinations that could lead to more programming being put up for bidding. Perhaps more playoff qualifiers and games, too. Which means more billions of dollars for the 32 teams. ■ Los Angeles. Ah, yes, LA, which has not hosted an NFL franchise in two decades. Now, three teams are dickering to relocate there — all of them having already called Hollywood home.
The Rams and Raiders both left after the 1994 season, while the Chargers played the first season of the AFL in LA before heading to San Diego. At long last, it seems a solid stadium project has surfaced. Maybe even two. St. Louis Rams owner Stan Kroenke is behind a project in Inglewood, Calif., while the Raiders and Chargers are backing one in Carson. Last month, Goodell said both plans looked “viable.” There won’t be any votes taken on how to proceed in LA at these meetings, but the owners will hear progress reports about St. Louis, Oakland and San Diego. Eric Grubman, one of Goodell’s executive vice presidents, has said these meetings will play a significant role in educating the other teams on all aspects of bringing the NFL back to Los Angeles. None of the teams can apply for relocation before Jan. 1, but that window that runs through Feb. 15 could be moved up.
SportsRecreation
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, MAY 19, 2015
B3
Wahl: Race directors ‘really accommodating’ CONTINUED FROM B1 morning, we always do, and these two guys said that So Wahl asked the they’d be happy to accomevent’s organizers, Michelle pany me,” Wahl said. “I couldn’t have done it Little and Victoria Jones, if he could sign up, run the without them. Doing it this marathon early and have way, there’s no support out his time count (“Not that there, so they carried all my it’s going to be a time that I water and took care of me really would want,” Wahl the whole way.” They also coached the said with a laugh.). “I thought it wouldn’t coach. Flood damage to Railhurt to ask if they would still count it as an official road Bridge has forced the marathon to find a new time,” Wahl said. “They were really nice route. Instead of being a pointabout it and just said, ‘Absoto-point marathon that lutely.’ “[They were] just really starts in Sequim and conaccommodating, so I appre- cludes in Port Angeles, this ciate them willing to deal year the marathon begins with something a little bit in Agnew and includes a couple of out-and-back extraordinary.” stretches that can be mentally taxing. Ride-along helpers “These guys were in my The track wouldn’t be ear, talking steadily and lined with volunteers, keeping me distracted,” though, so Wahl turned to a Wahl said. couple of friends: Buddy Despite having finished Bear, a former Port Angeles a marathon minutes earlier baseball and softball coach and with a potentially scary and an assistant football operation looming, Wahl coach under Wahl, and maintains the calm he had Steve Blakeman. on the sidelines during his Bear and Blakeman rode five seasons coaching the their bikes alongside Wahl. Port Angeles football team “These two guys are (2010-14). Christian brothers, we had “Well, you know, I’m a bible study on Saturday doing everything I can, and
LEE HORTON/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Former Port Angeles football coach Tom Wahl, center, ran the North Olympic Discovery Marathon on Saturday with the help of Steve Blakeman, left, and Buddy Bear. I know the doctors are, too,” Wahl said. He also is leaning on his faith. While the front of his shirt is dedicated to the American Cancer Society, the back references a verse from Philippians.
“He died for your life. Phil. 4:13. Yes you can,” the black lettering says. “My faith is important to me, and so I wanted to just do that, too, and to kind of prove to myself my trust in my God and that, you know, this is not a battle that I am
Marathon: More relay teams CONTINUED FROM B1 Boston Marathon qualifier. “We were able to make They follow Finn Hall it a Boston-certified Road until the loop at course,” Jones said, “which Agnew Parkway. They take is a pretty big deal.” the loop, which returns The marathoners also them back towards Gehrke won’t be as lonely this year. Road. “We have an increase in The final 9 miles of the relay teams, which I’m marathon remain really excited about,” Jones unchanged. said. The other races — half“It’s more fun for the marathon, 10K, 5K — marathoners; they have remained similar to last more athletes on the trail year. (See all the courses online at www.nodm.com/ with them.” Relay teams can consist course.) of two to five people. With Another thing that five runners, the relay legs hasn’t changed is the range from 4.2 to 6 miles. North Olympic Discovery Jones said the relays Marathon’s status as a
haven’t been popular in the past, so an extra effort was made to promote them this year. Jones said the organizers added “a bunch of different divisions” to the relays this year. There are nine divisions: junior (19 and younger), men’s open (all men), women’s open (all women), mixed open (men and women), masters open (40 and over), grand Olympic open (55 and over), family (limited to extended family), business (runners who work for the same business) and teacher and staff
(“We encourage all runners to be from the same school,” Jones said.). As in the past, there will be a 1.2-mile kids marathon Saturday, June 6. This race starts and finishes at City Pier. Registration is still open and will remain open until the day before the marathon. For more information, including registration details, visit www.tinyurl. com/PDN-NODM.
father, Jon Wahl, a legendary coach at Raymond High School, battle and survive prostate cancer. His father’s encounter with the disease helped Tom Wahl and his doctor recognize the signs and take swift action. “I guess if I were to put a plug in, to know your family history and stay on top of it,” he said. “Jerry Oakes is my doctor and he knew about my history, and so I think he identified it as quick as he could and we just took the steps that we could. “Hopefully we got it early enough.” And hopefully Wahl will be able to run the marathon with everyone else next year. And the year after that. And the year after that. And beyond. He talks like he plans to be back. “I hope that I can do it for as long as I can,” Wahl said. “I think I’ll keep going as long as I can, as long as I’m alive.”
the only one fighting, a lot of other people do, too, and so whatever his will will be and the outcome, I accept that,” Wahl said. ________ “But it’s just really important for me to show Sports Editor Lee Horton can my trust.” be reached at 360-417-3525 or at He also has seen his lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com.
Hawks Jesse Williams diagnosed with cancer BY JOHN BOYLE THE[EVERETT] DAILY HERALD
RENTON — Seattle Seahawks defensive tackle Jesse Williams will undergo kidney surgery after being diagnosed with papillary type 2 cancer, the team announced Monday. The team did not provide further details on a prognosis or timeline for recovery, but Williams did issue the following statement: “Although disappointing, I ________ am a fighter and will hanSports Editor Lee Horton can dle this. be reached at 360-417-3525 or at “I am going to focus on lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com. my health and fighting this battle with a return to foot-
ball as my ultimate goal. “Thank you for your thoughts and support. Go Hawks!” Seahawks general manager John Schneider said in a statement: “Jesse is an extraordinarily tough individual who has overcome a great deal in his life and we will support him in any way possible. He is in our thoughts and prayers.” Williams, a fifth-round pick out of Alabama in 2013, has yet to play for Seattle in a regular-season game, having spent the past two seasons on injured reserve because of knee injuries.
McGrath: Improved command M’s: On a tear CONTINUED FROM B1
McClendon might be as confused as I am by why a pitcher doesn’t want to be “long on the backside,” but he and Paxton are on the same page about one thing. “He wants me to attack, and go after guys,” said Paxton, the No. 37 overall pick by Toronto in 2009 whose velocity is rare for a lefty. “Make ’em prove they can hit my fastball. “Everything works off my fastball. If I can execute my fastball, there’s a pretty good chance I’ll throw the other pitches well, too.”
Said McClendon: “He commanded right from the start. It’s no secret: command the fastball and you’re going to win. It’s going to make everything else better, and when you command a 98 mile-anhour fastball, it’s going to make everything special.” The Mariners have been slow to gain traction this season. Some days the hitters are in sync but the starting pitcher is shelled. Other days the starter is solid, only for the effort to be undermined by the bullpen. Mistakes have been committed on defense and on the basepaths, where
too many runners have been stranded at second and third. No wonder the Mariners began a winning homestand 7.5 games out of first place, and finished it 7.5 games out of first place. And yet every once in a while, you can’t watch this team without thinking of its potential to go far in the playoffs. Felix Hernandez on Saturday didn’t pitch with the surgical precision he usually brings to the mound — “he’s not Superman,” reminded McClendon — but then Paxton takes that mound, 16 hours later, and barely breaks a sweat
against a Boston lineup that caused The King to labor. He attacked the Red Sox with a fastball polished by mechanical adjustments his manager neither understands nor cares to acknowledge. What McClendon does know is that three weeks after Paxton looked overwhelmed, the Mariners have a No. 2 starter capable of throwing a pitch that makes everything special.
________ John McGrath is a sports columnist for The News Tribune. He can be contacted at john. mcgrath@thenewstribune.com.
Cavs’ Irving ready for Game 1 vs. Hawks BY TOM WITHERS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
we really don’t know until we get out there on Wednesday. The good thing is he’s positive, he’s feeling better, and that’s positive for our team.” Irving’s injuries threatened to derail the Cavs before they even took the floor against the Hawks, a balanced squad with quick guards and numerous offensive weapons. The
Cavs are already without forward Kevin Love (shoulder surgery) and can’t afford to be without another of top player. Still, there’s no way of knowing how effective Irving will be until he’s on the court trying to drive past Hawks forward Paul Millsap or guarding fellow All-Star Jeff Teague or his backup, Dennis Schroder.
For the season, he’s batting .264 with five home runs and 14 RBI. He has raised his season batting average from .225 on May 10 — the day before this hot streak began — to a far more encouraging .264. “I think the biggest thing is just try to treat each opportunity as a new one and go out there and play, and really not try to read too much into where I’m hitting in the order or where I’m playing — just kind of go out there and go after it,” Miller, who batted in the leadoff spot on Sunday for the first time this season, said. Miller expressed some initial frustration over the club’s decision to call Chris Taylor up from Triple-A Tacoma to play every day at shortstop, a move that subsequently forced Miller into a utility role. He’s mostly slotted in since as the team’s designated hitter, though he’s learning how to play the outfield and made his left field debut on Thursday. On Sunday he was back at shortstop, where he made
“This guy’s a special player and has the ability to move all over the field.” LLOYD MCCLENDON On Miller’s new utility role a nifty play on a sharp ground ball hit by Dustin Pedroia to end the third inning. So far, it doesn’t appear as if his new role has shaken him. “I just think from past experience, looking over your shoulder and all that stuff — worry’s not good for your performance, I don’t think,” Miller said. “We’re all out here battling. We all want to do well for the team. So it’s fine. Especially a game like that.” Mariners manager Lloyd McClendon said Miller has so far lived up to the vision he plotted for him when he first discussed the move. “This guy’s a special player and has the ability to move all over the field because he’s very athletic,” McClendon said, “and he hasn’t disappointed to this point.”
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INDEPENDENCE, Ohio — Kyrie Irving finished an animated post-practice shooting game of “Around The World” with LeBron James and then quickly removed any doubt about his playing status for Game 1. “I’m going to go,” he said. Cleveland’s All-Star guard may not be 100 percent — or anywhere close — but he’s much better and that’s welcome news to the Cavs, who will open the Eastern Conference finals on Wednesday in Atlanta. Irving has been bothered by a sore right foot since Game 2 of the opening round against Boston, and he sat out the final half of the Cavs’ series-clinching win over Chicago last week with tendinitis in his left knee. But a weekend of rest and rehab allowed Irving to make it through a full practice on Monday, lifting his spirts and improving the Cavs’ chances against the East’s top seed. Irving said he has come
a long way from the way he felt Thursday night while sitting on the bench in United Center. “Just being able to actually feel both my feet underneath me, especially when I’m shooting, it feels amazing,” said Irving, who was limited to 12 minutes in Game 6. “I don’t want to be on the sideline at all, especially preparing for a big stage like this.” Irving’s improved health seemed to have an immediate impact with James, who ran around like a little kid after all of his teammates left the practice floor. “I can’t leave. You just gotta let me go,” James yelled to good friend, Damon Jones, his former teammate who works with him on his shooting. “I’m locked in.” James knocked down 8 of 10 shots from 40 feet and threw down several jawdropping dunks before meeting with reporters in good spirits. “He feels better,” James said. “Obviously the days have helped him. You know,
CONTINUED FROM B1
B4
Fun ’n’ Advice
TUESDAY, MAY 19, 2015
Dilbert
❘
Minister dismisses wife’s concerns
by Scott Adams
For Better or For Worse
❘
Classic Doonesbury (1982)
Frank & Ernest
Garfield
❘
❘
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
DEAR ABBY: I have been married to the same man for 20 years. He likes having people around all the time, and because he is a minister, we often can’t avoid it. I have tried to accommodate his friends and hangers-on, but lately it’s becoming unbearable. He will say “yes” to people who have been evicted, and I find myself sharing living quarters with perfect strangers or church members without prior notice. I have tried over the years to make sense of his attitude toward me (also toward those he’s offered help). I feel he cares for others and what they think of him more than what I feel or think. When I complain about his latest live-in’s attitude — or anything — he brushes every issue aside and basically tells me to be a good Christian. Right now, we have a family of three sharing our three-room house with us and our three boys. I’m thinking of leaving him when the youngest one is 13. I don’t want to hurt my kids. How can I explain to them that their “nice” dad is unreasonable and irresponsible with money, and I can’t bear it anymore? Reached My Limit in Nigeria
by Lynn Johnston
❘
by G.B. Trudeau
DEAR ABBY tionship in high school and then Van Buren attended an allwomen’s college. Suffice it to say, he said he wasn’t going to be the “one.” I can’t understand why he rejected me, and I don’t know what to do now. I thought I was making a sound decision choosing my friend because he is an engineer. Could it be that he doesn’t regard me as a good enough partner because I have an art degree, or could it be insecurity on his part? I can’t imagine why he doesn’t want to marry at this stage in life. We are 23. We were together for four years, and for both of us, this was our longest relationship. Part of me wonders, if I change, will he change his mind? Or does this seem like a hopeless case? Jane Doe in South Carolina
Abigail
Dear Jane: If you would like to know his reasons for not accepting your proposal, the person you must ask is him. While you feel ready to Dear Reached: I suspect your make a lifetime commitment, your problems “come with the territory” of boyfriend apparently hasn’t reached being married to a minister. But a that stage of life. caring husband would respect and I know you’re disappointed, but consult his wife before inviting house life doesn’t always go the way we guests into their home. predict it will. Sometimes it turns If you finally decide you are so out even better. unhappy you need to leave, be honSo please don’t try to change est with your sons. The way you yourself to accommodate someone have expressed your reasons to me who is emotionally unavailable. You are clear and well stated. Because could twist yourself into a pretzel, they have grown up with things but it wouldn’t work because you always having been this way, they aren’t the problem. may think it is normal. Or, you may Accept it and move on. find they agree with you. ________
by Bob and Tom Thaves
by Jim Davis
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.
Dear Abby: I am a young woman who proposed to my high school sweetheart after graduating from college. It may seem odd for a woman to do, but I initiated our rela-
The Last Word in Astrology ❘ Red and Rover
Rose is Rose
❘
❘
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Make a couple of changes. Learn from the past and negotiate on your own behalf. No one can present what you have to offer better than you, so step into the spotlight and express your ideas and desires. 4 stars
by Brian Basset
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. TAURUS (April 20-May 22): Be careful not to share 20): Listen carefully before personal information. It’s you give financial support to important to articulate what a charity or someone ask- you want to avoid ending ing for help. It’s important up with something you don’t not to let your emotions get want. Getting angry will not in the way of a good deci- solve anything. Do whatever sion. Do your research and it takes to improve your offer what’s fair. 3 stars skills and your position. 2 stars GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don’t start something LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. you can’t finish. Emotional 22): You have what it takes responses can be expected. to get ahead, so don’t let Don’t believe everything laziness stand between you you hear about a job or the and success. A romantic way you do things. Go relationship will undergo about your business and some changes that can you’ll avoid delays and alter your plans. Question arguments. 3 stars your commitments. Live and learn. 5 stars CANCER (June 21-July 22): Don’t worry about the SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. changes going on around 21): Stick to what you do you. Look for the best way best. Don’t get involved in a to get things done in the joint venture that has the shortest amount of time. potential to be costly. Trust Efficiency will come from in your own abilities, not in using your imagination and what someone else brags eliminating what stands about being able to do. between you and your suc- Work hard to develop a crecess. 3 stars ative idea. 3 stars
by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer
ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Work at making some changes. Get out and par-
Dennis the Menace
❘
by Hank Ketcham
ticipate in functions that will allow you to use your skills and prove to onlookers what you are capable of doing. You’ll impress someone who can help you expand your interests. Proceed with confidence. 4 stars
Pickles
❘
by Brian Crane
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Make the alterations at home or
The Family Circus
❘
by Eugenia Last
within important partnerships that will benefit you. A trip will lead to an encounter with someone who can change the direction of your life. Don’t let unfinished business limit your ability to get ahead. 3 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Take time out to rejuvenate. Nurturing an important partnership will make a difference to the outcome of the dealings you share. Well-thought-out plans can bring good results, but an impulsive move will lead to disaster. 3 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Put more time and effort into your home, family and future. Speak up about the changes you want to make and rely on your track record and past accomplishments to help you reach your new goals. Strive for security and financial independence. 5 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You will be misunderstood. Back away from anyone creating an emotionally disruptive situation that can influence your position or reputation. Regroup and take time to reflect on your situation with someone you love and trust before you decide to move ahead. 2 stars
by Bil and Jeff Keane
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, May 19, 2015 PAGE
B5
Port land buy bid discussed ing the site at Cedar Street and Marine Drive to Platypus. The company wants to buy it, as its next-door neighbor, Westport LLC, did with 3 acres in 2003 for $530,000 when the company was known as Westport Shipyard. BY JAMES CASEY O’Hollaren said port commissionPENINSULA DAILY NEWS ers who no longer are in office agreed PORT ANGELES — The Port of to that controversial sale because Port Angeles will consider May 26 they were competing with the Port of selling 4 acres of land near its water- Anacortes for Westport’s yacht-building operation. front to Platypus Marine Inc. Ken O’Hollaren, port executive director, said the sale question proba- Yearlong negotiations bly will be on the agenda for port comThe port and Platypus have jockmissioners’ next regular meeting. It eyed for about a year behind the will start at 9 a.m. in port headquar- scenes. ters. 338 W. First St. In March, the marine company’s O’Hollaren spoke against the sale owner, Judson Linnabary, brought it at Monday’s luncheon meeting of the into open by offering to buy the site he Port Angeles Regional Chamber of said was worth $700,000. Commerce in the Red Lion Hotel. He The port has said its value could be countered remarks by Marty March- $2 million. ant, Platypus’ sales and marketing Linnabary said Platypus wants to director. double its boat-building and repair The port prefers to continue leas- business — and its current 70-person
Chamber audience hears issues prior to May 26 meeting
workforce. It would pay wages averaging $48,500 a year, Linnabary said. “We’re beyond our capacity,” Marchant told a Chamber of Commerce audience of about three dozen at Monday’s meeting, citing contracts Platypus holds with the Navy and Coast Guard and a pact it is negotiating with the Army Corps of Engineers. Platypus customers also builds and repairs private yachts and fishing vessels. A sale, he said, would keep the actual harbor-front in port ownership and not block access to its terminals.
‘Never sell waterfront’ But O’Hollaren repeated port commissioners’ point that the state’s public ports paid dearly for land that once was monopolized by railroads and by pulp and timber mills. If every public port director in the country were to speak, he said, each would oppose selling the land — “and never on the waterfront because it is so rare and limited.”
FOOD
BANK DONATION
$ Briefly . . . Discussion on Social Security set PORT HADLOCK — A presentation on understanding Social Security will take place at Edward Jones, 201 W. Patison St., at 6 p.m. Thursday. Hosted by Shelli Cates, the presentation teaches how to calculate benefits; full retirement age; choosing the right time to file; receiving benefits while working; provisional income and tax implications; and options for spouses and ex-spouses. To pre-register by Thursday, phone Jennifer Burgess at 360-3790170 or email her at jennifer.burgess@edward jones.com.
Real-time stock quotations at peninsuladailynews.com
Market watch May 18, 2015
Dow Jones industrials
18,298.88
Nasdaq composite
5,078.44
Standard & Poor’s 500
2,129.20
Russell 2000
26.32 30.15
6.47 13.58 1,257.52
NYSE diary Advanced:
1,759
Declined:
1,363
Unchanged: Volume:
110 2.8 b
Nasdaq diary Advanced: Declined: Unchanged: Volume:
1,772 982 150 1.6 b
AP
Her lawyer argued she had a copyright claim to SAN FRANCISCO — the low-budget film YouTube should not have because she believed she been forced to take down was acting in a different an anti-Muslim film that production. sparked violence in the Google argued Garcia Middle East and death had no claim to the film threats to actors, a fedbecause the filmmaker eral appeals court ruled wrote the dialogue, manMonday in a victory for aged the production and free speech advocates. dubbed over her lines. The 9th U.S. Circuit It wasn’t immediately Court of Appeal sided clear if or when the video with Google, which owns would be reposted on YouYouTube, after free Tube. speech advocates urged the court to overturn a Gold and silver 2-1 decision by three of Gold for June delivits judges. The three judges had ery grew by $2.30, 0.2 perordered YouTube to take cent to settle at $1,227.60 an ounce Monday. down the video. July silver added Actress Cindy Lee Garcia wanted “Innocence 16.9 cents, or 1 percent, to $17.732 an ounce. of Muslims” removed Peninsula Daily News from the site after receivand The Associated Press ing death threats.
Google court win
Bob Aunspach, Swain’s General Store sporting goods buyer, kneels alongside 338 pounds of donated canned and packaged food, which were delivered to the Port Angeles Food Bank. Swain’s customers donated the food in conjunction with the store’s monthly salmon and halibut fish ladder contest. They registered for the fish ladder with a four-can or package donation. March’s top four largest salmon entries won Swain’s gift cards.
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4026 Employment General CARRIER for Peninsula Daily News and Sequim Gazette Combined Route Sequim area. Interested par ties must be 18 yrs. of age, have a valid Washington State Drivers License, proof of insurance and reliable vehicle. Early mor ning delivery Monday through Friday and Sunday. Call Jasmine at (360) 683-3311 ext 6051 jbirkland@sequim gazette.com
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B6 TUESDAY, MAY 19, 2015
DOWN 1 Hot times in Cannes 2 Take a chance
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. USES OF LIME Solution: 6 letters
M A R M A L A D E S A L A D S
E A P O P C O R N T I U R F G
P U R P A O S B U R C S K I N
C U C G E S E G A R E V E B I
© 2015 Universal Uclick
By Marti DuGuay-Carpenter
Monday’s Puzzle Solved
R L K C B R I N T G E C A E P
R E C E H R I Z E S L S I R O
Y S C S G N A T E C A A E U T
www.wonderword.com
D R U C M I F S A H I A R S S N T A E I I L L C N S B E A R A S Z N A B I E D G A U S Y F R S T O A S S T T C ګ P ګ E O E E Z U ګ I U A R E S ګ P P J T R U G Join us on Facebook
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5/19
Ales, Appetizers, Barbecue, Beer, Beverages, Butter, Cake, Candy, Curd, Curry, Desert, Face, Fish, Fruit, Garnish, Glaze, Juice, Margaritas, Marmalade, Martini, Meltaways, Mousse, Parfaits, Pasta, Pies, Popcorn, Punch, Rice, Salads, Salsa, Sangria, Scent, Scrubs, Skin, Slices, Soap, Soup, Steak, Sugar, Tacos, Tart, Toppings, Vegetables, Yogurt, Zest Yesterday’s Answer: Testing 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.
HYYLS ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
ROLYG ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
35 One in a model’s repertoire 37 Computer user’s accessory 41 Warning to pull over 43 Swe. neighbor 44 Crime on the Bounty 46 Bakery array 47 Picked up the tab 48 Crucifix inscription
5/19/15
49 Prince William’s alma mater 50 Spunk 51 Swiss surrealist Paul 52 “Return of the Jedi” dancing girl 53 Wineglass feature 56 __ Baba 57 High-tech rte. finder
BEMLIN
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
3 Word with gray or play 4 Scottish name prefix 5 Rose protectors 6 Like many a Poe story 7 Too 8 “What’d I tell you?” 9 Woven together 10 Bunch of contortionists? 11 Ship-related: Abbr. 12 Pasta that sounds like two letters 13 Oklahoma tribe 18 Sporty sunroofs 23 Finish 24 Bunch of cryptologists? 25 Wood shop tool 26 Cookie holders 27 Run out of 28 Ship with staterooms 29 Lays down blacktop 30 Bit of beach footwear 31 Mortgage-issuing inst. 33 Flanders Fields flower
5/19/15
U A N E A T T A T D E T R E P
DONEOL Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Answer here: Yesterday’s
“
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ACROSS 1 Netherlands dairy export 5 Needle 10 Car designer Ferrari 14 O’Hara plantation 15 Hunt of “As Good as It Gets” 16 Café au __ 17 Bunch of builders? 19 Ferrari, e.g. 20 Salty expanse 21 Peter, Paul and Mary, e.g. 22 White terrier, familiarly 24 Finished 25 “He __ Heavy, He’s My Brother” 26 Derby drinks 29 Talking heads 32 Adidas rival 33 Magazine unit 34 Bloke 36 Gambling town at the foot of the Sierra Nevadas 37 Found new digs 38 Sonny & Cher surname 39 Took to court 40 Phone button abbr. 41 Historic Vegas hotel, with “the” 42 Before-marriage contracts, briefly 44 Mix at a party 45 Like Santa’s cheeks 46 Cottage cheese lump 47 South Dakota’s capital 50 Boarding pass information 51 Boxing stat 54 Not pro 55 Bunch of valets? 58 Tend to a pressing task 59 Not from Earth 60 Soccer superstar 61 Bumper defect 62 Scatterbrained 63 Sewer’s row
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
”
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: THUMB KAYAK SPRING EXPAND Answer: The hula dancer was really sick. She had a bad cold and she couldn’t — SHAKE IT
4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale General General General General General General General Wanted Clallam County
7 CEDARS CASINO FULL TIME SYSTEM ADMINISTRATOR LEVEL 1 Tier 1 suppor t, with potential for responsibility and skills growth. Responsible fo r w o r k i n g c l o s e l y with tier 2 and 3 suppor t to resolve computer related issues. Assists in maintaining n e t w o r ke d s y s t e m s and services, and ensures ser vice levels are sustained. System installation, maintenance, troubleshooting, and administration are the core functions of this position. Manage systems and provide appropriate support to resolve identified problems, capture systems requirements, and follow through on change requests. If interested in applying, submit an application on our website at www.7cedarsresort .com Native American preference for qualified candidates.
7 Cedars Resor t is now hiring for the following positions: • Busser/Host • Cocktail Server • Cook • Deli/Espresso Cashier • Dishwasher • Grounds Keeper • Line Cook • Marketing Assistant • Prep Cook • Pro Shop Team Member • Food and Beverage Server • System Administrator I • Table Games Dealer • Totem Rewards CSR • Valet Attendant For more info and to apply online, please visit our website at.
ADVERTISING ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE The Peninsula Daily News and Sequim Gazette have a rare oppor tunity position in outside sales with an existing territory working in a team environment. Opening for a well organized, creative professional with the ability to develop strong customer relationships. Manage an existing account base as well as developing new clients to meet ever changing marketing needs. Solid presentation skills and the a b i l i t y t o wo r k i n a team environment a must. Competitive compensation package including full benefits and 401K plan. Submit cover letter and resume to: Steve Perry Advertising Director Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 Port Angeles, WA 98362 sperry@peninsuladaily news.com
CNA: Ideally available for all shifts, including weekends. Apply in person at Park View Villas, 8th & G Streets, P.A. COOK: Long term, lead cook, experienced, hard work, good pay, apply in person at Chimacum Cafe, 9253 Rhody Dr., Chimacum. IMMEDIATE OPENING 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 mor ning delivery Monday-Friday and Sunday. Apply in person 305 W 1st St, or send resume to tsipe@peninsuladailynews.com. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.
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ACTIVITY DIRECTOR Part-Time at Discovery V i ew S e n i o r L i v i n g C o m m u n i t y. I f y o u would like to be considered for this position, apply online at www.gres.com under the Careers link. DENTAL HYGENIEST Part-time. Send resume: forksfamily dental@gmail.com
Program Specialist 4 Chemical Dependency Pe r m a n e n t p o s i t i o n 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
Licensed Nurse needed, flexible hours, with benefits. Call Cherrie.(360)683-3348 Correctional Officer 1 Perm/On-call Positions available now at Clallam Bay Corrections Center and Olympic Corrections Center Pay s t a r t s a t $ 2 , 9 5 7 monthly, Plus full benefits. Closes 6/7/2015. Apply on-line: www.careers.wa.gov. For further information please call Laura at (360)963-3208 EOE. DAYS INN Front desk customer service rep. • Housekeepers • Night auditor Six months to a year exp. pref. Apply in person at Days Inn, 1510 E. Front St., Port Angeles. No calls. •
D E N TA L H Y G E N I S T: needed 1 Thursday per month in Port Townsend WA. Opportunity for expansion in the future. Please fax resume to (360)385-1277, or email to info@cunningtondental.com. DENTAL HYGIENIST 8-5p.m., Tue. and Wed. Please contact 360-4379392 ask for Beth or email resume to: pldentistry@gmail.com DOG GROOMER: Experienced. Busy salon with mobile grooming van in Por t Townsend. Br ing resume to The Dog Spa, 2427 W. Sims Wy. Next to Pettown.
Employment Opportunities -Pt. Navigator Ass’t. -Pt. Relations Coord. -Director, Finance -Director Nutrition Svs. -OR Day Supervisor -RN Educator -Social Work Care Mgr -Ultrasonographer -Cardiac Echosonographer -Pharmacist -Physical Therapist -Imaging Serv. Rep. -C.N.A. -M.A. -Center Core Tech. -Clinic RN -Housekeeper For details on these and other Positions and to apply online, Visit www.olympicmedical.org. EOE Housekeeper Full Time Benefits available Pickup Applications at 550 W. Hendrickson Rd. Sequim Wa.
Library Substitute City of Por t Townsend P u bl i c L i b ra r y. Pa r t time, no benefits. Irregular hours, fill in for regular staff absences. Includes general circulaDRIVING ROUTES Clean driving record, lift- tion and reference assising involved. Apply in tance at public desk. Some evening and person: Olympic Springs weekend hours. Mini253 Business Park Loop mum requirement: high Carlsborg, WA 98324. school diploma or GED. AA degree and prior liESTIMATOR / brar y experience preDRAFTER ferred, volunteer experiFor or namental and e n c e a t P. T. L i b r a r y structural steel fabrica- d e s i r a b l e . S a l a r y tor in Carlsborg. Must $12.51/hour. Complete be within 45 min or re- job description and apl o c a t e . M u s t h a v e plication at math skills and crea- www.cityofpt.us tive ability to provide or at City Hall, 250 Madishop-ready drawings son St., #2. To apply, for gates, railings, and submit completed City of structural jobs. Must Port Townsend job applibe able to create scale cation to: Human Redrawings using paper sources, 250 Madison and pencil. CAD expe- St., Port Townsend WA rience a plus. Profi- 9 8 3 6 8 o r k m c l a u g h ciency with Excel and lin@cityofpt.us. ApplicaWord required. Ability tion review begins June to work with the public 2 , 2 0 1 5 . E O E / A DA , required. Must be de- smoke free workplace. tail oriented and creative. Good communi- PAINTER: Local body cation skills required. shop looking for experiF T. W a g e s D O E . enced painter, FT, paid E m a i l r e s u m e t o on commission. Send reK a t e @ A l l fo r m We l d - sume to: ing.com or fax to Peninsula Daily News (360)-681-4465. PDN#234/Painter No phone calls. Port Angeles, WA 98362
Nippon Paper Industries USA is recruiting for a COST ANALYST 1. Requirements: BS in Business with concentration in Accounting; excellent knowledge of Microsoft products, including spreadsheets and databases; good analytical ability, communication and interpersonal skills. Experience in industrial pulp and paper, manufacturing or accounting; and CPA/CMA designation are desired.Please send a resume to jobs@npiusa.com. Must meet minimum qualifications for consideration. NPIUSA is an AA/EEO employer and participates in E-Verify. OPTHALMIC ASSISTANT: Eye clinic seeks friendly people person to assist Dr. with patient testing and cross train for other d u t i e s. E x p e r i e n c e a plus but will train the right person. Send resume to Peninsula Daily N ew s, P D N # 7 2 7 / E ye, Port Angeles, WA 98362
SHIPPING and WAREHOUSE OPERATIONS CLERK Multi carrier shipping experience preferred, highly organized with strong problem solving skills, Strong attention to details, Working knowledge of ERP systems, Ability to lift over 50 lbs. Fullt i m e , M o n d ay - Fr i d ay 7-3:30. Medical/Dental/Vision/Retirement b e n e f i t s. L OV E O F FISHING A HUGE PLUS R e s u m e a c c e p t e d by e m a i l O N LY: e m p l oy ment@fishpacbay.com TEACHER POSITIONS Olympic Christian School is accepting applications for 2015-2016 teacher openings that could include: primary and intermediate positions. For application procedure / forms and / or fur ther infor mation contact OCS at (360)457-4640 or ocs@olympicchristian .org View website at olympicchristian.org.
The Hoh Indian Tribe, a Washington State Native American community, is seeking an Executive Director to manage operations and coordinate strategic planning. The position is 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 For ks, WA 98331. Electronic applications can be sent to hr@hohtribe-nsn.org . For full announcement, g o t o w w w. h o h t r i b e nsn.org. Questions or additional information, contact Darel Maxfield 360-374-5415. Opening Closes 5/22/2015.
4080 Employment Wanted
Mr. Mannys lawn and home care. We offer a complete yard service: trees bush trim and removal, moss removal,dethatcher, flower bed picking, dump runs! All clean up no job too big or small. Also exper ie n c e d h a n d y m e n l ow rates FREE estimates serving P.A. and Sequim areas call Manny (253)737-7317. PRIVATE HOME: Priva t e h o m e , p r i va t e room, 35 yrs experience, 24 hour loving care for senior lady. (360)461-9804.
All your lawn care needs. Mowing, edging, pruning, hauling. ReaSUPERIOR sonable rates. LAWN CARE (360)683-7702 Lawn Maintenance and Pressure Washing. SenAlterations and Sew- ior Discounts and Free ing. Alterations, mend- Estimates. Call Ronnie i n g , h e m m i n g a n d @ (360-797-3023) some heavyweight s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o Young Couple Early 60’s y o u f r o m m e . C a l l available for seasonal (360)531-2353 ask for cleanup, weeding, trimming, mulching & moss B.B. removal. We specialize A Plus Lawn Service in complete garden resComprehensive service torations. Excellent refincluding thatching and erences. 457-1213 edging with professional Results. Here today here 2020 Money to t o m o r r ow. B o o k n ow. Loan/Borrow Senior Discounts. P A only. Local call: Do you need capital? (360) 808-2146 S h o r t t e r m c o l l a t e ra l CAREGIVER: Exper i- loans, from $1,000 to enced. Special loving $20,000 at an interest care. Sequim, local ref’s. r a t e o f o n l y 3 % p e r month. No credit checks, Karen (360)808-7061. no dings to your credit, EDITING SERVICES: by confidential, courteous, English PhD. Former in- instant cash to professtructor at Stanford, An- sional people who would tioch College and Penin- like a safe and secure sula College. Contact alternative to bank opSuzann, (360)797-1245 t i o n s . P l e a s e c a l l hetaerina86@gmail.com (360)477-9933. It would be my pleasure to do business with you.
The Hoh Indian Tribe, a Washington State Native American community, is seeking Head Librarian. The position is 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 For ks, WA 98331. Electronic applications can be sent to RO O F E R S WA N T E D : hr@hohtribe-nsn.org . Driver’s license required. For full announcement, g o t o w w w. h o h t r i b e Tools will be supplied. nsn.org. Opening Closes (360)460-0517 5/15/2015. The Hoh Indian Tribe, a Washington State Native The Hoh Indian Tribe, a American community, is Washington State Native seeking an ICW Case American community, is Worker. The position is seeking an Assistant Libased in Forks, Wa. Ap- brarian – Early Literacy plicants should send a Coordinator. The posicover letter, resume, and tion is based in Forks, three professional refer- Wa. Applicants should e n c e s t o H o h I n d i a n send a cover letter, re- Mowing Lawns, lots Tribe C/O Human Re- sume, and three profes- a n d f i e l d s . Tr i m sources P.O. Box 2196 sional references to Hoh ming,pruning of shrubs Forks, WA 98331. Elec- Indian Tribe C/O Human and trees. Landscape tronic applications can R e s o u r c e s P. O. B o x maintenance, pressure be sent to hr@hohtribe- 2196 Forks, WA 98331. washing, light hauling nsn.org . For full an- Electronic applications a n d m o r e . F r e e n o u n c e m e n t , g o t o can be sent to hr@hoh- quotes. Tom 360-460www.hohtribe-nsn.org. tribe-nsn.org . For full 7766. License: bizybbl868ma Questions or additional announcement, go to information, contact Dar- www.hohtribe-nsn.org. e l M a x f i e l d 3 6 0 - 3 7 4 - O p e n i n g C l o s e s ODD JOBS: Yard work, 5415. Opening Closes 5/15/2015. c l e a n - u p, r e fe r e n c e s. 5/22/2015 Mike. (360)477-9457 RECEPTIONIST: Par t time, needed in Forks for busy clinic. Wed. and Sat. 8-6p.m. Must be able to multi-task, have excellent customer service skills and be willing to learn and help in other areas of clinic. Fax resume (360)457-1774 or mail to 1004 W. 16th P.A. WA 98363.
1512 sqft, 3Br, 2Ba, 1.2 acres Covered Parking for 4, RV Parking, Tons of storage MLS#290654 $244,900 Wade Jurgensen 360.477.6443 John L. Scott Sequim
ATTEN. ALL PILOTS! 2 BR, 2 BA home with hangar presently for sale in Diamond Point Airpark. New carpeting and new decks front & back with views of the Strait. 40’x32’ hangar for your a i r p l a n e, RV, c a r s o r wor kshop. Don’t miss the office in the hangar. New concrete driveway leading to hangar. Salal Way provides easy access to runway. MLS#290541/763477 $159,900 Rowland Miller (360)461-3888 TOWN & COUNTRY
Happy Valley Area Beautiful 1868 sqft home with a great mountain view on 2.11 fenced in acres. The home features a great kitchen w/new refrig, dishwasher, & microwave. Family room w/woodstove, laundr y w/utility sink, both baths have double sinks. New heat pump, water softener, & hot water heater. Attached 2 car garage plus a detached 2 car garage. MLS#282375 $315,000 Tom Blore 360-683-7814 PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE
105 Homes for Sale Clallam County
Here’s the One! Great sight built 2007 home in desirable Diamond Point, with additional out buildings, half acre of elbow room & community features including 3 private beaches. Wood floors, great room ties in the kitchen, dining & family room. Great price, great time! MLS#282390/724772 $234,500 Chuck Murphy (360)808-0873 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East
BRAND NEW ROOF! New car pet & fresh paint. Carefree living in West Alder Estates, a 55+ park. Water, sewer, & trash included in m o n t h l y fe e o f $ 3 7 0 . Wa l k i n g d i s t a n c e t o shopping/services. Nice, clean & move in ready. 1568 SF, 2BR/2BA. Pets allowed w/approval. MLS#290020/727983 $68,500 Cathy Reed (360)460-1800 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East
OPPORTUNITY IS KNOCKING! This property is literally “Good to Go” with its commercial location and v i s i b i l i t y. B L D G h a s been used as a popular deli/bakery/grocery store w/coffee/espresso/soup etc. Great visibility, drive thru window, DBL city lot, lots of improvements including newer green house. MLS#290081 $215,000 Ania Pendergrass (360)461-3973 Remax Evergreen
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A C R Y L I C S H E E T : BOBBLEHEAD: Ken clear, 4’ X 8’ X 1/8”. $25. Griffey Jr., ‘13 Mariners (360)301-1779 Hall of Fame, new. $50. (360)457-5790 AIR PURIFIER: Hybrid GP Germicidal, Sharper BOOKS: Coffee table Image. $150. 775-0855. books (2) David Muench photographs. $10.ea AMMO: 1 box Federal (360)565-8110 Premium, 260 REM Sierra game king. $25. BOOK SHELVES: Tall (360)808-6430 wicker. $100 o.b.o. (360)850-8896 AMMO: 2 box Federal Premium, 25-06 REM CAMERA: Fujifilm FineVital-Shok. $50. pix S 9000 digital,28 (360)808-6430 -300 mm. $85. (360)477-4776 AQ UA R I U M F I LT E R : Fluval Model 204, for up C A R PET CLEANER: to 50 gallon tank. $25. Rug Doctor, profession(360)582-0723 al, heavy duty, vibrating ART: Rie Munoz “Mend- brush. $195. 670-3310 ing the Nets” very nice, CERAMIC: Lladro piece. mat and frame. $135. Clown musician. Perfect (360)681-7579 cond. $75. (360)681-7579 BA R S TO O L S : L i g h t oak, high back, swivel. $80 pair. (360)631-9211 C H A I N S A W : H u s k y 450, chains, oil, various BEER MUGS: (2) Olym- accessories. $199. pia collector. $5. (360)241-4821 (360)565-8110. CHAIR: V i n y l , s w i v e l , BENCH: Bedroom, floral desk chair. with arms. cushion, brass legs, 48” $25. (360) 582-9725 X 18” X 20”. $59. (360)775-0855 C H E S T: 6 d rawe r s, wood with black accents, BIKE: “Blackeye” brand 32” X 44”. $65. ra c e b i ke, wa s $ 4 5 0 . (360)457-6431 new. Now $150.obo (360)775-9631 CHINA CABINET: Oak, B OAT : 8 ’ L i v i n g s t o n , 52” X 17” X 76”, glass with retracting wheels-a- top, drawers, cupboard $100. (360)681-4491 weigh. $200. (360)460-7920 CHINA CABINET: TwoB O B B L E H E A D : Ke n piece maple, with glass G r i f fey J r. , n ew. $ 5 0 shelves $125. (360)452-8738 firm. (360)681-3811
C O O K I E JA R S : ( 2 3 ) FIREPLACE SCREEN: Novelty ceramic jars, 32”h x 37”w gold, glass bi-fold doors, screens, $125. (360)374-9332 vents. $150. 461-2799 COUCH: Beige 85” long, FISH NET: Trout 15” good condition. $100. hoop 24” handle . $8. (360)417-5512 (360)640-0556 D E S K : E a r l y 1 9 0 0 ’s F L AG S : ( 6 ) O u t d o o r drop leaf desk $175. flags. $2-$5 each. (360)457-1389 (360)496-8645 D E S K : L e a t h e r t o p, FREE: (2) disassembled large, old. $85. raised planting beds (360)461-0940 (lumber only) 4’x5’ each. (360)457-9350 DINING TABLE: Large antique knocked togethFREE: 4 plastic desk er, seats 6. $150. chair floor mats. (360)452-8738 (360)452-9351 D I S H WA S H E R : Ke n more Ultra Wash, FREE: Organ with bench. portable, black. $75. (360)640-0556 (360)670-3310 DOG CRATE: Medium FREE: Swing set, you for 30-70lb., dog, like haul. (360)928-9659. new, assembles in seconds. $50. 683-2383. FRIDGE: Kenmore 2.8 cu ft, upper freezer, exD O L L : 1 6 ” E f fa n b e e cellent condition. $75. C o l l e c t o r, “ C o l o n i a l (360)452-8760 Lady”, with stand. $15. (360)582-6370 FRIDGE: Mini fridge and f r e e ze r, w o r k s g o o d . D R E S S E R : A n t i q u e $75.obo (360)775-9631 w/mirror, excellent condition. $150. 457-1389 GOLF: 100 used, cleaned balls, $25.AsD R I L L P R E S S : Fr e e sorted clubs, $1 each. standing, 16 speed. 457-2856 $100. Brinnon (360)796-4813 GOLF CLUBS. 7,8,9 irons; 4,5 hybrids; 3,5,9 DRILL: Skil 1/2” right w o o d s . $ 5 a n d $ 1 0 angle vintage. $60. each. (360) 457-5790. (360)477-1716 GOLF CLUBS: WomFENCE: 4 - Split rail, en’s clubs 3-9, PW, P, 10’, new. $25. 1W and bag $50. (360)683-0146 (360) 582-9725
TUESDAY, MAY 19, 2015 B7
G U I TA R : Ya m a h a 6 M I S C : C r a f t s m a n 4 6 piece metric socket and string, acoustic.. $125. wrench set. $29. (360)457-4383. (360)681-2198 HOBBY TABLES: 2’ X 8’ X 3’, epoxy coated MISC: Dollhouse Furniture. $25. (360)452-8760 birch plywood. $10 ea. (360)301-1779 MISC: Enter tainment JEWELRY SETTINGS: center. $50. (360)477-4545 (77) pieces for cabochons. $200. 452-7721 MISC: Extension ladder, J O I N T E R : 5 ” o n 24’, 225 lbs. $99. Work r o l l away. S h a p e r a n d lights, 2 heads. $20. (360)241-4821 many contour bits. $100. (360)683-4357
MISC: New Bosch aircompressor w/ twin L A M P : 1 9 6 0 ’s S e a - tanks. $200. 457-2804 g r a m ’s V. O. 1 g a l l o n glass. $75. 452-6842 MISC: Old Norwegian wood ski’s. $100. (360)477-4545 LAMPS: Table, 2 eleg a n t , c e ra m i c, G r e e k MISC: Septic infiltrators. vase style, white. $80 pr. $25 ea. (360)640-0111 (360)582-0180 M I S C : Te n t , 3 r o o m , L A M P : Ta b l e , c o l - u s e d o n c e . $ 4 0 . ( 2 ) lectable, 1960’s, small Jumbo sized cots. (360)565-5414 ceramic Asian figurine. $50. (360)582-0180 MISC: TV’s 26” $30. 20” L E A F G UA R D : 2 2 0 ’ , with vhs $20. 13” with new in box. Paid $150. remote. $10. 452-9685 $75. (360)681-2747 MISC: Whites medal deLENS: Sigma 18-125 tector w/carr y case. m m zo o m , fo r N i ko n . $150. obo. 452-6842 $80. (360)477-4776 MIZUNO IRONS. Ladies flex graphite, like new. M A S S A G E T A B L E : $150. (360)390-8611. With case, great condition. $200. 461-0940 MONOPODS: Gitzo $65. Monoball Swiss MISC: Assorted books. Arca $200. $3 ea.Halogen lamps, (360)379-4134 (2) $15 ea. (2) End tables. $25 ea. 850-8896 PENDANT: Sequim Bay MISC: Bakers rack $30. yacht club boat Pendant. (360)640-0111 $25. (360)683-0146
E E F R E E A D S R F Monday and Tuesdays S
MOTORCYCLE GEAR TABLE: Glass coffee ta- WASHER DRIVE BELT Helmut, full suit, vest, ble, with metal base, Fits Maytag A712 and gloves, tank bag, etc., very nice. $75. Others (2new, 2used) (949)241-0371 $200/offer 808-1519. $15 (360)928-0164. P E T B A R R I E R : F o r TABLE: Oak coffee taSUV, wire mesh type, ble and “Lane” mahogaused once. $35. ny end table. $20. each (360)565-5414 (360)452-9685
WA S H E R M OTO R : 2 Speed, with har ness. Fits Maytag incl, A712, $60 (360)928-0164.
PIPEWRENCH: Crafts- TABLE: Redwood picnic man 24” pipewrench. with 2 bench seats, fold(360)681-7153 ing legs. $35. (360)460-7920 PIPEWRENCH: Rigid 36” pipewrench. TELESCOPE: Stargazer (360)681-7153 Bushnell Voyager, 6”, F/8 reflecting. $100. PLATES: Stouffer fine (208)451-6463 china, (7) gold Iris flower plates by A. Rhodes. TENT: Sleeps 6, room $140. (208)451-6463 divider, front awning. $90. (949)241-0371 P OT T E RY: S h a w n e e s a l t a n d p e p p e r s e t , TIRES: (4) Studded tires “Puss n’ Boots”. $10. for 2008 Toyota Rav 4. (360)683-9295 $25 ea. (360)496-8645
WAT E R H E AT E R : 3 0 gallon, never used, still in box. $125. (360)477-7340
P U M P : F l o t e c u t i l i t y, 1320 G.P.H., good condition. $20. 681-3811 RAIL BENCH: Portable, for chop saw. 3’H x 6’W. Galvanized with folding legs. $75. 461-2799 RECLINER: Swivel rocker chair, tan leather, good condition. $100. (360)417-5512
WAT E R S K I : O ’ B r i e n solo water ski with cover, like new, 63”. $75. (360)670-6230
WIG: Long dark blonde wig, worn 2 times, paid $200. asking $30. (360)681-2747 TIRES: T235-15, Master craft, 75% tread. $75 for pair. (360)457-4383 WINE FRIDGE: Magic chef, 24” X 33” X 23”, TRANSMISSION: Che- dual zone temp. $150. (360)631-9211 vy, 4 speed, 1938-’53, good condition. $50. (360)452-7721 WO K : Fa r b e r w a r e , electric, stainless steel,nearly new. $20. TREADMILL: $100. (360)374-9332 (360)683-9553
TRIMMER: Craftsman S C O P E : W i n c h e s t e r high wheel. $100. (360)477-1716 spotting scope kit. $50. (360)681-4491 TRIPOD: Bogen HD triSINK. Large fiber glass pod with dolly. $200 laundry tub with faucet. Firm. (360)379-4134 $15. (360)-582-0723 TV STAND: 2 drawers SOMBREROS: (2) Adult and shelf, natural, 36”w, s i ze. $ 1 8 . C h i l d s i ze 26”d, 21”h, $20. (360)457-6431 $10. (360)683-9295
M ail to: Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 Port Angeles, WA 98362
WATER SKI: Connelly solo water ski with cover, like new, 64”. $75. (360)670-6230
WOOD LATHE: Shopsmith. Drill press and woodworking tools. $200. (360)683-4357 Woodstove: $100. (360)477-7340 WOOD STOVE BOX: 19 x 1 9 , g o o d fo r s h o p. $100. Brinnon. (360)796-4813
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105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses Momma Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County
• Nice location off Uncas Road
Just listed! Nice 3br 2ba one story home lies on 2.19 acres. There is a large attached garage plus a big three bay pole barn. The yard is fenced and has many fruit trees, a garden area and a swimming pool. There are new laminate wood floors and carpet throughout the house. Kitchen has had recent upgrades such as new cabinetr y and counter tops. This home is close to town, the Discovery Trail and all the shopping in Sequim! MLS#290854 $379,000 Ed Sumpter Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim 360-683-3900 Move In Ready! Quality built 3 bed, 2 bath, 1837 sq. ft. rambler with par tial water v i ew s. O p e n c o n c e p t gourmet kitchen with tile counter tops. Eating space in kitchen plus lovely area off entry for formal dining. Decks off living room & master bed. Large, nicely landscaped .20 acre lot. Close to National Park Visitor Center & college. MLS#290765$274,500 Jean Irvine UPTOWN REALTY (360) 417-2800
• Western por tion has territorial view • PUD In at Road • Par tially ed/logged
wood-
• Level/medium slope • Great Price! MLS#290762 Priced to sell ONLY $75,000 Team Thomsen UPTOWN REALTY (360) 808-0979 Price IMPROVEMENT!!! Don’t miss this impeccable 2684 sq ft 3 bedroom home. Other features: 3.5 baths, upgraded Kitchen, skylights, 2 Dining areas, Activity room, 2,000 sq ft Gar/shop, 2.5 acres and m o r e. 6 2 Pa t t e r s o n Road MLS#281327 Now Only $315,000 Dave Ramey UPTOWN REALTY (360) 417-2800 You will love this VERY quiet & peaceful home with a gorgeous salt water view. Listen to the soothing waves putting you to sleep, entertaining or sipping your morning coffee on the expansive deck. Sugar maple cabinets with faux granite laminate countertops with a garden window & pull out pantr y. Dining room slider to the outside deck, firm trim package including doors. Downstairs family room has a wet bar with sink, 2nd fireplace & exterior entrance. Convenient location to both Sequim & Port Angeles. MLS#281675 $249,900 Holly Coburn (360) 457-0456 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
one of the 2 Decks • L ove l y L a n d s c a p e d Yard w/Mature Plants
311 For Sale Manufactured Homes
417-2810
HOUSES/APT IN PORT ANGELES STUDIO..............$550/M A 1BD/1BA ........$575/M 605 Apartments 6010 Appliances Clallam County A 1BD/1BA ........$575/M CARLSBORG: 2 br., 2 H 1BD/1BA ........$575/M ba. apartment, with garage. $950. First, last, deH 2BD/1BA ........$650/M post. (360)460-4680 or (360)-6833296 A 2BD/2BA ........$675/M 665 Rental A 2BD/1.5BA .....$775/M Duplex/Multiplexes A 2BD/1BA ........$900/M WASHER / DRYER SEQ: 2 Br. 1 ba. Bright, H 2BD/1BA ........$900/M l a u n d r y, g a r a g e a n d W h i r l p o o l , 2 y r s o l d . $700. (916)730-3801. large yard. $900. (360)774-6004 H 4BD/1.75BA .$1000/M 6025 Building H 3BD/2BA ......$1300/M 683 Rooms to Rent Materials Roomshares
COMPLETE LIST @ 551281331
Home on 15 acres Completely remodeled and updated manufactured home on 15 acres close to town. Large garage/shop plus shed. Beautiful mountain view. Very private. MLS#290766 Only $285,000 Jeanine Cardiff (360)460-9221 JACE The Real Estate Company
• Near Discovery Bay
(360)
1111 Caroline St. Port Angeles Properties by
Inc.
RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS
FSBO: MFG. 3 Br., 2 • Community Pool, Ten- ba., in Por t Townsend. nis & Pickleball Courts 1,333 sf., on foundation, large kitchen, 6x24 • RV Parking & Beach porch, 8x8 storage shed, Cabana, Nightly Security large yard, good locaSvc. 605 Apartments tion, on cul de sac, close MLS#758900/290451 Clallam County to stores and hospital. $225,000 House empty or full Team Schmidt household. $205,000. (360)460-0331 Properties by (360)385-3175 WINDERMERE Inc. SUNLAND MOBILE: Doublewide ‘79, very roomy, 2 Br. 2 Truly Exceptional bath. Large cor ner lot Home with privacy. Nice CondiE x q u i s i t e p r o p e r t y ! 5 tion, quiet senior park 5 master suites. Generous m i l e s f r o m S e q u i m . living spaces. Stunning $32,000 obo. outdoor patios & barn. (719)382-8356 COMMERCIAL Impeccable gardens. A beautiful place to call HOMES home or hold special 505 Rental Houses ev e n t s . A m u s t s e e ! Clallam County MLS#776410 APARTMENTS Jamie Jensen CENTRAL P.A.: Charm(360) 620-9351 ing cottage. Fenced yard John L. Scott Poulsbo a n d g a r a g e, 2 b r. , 1 bath, new heat pump. GARAGE SALE ADS N o s m o k i n g , p e t s by Call for details. p e r m i s s i o n , r e f s . r e - P.A.: 1 Br., $600 mo., 360-452-8435 $300 dep., utilities incl., quired. $950. 1-800-826-7714 no pets. (360)457-6196. (360)460-2502
452-1326
RENTALS AVAILABLE
452-1326
SEQUIM: Fur nished 1 Br. $380, plus $350 deposit, plus electric. (360)417-9478
1163 Commercial Rentals
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
Terry Neske 360-477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
Picturesque Snow Creek meandering through Property!! • 8.73 acres
Unobstructed panoramic water view Just listed classic brick home on .82 acres in • Freshwater Bay Area Port Angeles. 3 bd. 1 3/4 • C l e a r e d A r e a f o r ba., formal dining, breakfast nook & family room. Homesite MLS#290861 Won’t last • L o t s o f Tr e e s a n d at $285,000 Harriet Reyenga Trails (360) 457-0456 WINDERMERE • Driveway Installed PORT ANGELES • Water & Power Along WATER VIEW Road • 3BD 3.5 BA, 2436 Sq. Ft. Multi-Level MLS#290686 $74,000 • Master Suite w/2BA & Kathy Brown Office Space (360) 461-4460 COLDWELL BANKER • Lower Level Rec UPTOWN REALTY Room, Bonus Rm & BA Stunning View! Beautiful .25 acre corner • Kitchen w/Stainless lot in Diamond Point with Appliances, Pull Outs, panoramic views of the Pantry Strait, Protection Island, • 3 Decks, Pet Friendly Mt. Baker, Cascades & Discovery Bay! Lot has Low Maintenance Yard MLS#759157/290458 very gentle slope. Lovely $349,900 Madrona and evergreen Deb Kahle trees provide privacy all (360) 683-6880 around except for the WINDERMERE northern view side. WithSUNLAND in walking distance to the community beach & Water Views boat launch. Last 4 bed, 3 bath home cenavailable lot with such trally located. Hardwood an open view! MLS#290197 Now only floors and all new carpets. Newer roof, and $72,500! new stainless appliances. Sherry Grimes Attached 1 car garage, UPTOWN REALTY fully fenced back yard w/ (360)417-2786 RV parking. Nicely landscaped. SWEETHEART IN MLS#290866 $222,900 SUNLAND Jennifer Felton • 3 BD 2.5 BA, 1600 Sq. (360) 460-9513 Ft. On 6th Fairway WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES • French Doors Lead to
by Mell Lazarus
PRIVATE HOMESITE • 4.5 Acres
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
Live with a View! Big saltwater view from this beautiful one level home up on Mount Pleasant. Master suite with sitting room on one side of the house, bedrooms with den/office on t h e o t h e r. O v e r t w o acres to enjoy along with fenced back yard. MLS#290863 $360,000 Jeanine Cardiff (360)460-9221 JACE The Real Estate Company
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
Heavy industrial land One of a kind 22+ acre parcel zoned heavy industrial within the city limits. Located at the corner of Critchfield & Edgewood on the west side of town. Close proximity to Fairchild International Airport, Highway 101 West and the H i g h w a y 1 0 1 Tr u c k Route. Level topography, mountain view and Dry Creek frontage. 3 Phase power to property. Property can be split into four 5 acre parcels. Buyer to verify to their own satisfaction.
❘
5A246724
D A For items E $200 and under S E D A E FR E E R E F R F
Properties by
Inc.
RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS
452-1326
OFFICE FOR RENT O f f i c e i n d ow n t ow n 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.
PLACE YOUR AD ONLINE With our new Classified Wizard you can see your ad before it prints! www.peninsula dailynews.com
6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
6100 Misc. Merchandise
FIREWOOD: $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special for $499. Credit card accepted. (360)582-7910 www.portangeles firewood.com
PET CRATE: New Petco crate, used once, 48” black with premium foam pad. Ex cond. $190. (360)417-6614
FIREWOOD: 6 CORD SPECIAL, $899. 2 weeks only! www.portangelesfire wood.com (360)582-7910
6065 Food & Farmer’s Market
BAND SAWMILL: will cut your logs into custom lumber mill located on Deer Park Rd. 7’ to 20’ length. Online Newspaper Ad has picture and more infor mation. call 360-460-9226 for an appointment or questions
BEER GEAR: Steeping pot and bags, spouted bu cke t s, hy g r o m e t e r, bubblers, brushes, funnel, glass car boy, 15# malt, bottle capper, cork setter, 60+ brown latch b o t t l e s, r e c i p e b o o k . $350. (360)460-2796. Text or leave message. FLOORING: Mohawk Laminate. Brand new, beautiful oak colored, 6080 Home still in boxes. 380sq. ft. Furnishings Selling for $2. a sq. ft., must sell as lot. FURNITURE: King ma(360)477-5111 ple bedroom set, $450 o b o. 7 ’ s o fa a l m o s t G A R A G E D O O R : new,$100 obo. Thomas8’x8’, 1 year old, 2” in- ville dining room set, 6 sulation, row of win- chairs, table, china cabidows, new hardware. net. $1200. Full service $500. (360)683-8810. china set from Japan, N o r i t a ke 5 6 9 3 , $ 5 0 0 obo. 2 coffee tables. 6045 Farm Fencing (360)681-6825
& Equipment
TRACTOR: 1942? John Deere Model L. Nicely restored; Run and drives excellent; Many extras; Beautiful!!! Photos of r e s t o ra t i o n ava i l a bl e. Call for details. $5,500 OBO 360-452-2484
6105 Musical Instruments
Tenor Sax. Legacy Student model bought new thru Amazon for a spare. incl mouth piece, neck strap and soft case. Sequim, $200 price firm. (360)912-4677
6115 Sporting Goods
TERRA TRIKE: Model “Path” Almost new, with H o n d a m o t o r. $ 1 , 0 0 0 obo. (360)683-9667 TWO RECUMBENT TRIKES:Sun model SXS. $750. Lightfoot G r e e n w a y. $ 1 0 0 0 . Both excellent condition. (360)683-8810.
6125 Tools
TOOLS: Delta “Model 1 0 ” R a d i a l A r m S aw, great condition. $150 obo., Porter cable table r o u t e r, $ 1 0 0 o b o. , C r a f t s m a n t a bl e s aw with table. $100 obo. (360)683-5090.
MATTRESS SET Queen, like-new, clean, firm, organic cot6140 Wanted ton/wool, steel frame, & Trades mattress encasing and bedding. Original paperWANTED: Old tools and work from Nontoxic Enhand planes. Call Les at vironments, Inc. $250. (360)385-0822 (360) 683-5648
6100 Misc. Merchandise
6135 Yard & Garden
MISC: Full kitchen set of cabinets,$350. Cabinets for 2 bathrooms, $75 ea. Futon, $75. Leather reclining couch, $175. Rec l i n i n g l e a t h e r c h a i r, $95. All prices are OBO. (360)582-1215
RIDING LAWNMOWERS $400 to $900. Some with bags. Call Kenny, (360)775-9779.
FIREWOOD: Log truck TRAILER: 14’ Tandem full. $1500. axle. Heavy duty. $500. (360)460-4294. (360)808-6009 after 6pm
Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714
6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
LONG DISTANCE No Problem!
Classified
B8 TUESDAY, MAY 19, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
8180 Garage Sales 8180 Garage Sales 8180 Garage Sales 8180 Garage Sales 7035 General Pets 9820 Motorhomes PA - Central PA - Central PA - Central PA - Central FRIENDS OF THE LIB R A RY T H R E E - DAY BAG OF BOOKS SALE: Thursday 5/21, Saturday 5/23 and Tuesday 5/26, star ting at l0:00 a.m. One free raffle ticket for each bag of books purchased for a drawing for a $l0 gift certificate each day. 2210 South Peabody. New books added each day. Each bag: $2.00.
RUN A FREE AD FOR ITEMS PRICED $200 AND UNDER
8183 Garage Sales PA - East
• 2 ads per household per week • Run as space permits Mondays &Tuesdays • Private parties only • No firewood or lumber • 4 lines, 2 days • No Garage Sales • No pets or livestock
Ad 1
WA N T E D : Q u a l i t y items in good condition for garage sale June 19-20. Proceeds b e n e f i t WAG , l o c a l dog rescue. Accepting kitchen, household items, linens furniture, garden/outdoor furniture etc. Call to arrange pick up (360)683-0932
Ad 2
7030 Horses
Deadline: Friday at 4 p.m.
PUPPIES: AKC Siberian Husky. 2 black and white fe m a l e s. R e a d y n ow. $900./obo. Mike text or call (360)640-3483.
MOTORHOME: Class A, Damon ‘95 Intruder. 34’, Diesel 230 Cummins turboed after cool, with 6 speed Allison, Oshgosh f ra m e, 8 0 k m i l e s, n o slides, plus more! $21,500/obo. PUPPY: 10 week old fe(360)683-8142 male golden doodle puppy. Light tan, will be ap- RV: ‘91 Toyota 21’.V-6, proximately 50 pounds. C r u i s e c o n t r o l , ove r $900, (425)478-5076 drive, 90K miles. $9,900. (360)477-4295 STUD: AKC Black Lab f o r S t u d . J o n a s h a s RV: ‘ 9 3 W i n n e b a g o. good hunting lines and is Class A, very good cona great waterfowl/upland dition, 88k mi., 454 eng., bird dog.He weighs 85 lots of storage, full bedl b s a n d h a s a n i c e room, high rise toilet, square head. We can s e l f l e v e l i n g j a c k s . send more pictures upon $18,000. (360)457-3979 request, $500 stud fee or pick of the liter. For more infor mation you 9832 Tents & can text or call at Travel Trailers (360)461-2269. PUPPIES: Border Collie p u p s, r e d a n d w h i t e, black and white, tri color. First shots. $250. to $400 each. (360)7324358 (360)865-7497.
9820 Motorhomes
HORSE TRAILER: 2 horse straight load, tand e m a x l e, n ew t i r e s. $1500 OBO. (360)417-7685
Name
7035 General Pets
Address KITTENS: Siamese/Pers i a n , l o n g h a i r, bl u e point. $100. (360)461-6472.
Phone No
Mail to:
Bring your ads to:
Peninsula Daily News Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 305 West 1st St., Port Angeles Port Angeles, WA 98362 Sequim Gazette/Peninsula Daily News 147 W. Washington, Sequim or FAX to: (360) 417-3507 NO PHONE CALLS
POODLES: Standard Parti. 4 females, 1 male, $1,000-1,200. (360)670-9674
3A574499
PUPPIES: 7 Labradoodle angel pups, 6 weeks old, browns and blacks. $700. (360)683-9528.
Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com
MOTORHOME: ‘85 Class C, 3,000k mi on motor and tires. $3,000 obo. (360)808-1134
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
TRAVEL TRAILER: ‘06 , Thor , Dutchmen/Rainier model 18/SC trailer for sale , good condition please contact us at (360)732-4271
BAYLINER: ‘79 Victoria, 2 br cabin cruiser. Great cond. Newer engine and outdrive. New upholstry. $6,500 obo. (360)912-4922
BOAT: Larson, 16’, 40 horsepower mercur y motor, Eagle depth finder, 2 life vests, with trailer. $2000/obo (360)417-7685
BOAT: ‘11, Grandy, 12’, rowing / sailing skiff, built by the boat school in 5TH WHEEL: Alpenlite, 2011. Includes the full ‘83, 19’ well maintained, sailing package, with e v e r y t h i n g w o r k s . oars and trailer. Good shape. $4,000/obo. $2,700. (808)-895-5634 (360)850-2234 TRAILER: 2004 MontaBOAT: 19’ Fiberglass, na 5th Wheel. $14,000 trailer, 140 hp motor. Ed at (206)414-0636 $2,800. 683-3577
BOAT: Searay, 18’, fun family boat. $6,500. (360)457-3743 or (360)460-0862
9802 5th Wheels
9808 Campers & Canopies CAMPER/TRUCK: ‘93 Lance camper, model 880, very clean, 1 owner, self contained. Chevy 1 ton pickup dually, good condition. ext cab, 113K miles, fully furnished and ready to go. $7,500. (360)457-9568
TRAILER: 01’ Arctic Fox 26X with slide. Sleeps 6, rear bedroom. Excellent, o n e o w n e r . $12,500 452-7969 or 452-5990 T R A I L E R : ‘ 0 8 , Jay c o Bunaglo, 40’, with 36’ aluminum awning, 2 slides. $17,500. (206)595-0241
MOTORHOME: ‘06 Winnebago Aspect 26’. Very clean inside, little sign of wear outside. Mileage is 57,000 on a Ford 450 engine. Options include aluminum wheels, awning over slide out, trailer hitch, full body paint, rear vision camera, and much more. This rig is easy to drive and man e u ve r i n t r a f f i c a n d parking lots. Nada valuation $50,600. $48,000. (360)681-0881
9832 Tents & Travel Trailers
TENT TRAILER: Coachman ‘11 Clipper 126 Spor t. Pop up, Queen bed on each end. Fr idge, stove, stereo, furnace, hot water heater, excellent condition. Ve r y l i t t l e u s e. Ta bl e 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: ‘99 Sierra, 25’, needs TLC. $7000. (360)417-0803
TRAILER: Coleman Williamsburg tent trailer. Sleeps 6, in and outdoor shower. In and outside stoves, furnace, fridge, awning, dual propane LONG DISTANCE tanks, hydraulic lift and No Problem! Thule. Canvas and plastic sides in great condi- Peninsula Classified tion, a must see! $3,200. 1-800-826-7714 (360) 640-3503
TRAILER: ‘96 Shorelander, galvanized, fits 19-21’ boat, many new parts. $850/obo. (360)460-9285
9817 Motorcycles
BOAT: ‘96 Sea Doo Jet boat. $4,500. (360)452-3213
B OAT: G l a s s p l y 1 7 ’ , good cond., excellent fishing and crabbing setup, great running 90hp Yamaha and 15hp Evinrude elec star t, power tilt, new pot puller with HARLEY: ‘06 Custom Deluxe. 25K miles. pots. 4,800. Comes with extras: rear (360)775-4082 seat, windshield, sissy bar. New tires. Harley BOAT: Glassply, 18’, 90 Custom Paint #123 of hp ENV. 15 hp. kicker, 150. Immaculate condiready to fish. $4,700. tion. $12,500. Call Lil (360)808-4692 John Kartes. (360)460-5273
CHB: ‘81 34’ TriCabin Trawler, (Por t Ludlow). Well maintained! Ready to cruise. fiberglass hull, single Ford Lehman diesel engine, bow thruster, v berth and stern state rooms, 2 heads, electronics: radar, chart plotter, auto pilot and more, dingy with outboard, recent bottom paint and zinks. $33,900. (360)301-0792 to view.
Motorcycle. 2007 Honda Rebel motorcycle CMX 250, Red, 300 miles $2,400. (360) 582-9725 MOTORCYCLE: ‘98 Honda, 1100 ST, Red. (360)452-9829
YAMAHA: ‘05 Yamaha YZ 125, runs great. $1,300 (360)461-9054
D •I •R •E •C •T •O •R •Y
TRACTOR
PAINTING
FOX PAINTING Painting & Pressure Washing
457-6582 808-0439
41595179
(360) 683-7655 (360) 670-9274
We Need Work Interior Painting
larryshomemaintenaceonline.com
Drywall Repair
RDDARDD889JT
LARRYHM016J8
Serving Jefferson & Clallam County
Service On All Major Brands All Major Appliances
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No Job Too Small
We go that extra mile for your tree needs • Tree Removal • Tree Trimming • View Enhancement
# CCEAGLECB853BO
360-461-5663
Excavator - CAT - Backhoe Loader - Roller 5 & 10 yd Dump Trucks
APPLIANCE SERVICE INC. 457-9875 914 S. Eunice St. Port Angeles
YOUR LOCAL FULL-SERVICE DEALER & PARTS SOURCE
Flooring
Appliances
Interior/Exterior Painting & Pressure Washing
STUMP REMOVAL
Free Estimates • Senior Discounts Licensed • Bonded • Insured
GOT STUMPS?
TREE SERVICE
FOR FREE ESTIMATES Lic# ROOTZ**913KQ
360-477-2709
CALL NOW To Advertise
LIC#WESTCCT871QN
541301886
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OR
1-800-826-7714
Reg#FINIST*932D0
(360) 477-1805 Every Home Needs “A Finished Touch”
SMALL LOAD DELIVERY
Soils •Bark •Gravel SmallLoadDelivery.com
al Speci
4 Yards of Beauty Bark Medium Fir $135 (plus tax)
Includes Delivery
808-1517
471080139
360-452-8435
I WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY REASONABLE BID
42989644
Cont ID#PENINCS862JT
TV Repair
3 6 0 - 4 52 - 3 7 0 6 • w w w . n w h g . n e t 451054676
360.928.9550
TV REPAIR
PAINTING
13 Years Experience Veteran Owned & Operated
Port Angeles, WA www.peninsulachimneyservices.com
Call (360) 683-8332
/PSUIXFTU &MFDUSPOJDT
23597511
4C636738
Serving the Olympic Peninsula
CONSTRUCTION, INC.
Excavation and General Contracting
• Site Prep • Utilities • Septic Systems • Roads/Driveways
360-683-4881
Cabinets
Sweeping • Water Sealing Caps • Liners • Exterior Repair
GEORGE E. DICKINSON
-$% t 1MBTNB t 1SPKFDUJPO t $35 7JOUBHF "VEJP &RVJQNFOU
Please call or visit our showroom for lowest prices on:
CHIMNEY SERVICES PENINSULA CHIMNEY SERVICES, LLC
EXCAVATING/SEPTIC
Contractor # GEORGED098NR Mfd. Installer Certified: #M100DICK1ge991KA
Lic.#FLAWKTS873OE
Quality Work at Competitive Prices
Washington State Contractors License LANDSC1963D2
Visit our website: www.dickinsonexcavation.com Locally Operated for since 1985
flawktreeservice@yahoo.com Show us Any written estimate and we will match or beat that estimate!
Contr#KENNER1951P8
LANDSCAPING
29667464
360-461-7180
Call For Free Estimate We Build Rain or Shine
APPLIANCES
AA
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431015297
551012185
EXCAVATING/LANDSCAPING
Licensed, Bonded & Insured
DONARAG875DL
54988219
Cedar • Composite • Tigerwood • Sunwood – Design and Construction –
24608159
551139687
360-460-0518
360-477-1935 • constructiontilepro.com
360-681-0132
531256831
4B968949
EEK BUILDER AGLE CR S E Specializing in Decks • Patios and Porches
TREE SERVICE
Lic. # ANTOS*938K5
360-452-2054 360-461-2248
(360) 582-9382
All Carpentry, Kitchen & Bath Tile • Stone • Laminate • Hardwood
Open 7 Days • Mon-Sat 10-5 p.m. Sun 10-4 p.m. 4911 Sequim Dungeness Way (in Dungeness, just past Nash’s)
DECKS AND PATIOS
Complete Lawn Care Hauling Garbage Runs Free Estimates BIG DISCOUNT for Seniors
“AFFORDABLE HOME IMPROVEMENTS” We Do It All
ND New Dungeness Nursery .com Landscape Design & Construction. 360-683-5193
582-0384
TREE SERVICE SPECIALIZING IN TREES
(360) 460-3319
Washer Dryer Refrigeration Range Dishwasher
✓ Yard Service
EARLY BIRD LAWN CARE
FAST SERVICE
Over 25 Years Experience
✓ Senior Discount
LAWNCARE
ANTHONY’S SERVICE
Lyle Lyster, Jr
GENERAL CONST. ARNETT
TREE SERVICE
• Licensed • Fully Insured • FREE • Senior Estimates Discount
Tree Removal Canopy Reduction Dead Wood Removal View Enhancement Professional Clean Up Free Estimates
Tom’s Appliance Service
PROPERTY MAINTENANCE
471080142
Larry Muckley
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
Jami’s
4A1161355
Licensed Cont#FOXPAPC871D7
All Repairs Needed • Siding • Windows • Gutters Environmentally friendly Products Exterior Chemical Treatment Power Washing Gutter Cleaning • Window Washing
360.452.7938
Grounds Maintenance Specialist • Mowing • Trimming • Pruning • Tractor Work • Landscaping • Spring Sprinkler Fire Up • Fall Cleanup and Pruning
32743866
(360) (360)
Exterior Painting
Licensed and Bonded Contr. #ESPAI*122BJ
Larry’s Home Maintenance
In s id e , O u ts id e , A ny s id e
Peninsula Since 1988
ALL HOME IMPROVEMENTS
45769373
I Fix Driveways,
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551210231 5-17
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Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9434 Pickup Trucks 9817 Motorcycles 9180 Classics & Collect. Others Others Others F O R D : ‘ 0 3 R a n g e r, E d g e , ex t e n d e d c a b 4x4, 4.0L V6, Auto, alloys, new tires, running boards, matching leer canopy, bedliner, priv glass, rear slider, 4 openingdoors, ac, mp3 cd stereo, dual front airbags. only 96,000 original mi! $10,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 CHEVY: ‘80 Monza 2+2. graymotors.com V-8, 350 c.i. engine, Alu m . m a n i fo l d , H o l l ey HYUNDAI: ‘08 Sonata carb., alum. radiator and trans. cooler, A.T. floor GLS Sedan 2.4l 4 cyl, console, Posi 3:08, 5 a u t o, n ew t i r e s, p w r stud axels and hubs, windows, door locks, & front and rear sway bars, mirrors, cruise ctrl, tilt, disc brakes, pwr. steer- ac, cd mp3 stereo with i n g . N ew Au t o M e t e r xm radio, dual front, gauges, paint and tires. side, & rear airbags. $4,200. Located in Quil- only 49,000 mi! $10,995 cene, WA. Call Brad GRAY MOTORS (360)774-0915. 457-4901 graymotors.com
WHAT A DEAL SUZUKI: ‘12 Blvd. CruisCHEVY: ‘11 HHR. LT. er, VL 800, immaculate, Chevy: ‘70 3/4T 4x4, au- Ve r y g o o d c o n d i t i o n . tomatic. GMC: ‘72 1/2T 113K ml. $15,000/obo. extras. $5,000 obo. Call 4x4 4 speed. BOTH for for details. 452-3764 (360)640-3945 $5,500. (360)452-5803
9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect. 9292 Automobiles Others BMW: ‘07 Z4 3.0 SI Abandoned Vehicle R o a d s t e r. 4 7 K m i l e s, Auction w e l l m a i n t a i n e d , l i ke In accordance with RWC new. $20,000. 46.55.130, the following (360)477-4573 ve h i c l e s w i l l b e a u c t i o n e d a t 4 3 1 8 D RY CREEK RD., PORT ANGELES, WA 98363 on 05/20/2015 at 10:00 AM. Sign Up at office from 9:00 a.m. to 9:45 a.m. absolutely no late sign ups!! VIEWING AT THIS BUICK: ‘66 Skylark Cus- TIME. CHRIS’ TOWING tom Convertible, Custom paint, Ready for Sum- 1975 - CHEV - PU - WA License #B57579H mer.$16,500. 683-3408 1990- FORD ECONO WA License #B65882L C H E V Y: ‘ 0 3 S S R . 8 k original miles, $22,500. EVERGREEN TOWING (360)640-1688 PORT ANGELES 1985 - OLDS - CALCP WA License #989XNF 1992 - CHEV VAN/CON WA LICENSE #526ZGX 1996 - MERC SABSW WA License #AEJ6830 1996 - HONDA ACC4D WA License #APS2272 1997 - STRN SC2CP WA License #AGA7731 1998 - NISS PU - WA FORD: ‘41 Hot Rod, License #B59822X 302, C4, 9” “Finished” $15,000. (360)683-8183 PENINSULA TOWING 1989 TOYT CAM4D WA License # APS3088 1994 - OLDS CUT4D WA License # AGM6223 1998 VOLKS GOL2D WA License # AER6274 1998 CHEV MOCCP WA License #460ZXZ 2007 FORD RANPU JAGUAR: ‘89 RED Jagu a r X J S C o nve r t i bl e. WA License # 89944DP 79K miles. $6500. ALPINE AUTO INC (425)508-7575 1988 - CHEV CIPU - WA License #B65793P JEEP: 1945 Willys Milit a r y. R e s t o r e d , n o t 1193 - HONDA CIVCP WA License #ALB2849 show. $10,000 obo. 1996 - PONT GRM4D (360)928-3419 WA License # AGA7681 VW: ‘70, Karmann Ghia, p r o j e c t , m a ny ex t ra s. $750 or trade. (360)681-2382 VW BEETLE: 1969 Conver tible. Must sell this 1 9 6 9 V W C o nve r t i bl e 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 e n g i n e s t i l l r u n s, a l though the car hasn’t b e e n d r i ve n i n t h r e e years. Title clean and c l e a r ! N o t ra d e s j u s t cash. If you are interested, I can provide LOTS more details and pictures. $2,500. Please call (605)224-4334.
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
MAZDA: ‘99 Miata, Custom leather seats, excellent condition. $7,300. (360)461-0929 SCION: ‘06, TC, 138K mi., new tires, brakes, alignmnet, sunroof. $5,800. (360)912-2727
THUNDERBIRD: ‘96, classic, runs great, reduced, 140K ml. D O D G E : ‘ 9 9 R a m $2400/obo. 775-6681. 2500, club cab, slt longbed, 4x4. 5.9l 24v i6 9434 Pickup Trucks cummins turbo diesel, Others auto, chrome, new tires, spray-in bedliner, tool box, soft tonneau cover, C H E V Y : ‘ 7 6 3 / 4 To n 5th wheel hitch, trailer pick-up GREAT ENGINE brakes, running boards, New 454, carb, battery, p w r w i n d o w s , d o o r radiator, fuel pump, turlocks, & mirrors, cruise bo 400, short shaft. Must ctrl, tilt, ac, cassette t a k e e n t i r e t r u c k . stereo, dual front air- $2,000/obo. Before 6pm (360)461-6870 bags. $12,995 CHEVY: ‘94 Half Ton, GRAY MOTORS Z71. $3000. 457-4901 (360)452-4336 graymotors.com CHEVY: ‘97 Chevrolet FORD: ‘00 Ranger, XLT 3500 4x4 dully, reg. cab Super Cab, Stepside. 9’ flatbed, 6.5 liter turbo Rear slider, priv glass, diesel, 116K ml. Also All Elec. NEV Neigh- keyless entry, 4 open- comes with 3’ removable borhood elec. Vehicle. ing doors, pwr windows, m e t a l b e d r a c k s . 4 8 vo l t N e a r l y n ew door locks, & mirrors, $6,000/obo. batteries, good tires, cruise ctrl, tilt, ac, dual (360)640-0829 up graded battery front airbags. only charger. charge with 94,000 original mi! DODGE: ‘93 Cummins. regular household cur2x4 with protech flatbed. $7,995 rent. Good for student, 135k mi. $12,000. GRAY MOTORS can’t go over 25 mph. (360)271-6521. 457-4901 For more details graymotors.com $3,000. FORD: ‘04 Ranger. 1 (360)385-1583. owner, low mileage, 35K MERCURY: ‘95 Cougar miles. Exel. condition, XR7, 4.6 V8. AC, auto HYUNDAI: ‘09 Elantra, 4 bed liner and Tonneau d o o r . 9 , 2 0 0 m i l e s , t r a n . , s u n r o o f . 7 7 K cover. $10,000 firm. miles. $2500. 681-5068 $11,500. (425)985-3596 (360)797-1097
All you need to cash in on this opportunity are a garage sale kit from the Peninsula Daily News and a garage sale ad in classified.
FREE GARAGE SALE KIT • Signs • Pen • Price Stickers • Tips and Rules • Arrows
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9556 SUVs Others
FORD: ‘83 Pick up. 4x4. JEEP: ‘01 Grand Chero2 gas tanks. 48,365 mi. kee LTD. 153k mi., ex cond. All service papers. $2500. (360)683-3967 Black w/ bone interior. $5650 obo. (360)457FORD: ‘96 Ranger EX 4898 or (360)504-5633. with canopy. 4 Cyl. new clutch and tires, good J E E P : ‘ 9 7 , W ra n g l e r, body. $3,500. Sahara. Low mileage, (360)452-2118 recent engine work. Some r ust, r uns well. Removable top and 9556 SUVs doors. Must sell. $2900. Others In Sequim. (303)330-4801. FORD: ‘05, Expedition, 169K ml., r uns great, with winter tires. $4,700. (360)775-4301
9730 Vans & Minivans Others FORD: ‘06 Passenger van. V-8, 350, Runs excellent, good tires. $7,500 obo. 460-2282
FORD: ‘11, Explorer Limited. 79,500 miles. Excellent Condition. 4-wheel drive, loaded w/ o p t i o n s : n av s y s t e m , touch screen, parking assist, remote locks and star t, back-up camera $28,000. (360)797-3247.
9931 Legal Notices Clallam County
TUESDAY, MAY 19, 2015 B9 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM In the Matter of the Estate of: WAYNE L. DANIELSON, JR., Deceased. NO.15-4-00010-1 NOTICE TO CREDITORS ____________________________________ The person named below has been appointed as Administratrix of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving o n o r m a i l i n g t o t h e A d m i n i s t ra t r i x , o r t h e Administratrix’s attorney, at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Administratrix served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(3); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets.
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LEGAL NOTICES: SUMMONS: In the superior court of the State of Washinton for the of Clallam, NO: Since readers often 14 2 00407 1 scan, include a R o n a l d W. E r i c k s o n , catchy headline Plaintiff Date of First Publication: May 5, 2015. vs. and/or a Tammy Danielson FORD: ‘97 Explorer XL, Port of Port Angeles, et Personal Representative: photo or graphic. 4 x 4 , 1 5 5 , 0 4 3 m i l e s , al, Defendants $2,500. (360)417-2967. Attorney for Personal Representative: The State of Washington You are a reader, so Lane J. Wolfley JEEP: ‘84 Grand Chero- to the said Puget Sound Address for Mailing or Service: make sure the ad kee, wrecked nose clip. M i l l s & T i m b e r C o r p. 713 E 1st St, Port Angeles WA 98362 looks appealing and stockholders (PSM&T); $800/obo 360-912-2727 and all other persons or is clear to you. parties unknown claim- Tammy Danielson, Personal Representative WOLFLEY & WOLFLEY, P.S. ing any right, title, es9935 General tate, lien, or interest in Legals the real estate and water __________________________________ rights described in the Lane J. Wolfley, WSBA #9609 Attorney for Petitioner complaint herein: Legal Notice Pub: May 5, 12, 19, 2015 Legal No. 630261 The Quinault Child Support Services Program Yo u a r e h e r e by s u m hereby notifies the Re- moned to appear within TS No WA08002742-14-1 APN 033034140050 TO No 8499090 NOTICE OF spondent, Shirley L. But- sixty days after the date TRUSTEE’S SALE PURSUANT TO THE REVISED CODE OF WASHINGTON ler, that their presence of the first publication of CHAPTER 61.24 ET. SEQ. I. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on June 19, is required on June 24th, this summons, to wit, 2015, 10:00 AM, at the first floor main lobby to the entrance of the County 2015 at 2:30 PM, for a within sixty days after Courthouse, 223 East 4th, Port Angeles, WA 98362, MTC Financial Inc. dba hearing in the Quinault t h e 1 9 t h d ay o f M ay Trustee Corps, the undersigned Trustee, will sell at public auction to the highTribal Court in Taholah, 2015, and defend the est and best bidder, payable, in the form of cash, or cashier’s check or certified Grays Harbor County, above entitled action in checks from federally or State chartered banks, at the time of sale the followWashington. Failure to the above entitled court, ing described real property, situated in the County of Clallam, State of Washappear or respond within and answer the com- ington, to-wit: THAT PORTION OF GOVERNMENT LOT 2 OF SECTION 34, 60 days, from the first plaint of the plaintiff Ro- TOWNSHIP 30 NORTH, RANGE 3 WEST, W.M., CLALLAM COUNTY, date of Publication, may nald W. Erickson, and WASHINGTON DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT A POINT ON result in a default. For serve a copy of your an- THE CENTERLINE OF COUNTY ROAD NO. 9544, KNOWN AS THE OLD more information, please swer upon the under- OLYMPIC HIGHWAY, THAT IS SOUTH 87°13`10” EAST A DISTANCE OF call (360) 276-8211 ext. signed plaintiff, at his of- 1530.48 FEET AND SOUTH 01°37`52” WEST A DISTANCE OF 1203.62 fice below stated; and in FEET FROM THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF THE NORTHEAST 1/4 OF 685. case of your failure so to SAID SECTION 34; THENCE NORTH 51°35`10” EAST A DISTANCE OF Pub: May 5, 12,19, 2015 do, judgment will be ren- 304.00 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 51°29`49” EAST A DISTANCE OF 340 FEET Legal No: 630305 dered against you ac- TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING; RUNNING THENCE SOUTH 51°29`49” cording to the demand of EAST 160 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 51°35`10” WEST 491.75 FEET TO THE Legal Notice The Quinault Child Sup- the complaint, which has CENTERLINE OF COUNTY ROAD NO. 9544; THENCE NORTHWESTERLY port Services Program been filed with the clerk ALONG SAID CENTERLINE 156 FEET, MORE OR LESS TO A POINT DIRECTLY SOUTH 51°35`10” WEST OF THE POINT OF BEGINNING; hereby notifies the Re- of said court. s p o n d e n t , T h o m a s J. 1)Plaintiff seeks quiet ti- T H E N C E N O RT H 5 1 ° 3 5 ` 1 0 ” E A S T 4 4 4 . 3 3 F E E T TO S A I D P O I N T Lewis, that their pres- tle against PSM&Ts to OF BEGINNING; ALSO ALL THAT PORTION OF GOVERNMENT LOT 2 LYence is required on June land and water rights ING NORTHEASTERLY OF THE ABOVE DESCRIBED TRACT BETWEEN 24th, 2015 at 2:30 PM, just east of Nippon mill THE NORTHWESTERLY AND SOUTHEASTERLY LINES OF SAID TRACT for a hearing in the Qui- site; and to all property E X T E N D E D N O R T H E A S T E R LY ; E X C E P T I N G F R O M T H E nault Tribal Court in Ta- rights PSM&Ts may be ABOVE DESCRIBED PREMISES THE RIGHT OF WAY FOR COUNTY h o l a h , G r ay s H a r b o r entitled to in Clallam ROAD NO. 9544. SITUATE IN THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM, STATE OF WASHINGTON. APN: 033034140050 More commonly known as 3347 WEST C o u n t y, Wa s h i n g t o n . County; Failure to appear or re- 2)Plaintiff seeks quiet ti- SEQUIM BAY ROAD, SEQUIM, WA 98382 which is subject to that certain tle and fraud against the Deed of Trust dated as of August 29, 2007, executed by NANTHANA OLNEY, spond within 60 days, from the first date of Port and city of Port An- DAVID D. OLNEY, WIFE AND HUSBAND as Trustor(s), to secure obligations in favor of VIKING BANK as original Beneficiary recorded August 31, 2007 as Publication, may result geles; etc. in a default. For more in- Ronald W. Erickson, pro Instrument No. 2007-1208310 and the beneficial interest was assigned to se BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. and recorded July 21, 2014 as Instrument Number for mation, please call 934 W. Lauridsen Blvd. 2014-1310289 of official records in the Office of the Recorder of Clallam qoun(360) 276-8211 ext. 685. #209 ty, Washington. II. No action commenced by BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., the Pub: May 5, 12,19, 2015 Port Angeles, WA 98363 Legal No: 630304 current Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of C o u n t y o f C l a l l a m the obligation in any Court by reason of the Borrowers’ or Grantor’s default on County, WA.PUB: May the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust/Mortgage. Current Beneficiary: 26, June 2, 9, 16, 23, BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. Contact Phone No: 800-669-6650 Address: 7105 9931 Legal Notices 19, 2015 Corporate Drive, Plano, TX 75024 III. The default(s) for which this foreclosure Clallam County Legal No: 633140 is made is/are as follows: FAILURE TO PAY WHEN DUE THE FOLLOWING AMOUNTS WHICH ARE NOW IN ARREARS: DELINQUENT PAYMENT INNOTICE: ANNOUNCEMENT OF AVAILABILITY FORMATION From July 1, 2014 To February 11, 2015 Number of Payments 1 OF APPLICATION Monthly Payment $4,318.92 2 $4,258.25 5 $4,211.40 Total $33,892.42 LATE PERMIT NO.: WAG501570 CHARGE INFORMATION From July 1, 2014 To February 11, 2015 Total $546.87 PROMISSORY NOTE INFORMATION Note Dated: August 29, 2007 APPLICANT: Green Crow Timber, LLC Note Amount: $828,000.00 Interest Paid To: June 1, 2014 Next Due Date: July P.O. Box 2439 1, 2014 IV. The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: Port Angeles, WA 98362 The principal sum of $741,154.79, together with interest as provided in the Note or other instrument secured, and such other costs and fees as are due FACILITY: Elwha River Road Gravel Pit under the Note or other instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. V. Elwha River Road The above described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale Port Angeles, WA 98362 and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. Said Green Crow Timber, LLC has applied for a Na- sale will be made without warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, postional Pollutant Discharge Elimination System session or encumbrances on June 19, 2015. The defaults referred to in Para(NPDES)/State Waste Discharge Sand & Gravel graph III must be cured by June 8, 2015, (11 days before the sale date) to general permit in accordance with the provi- cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminatsions of Chapter 90.48 Revised Code of Wash- ed if at any time before June 8, 2015 (11 days before the sale) the default as ington (RCW), Chapter 173-220 Washington Ad- set forth in Paragraph III is cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. ministrative Code (WAC), and the Federal Clean Payment must be in cash or with cashier’s or certified checks from a State or federally chartered bank. The sale may be terminated any time after the June Water Act. 8, 2015 (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrower or The new facility proposes to mine, screen, Grantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance by paying the cursh, and/or wash construction sand and grav- principal and interest, plus costs, fees and advances, if any, made pursuant to el. The wastewater, must meet the requirements the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust. VI. A written Notice of Default of the Washington State Water Pollution Control was transmitted by the current Beneficiary, BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. or TrusAct and applicable regulations for a permit to tee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following address(es): ADDRESS NANbe issued. THANA L OLNEY 3347 WEST SEQUIM BAY ROAD, SEQUIM, WA 98382 DAVID D OLNEY 3347 WEST SEQUIM BAY RD, SEQUIM, WA 98382 DAVID On the basis of preliminary staff review, the De- D OLNEY 3347 WEST SEQUIM BAY ROAD, SEQUIM, WA 98382 NANTHApartment of Ecology (Ecology) proposes to is- NA OLNEY 3347 WEST SEQUIM BAY RD, SEQUIM, WA 98382 NANTHANA sue coverage under the NPDES/State Waste OLNEY 3347 WEST SEQUIM BAY ROAD, SEQUIM, WA 98382 by both first Discharge Sand & Gravel general permit. A final class and certified mail on December 30, 2014, proof of which is in the possesdetermination will not be made until all com- sion of the Trustee; and the Borrower and Grantor were personally served, if ments received, pursuant to this notice, have applicable, with said written Notice of Default or the written Notice of Default been evaluated. was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in Paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or PUBLIC COMMENT AND INFORMATION posting. VII. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due The general permit and fact sheet may be at any time prior to the sale. VIII The effect of the sale will be to deprive the viewed at Ecology website: Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all their inhttp://www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/wq/sand/in- terest in the above described property. IX. Anyone having any objections to dex.html. The application, fact sheet, proposed this sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be permit, and other related documents are also heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant available at Ecology’s Southwest Regional Of- to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of fice for inspection and copying between the any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s Sale. X. If the Borrower rehours of 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., weekdays. To ceived a letter under RCW 61.24.031: THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEobtain a copy or to arrange to view copies at the FORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME. You have only 20 Southwest Regional Office, please call 360-407- DAYS from the recording date of this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DE6365, e-mail publicdisclosureswro@ecy.wa.gov, LAY. CONTACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR OR AN ATTORNEY LICENSED or write to the address below. IN WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situation and refer you to mediation if you are eligible and it may help you save your home. See below for safe Interested persons are invited to submit written sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing counselors and legal assiscomments regarding the proposed permit. All tance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in comments must be submitted within 30 days after publication of this notice to be considered determining your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may contact for the final determination. Ecology will review the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to all public comments regarding this application housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission Teleand consider whether coverage under the Sand phone: (877) 894-4663 or (800) 606-4819 Website: www.wshfc.org The United & Gravel General Permit is appropriate for this States Depar tment of Housing and Urban Development: Telephone: (800) 569-4287 Website: www.hud.gov The statewide civil legal aid hotline for facility. Comments should be sent to: assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorneys: Telephone: (800) 606-4819 Website: www.homeownership.wa.gov NOTICE TO Carey Cholski OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS - The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled Department of Ecology to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Southwest Regional Office Grantor under the deed of trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junP.O. Box 47775 ior to the deed of trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th Olympia, WA 98504-7775 day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are E-mail comments should be sent to carey.chol- not tenants by summary proceedings under the Unlawful Detainer Act, Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a ski@ecy.wa.gov. tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060; Dated: Please bring this public notice to the attention 2/12/2015 MTC Financial Inc. dba Trustee Corps, as Duly Appointed Succesof persons who you know would be interested sor Trustee By: Athena Vaughn, Authorized Signatory MTC Financial Inc. dba in this matter. Ecology is an equal opportunity Trustee Corps 1700 Seventh Avenue, Suite 2100 Seattle WA 98101 Phone: agency. If you have a special accommodation (800) 409-7530 TDD: (800) 833-6388 For Reinstatement/Pay Off Quotes, contact MTC Financial Inc. DBA Trustee Corps TRUSTEE’S SALE INFORMAneeds, please contact Carey Cholski at 360407-6279 or TTY (for the speech and hearing im- TION CAN BE OBTAINED ONLINE AT www.priorityposting.com P1131847 5/19, 06/09/2015 paired) at 360-833-6388. PUB: May 19, June 9, 2015 Legal No:632004 PUB: May 19, 26, 2015 Legal No. 633111
PENINSULA CLASSIFIED
91190150
ATTENTION ADVERTISERS: No cancellations or corrections can be made on the day of publication. It is the Advertiser’s responsibility to check their ad on the first day of publication and notify the Classified department if it is not correct. Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., is responsible for only one incorrect insertion. All advertising, whether paid for or not, whether initially accepted or published, is subject to approval or rescission of approval by Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc. The position, subject matter, form, size, wording, illustrations, and typography of an advertisement are subject to approval of Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., which reserves the right to classify, edit, reject, position, or cancel any advertisement at any time, before or after insertion. Neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., investigates statements made directly or indirectly in any advertisement and neither makes any representations regarding the advertisers, their products, or their services or the legitimacy or value of the advertisers or their products or services. In consideration of publication of an advertisement, the Advertiser and any advertising agency that it may employ, jointly and severally, will indemnify and hold harmless Black Press Ltd./ Sound Publishing, Inc., their officers, agents, and employees against expenses (including all legal fees), liabilities, and losses resulting from the publication or distribution of advertising, including, without limitation, claims or suits for libel, violation of privacy, copyright or trademark infringement, deception, or other violations of law. Except as provided in this paragraph, neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall be liable for any damages resulting from error in or non-publication of ads, whether paid for or not, including but not limited to, incidental, consequential, special, general, presumed, or punitive damages or lost profits. The sole and exclusive remedy against Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., for any error in, or non-publication of, an ad shall be a refund of the cost of the ad or the printing of one make-good insertion, at the discretion of the Publisher; provided that Advertiser and/or its agency has paid for the ad containing the error or which was not published; otherwise, the sole remedy shall be one make-good insertion. No claim for repetition shall be allowed. No allowance shall be made for imperfect printing or minor errors. Neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall be liable for failure to print, publish, or circulate all or any portion of an advertisement or of advertising linage contracted for, if such failure is due to acts of God, strikes, accidents, or other circumstances beyond the control of Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc. Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall not be liable for errors in or non-publication of advertisements submitted after normal deadlines. Any legal action arising from these terms and conditions or relating to the publication of, or payment for, advertising shall, if filed, be commenced and maintained in any court. Other terms and conditions, stated on our Advertising Rate Cards and Contracts, may apply. This service is not to be used to defraud or otherwise harm users or others, and Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., reserves the right to disclose a user’s identity where deemed necessary to protect Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., or others or to respond to subpoenas or other lawful demands for information. All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
B10
WeatherWatch
TUESDAY, MAY 19, 2015 Neah Bay 58/48
➡
g Bellingham 69/51
Olympic Peninsula TODAY P.M. BREEZY
Port Angeles 66/48
P.M. BREEZY Port
Townsend 65/49
Sequim Olympics Freeze level: 9,000 feet 68/49
Forks 67/45
➡
Low 48 Clouds return for nighttime
Forecast highs for Tuesday, May 19
Last
New
First
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
61/49 Sun, clouds share the sky
64/53 Grayness accumulates
SATURDAY
65/50 Warm up to weekend
64/50 Game of peekaboo
Billings 58° | 39°
CANADA Victoria 69° | 53° Seattle 74° | 54°
Ocean: W wind to 10 kt. Wind waves 1 ft or less. W swell 4 ft at 11 seconds. Tonight, W wind 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 2 ft or less. W swell 4 ft at 10 seconds.
Olympia 75° | 50°
Spokane 76° | 49°
Tacoma 75° | 53° Yakima 78° | 50°
Astoria 60° | 51°
ORE.
Tides
TODAY High Tide Ht 1:24 a.m. 9.4’ 2:40 p.m. 7.6’
© 2015 Wunderground.com
San Francisco 60° | 52°
Denver 50° | 45°
Chicago 54° | 47°
Washington D.C. 87° | 68°
Los Angeles 69° | 56°
Atlanta 85° | 65°
El Paso 87° | 59° Houston 86° | 75°
Full
High Tide Ht 2:06 a.m. 9.1’ 3:27 p.m. 7.4’
8:51 p.m. 5:28 a.m. 7:58 a.m. 10:30 p.m.
Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo
Hi 86 69 74 58 81 85 87 83 87 46 86 54 70 67 90 83
Lo Prc Otlk 54 Cldy 51 Clr 47 PCldy 38 Clr 62 Rain 69 .40 Rain 64 Cldy 71 2.13 Rain 66 Rain 39 .11 Cldy 70 .06 Rain 32 1.14 Cldy 51 .05 Cldy 49 Cldy 77 PCldy 66 Cldy
THURSDAY
Low Tide Ht 9:00 a.m. -1.8’ 9:02 p.m. 2.4’
High Tide Ht 2:49 a.m. 8.6’ 4:14 p.m. 7.2’
Low Tide 9:43 a.m. 9:49 p.m.
Ht -1.4’ 2.7’
Port Angeles
3:03 a.m. 6.7’ 10:11 a.m. -1.8’ 5:50 p.m. 7.2’ 10:50 p.m. 5.1’
3:43 a.m. 6.4’ 10:54 a.m. -1.6’ 6:29 p.m. 7.3’ 11:50 p.m. 5.2’
4:25 a.m. 6.1’ 11:38 a.m. 7:27 p.m. 7.2’
-1.3’
Port Townsend
4:40 a.m. 8.3’ 11:24 a.m. -2.0’ 7:27 p.m. 8.9’
5:20 a.m. 7.9’ 12:03 a.m. 5.7’ 8:16 p.m. 9.0’ 12:07 p.m. -1.8’
6:02 a.m. 7.5’ 1:03 a.m. 9:04 p.m. 8.9’ 12:51 p.m.
5.8’ -1.4’
Dungeness Bay*
3:46 a.m. 7.5’ 10:46 a.m. -1.8’ 6:33 p.m. 8.0’ 11:25 p.m. 5.1’
4:26 a.m. 7.1’ 11:29 a.m. -1.6’ 7:22 p.m. 8.1’
5:08 a.m. 6.8’ 12:25 a.m. 8:10 p.m. 8.0’ 12:13 p.m.
5.2’ -1.3’
*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
Miami 87° | 75°
-10s
-0s
0s
sponsoring an Art and Garden Show from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, May 24, at its nursery site, 4911 Sequim-Dungeness Way, past Nash’s COUPEVILLE — Field Store. carrier landing practice Spots are available in operations for aircraft stathe retail nursery for ventioned at Naval Air Station dors, including individuals Whidbey Island at the out- with outdoor products, spelying field in Coupeville are cialty nurseries and giftscheduled for Thursday. ware. The training is schedElectricity is available, uled for mid- to late afterand there will be no noon. Comments, including noise complaints, can be directed to station’s comment line at 360-257-6665 or via email at comments. NASWI@navy.mil. All other questions can st be directed to the public affairs office at 360-2572286.
79 56 84 84 86 59 82 82 82 88 83 86 79 84 66 78 81 63 81 79 76 69 58 82 43 86 88 45 82 84 79 87 86 70 79 88 82 85
rent charged. Attendees are invited to sign up for the newsletter and door prizes. For more information, phone 360-681-0132.
Monsanto march PORT TOWNSEND — Marchers against Monsanto will meet at the public library, 1220 Lawrence St., from 10:45 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. Saturday. This event is free and open to the public.
Marchers are asked to wear red clothing and bring or carry signs supporting non-GMO foods, soil, bees, biodiversity, opposition of the DARK Act and the protection of the land, water, food sovereignty and future generations. For more information, email Jeannette Martens at thehungryelephantpt@ gmail.com. Peninsula Daily News
SEQUIM — New Dungeness Nursery is
May, July, August & October
LMO
Low
High
U N & H A LI B
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
70s
80s 90s 100s 110s
72 83 79 81 88 83 78 74 86 87 83 89 72 86 80 88 71 84 86 80 74 70 85 88 62 61 88 72 83 90 63 81 68 62 87 66 63 82
Bainbridge, Ga. Ä 25 in Jordan, Mont.
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
69 36 .01 Clr 60 Cldy Sioux Falls 70 .16 Rain Syracuse 79 58 Rain 52 Cldy Tampa 89 74 .34 PCldy 69 .36 Rain Topeka 82 56 Clr 77 .05 PCldy Tucson 87 60 Clr 62 Cldy Tulsa 83 65 PCldy 66 .21 Clr Washington, D.C. 87 72 Rain 41 .08 Cldy Wichita 80 58 Clr 67 .34 Rain Wilkes-Barre 83 65 Rain 77 Cldy Wilmington, Del. 83 67 Rain 60 Cldy _______ 71 .01 Cldy 39 .26 Cldy Hi Lo Otlk 65 PCldy 62 52 Cldy 47 .04 PCldy Auckland Beijing 84 61 Clr 69 PCldy 64 46 Sh 51 .02 Cldy Berlin 63 46 Wind/Sh 69 Cldy Brussels 98 75 Clr 67 PCldy Cairo 62 35 Clr 67 .06 Rain Calgary 89 57 PCldy 48 Cldy Guadalajara 82 75 Ts 53 Cldy Hong Kong 97 64 Clr 52 Cldy Jerusalem Johannesburg 75 44 Clr 69 Cldy 80 50 Ts 36 PCldy Kabul 58 44 Sh 46 .05 Rain London 77 61 Ts 72 Cldy Mexico City 76 46 Sh 53 Cldy Montreal Moscow 66 49 PCldy 66 PCldy 104 82 Clr 75 .07 PCldy New Delhi 59 41 Sh 49 .10 Rain Paris PCldy 76 1.33 Cldy Rio de Janeiro 78 68 86 58 Clr 61 Cldy Rome Ts 55 Cldy San Jose, CRica 80 66 75 57 Sh 76 .04 PCldy Sydney 78 58 Sh 40 Clr Tokyo 62 38 PCldy 54 .05 PCldy Toronto 71 2.73 Rain Vancouver 70 52 PCldy
More than independent senior living . . .
T
Stop by Swain’s and pick up your
Luxury Retirement Living.
FISH LADDER TICKET
660 Evergreen Farm Way
with your donation of 4 cans of food for the Clallam County Food Bank
Sequim, WA 98382 thelodgeatsherwood.com
360.681.3100
WIN A SWAIN’S GIFT CARD during each of Swain’s Fish Ladder Months
1st PLACE – $100 • 2nd PLACE – $75 3rd PLACE – $50 • 4th PLACE – $25 STORE HOURS: MON. THRU. SAT. 8-9 • SUN. 9-6 • WWW.SWAINSINC.COM
602 E. FIRST ST., PORT ANGELES • 452-2357
541272088
Art, garden show
SA
521256334
SEQUIM — The Sequim-Dungeness Hospital Guild will host its annual luncheon, fashion show and silent auction in Club 7 lounge of 7 Cedars Casino, 270756 U.S. Highway 101, on Thursday, May 28. A social hour will commence at 11 a.m., with time to view and bid on items in the silent auction. Awards will be made at noon, followed by lunch and a fashion show. Ladies from the guild’s thrift shop will model fashions from the shop. The price for all three events is $18. Tickets are limited and can be purchased at the Sequim-Dungeness Hospital Guild, 204 W. Bell St. For more information, phone 360-683-7044.
Pressure
à 95 in
. . . a lifestyle of luxury
1 Annual
during each of the months of
10s
52 PCldy Los Angeles 38 .03 Cldy Louisville 66 PCldy Lubbock 65 .41 Rain Memphis 67 Cldy Miami Beach 38 Rain Midland-Odessa 67 Clr Milwaukee 68 .03 Rain Mpls-St Paul 69 .03 Cldy Nashville 69 Cldy New Orleans 69 .28 Rain New York City 50 PCldy Norfolk, Va. 65 .07 Cldy North Platte 71 Cldy Oklahoma City 43 Cldy Omaha 48 PCldy Orlando 69 .04 Cldy Pendleton 41 .23 Rain Philadelphia 56 PCldy Phoenix 68 .28 Rain Pittsburgh 46 Clr Portland, Maine 34 2.73 Snow Portland, Ore. 29 Cldy Providence 69 PCldy Raleigh-Durham 32 .21 PCldy Rapid City 70 Cldy Reno 57 Cldy Richmond 40 PCldy Sacramento 73 Clr St Louis 74 .98 Rain St Petersburg 69 Cldy Salt Lake City 67 .80 Rain San Antonio 65 PCldy San Diego 46 Clr San Francisco 57 Clr San Juan, P.R. 79 PCldy Santa Fe 68 Rain St Ste Marie 70 .31 Rain Shreveport
Enter
Fashion show set
Warm Stationary
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
Briefly . . . Jet landing practice set for Thursday
New York 74° | 59°
Detroit 62° | 53°
June 16 May 25 June 2
Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise tomorrow Moonset today
TOMORROW
Low Tide Ht 8:17 a.m. -2.0’ 8:16 p.m. 2.1’
Cloudy
Minneapolis 59° | 36°
Cold
June 9
Pt. Cloudy
The Lower 48 TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:
Fronts
Nation/World
Washington TODAY
Strait of Juan de Fuca: W wind 10 kt rising to 15 to 25 kt in the afternoon. Wind waves 1 to 4 ft. Tonight, W wind 20 to 30 kt easing late. Wind waves 3 to 5 f subsiding.
Sunny
Seattle 74° | 54°
Cartography by Keith Thorpe / © Peninsula Daily News
Marine Conditions
LaPush
Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 62 49 0.03 13.41 Forks 62 46 Trace 38.79 Seattle 67 54 0.00 16.24 Sequim 71 50 0.00 7.42 Hoquiam 62 48 0.00 19.38 Victoria 66 48 0.00 13.47 Port Townsend 68 46 **0.00 7.97
National TODAY forecast Nation
Almanac
Brinnon 74/51
Aberdeen 62/49
TONIGHT
Port Ludlow 69/49
Yesterday
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