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Thursday

Seahawks’ Irvin out

Some sun interrupted by showers B10

Suffered ligament sprain against Cardinals B3

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS November 19, 2015 | 75¢

Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper

Towns in recovery after storm’s big blow CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Rachel Williams, front, and Danny McEnerney are two businesspeople who use the CoLab in Port Townsend as a base of operations.

Resource sharing business of forum Free symposium about local success BY CHARLIE BERMANT

CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — An all-day symposium designed to help small businesses share resources will take place in two locations Friday. “We feel the more we can do for our members to use networking to build their business, the more successful they will be,” said Heather Dudley-Nollette, co-founder of the CoLab at 237 Taylor St., which provides space for small-business owners to use downtown without having to rent their own office space. “We want to show them how using a coworking space can help them connect with useful business services,” Dudley-Nollette said. The CoLab, which opened in May 2013, now has about 25 members, less than expected or hoped for but enough to keep it afloat, DudleyNollette said. The event, in its fourth year, has changed its focus, according to Dudley-Nollette. It was previously called the Small Business Symposium but has been rebranded as Business to Business, or B2B. TURN

TO

Kala Point resident George Simmons gathers some of the branches that fell on his property during Tuesday’s storm.

Most lights on, roads open after heavy winds BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

The North Olympic Peninsula began to recover Wednesday from Tuesday’s storm, with power restored to most customers and most roads reopened after high water receded and fallen trees were cleared. Most of the immediate damage and debris from Tuesday’s storm had been cleared from state, city and county roads Wednesday, although several areas of Olympic National Park remained closed. In Jefferson County, about 800 customers remained without power Wednesday afternoon, said Jim Parker, general

manager of the Jefferson Public Utility District. Most should be restored by Thursday afternoon, Parker said. “Most of [Port Townsend] was out Tuesday,” he said. Main transmission lines to the city were taken down by the winds and falling trees. Parker said that at the height of the storm Tuesday afternoon, as many as 12,000 customers were in the dark. In Clallam County, only about five customers remained without power Wednesday afternoon, and all were expected to be restored by the end of the day, said Mike Howe, spokesman for the

Clallam County PUD. Most of those remaining without power were in Carlsborg and west of Sequim, Howe said. Approximately 3,000 customers were without power in central and eastern Clallam County at the storm’s height Tuesday. They were mostly from Port Angeles east to Diamond Point, Howe said.

Peak gusts The National Weather Service reported peak wind gusts of 60 mph on the North Olympic Peninsula during the height of the storm. TURN

TO

STORM/A5

BUSINESS/A5

Survey shows support for YMCA-run SARC 69% favor a partnership proposal BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SEQUIM — Most who responded to a feasibility survey supported the idea of Olympic Peninsula YMCA managing the Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center, the firm that conducted the survey announced Wednesday. The study was conducted over a three-week period in October and is expected to be published online sometime in the next month, Kyle Cronk, YMCA director, said Wednesday. The exercise center at 610 N. Fifth Ave., which is known as SARC and which has the city’s only

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public pool, was closed Oct. 30. The SARC board cited lack of funds and said the center could reopen if an agreement were reached with the YMCA. Sixty-nine percent of the Sequim-area residents surveyed were in favor of a YMCA-SARC partnership, said Joanne Vega, director of Strategic Research Associates of Spokane, which conducted the survey. “Most respondents of the population were supportive of the YMCA presenting a proposal to manage SARC, regardless of their interest to join,” Vega said during a presentation Wednesday morn-

ing at the Sequim Civic Center. About 100 people attended the meeting. Among them were four Sequim City Council members, SARC board members, Sequim Schools Superintendent Gary Neal and Eric Lewis, Olympic Medical Center CEO. The city of Sequim, YMCA, SARC, Clallam County, OMC, Sequim School District and private donors provided money for the $36,000 feasibility study and are working together on the proposal, Cronk said. The research firm collected responses from 245 SARC members and 404 non-SARC members via telephone, and another 784 responses online, Vega said.

CHRIS MCDANIEL/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Kyle Cronk, Olympic Peninsula YMCA CEO, right, and Joanne Vega, Strategic Research Associates director, discuss Wednesday at the Sequim Civic Center the results of a feasibility study to gauge public interest in TURN TO YMCA/A5 the Y taking over management of SARC.

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Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

Beckham is named Sexiest Man Alive BRITISH SOCCER STAR David Beckham has been an international sex symbol for nearly two decades, but he said he’s still flattered to be named People magazine’s 30th-anniversary Sexiest Man Alive. “It’s a huge honor,” the 40-year-old Beckham told the magazine, which announced its choice on ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live” on Tuesday night. “I’m very pleased to accept,” he said. And his famous fashion designer wife, Victoria Beckham, approves, too, Beckham said. “I would hope that she feels this way about me all the time anyway,” he said. But the father of four insists he doesn’t think of himself as being all that hot. “I never feel that I’m an attractive, sexy person,” Beckham told People — presumably with a straight face.

Song lyrics Carly Simon says the second verse of her infamous song “You’re So Vain” is about Warren Beatty. The 70-year-old singer told People magazine that

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

David Beckham poses for photographers upon arrival at the Pride of Britain Awards 2015 in London in September. she’s “confirmed that the second verse is Warren.” She added that Beatty “thinks the whole thing is about him.” Simon will release the memoir, Boys in the Trees, on Tuesday. The subjects behind “You’re So Vain,” released in 1972, have been a matter of speculation for years. The singer said the No. 1 hit is about three men, including Beatty, though she isn’t naming the others. Simon was married to James Taylor, and People said she has been linked to Mick Jagger, Kris Kristofferson, Jack Nicholson and Cat Stevens.

‘Soup’ canceled The E! Entertainment network is pulling the plug on “The Soup,” its weekly show with host Joel McHale that mocks other television series. McHale has been host for 12 years, and the network said Wednesday he will do the final show Dec. 18. The program premiered in 1991 as “Talk Soup,” specifically targeting talk shows for parody, with Greg Kinnear as host. John Henson, Hal Sparks and Aisha Taylor took turns as hosts before it was relaunched as “The Soup” with McHale as host in 2004.

Passings

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL TUESDAY’S QUESTION: Olympic National Park plans to renovate U.S. Highway 101 around Lake Crescent. Should the work be stretched out to reduce inconvenience, done quickly to get it over with or even done at all? Stretch it out

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Do it quickly Do nothing

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Undecided 2.6% Total votes cast: 839 Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com

By The Associated Press

ect called “Flip Cancer” in which he and others drew raised middle fingers to protest the disease.

NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those

airplanes in 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. World War II. A biography by the Butler Cen_________ Setting it Straight ter for MILTON PITTS Corrections and clarifications Arkansas CRENCHAW, 96, a flight Studies said ■ The Hope After Heroin Walk Against Drugs will instructor who trained many Mr. Mr. Crenchaw take place at noon Sunday beginning at the Fairmount of the U.S. military’s Tuske- Crenchaw in 2007 Grocery, 1137 U.S. Highway 101, Port Angeles, after meetgee Airmen, has died in trained hunGeorgia. dreds of pilots at the Tuske- ing at the Lincoln Street Safeway for shuttle service. A story on Page A6 Tuesday gave the incorrect date. Mr. Crenchaw’s daughter, gee Institute in Alabama in Dolores Singleton, said he the 1940s and later helped The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairdied Tuesday at Piedmont establish an aviation proness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to Henry Hospital near Atlanta gram at Philander Smith clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Leah Leach at 360-417after battling cardiovascular College in Little Rock. 3530 or lleach@peninsuladailynews.com. disease and pneumonia. Singleton said her father, Peninsula Lookback a native of Little Rock, Ark., From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News was among the last surviving instructors of the TuskeThis month, “Drug 1940 (75 years ago) 1965 (50 years ago) gee Airmen. Crackdown” features West They were the first AfriSeen Around the Clock R. Gordon Mathews, Coast marijuana growers can-Americans to fly combat [Port Angeles]: Scout executive for the ■ More rain in Sequim — how to spot farms from Everett Area Council of the air and how to raid than Port Angeles in last Seen Around the Boy Scouts, will be them. night’s storm. the featured speaker at Peninsula snapshots On “Crime Scene,” a vet■ Signs for road conthe annual Boy Scout dinLaugh Lines eran detective talks about struction on [U.S. Highway] A GROUP OF raccoons ner, to be held Friday eve101 just east of Port Ange- murder investigations. of various ages trying to hit ning, Dec. 6, at the Elks TO DESTROY ISIS, On “Street Bait,” it les city limits bearing “Jefup people in cars parked at Temple [Port Angeles]. President Hollande has shows how to handle sensiferson County” sign: “Your the Haines Park overlook said that he will form a big Mathews comes Highway Dollars at Work.” tive interviews with child [Port Townsend] for a tidunified coalition. highly recommended as a ■ Kitten on window abuse victims. bit. Up on their hindquarBut today, President speaker, local Scout leaders still trying to avoid rain, And “Roll Call” comes ters, looking like masked Obama said it would be a report. scaring early morning riser. across like ABC’s “Good marauders, paws waving, mistake for the U.S. to send He has had an interestbut no takers . . . Morning America” but troops to Syria. ing career, having been a 1990 (25 years ago) reminds viewers to grab a So the international WANTED! “Seen Around” member of the Canadian bulletproof vest before Peninsula police are community agrees on two items recalling things seen on the Royal Mounted Police for North Olympic Peninsula. Send watching TV on the job, but going out rather than an things. them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 10 years, a captain in the umbrella. instead of catching “Cop One, the only way to Port Angeles WA 98362; fax Canadian army during The show gives updates Rock,” they’re viewing wipe out ISIS is to send in 1330, 360-417-3521; or email news@ World War I and actively on the latest changes in shows like “Drug Crackground troops. peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure engaged in Scouting for the down,” “Crime Scene” and law, equipment and defenAnd two: “Not it!” you mention where you saw your past 19 years. Stephen Colbert “Seen Around.” “Street Beat.” sive tactics. MICHAEL GROSS, 70, an artist who created two of the most distinctive pop culture images of the 20th century, has died. Mr. Gross’ son, Dylan Gross, said his father died Monday at his home in Oceanside, Calif. He had been diagnosed with terminal cancer in 2014. Mr. Gross first gained wide attention in 1973 for the National Lampoon cover of a dog with a gun to its head and the words, “If You Don’t Buy This Magazine, We’ll Kill This Dog.” A decade later, he created the enduring symbol of a confused-looking ghost in the middle of a slashed red circle for the film “Ghostbusters.” More recently, he launched a charity art proj-

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS THURSDAY, Nov. 19, the 323rd day of 2015. There are 42 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On Nov. 19, 1915, labor activist Joe Hill was executed by firing squad in Utah for the murders of Salt Lake City grocer John Morrison and his son, Arling. On this date: ■ In 1863, President Abraham Lincoln dedicated a national cemetery at the site of the Civil War battlefield of Gettysburg in Pennsylvania. ■ In 1919, the Senate rejected the Treaty of Versailles by a vote of 55 in favor, 39 against, short of the two-thirds majority needed for ratification.

■ In 1924, movie producer Thomas H. Ince died after celebrating his 42nd birthday aboard the yacht of newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst. The exact circumstances of Ince’s death remain a mystery. ■ In 1942, during World War II, Russian forces launched their winter offensive against the Germans along the Don front. ■ In 1955, the first issue of National Review, created by William F. Buckley Jr., was published. ■ In 1969, Apollo 12 astronauts Charles Conrad and Alan Bean made the second manned landing on the moon. ■ In 1975, the film “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” starring

Jack Nicholson, was released by United Artists. ■ In 1990, the pop duo Milli Vanilli were stripped of their Grammy Award because other singers had lent their voices to the “Girl You Know It’s True” album. ■ In 1995, the animated film “Toy Story,” a Buena Vista Pictures release, had its world premiere in Hollywood. The video of the new Beatles single “Free as a Bird” aired on ABC-TV. ■ Ten years ago: Two dozen Iraqi men, women and children in Haditha were killed by U.S. Marines after a Marine was killed by a roadside bomb. Eight Marines were initially charged in the case; one was

acquitted and six others had their cases dropped. The squad leader, Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich, received a general discharge under honorable conditions after pleading guilty to negligent dereliction of duty. ■ Five years ago: President Barack Obama, attending a NATO summit in Lisbon, Portugal, won an agreement to build a missile shield over Europe, a victory that risked further aggravating Russia. ■ One year ago: Authorities in Honduras discovered the buried bodies of Maria Jose Alvarado, Miss Honduras 2014, and her sister, Sofia, six days after they had disappeared. Sofia Alvarado’s boyfriend, Plutarco Antonio Ruiz, is accused of the slayings.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Thursday, November 19, 2015 P A G E

A3 Briefly: Nation time for some nonviolent drug offenders. The bill, backed by voice vote, comes less than a month after the Senate’s judiciary panel approved similar legislation. The aim of the bipartisan MINNEAPOLIS — Investibills, the product of years of gators examining the shooting negotiations, is to reduce overof an unarmed black man by crowding in the nation’s prisons, Minneapolis police identified the save taxpayer dollars and give two officers involved as sevensome nonviolent offenders a secyear veterans but did not disond chance while keeping the close the officers’ races. most dangerous criminals in The state’s Bureau of Criminal prison. Apprehension released no other Like the Senate bill, the new information Wednesday. House legislation would reduce The police department also mandatory life sentences for began taking down protesters’ three-time, nonviolent drug tents that went up after the offenders to 25 years. It would fatal shooting Sunday of also reduce mandatory sen24-year-old Jamar Clark. tences for two-time offenders. Officers Mark Ringgenberg and Dustin Schwarze were iden- Fixing military hiring tified as the officers who WASHINGTON — The U.S. responded to a reported domesmilitary must harness the best tic assault shortly after midnight Sunday on the city’s north talent and keep up its technologiside and wound up in a confron- cal edge in order to meet evolving security challenges, Defense Sectation with 24-year-old Jamar retary Ash Carter said WednesClark. day as he rolled out a series of The police department initiatives aimed at attracting released the officers’ personnel the next generation of service records but redacted informamembers. tion on race. The nearly Police said Clark, a suspect two dozen proin the assault, was interfering posals largely with medical workers trying to target the treat the victim and was shot Defense when he scuffled with police. Department’s to recruit Sentencing law change effort and retain serWASHINGTON — Congress vice members. is moving swiftly on a sweeping America’s Carter overhaul of U.S. sentencing laws fighting force, that has the rare backing of he said, must stay competitive both Republicans and Demoas other countries like Russia crats and President Barack and China try to close the techObama. nology gap. The House Judiciary ComThe plans, detailed in a mittee on Wednesday approved speech Wednesday, reflect Cartlegislation that would allow er’s goal of encouraging more judges discretion to give lesser talented young people to consentences than federal mandasider the military as a career. tory minimums, reducing prison The Associated Press

Police identify two in shooting of unarmed man

Paris attack planner’s fate unclear after raid BY THOMAS ADAMSON AND JILL LAWLESS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAINT-DENIS, France — Heavily armed French SWAT teams swooped in Wednesday and neutralized a cell that was planning to launch new attacks, firing 5,000 rounds during an hourslong battle that left at least two people dead, including a woman who exploded an explosives belt, a prosecutor said. The raid had targeted the suspected planner of the attacks, 27-year-old Abdelhamid Abaaoud, but his fate remained unclear. Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said the identities of the dead were still being investigated but that neither Abaoud nor the fugitive attacker Salah Abdeslam was in custody. “At this time, I’m not in a position to give a precise and definitive number for the people who died, nor their identities, but there are at least two dead peo-

ple,” he told reporters. Molins said heavily armed police squads initially were thwarted by a reinforced door to the apartment in the Saint-Denis neighborhood north of Paris and faced nearly incessant fire. Earlier, the prosecutor said the raid was launched after information from tapped telephone conversations, surveillance and witness accounts indicated that Abaaoud might be in a safe house in the Saint-Denis suburb.

Attack planner identified Investigators have identified Abaaoud, a Belgian of Moroccan descent, as the chief architect of Friday’s attacks in Paris, which killed 129 people and wounded 368 others. A U.S. official briefed on intelligence matters said Abaaoud was a key figure in an Islamic State external operations cell that U.S. intelligence agencies have been tracking for months.

Abaaoud is believed to have escaped to Syria after a January police raid in Belgium, but he has bragged in Islamic State propaganda of his ability to move back and forth between Europe and Syria undetected. The site of Wednesday’s raid is just over a mile from the Stade de France soccer stadium; three suicide bombers blew themselves up outside the stadium during an international soccer match Friday. They were one of three teams of attackers who also targeted a rock concert at the Bataclan theater as well popular night spots in a trendy Paris neighborhood. The Islamic State group has claimed responsibility for the carnage, which has left France in mourning and on edge. On Wednesday, residents of Paris’ Saint-Denis neighborhood were shocked awake by an explosion at around 4:20 a.m. Amine Guizani said the blast was followed by the sound of grenades and automatic gunfire.

Briefly: World Boko Haram credited for 49 bombing deaths YOLA, Nigeria — At least 34 people were killed and another 80 wounded in Yola, a town packed with refugees from Nigeria’s Islamic uprising, emergency officials said Wednesday. Later Wednesday, two more suicide bombers killed at least 15 people in the northern city of Kano and injured 53, according Dasuki to police. President Muhammadu Buhari ordered the arrest of Sambo Dasuki, a former national security adviser accused of diverting billions that should have helped the army fight Boko Haram. The blasts were the latest by Boko Haram, Nigeria’s homegrown extremists whose six-year insurgency has killed 20,000 and forced 2.3 million to flee.

Gunman kills 2, injures 3 SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — A gunman killed two

Bosnian soldiers and injured three civilians Wednesday after he opened fire with an automatic rifle against a betting shop and a public bus driving by. Police spokesman Irfan Nefic said the attack happened in the Sarajevo suburb of Rajlovac and that the two soldiers were killed instantly in the betting shop. The attacker then shot at a public bus, and fragments of the broken glass injured the driver and two passengers.

Bomb based on can CAIRO — The Islamic State group has released a photo of the bomb it says was used to bring down a Russian passenger plane in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula last month. The picture showed a yellow can of Schweppes Gold, a flavored soda marketed in Egypt, and what appeared to be other bomb components made of plastic and metal. The picture was published in the latest issue of the extremist group’s Englishlanguage magazine. The group also published a picture of what it said were passports belonging to people who died in the plane crash. The Metrojet Airbus 321-200 crashed shortly after taking off from Sharm el-Sheikh. The Associated Press

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

GREEK

POLICE, FARMERS CLASH

Policemen spray tear gas against farmers during an anti-government protest in front of the parliament at central Syntagma square in Athens on Wednesday. Greek farmers were protesting over planned tax and pension reforms demanded by the country’s bailout creditors.

Ryan: Congress’ refugee bill won’t have religious tests THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Paul Ryan said a Republican bill the chamber plans to vote on this week won’t limit Syrian and Iraqi refugees admitted to this country based on their religions. The Wisconsin Republican’s description of the legislation contrasted with remarks by some GOP presidential candidates. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz have said preference should be given

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to Christians. Ryan said that under the House bill, Syrian and Iraqi refugees could only be admitted to the U.S. if intelligence and law enforcement officials can certify that they won’t be a security threat. He said such precautions are common sense and the government’s obligation to American citizens. Most Democrats have defended current screening procedures, though some have called for a

pause since last week’s terrorist attacks in Paris. President Barack Obama took particular ire at a proposal by GOP presidential candidate Bush to admit only Christian Syrians. Bush later clarified he wants to give preference to Christians but not exclude properly vetted Muslims. Still, Obama said the idea of only allowing Christians in amounted to “political posturing” that runs contrary to American values.

. . . more news to start your day

West: Customs take down nets 450 pork tamales

Nation: With dam gone, sturgeon returning in Maine

Nation: Youth program money spent by officer

World: Border program lifts detentions 73 percent

THE CONTRABAND WAS carefully wrapped in corn husks and concealed in the luggage of a traveler when authorities moved in for a tamale takedown at Los Angeles International Airport. The search by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents turned up 450 pork tamales individually packaged in plastic bags. “Although tamales are a popular holiday tradition, foreign meat products can carry serious animal diseases,” said Anne Maricich, CBP. U.S. Customs and Border Protection said Wednesday the person was carrying food but had lied when asked if there was any meat.

UNIVERSITY OF MAINE scientists said an endangered species of sturgeon has rediscovered a long-inaccessible habitat that could be a key to improving its reproduction. They said the shortnose sturgeon has returned to the portion of the Penobscot River that’s beyond the former Veazie Dam, which was removed in 2013. The fish had not been seen in that area for more than 100 years. Researchers said they had implanted sturgeon with small sound-emitting devices to see if they would use the newly accessible parts of the river. The sturgeon still has not been observed spawning in the Penobscot.

A NORTHERN ILLINOIS police officer who authorities said killed himself after years of embezzling from a youth program spent the stolen money on items such as coffee, restaurant meals and trips to the movies, according to court documents. The records were released by attorneys for Melodie Gliniewicz, the widow of late Fox Lake Lt. Charles Joseph Gliniewicz. Authorities say he staged his suicide to look like a homicide because he feared the embezzlement was about to be exposed. Attorneys said that Gliniewicz was asking all to “refrain from rushing to, or misplacing, judgment.”

MEXICO DETAINED 73 percent more migrants in the first year since the announcement of an operation to shore up security on its southern border, according to a study released Wednesday by human rights groups and migrants’ advocates. The study found that about 168,000 migrants were detained in Mexico from July 2014 to June of this year, up from some 97,000 during the previous 12-month period. Mexico launched its Southern Border Program in the summer of 2014, a time when the U.S. was experiencing a large spike in unaccompanied child migrants arriving at its own border.


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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015

SPECIAL PAID ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE

2015

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DOUBLE FORGED STATE PROCLAMATION

COURTESY: LINCOLN TREASURY

PHOTO ENLARGEMENT SHOWS ENGRAVING DETAIL

banks, credit unions or the U.S. Mint. In fact, they’re only being handed over at state minimum to WA, OR and ID residents who call the Toll Free Hotline before the deadline ends two days from today’s publication date”, said Timothy J. Shissler, Executive Director of Vault Operations at the private Lincoln Treasury. To make it fair, special Toll Free Overflow Hotlines have been set up to ensure all residents have an equal chance to get them. Rapid shipments to state residents are scheduled to begin with the first calls being accepted at precisely 8:30am today. “We’re bracing for all the calls and doing everything we can to make sure no one gets left out, but the U.S. State Silver Bars are only being handed over at just the state resident minimum for the next two days or until they’re all gone, whichever comes first. For now, residents can get the U.S. State Silver Bars at just the state minimum as long as they call before the order deadline ends,” confirmed Shissler. “With so many state residents trying to get these U.S. State Silver Bars, lines are busy so keep trying. All calls will be answered,” Shissler said. N

WA, OR AND ID: COVER JUST $57 STATE MINIMUM call

1-888-873-7302 Ext.RNF454 beginning at 8:30am

1.

If all lines are busy call this special toll free overflow hotline: 1-888-873-7314 Ext.RNF454

2.

residents who find their state on the Distribution List above in bold and beat the deadline are authorized to get individual State Silver Bars at just $57 state resident minimum. That’s why nearly everyone is taking full Vault Bricks loaded with five State Silver Bars before they’re all gone. And here’s the best part. Every WA, OR and ID resident who gets at least two Vault Bricks is also getting free shipping and free handling. that's a real steal because all other state residents must pay over six hundred dollars for each State Vault Brick.

ALL OTHER STATE RESIDENTS: MUST REMIT $134 PER STATE SILVER BAR 1. No State Silver Bars will be issued to any resident living outside of WA, OR or ID at state resident minimum.

2. Call the Non-Resident Toll Free Hotline beginning at 11:00am at: 1-888-873-7312 Ext.RNF454

3. If you are a u.s. resident living outside of the states of WA, OR or ID you are required to pay $134 for each State Silver Bar for a total of six hundred seventy dollars plus shipping and handling for each sealed State Vault Brick loaded with five u.s. State Silver Bars. This same offer may be made at a later date or in a different geographic location. UNITED STATES COMMEMORATIVE GALLERY INC. AND LINCOLN TREASURY, LLC ARE NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE U.S. GOVERNMENT, A BANK OR ANY GOVERNMENT AGENCY. IF FOR ANY REASON WITHIN 30 DAYS FROM SHIPMENT YOU ARE DISSATISFIED, RETURN THE PRODUCT FOR A REFUND LESS SHIPPING AND RETURN POSTAGE. DUE TO THE FLUCTUATING PRICE IN THE WORLD GOLD AND SILVER TRADES, PRICES ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. U.S. COMS0493 P6966A MEMORATIVE GALLERY 7800 WHIPPLE AVE. N. CANTON OH 44720 ©2015 LINCOLN TREASURY

N A SNEAK PEAK INSIDE SILVER VAULT BRICKS: Pictured left reveals for the very first time the valuable .999 pure fine silver bars inside each State Silver Vault Brick. Pictured right are the heavy State Silver Vault Bricks containing the only existing U.S. State Silver Bars. WA, OR and ID residents are authorized to get individual State Silver Bars at just $57 state resident minimum. That’s why nearly everyone is taking full Vault Bricks loaded with five State Silver Bars before they’re all gone. And here’s the best part. Every resident who gets at least two Vault Bricks is also getting free shipping and free handling. That’s a real steal because all other state residents must pay over six hundred dollars for each State Vault Brick.


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

(J) — THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015

A5

Business: Forums also planned CONTINUED FROM A1

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

DECKING

THE STREETS

Port Angeles Parks Department crew members unload the city’s 2015 Christmas tree at the Conrad Dyar Memorial Fountain Plaza on Wednesday. The tree, a 30-foot Douglas fir donated by Sharon Adams of rural Port Angeles, will be decorated in lights in preparation for a lighting ceremony Nov. 28.

YMCA: Survey CONTINUED FROM A1 “To reach the community, we called by telephone all of your landline and cellular phone numbers that we could find within the Sequim ZIP code,” she said. The telephone survey took an average of 10 to 13 minutes to complete, she said. The level of respondents, especially online, was well over what was expected for a community of Sequim’s size, she said. “We had an overwhelming response online — probably the strongest response I have ever seen,” she said. The firm needed only about 400 responses to form a cohesive statistical average, she said. “We try to do a sampling of the population,” which can be generalized “towards the rest of the community.” About 12.4 percent of the market is potentially interested in becoming a member, she said. Based on the survey, “we are looking at . . . about 374 two-adult family memberships, 87 single-adult family memberships, 586 individual-adult memberships and six young adult memberships,” she said.

Business plan The next step for the YMCA is to prepare a business plan and present that to the SARC board for approval. While Cronk has in the past said a business plan would be presented sometime this month, on Wednesday, the date had been pushed back by a month or two because of the holiday season and to allow time for the YMCA to formulate a comprehensive proposal. With its community partners, the YMCA is working to “figure out a sustainable operating model,” he said. “We would not be able to operate in the red. From the YMCA’s perspective, we need to fully fund our reserves to make sure that we can invest back into the facility. “That would be true with any sort of management agreement that we could come up with.” Upon approval of a plan, YMCA would come in as a contractor to maintain day-to-day operations, but the SARC board would remain intact and could call for tax levies in the future if needed, Frank Pickering, SARC board

hile YMCA CEO Kyle Cronk has in the past said a business plan would be presented sometime this month, on Wednesday, the date had been pushed back by a month or two because of the holiday season and to allow time for the YMCA to formulate a comprehensive proposal.

W

chair, has said. However, Cronk said Wednesday it is the YMCA’s goal to be self-sustaining to prevent any further request of revenue from the public through taxes. “YMCA revenue is usually about 60 percent membership, 25 [percent] to 30 percent of program fees and about 10 [percent] to 15 percent of contributed support” through donations, he said. During the transition phase, renovations would begin at the facility and would need to be completed before it reopened to the public, Cronk said. “There is probably a window of three months that we are talking [about], at least,” he said.

Outstanding passes The fate of valid annual and biannual passes for SARC remains in a state of limbo, with refunds not currently available. The sale of annual passes was discontinued in June, and biannual passes stopped being sold in September, Scott Deschenes, former SARC director, has said. The SARC board has placed all outstanding passes in a state of suspension but has not canceled them. It remains to be seen if outstanding passes will be honored if the athletic center reopens under management of the YMCA in partnership with the SARC board — a possibility currently being explored — Pickering has said.

________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsula dailynews.com.

Friday’s B2B symposium is free and open to the public. Anyone interested can spend the day attending forums, consulting with experts and taking the CoLab for a test-drive; free use of the space is part of the event. Three forums also are included at the Business Resource Center, 2409 Jefferson St. An after-party from 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. will include short presentations about some local business ideas. The day includes six free consulting sessions at the CoLab. They are: ■ One-on-one general business consultations — Sessions will be between 20 and 30 minutes from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

■ Web development with Nate Malmgren of Codepress — 20-minute slots are available from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Consultation will be on Wordpress training and website solutions for small businesses, independent professionals and nonprofit organizations. ■ Bookkeeping with Melissa Patrick of Keeping the Books — 20-minute slots are available from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. This focuses on organizing and recording financial transactions. ■ Life and business coaching with Chauncey Locklear — 30-minute slots are available from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. This concentrates on establishing priorities and how to achieve business goals. ■ Graphic design with

Sarah Peller of Fruition Design — 30-minute slots from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. ■ Legal services with Lisa von Trotha of Von Trotha Law — Consultations are available at 1 p.m., 1:45 p.m., 2:30 p.m. and 3:15 p.m. This addresses legal concepts important to businesses. The forums are: ■ “Using Data to Find and Reach Your Market” — 10:30 a.m. to noon, which will discuss applying marketing data. Panelists are David Timmons, Port Townsend city manager; small-business consultant Luisa Walmsley; and Scott Wilson, editor and publisher of the weekly Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader. ■ “Funding Options from Startup to Expansion” — 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Panelists are Dominic

Svornich, Kitsap Bank branch manager; Hilary Wilson of Community Sourced Capital; Deborah Stinson, a principal of the Local Investing Opportunities Network (LION) and a Port Townsend City Councilwoman; and business lender Brian Kuh. Peter Quinn, the executive director of EDC Team Jefferson, will moderate both panels. Reservations are advised for all the consultations and forums. See www.ptcolab. com/b2b/agenda. The CoLab also operates a second location in Chimacum at 9165 Rhody Drive. For more information, go to www.ptcolab.com or call 360-385-9655.

________ Jefferson County Editor Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360385-2335 or cbermant@peninsula dailynews.com.

Storm: Some ONP roads open CONTINUED FROM A1

Olympic Hot Springs Road in the Elwha River valley remained closed at the park entry station because of flooding and other damage. Hurricane Ridge also remained closed because of snow. It is expected to reopen for the winter season Nov. 27.

The top gust was recorded at a weather station near Sappho. In Clallam County, wind gusts were recorded at 48 mph at Quillayute Airport, 47 mph at William R. Fairchild International Airport in Port Angeles and 46 mph at a site north of Sequim. In Jefferson County, the Mountain snow top gusts were 53 mph in On Wednesday, windPort Ludlow and 52 mph in scoured snow at the WaterBrinnon. hole Snotel weather station, near Hurricane Ridge, meaOlympic National Park sured 20 inches. That’s 126 Some Olympic National percent of average for Nov. Park roads reopened 18. The storm left 8 inches Wednesday, while others remained closed due to of snow at the Dungeness flood and wind damage or Snotel weather station, 400 percent of the average 0.4 snow. Mora Road to Rialto inches of snow usually meaBeach, Kalaloch, Ozette, the sured at the station south of Lake Crescent area and Sequim. Mount Crag Snotel site, Heart o’ the Hills Campground reopened Wednes- west of Brinnon, measured 13 inches, or 157 percent of day. Park areas remaining average. There were 17 inches of closed were Upper Hoh Road, Sol Duc Road, Queets snow at Buckinghorse SnoRiver Road and North tel station, located on a ridge overlooking the southShore Quinault.

ern Elwha River valley. Buckinghorse has been in operation since 2008 and has not yet established a long-term average. Forecasters expect clear skies and colder temperatures during the rest of the week. Temperatures will be in the low- to mid-30s overnight, with daily high temperatures in the mid- to high-40s across the region, said Allen Kam, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Seattle. A slight chance of snow in the lowlands is predicted as a colder system moves into the area Monday.

County, authorities said. Both people’s identities were not available. The third victim, identified by authorities as Carolyn M. Wilford, 70, died of head injuries after a tree landed on her car on Highway 904 about 15 miles southwest of Spokane. Puget Sound Energy said more than 30 transmission lines were badly damaged and about 100,000 customers were still without power early Wednesday. The Snohomish County PUD tweeted that about 130,000 of its customers lacked power. Avista Corp. was trying to restore power to more than 142,000 customers, most in Spokane County Elsewhere and northern Idaho. Falling trees killed three Gusts reached 100 mph people in Washington state near Wenatchee and 80 and cut power to more than mph near Mattawa. 350,000 residents, The ________ Associated Press said. Reporter Arwyn Rice can be A woman in her 50s was killed when a tree fell in reached at 360-452-2345, ext. Spokane. A man in his mid- 5070, or at arice@peninsuladaily news.com. 20s died when a tree crushed his car as he was The AP contributed to this driving in Snohomish report.

Briefly . . . art for sale: jewelry, fused glass, ceramics, ornaments, gourds, wood sculpture, paintings, photography, digital art, fiber art and holiday cards. The holiday art sale will PORT ANGELES — For stay open through Dec. 28 the second straight year, at the Blue Whole, whose Clallam Transit will prohours are from 10 a.m. to vide regular bus service 5 p.m. Mondays through the day after Thanksgiving. Saturdays and from Fixed route and dial-a11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sundays. ride buses will be on reguThe artists will close the lar weekday schedules Frivenue for the holidays, day, Nov. 27. though, for Thanksgiving The Clallam Transit on Nov. 26 and Christmas administration office in west Port Angeles, however, on Dec. 25. More details await at will be closed. 360-681-6033 and www. The office will reopen on bluewholegallery.com. Monday, Nov. 30. Jefferson Transit also will provide bus service the Leaving hospital day after Thanksgiving. SEATTLE — A 25-yearClallam Transit elimiold man severely injured in nated day-after-Thanksgiv- a wildfire near Twisp that ing service during the killed three of his fellow recession years. firefighters has left the It is now evaluating rid- hospital after three months ership and community sup- of treatment, but his recovport for the service, agency ery is far from complete. officials said. Daniel Lyon, who sufFor information about fered burns on more than Clallam Transit, visit www. 60 percent of his body Aug. clallamtransit.com. 19, still hasn’t regained use of his hands, and it will Open house reset take time to get his body functioning well enough to SEQUIM — The Blue Whole Gallery open house, go back to work. He wears a face mask an event celebrating the and other wraps to help his venue’s holiday art sale, wounds heal. has been rescheduled for The first day he got out 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. this of bed to take a walk — Friday. The Blue Whole, 129 W. just over a month ago — was the moment he realWashington St., initially planned the open house for ized he was going to survive, Lyon said during a Tuesday, but stormy weather prompted organiz- news conference Wednesday at Harborview Medical ers to postpone it. Admission is free to Fri- Center, where he has undergone 11 surgeries. day’s reception, which will Lyon has made a feature festive food and remarkable recovery, said drink, prize drawings and conversation with the Blue Dr. Nicole Gibran, one of his attending physicians Whole’s member artists. Visitors also will have a and director of the University of Washington Burn chance to see the range of

Bus service provided after Thanksgiving

Center at Harborview. She cited his family’s constant support and the fact that his lung injury was not as severe as it could have been. “His journey is not over,” Gibran said, describing the physical therapy he needs to continue. “He can anticipate a long road ahead.” Lyon reached another milestone in his recovery Wednesday. “It felt great walking outside today, feeling the fresh air,” he said. “I can’t wait to get back home, see my dog and to be more active.” This summer was his first as a wildland firefighter. He previously worked as a reserve police officer and was an active skier, mountain climber, kayaker, motorcycle rider and hunter. He said he thinks constantly about his friends who died in the same flareup near the north-central Washington community of Twisp: 20-year-old Tom Zbyszewski, 26-year-old Andrew Zajac and 31-yearold Richard Wheeler. The quickly moving fire overtook their engine after it crashed down an embankment. “August 19th was definitely the scariest day of my life,” Lyon said. “Those guys were truly brothers to me.”

Sex solicitation TACOMA — Pierce County prosecutors have accused a deputy court clerk of accessing records through his job to find a former jail inmate and asking for help arranging for sex with a juvenile.

The News Tribune reported that 47-year-old James Porter was charged Tuesday with commercial sexual abuse of a minor. He was arrested Monday. Bail has been set at $100,000. Porter’s lawyer, Gary Clower, said that “this is nothing but an allegation.” He said Porter has no criminal history, is a lifelong Pierce County resident and has worked in the Pierce County Superior Court clerk’s office for 20 years. According to charging documents, an informant with a history of prostitution told Lakewood police that Porter reached out after meeting the informant earlier. Prosecutors allege Porter asked the informant to arrange for him to have sex with a juvenile girl.

Cows shipped OLYMPIA — More than 1,400 dairy cows have been shipped out of the Port of Olympia and are on their way to Vietnam. KING-TV reported that crews loaded the 20 truckloads of cattle onto a livestock cargo ship Tuesday. The trip is expected to last 29 days. The cows are being sent to Vietnam to support the country’s newly launched campaign to get children to drink at least one glass of milk a day. Troy Clayton with Clayton Agri-Marketing Inc., the company shipping the cows, said Tuesday’s export of 1,430 cows was the largest ever for cattle crossing the Pacific. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press


A6

PeninsulaNorthwest

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Band returns for hometown gig BY DIANE URBANI

DE LA

PAZ

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — On tour with country singer Nikki Lane, Ben Eyestone and Eric Whitman are playing San Francisco, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Miami, Cleveland, Detroit and Vancouver, B.C., among many other North American cities. This Friday night, though, is when the two musicians might feel a little stage fright. “I’m not going to say I’m nervous,� quipped Whitman, 27. “I’ve got to be on my game,� though, for a show at the Metta Room, that nightclub in his and Eyestone’s hometown of Port Angeles. The Nikki Lane band will bring what’s been called “outlaw country� to the venue, 132 E. Front St., for a 9 p.m. show for the 21-andolder crowd. The rock band Clear Plastic Masks will open. The cover charge is $5. For the past year and a half, Whitman, a guitarist and bassist, and Eyestone, a drummer, have been traveling with Lane, whom they got to know after they moved to Nashville, Tenn., in 2010.

From the Peninsula The two, who began their careers while they were in high school with the band The Lonely H, are living the life musicians dream of. One Sunday in April 2014, Eyestone, 26, happened to run into Lane, who had just released her album “All or Nothin’ � to good reviews from outlets including Rolling Stone magazine and NPR. “I need a drummer,� she told him. “I had no thoughts that I was going to go out on the road with her,� Eyestone recalled.

The Nikki Lane band — from left, Alex Munoz, Eric Whitman, Lane and Ben Eyestone — will play a show at the Metta Room, in Whitman and Eyestone’s hometown of Port Angeles, on Friday. But Lane’s next remark was along the lines of “Can you go on tour with me, starting Tuesday?� Eyestone got his next bartending shift covered at the 5 Spot, a Nashville nightclub, and let his boss know he had this opportunity, so some other shifts would need covering, too. Boss was supportive, saying, “Right on. Where you going?� It turned out Lane also needed a bass player, so Eyestone contacted Whitman. Never mind that Whitman was a guitarist; he picked up the bass and taught himself, much as he had done with the guitar as a young boy in Port Angeles. Off they went across America, then to Australia and New Zealand — “super fun,� said Eyestone — and back to the States for a swing across the Midwest, the Mountain West and the Pacific Northwest. Port Angeles was not on the itinerary at first. But last time Lane and the band played Seattle, they drove out west and did

some visiting with family in Port Angeles. It was Lane’s idea to do a show here, Eyestone said, and she, for her part, is promoting the gig on her Facebook page.

‘Intimate party’ Reached on her cellphone while driving across Montana earlier this week, Lane said this Friday night is “for the boys to check in and show their town, ‘This is what we’re up to.’ We want to make it an intimate party,� with a rough-edged country soundtrack. Eyestone “is pretty much a full rock ’n’ roll drummer,� Lane added. As for Whitman, “he’s a fun one to watch. Listen to the parts he writes. He’s not doing it from a traditional bass background.� Lane knows what it is to come from a fairly small town: She grew up in Simpsonville, S.C., outside Greenville. Spending your formative years in a community such as Port Ange-

les, she believes, gives you time to explore your talents, test things out, sculpt yourself. “You can tell they had time, growing up, to develop really strong personalities,� Lane said of Eyestone and Whitman. Then again, “you know everybody, and everybody knows your parents,� Whitman added. His are mom Gay Whitman and stepfather Tony Steinman, while Eyestone’s folks are Laura Eyestone, a singer and Port Angeles School District music teacher, and Paul Eyestone, a musician and the owner of Eyestone Building Design. Whitman estimates he’s known Ben Eyestone since they both were 4 and on the same soccer team.

The Lonely H They started hanging out together in middle school and, barely into their teen years, began gigging and recording with The Lonely H, which included singer-keyboardist Mark Fredson and Whitman’s older brother, Johnny, on bass. The band played Port Angeles’ Juan de Fuca Festival of the Arts, at the Experience Music Project’s Sound Off! competition in Seattle and the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas. The band also recorded four albums, but broke up awhile after moving to Nashville. Fredson is now a solo artist, while Johnny is an art director at a Nashville advertising agency. For the two players in the Nikki Lane band, these days and nights on the road are sweet. “My goal has always been to make a living as a drummer,� said Eyestone. “I’m technically homeless right now,� Whitman added. “That’s kind of cool.�

Honky-tonk group’s gig set Friday Port Townsend band plans get-together BY DIANE URBAN

DE LA

PAZ

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — Three Chords and the Truth, the hometown honky-tonk outfit known for its gigs at the Hilltop Tavern here, is fixing to play the next Discovery Dance club party Friday night. This is a get-together open to everybody — regardless of dance experience — at the Port Townsend Elks Lodge, 555 Otto St. It starts with a lesson and refresher in country two-step at 7 p.m. with instructor Janice Eklund. Singles and couples are welcome, as are seasoned dancers, who are invited to help out the beginners. Then Three Chords and the Truth gets going at 8 p.m. with a slew of rockabilly, blues, Hank Williams-style country, western swing and waltz till around 10 p.m. Admission is $10 for Friday’s all-ages, smoke-free dance. For those who are curious, the band — Bruce Cannavaro, Dave Llewellen, Jim Newberry, Mark Sabella and Doug Warren — takes its name from a quotation attributed to country songwriter Harlan Howard (1927-2002). The elements of a great country song, he reportedly said, are “three chords and the truth.� For more information about the Discovery Dance club’s thirdFriday-of-the-month events, see www.olympicpeninsuladance.com.

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PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Protest against crime, drugs is planned Saturday BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — A protest against crime and illegal drugs is planned from noon to 2 p.m. Saturday on East First Street. Participants will meet at noon at Jessie Webster Park at East Second and South Eunice streets, then walk to the empty lot of East First Street, across the street from Swain’s General Store, said organizer Chelsea Ward. Protesters will make their own picket signs and plan to occupy the empty lot to protest and pass out fliers to local businesses for about two hours.

he group’s walk is not related to the Hope After Heroin Walk Against Drugs, to be held Sunday.

T

A7

Autopsy: Man at hot springs died in accident

Precipitation extinguishes Paradise Fire BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK — The Paradise Fire, which had been burning since May, has been declared extinguished. Ty Crowe, fire operations specialist for Olympic National Park, said Wednesday that the fire in the Queets River drainage was out following a series of storms that dropped several feet of rain on the area. The wildfire, the largest in the history of the park, burned an estimated 2,795 acres of rainforest trees and deep duff, as of the last update in September. A final estimate of the burned area has not yet been released. Crews hiked into the remote location and transported equipment in by mule train and helicopter, and set up containment systems to keep the fire contained in the Queets River valley, 12 miles inside the park border.

________ Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5070, or at arice@ peninsuladailynews.com.

BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Bruce Gunderson, the Silverdale man found dead at Olympic Hot Springs on Oct. 26, died of an accidental drowning, said Mark Nichols, Clallam County prosecuting attorney and coroner. An autopsy performed Oct. 30 revealed that the manner of death was an accident and the cause of death was freshwater drowning, Nichols said. Olympic National Park officials had suspected that the 61-year-old died of natural causes.

Found by friends Gunderson’s body was found by his traveling companions in one of the pools at the hot springs in the Elwha Valley. The group had been camping in the park near the springs.

he hot springs pools will remain closed pending the results of water testing, a park spokeswoman said.

T

The hot springs pools were closed for health and safety concerns. They will remain closed pending the results of water testing, park spokeswoman Barb Maynes said Wednesday. “We should have the results within a week and will announce the pools status as soon as we get the results,� Maynes said. The nearby Boulder Creek Campground remains open. Olympic Hot Springs are natural, non-maintained hot-water seeps in a wilderness area.

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based Facebook groups and built from there. “We want people to become aware of what is happening,� Ward said. The group’s walk is not related to the Hope After Heroin Walk Against Drugs, to be held Sunday. The Hope After Heroin walk will meet at Safeway on East Third Street at 11:30 a.m. and be shutIncrease awareness tled to the starting point at FairThe protest is meant to increase mount Grocery on Highway 101 awareness of illegal drug use, theft and Fairmount Avenue before and other crimes that are taking walking to the Clallam County Courthouse. place in Port Angeles, Ward said. ________ “They’re dealing drugs right in front of people,� she said. Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at Ward said the protest began 360-452-2345, ext. 5070, or at arice@ with discussions in several locally peninsuladailynews.com.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015

November 22, 29 December 6 at 2:00 p.m. Tickets at Odyssey Bookshop 114 W. Front St., P.A. or Online at pacommunityplayers.com

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PeninsulaNorthwest

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015

Briefly . . . Movie talk set Sunday in PA Library

open to the public. For more information, email home@joyousrefuge. org or phone 360-4775954.

PORT ANGELES — Joyous Refuge Meditation Circle will show the Oscar-winning Japanese movie “Departures” in the Raymond Carver Room of the Port Angeles Library, 2210 S. Peabody St., from 9 a.m. to noon Sunday. The movie concerns a young cellist who stumbles into a career as an encoffiner — someone who prepares bodies for their journey to the next world. The movie has subtitles. A short discussion will follow. Refreshments will be served. The event is free and

Drum circle slated PORT ANGELES — A free Peninsula Community Drum Circle will take place at Olympic Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 73 Howe Road, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday. All ages and ability levels will be welcome to the event. Bring a drum if available; drums will be provided to those who do not have one. For more information, phone Penny Burdick at 360-461-4538, email peninsuladrumming@ gmail.com or visit www.peninsulacommunity drumming.weebly.com. Peninsula Daily News

Party in PA to fete retiring executive head of chamber Veenema to retire at end of year BY JAMES CASEY PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — A farewell party Friday will celebrate retiring Russ Veenema’s 15 years as executive director of the Port Angeles Regional Chamber of Commerce. The event will run from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. in the Red Lion Hotel, 221 N. Lincoln St. at the foot of Lincoln Street, and will feature snacks, beverages and a nohost bar. Although not required, participants are invited to bring bottles of wine to “Fill the Barrel” as a gift for Veenema. Veenema, 62, will retire

at the end of the year. Hired in the fall of 2000, he earns $89,000 a year. Announcement of a replacement is expected in January. During Veenema’s tenure, Port Angeles captured national attention as the second-place finisher in a nationwide Web-based “Best City Ever” competition run by Outside magazine and kudos in a survey of small towns by Livability magazine, plus mention as one of the country’s “coolest towns” by the Matador Network travel website. Port Angeles also received visits May 16 and in May 2014 from Holland America

Death and Memorial Notice PATRICIA LAVERNE BELL January 6, 1935 November 13, 2015 Patt died on November 13, 2015. She was 80. She was born January 6, 1935, in L’Anse, Michigan, to Edward and Genivieve Nickles. At a very young age, she moved to Port Angeles. Her mother remarried, and she was raised by her mother, Genivieve, and father, Clarence Gakin. They lived on the Lower Elwha Dam for a very long time She met her husband, William T. Bell, when she was 16 years old at a Dry Creek School dance. She was diagnosed with diabetes at the age of 18, just days before she was married. She married William on November 1, 1953, at First

Mrs. Bell Methodist Church in Port Angeles. She graduated from the last class at Roosevelt High School in Port Angeles in June 1953. During high school, she worked at First National Bank until she got married. She is survived by her children Kathy (Ken)

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

cruise line’s ms Statendam and visits by American C r u i s e Lines’ American Spirit in 2013 and Veenema 2014. Veenema worked with the Port of Port Angeles to restore passenger air service between Seattle and Fairchild International Airport, which SeaPort Airlines is scheduled to begin March 1. The past three years also have marked records for hotel occupancy. During his time with the chamber, the Dungeness Crab & Seafood Festival, Olympic Discovery Marathon and Ride the Hurricane

lthough not required, participants are invited to bring bottles of wine to “Fill the Barrel” as a gift.

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bicycle rally grew into regional — even international — tourist attractions. Veenema’s slogan for the chamber — “The Center of It All on the Olympic Peninsula” — was replaced by “Port Angeles: The Authentic Northwest” five years ago.

_______ Reporter James Casey can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5074, or at jcasey@peninsuladaily news.com.

Death and Memorial Notice

Sukert, Wendy (Greg) Seward, Terry (Renee) Bell and Mitzi (Gilbert) Bell-Yslas; sisters Emma Hollingsworth, Betty Jean (Bill) Gallauher and Mary Lynn (Bill) Gakin-Poole; sister-in-law Betty Lou Nickles; brothers-in-law Mac Hefton and Doug Sherwood; three grandsons; three granddaughters; one great-grandson; and six great-granddaughters. She was preceded in death by her husband, William Bell; daughter Kristy Bell; brother Ed Nickles; and sisters Genny Long, Rosemary Sherwood and Sandy Hefton. Donations may be made to Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County, 540 East Eighth Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362; or the American Diabetes Association, http://tinyurl. com/obit-adadonation.

STEVE SVEIN GAUTESTAD December 20, 1930 November 7, 2015 Steve Svein Gautestad passed away peacefully at home on November 7, 2015, not long after being diagnosed with cancer. He was born in Oslo, Norway, on December 20, 1930, to Astrid and Erling Gautestad. After serving as a pilot in the Norwegian Air Force, he immigrated to Canada and then the United States, where he served in the U.S. Army. While in the Puget Sound area, Steve was an

Mr. Gautestad engineer at Eldec, Boeing, Marco and GE’s jet engine division. He was an active sailor, skier and hiker. Steve and his wife of

35 years, Gail Margaret Gautestad, most recently lived in Port Ludlow. He will be dearly missed for his wit, love and kindness. Remembrances can be made to Center Valley Animal Rescue, 11900 Center Road, Quilcene, WA 98376. In addition to his wife, Steve is survived by extended family members in Spain, Jannicke (Bjorn) Gautestad Larsen, and in Alaska by Patty Lee, Rick (Angie) and Jesse Schleyer. There will not be a memorial service. Steve’s spirit is in heaven, and his ashes will be tossed into the wind at sea.

Death Notices Sequim Valley Funeral related causes at his Port Chapel is in charge of Angeles home. Sept. 26, 1941 — Nov. 11, 2015 arrangements. He was 80. Sequim resident Susan www.sequimvalleychapel. Services: None, at his Ellen Catron died of natucom request. ral causes at Olympic MediDrennan-Ford Funeral cal Center in Port Angeles. Gerald Perry Home, Port Angeles, is in She was 74. charge of arrangements. Services: None, at her Aug. 11, 1935 — Nov. 16, 2015 Gerald Perry died of agewww.drennanford.com request.

Susan Ellen Catron

Remembering a Lifetime ■ Death and Memorial Notice obituaries chronicle a deceased’s life. Call 360-452-8435 Monday-Friday.

A convenient form to guide you is available at www.peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.”

The New York Times Crossword Puzzle HAVING ASPIRATIONS

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BY ALAN ARBESFELD / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

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ACROSS 1 Animals at a football game 8 Antithesis of brashness 16 One carrying a spiked club, maybe 20 Case for a lawyer 21 Lay bare 22 Worker hardly making a living wage 23 “So You Think You Can Dance,” say? 25 School for James Bond 26 Plenty 27 East German secret police 28 Some letter enclosures, for short 29 A or B, but not O 30 Punk offshoot 31 Kigali native 33 A mean Amin 34 Toni Morrison novel 35 One with monthly payments 37 Shakespeare’s Claudius and others 39 Added on, botanically 41 Roller coaster shout from Queen Elizabeth? 45 Geezers 46 Sprinkling on a deviled egg 49 Nuevo ____, state in Mexico 50 Klingon on “Star Trek: T.N.G.” 51 It may lead to an unearned run

52 Make out 56 Sad sack 58 AOL competitor 61 Actor Hirsch of “Into the Wild” 62 Without doubt 65 Antique photo 67 ____ Ration (old dog food brand) 68 “Did you mean Doom or Dolittle?”? 70 Tools for cobblers 71 Inverse trig function 73 Succinctly 74 Battlefield cry 75 Literary inits. 76 Actress Streep 78 Coolness, in modern slang 79 Lisa, to Patty and Selma, on “The Simpsons” 80 One-____ (old ball game) 82 Is sick 85 Made an effort 87 Easily 89 Mob Boss Hall of Fame? 93 Like some jeans and apartment buildings 95 Onetime place for Saddam Hussein’s image 96 Elite groups 100 Spillane’s “____ Jury” 101 Camouflaged 103 Snowbird’s destination 105 Wisk competitor 106 Sci-fi/historical fiction writer Stephenson

107 Decorative moldings 110 John ____, “The House of Blue Leaves” playwright 111 “Argo” setting 112 Some salad greens 113 Making a complaint at a restaurant? 116 Iowa State locale 117 Trigger autocorrect, say 118 Beat to the finish 119 Eighty-six 120 Traps in a net 121 You may want to stop reading when you see this DOWN 1 Hot Wheels maker 2 In 3 “Mad Men” extras 4 Crows’ cries 5 “Gee,” in Glasgow 6 “Meet the Press” competitor 7 Company that encourages people to lie? 8 Mardi Gras time 9 Locale of the Battle of Tippecanoe 10 Runs the show, briefly 11 Dots in la mer 12 ____ Maar (Picasso’s muse) 13 Formal identification 14 Bono bandmate 15 Answer with a salute 16 Precedes at a concert

17 “That milky liquid belongs to me!”? 18 Cousin of a tendril 19 Baseball or Supreme Court lineups 24 Calrissian of “Star Wars” films 31 Put back on the payroll 32 Dudley Do-Right’s love 36 Moseys along 38 E.U. member not in NATO: Abbr. 40 Part of a winter stash 42 One with brand loyalty? 43 “Oh … my … God!” 44 Brian who wrote the score for “Me and Earl and the Dying Girl” 46 Glimpse on the sly 47 Munitions suppliers 48 One in line to rule the ocean? 50 Peter who directed “Picnic at Hanging Rock” 53 Man’s name that’s Hebrew for “my God” 54 1970 hit with the lyric “I’m down on my knees,/I’m begging you please to come home” 55 Roger who wrote “The Boys of Summer” 57S tick-in-the-mud types 59 Edit some film 60 Like measuring cups, often

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104 Mathematician who was the subject of the book “The Man Who Loved Only Numbers” 108 Start of the Bay State’s motto 109 Nurses at a bar 111 Calvary inscription 114 Book before Esth. 115 Skater Midori


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Thursday, November 19, 2015 PAGE

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The race to riot on campuses COLLEGE CAMPUSES ARE again in turmoil. According to The New York Times, “Racist, Cal sexist and anti- Thomas Semitic incidents on and near college campuses from Dartmouth to Wisconsin to Stanford this fall have provoked worries by education and civil rights leaders that such acts are on the increase.” That wasn’t a story in yesterday’s newspaper; that was a story in the Times edition of Oct. 31, 1988. Most campuses where these incidents occurred were noted for their liberalism. They included such bastions of feminism as Smith and Wellesley colleges, Amherst and Mount Holyoke, as well as Yale and

Dartmouth and even what many regard as ground zero of liberal academia, the University of Wisconsin at Madison. In light of recent protests at the University of Missouri and other campuses, it is amusing to read what some believed to be the cause of similar unrest in 1988. Harvard Law School professor Derrick Bell blamed the Reagan administration. Bell claimed Reagan had disengaged the federal government from civil rights causes and that Vice President George H.W. Bush’s campaign ad about Willie Horton, an African-American Massachusetts prisoner who raped a white woman while on a weekend furlough, was also a contributing factor to racial fears. Bell must have forgotten that it was Al Gore who first raised the issue of furloughs for convicted felons in a debate with then-Massachusetts governor and presidential candidate Michael Dukakis. So if Reagan and Bush were

to blame then, who is to blame now for a repeat of the racial conflict on some college campuses? The left isn’t blaming the first African-American president, though he has done very little to substantially improve conditions for poor African-Americans. How about blaming the spoiled fruit of liberalism? The president and chancellor at the University of Missouri abruptly resigned when a group of mostly black students protested that they had not said or done enough in response to racial slights on campus. We’re hearing students speak of the need for “safe zones” and against “microaggression,” a term with which I have only recently become familiar. Several points about all of this. First, the leadership at the University of Missouri didn’t lead at all; they cut and ran. To put a twist on a cliche, it isn’t about the inmates taking over the asylum; rather it is

Peninsula Voices Majority should rule “I pledge allegiance to the flag . . . and to the republic for which it stands . . .” Everyone knows the rest. I was curious about what the definition of a “republic” is. The Merriam-Webster dictionary says it is “a state in which the supreme power is held by the people and their elected representatives . . .” I would like to note that it says “and their elected representatives.” So what does it say a democracy is? “A system of government by the whole population or all the eligible members of a state, typically through elected representatives.” It also says “control of an organization or group by the majority of its members: the intended extension of an industrial democracy.” I then looked up the defi-

nition of “majority” — “the greater number.” It would seem that requiring a two-thirds or a 60 percent supermajority allows a small group of people to prevent an outcome that a majority, say 51 percent, has voted for. It would seem that the intent of a republic or a democracy is that the majority of people vote for and elect officials. Those representatives then have the permission of the people to vote for them when making laws and deciding how to pay for public obligations through taxes. Requiring more than a simple majority for making decisions is not how a democracy or a republic was designed to work. John Benson, Sequim

Train elsewhere I’ve read many articles

about the controversial Navy electronic warfare training exercise proposed for the Olympic Peninsula. I fear it will damage the health of animals and people and cultural and historical resources.

OUR

about the children taking over the day care center. Students should be more concerned with the falling value of their degrees and the poor job market for college graduates than causes that will not help them after graduation. No employer will be asking for their protest resumes. There will always be racists, bigots and intolerant people among us, though it could be argued that liberals are the least tolerant of all when it comes to ideas and policies with which they disagree. The response to stupidity is education, not a fascist-like approach as we saw when a Mizzou “professor” asked for “muscle” to remove a journalist from covering a demonstration. Are certain people more interested in scoring political points, or solving a problem? Over several decades, incidents of discrimination against conservative students, faculty and even speakers have been well-documented.

Invitations have been withdrawn, speakers booed, censorship imposed on too many campuses, which are supposed to be oases of tolerance, pluralism and academic freedom. When a student expresses a racial or religious slur, instead of being condemned, that student should be invited to dinner with people whom they have maligned and required to listen to their stories and the hurt they are causing by their words. Conversion is better than forced silence. Isolation, punishment and expulsion can deepen bigotry, not cure it.

_________ Cal Thomas is a Fox TV network commentator and syndicated news columnist. His column appears on this page every Thursday. He can be reached at tcaeditors@tribune. com or by U.S. mail to Tribune Content Agency, 435 N. Michigan Ave., Suite 1400, Chicago, IL, 60611.

READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND EMAIL

The Navy can run the exercise in locations already used for training and live fire exercises and much better suited than the Olympic Peninsula. These facilities include naval air weapons stations

(NAWS) and naval air stations (NAS) in China Lake, Calif.; San Clemente Island, Calif.; NAS North Island (Coronado), Calif.; and NAS Fallon, Nev. (home of TOPGUN, the Naval Fighter Weapons School).

It might add cost to relocate the exercise, but this cost is probably a drop in the military bucket. It would also eliminate the legal expense of fighting the public here and keep them from losing public support. It’s possible, though doubtful, the Navy must do some electronic warfare training here to ensure they can protect the submarine bases in Kitsap County, naval weapons station on Indian Island, naval shipyard in Bremerton, NAS Whidbey Island and other facilities. If the Navy can prove this is the case, let them do most of the training elsewhere and then run one or two exercises locally. I think it’s unlikely that one or two limited exercises would have any lasting adverse effect. David Tonkin, Port Townsend

No place for refugees at U.S. table IN THE WAKE of the horrific attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, there has been a crushing backlash against refugees from the wars in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan. A cartoon has been circulating on social Amy media showing Goodman a Native American man greeting a Pilgrim, saying, “Sorry, but we’re not accepting refugees.” As Americans prepare for one of the most popular national holidays, Thanksgiving, which commemorates the support and nourishment provided by the indigenous people to English refugees seeking a better life free from religious persecution, a wave of xenophobia is sweeping the country. In the U.S. Congress, no less than six separate bills have been put forward to block any federal funding to resettle refugees from Syria or Iraq, and to empower states to deny entry into their “territory.” Imagine if all of a sudden we

had 50 “statelets” creating their own border checkpoints, stopping all travelers, looking for anyone suspicious, i.e., any and all Syrians. So far, 31 state governors have essentially demanded this. Republican Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback issued an executive order forbidding any agency of state government from cooperating in any way with Syrian refugee support efforts. House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell have called for a pause in the Syrian refugee program, with the support of Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer. In Europe, similar policies are being proposed, with an announcement from Poland that it would pull back from the Europe-wide commitment to take in Syrian refugees. Far-right-wing parties in France and Holland have gained traction with their anti-immigrant rhetoric as well. “It’s both morally reprehensible and factually wrong to equate these people with terrorists,” Peter Bouckaert told us on the “Democracy Now!” news hour. Bouckaert is the emergencies director for Human Rights Watch

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and has spent the past few months in the Balkans and Greece, closely monitoring the refugee crisis firsthand. “They’re actually fleeing from the terrorists, and they’ve faced horrors of war in Iraq and Syria and Afghanistan. Many of them are coming with their families, trying to bring them to safety and a better future in Europe. And they should be welcomed. They will contribute to our society, and they have a right to asylum,” he said. While the cartoon of the indigenous man and the pilgrim may be humorous, the crisis is not, and the imagery from the wars and the flight of the refugees is numbing. Bouckaert was one of the first people to share the photo of 3-year-old Aylan Kurdi after he drowned, lying face-down on the sand in the Turkish beach town of Bodrum. Last September, the Kurdi family was trying to reach Greece, just a dozen miles across the Aegean Sea. They bought passage on a smuggler’s small boat, which capsized. Aylan, his brother and mother drowned, along with at

least two others. The photos of Aylan’s corpse, first in the sand, then being carried by a Turkish soldier, shocked the conscience of the world. “That is still the reality on the beaches of Europe, two Aylan Kurdis are still drowning every day,” Bouckaert said. A core argument by those who would deny entry to Syrian refugees was a passport found at the scene of one of the suicide bombers in Paris last week. It was a Syrian passport, and contributes to the belief that violent jihadists can enter Europe posing as refugees. “That’s exactly why they left a fake Syrian passport at the scene of their attacks, because they would love it if we shut the door on the people who are fleeing their so-called Islamic caliphate,” Bouckaert explained. “Our most powerful tool in the war against Islamic extremism, are our values. It’s not our military planes and our bombs. The only way we can fight against this brutality, this barbarism, is with our values. And if we’re going to shut the door on these refugees, we’re giving a propaganda victory to ISIS.” And yet, the U.S., French and

NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, managing editor; 360-417-3531 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com ■ LEE HORTON, sports editor; 360-417-3525; lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com ■ 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

Russian response to terror is to pummel the city of Raqqa, considered the capital of the socalled Islamic State but also home to hundreds of thousands of civilians who will now become terrorized refugees themselves. They will follow the millions who have already fled, only to find they have no place to go. Add to that the refugees from countries like Iraq and Afghanistan: people fleeing for their lives from the wars being waged by the United States. It has been almost 400 years since that first, fateful Thanksgiving feast in Massachusetts. Xenophobic policies like those threatening to shut out refugees from these wars, if allowed to stand, should serve as a shameful centerpiece at every Thanksgiving table this year.

_________ Amy Goodman hosts the radio and TV program “Democracy Now!” Her column appears every Thursday. Email Goodman at mail@democracynow.org or in care of Democracy Now!, 207 W. 25th St., Floor 11, New York, NY 10001.

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


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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015

State budget outlook predicts shortfall for next fiscal plan BY RACHEL LA CORTE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

OLYMPIA — State lawmakers are facing a projected budget shortfall of nearly $500 million for the next two-year budget ending in mid-2019, according to new numbers released Wednesday. That doesn’t include the expected financial obligation needed to increase funding for education as directed by the state Supreme Court. The budget outlook released by the state Economic and Revenue Fore-

cast Council showed that the current two-year budget that ends in the middle of 2017 will have a surplus of about $357 million. But the following twoyear budget projection shows a shortfall of $474 million. State officials said that since the Legislature approved the current twoyear, $38 billion budget this past June, state costs to maintain current services and other mandatory costs for the current biennium have grown by nearly $700 million. Gov. Jay Inslee is prepar-

ing a supplemental budget ing the way the state pays proposal to be released next for public education. month. The high court initially ruled in 2012 that lawmakLawmakers return 2016 ers were not meeting their Lawmakers will return constitutional responsibilto Olympia in January, and ity to fully pay for basic the House and Senate each education. They gave the Legislawill present their suppleture until the 2017-18 mental budget proposals during the 60-day legisla- school year to fix the problem and ultimately found tive session. Lawmakers return to the Legislature in contempt the Capitol under the cloud in 2014 before sanctioning of $100,000-a-day sanctions them earlier this year. State budget director that have been imposed by the state Supreme Court David Schumacher said the since August over lawmak- costs related to that maners’ lack of progress on fix- date are at least $3 billion.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Thursday, November 19, 2015 SECTION

CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, BUSINESS, WEATHER In this section

B Outdoors

Think outside the bird WHAT WOULD THANKSGIVING be like without turkey? Maybe this is the year to find Lee out. Horton When you think about it, it’s surprising that one bird has remained the focal point of dinner every year on the fourth Thursday in November. It’s a good thing, for sure — don’t fix what isn’t broke, you know? — but the tradition’s staying power is impressive. You against-the-grainers and doit-yourselfers do have options, though. While the wild turkey hunting season gets underway Friday in Eastern Washington, there are various other hunts that can put a different meal on your table a week from today. All the weather the North Olympic Peninsula has received during the past week has made the area’s rivers difficult to fish and the saltwater miserable to fish. Ducks don’t mind the rain, but the wind had them ducking. “Waterfowl hunting season is in full swing,” Ward Norden, owner of Snapper Tackle Company and a former fishery biologist who lives in Quilcene, said. “Last week, the first big flocks of widgeon ducks joined the pintail and mallards on Hood Canal’s and other bays. “The wind storms of the last few days have sent the birds running for cover, but they will come right back with calmer weather. They don’t care about the rain.” But be on alert; the weather has left floating monsters in the water. “Care should be taken by waterfowl hunters in boats because there is a lot of floating debris in the water from recent flooding, and hitting something before first light can ruin your entire day,” Norden said. For those extreme outside-theboxers, the cougar hunt is ongoing, and the wind actually has helped the cause. “If you are intent on bagging one of our continent’s finest trophies, a mountain lion, it gets a lot ‘easier’ now that all the leaves have been blown off the bushes, so you can see a cat coming to the call,” Norden said.

Better under center Improved Munyagi, Neay Bay eye 3-peat BY MICHAEL CARMAN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

NEAH BAY — Neah Bay running back Cole Svec’s eyes lit up when asked about the play of Rwehabura Munyagi Jr. “Oh, yeah, he’s way better than last year,” Svec said of the Red Devils’ sophomore quarterback. “We’ve been getting him to the fitness center and he’s been getting fitter and stronger.” Munyagi was no slouch last season, when he started as a freshman on Neah Bay’s Class 1B championship-winning team. He threw for 932 yards and 22 touchdowns and had only three interceptions. Two of the TDs came in the fourth quarter of the Red Devils’ semifinal win against Lummi and in the state championship triumph over Liberty Christian. But something is different this season: Munyagi has grown, both physically — he’s listed as 6-foot-1, 175-pounds but looks at least a couple of inches taller — but also as a play maker and leader for Neah Bay (9-0). “He’s not even close to the same kind of player [as last year],” Red Devils head coach Tony McCaulley said.

JEFF HALSTEAD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Sophomore Rwehabura Munyagi Jr. has made strides as a passer and a runner in TURN TO NEAH/B2 this second season starting at quarterback for Neah Bay.

HONORING

THE CHAMPS

Deer hunts The late modern firearm blacktailed deer season opens today and runs through Sunday. For muzzleloaders, the late blacktailed deer season opens next Wednesday, Nov. 25. “Next week is the opening of the late muzzle loading season for deer, and this is the first year that the Olympic hunting unit on the west side of Hood Canal and north of Sequim has been open for muzzleloaders,” Norden said. “I have been looking forward to it for a while. Even with the huge numbers of deer in the unit, this is one of the toughest hunts in the state due to our local deer’s habit of lying in one spot for a week or more to conserve energy, a habit they have in common with Southeast Alaska’s coastal deer.” The late muzzleloader deer season will remain open through Dec. 15.

Opah record broken Here’s a big fish story, and it’s actually true. The state Department of Fish and Wildlife announced this week that Jim Watson of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, has set a new state record for the largest opah caught off the Washington coast. Watson caught an opah on Sept. 27 that weighed 35.67 pounds and measured 37 7/8 inches. That beat the old record by 7.49 pounds. TURN

TO

HORTON/B3

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Peninsula College men’s soccer coach Cale Rodriguez speaks about his team Wednesday during a celebration at the Pirate Union Building on the school’s Port Angeles campus. The event honored the Peninsula men’s team for winning the 2015 Northwest Athletic Conference championship earlier this week as well as the women’s team, which placed third in the NWAC.

Redhawks, Wolves fill all-league teams BY LEE HORTON PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Port Townsend dominated the Olympic League 1A allleague football teams and Sequim earned six spots on the Olympic League 2A first teams. Redhawks senior David Sua was voted the Olympic League 1A MVP by the league’s coaches. Port Townsend also received the Offensive and Defensive MVPs. Senior fullback Wesley Wheeler was picked for the offensive honor, while Keegan Khile was given the defensive award. Freshman Riley Cowan

Preps becomes the second consecutive Sequim quarterback to be voted first-team quarterback by Olympic League 2A coaches, following Miguel Moroles, who received the honor in 2014. Wolves sophomore Gavin Velarde was picked for two firstteam spots, at receive and kick returner. Velarde joins Olympic linemen Keith Moore and Tommy Fernandez as the only Olympic League 2A players to receive two first-team nods.

Sequim offensive lineman Zach Hebert also was chosen for the first-team offense. Two Wolves made the firstteam defense: linebacker Chris Whitaker and safety Kane Stoddard. Whitacker also was a firstteam linebacker last season. Receiver Noah Christianson and lineman Jack Ellison made the second-team offense. Port Angeles didn’t have any first-team honorees but filled six second-team spots. Caleb West earned two of those, at tight end on offense and defensive line on defense. Lineman Isaiah Nichols is

the only other Roughrider to make the second-team offense. Joining West on the secondteam defense are linebacker Kellen Landry and defensive back Branden Currie. Jacob Kennedy was voted second-team punter. Sequim’s coaching staff, led by head coach Erik Wiker, was picked at the league’s best this season. Wiker’s assistants are Dave Ditlefsen, Chris Young, Bob Withrow, Jerry Mote, Bryan O’Hara, Craig Frick and Cody Buckmaster. TURN

TO

PREPS/B3


B2

SportsRecreation

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015

Today’s

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

Scoreboard Calendar

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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

SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY

Today No events scheduled.

Friday Football: Neah Bay vs. Seattle Lutheran, 1B State Quarterfinals, at Silverdale Stadium, 7 p.m. Women’s Basketball: Peninsula College at Tacoma, 6 p.m. Men’s Basketball: Big Bend at Peninsula College, 7 p.m.

Saturday Football: Quilcene at Lummi, 1B State Quarterfinals, 1 p.m. Women’s Basketball: Peninsula College vs. Highline, at Tacoma, noon. Men’s Basketball: Highline at Peninsula College, 7 p.m.

Preps Football All-League OLYMPIC LEAGUE 2A MVP: Geordyn Shinard, RB, sr., Olympic Offensive MVP: Matt Becker, QB, sr., Olympic Defensive MVP: Bob Evans, LB, sr., North Kitsap Coaching Staff: Sequim Team Sportsmanship: North Mason and Kingston First-team Offense QB: Riley Cowan, fr., Sequim RB: Alex Barrett, sr., Kingston RB: Sean Crowell, sr., North Kitsap WR: Gavin Velarde, so., Sequim WR: Brett Heaps, jr., Kingston TE: Cole Milyard, sr., North Kitsap OL: Chad Schoonhoven, sr., North Mason OL: Zach Hebert, sr., Sequim OL: Ryan Brooks, so., North Kitsap OL: Keith Moore, sr., Olympic OL: Tommy Fernandez, jr., Olympic First-team Defense DL: Colin Sindel, sr., Kingston DL: Keith Moore, sr., Olympic DL: Tommy Fernandez, jr., Olympic DL: Quinnten Notah, jr., North Kitsap LB: Cole Rinehart, sr., North Mason LB: Dawson Johnson, sr., Kingston LB: Chris Whitaker, sr., Sequim LB: Christian Tom, sr., North Kitsap DB: Tony Watson, sr., Bremerton DB: Hayden Sather, sr., Kingston DB: Kane Stoddard, sr., Sequim DB: Jayden Fernandez, jr., Olympic DB: Zach Clark, jr., North Kitsap First-team Special Teams K: Kainen Warren, jr., North Kitsap P: Max Boekenoogen, so., Bremerton KR: Gavin Velarde, so., Sequim LS: Max English, sr., Kingston Second-team Offense QB: Chris Andrews, jr., North Kitsap RB: Richard Bios, jr., Bremerton RB: Logan Madison, jr., Olympic WR: Colton Wade, sr., Olympic WR: Noah Christianson, sr., Sequim TE: Caleb West, sr., Port Angeles OL: Jack Ellison, sr., Sequim OL: Alberto Castorena, sr., Olympic OL: Isaiah Nichols, sr., Port Angeles OL: Cameron Tangen, sr., Kingston OL: Bryan Guererro, jr., Bremerton Second-team Defense DL: Tony Lopez, jr., Bremerton DL: Brody Knapp, sr., North Mason

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ROCKET’S

MAN NO MORE

Houston Rockets fired head coach Kevin McHale on Wednesday after the team off to a puzzling 4-7 start. “The team was not responding to Kevin McHale and we had to make the tough call,” general manager Daryl Morey said. “And we had to make it soon. There is not time in the tough Western Conference to wait for a turnaround.”

SPORTS ON TV

Today 8:30 a.m. (311) ESPNU Basketball NCAA, Temple vs. Minnesota, Puerto Rico Tip-Off, Quarterfinals (Live) 10 a.m. (47) GOLF PGA, The RSM Classic (Live) 10:30 a.m. (311) ESPNU Basketball NCAA, Butler vs. Missouri State, Puerto Rico TipOff, Quarterfinals (Live) Noon (27) ESPN2 Tennis ATP, World Tour Finals, Round Robin (Live) 2 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NCAA, Miami vs. Mississippi State, Puerto Rico Tip-Off, Quarterfinals (Live) 4 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NCAA, Utah vs. Texas Tech, Puerto Rico Tip-Off, Quarterfinals (Live) 4 p.m. (306) FS1 Basketball NCAA, Rutgers vs. St. John’s (Live) 4 p.m. (311) ESPNU Basketball NCAA, Long Beach State vs. Seton Hall, Charleston Classic, Quarterfinals (Live) 4:30 p.m. (26) ESPN Football NCAA, East Carolina at Central Florida (Live) 5 p.m. NFLN Football NFL, Tennessee Titans at Jacksonville Jaguars (Live) 5 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA, Milwaukee Bucks at Cleveland Cavaliers (Live) 6 p.m. (306) FS1 Basketball NCAA, Iowa at Marquette (Live) 6:30 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NCAA, Virginia vs. Bradley, Charleston Classic, Quarterfinals (Live) 6:30 p.m. (311) ESPNU Football NCAA, LouisianaMonroe at Texas State (Live) 7 p.m. (47) GOLF APGA, Australian Masters (Live) 7:30 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA, Golden State Warriors at Los Angeles Clippers (Live) 7:30 p.m. (320) PAC12WA Basketball NCAA, Mount St. Mary’s vs. Washington (Live) 8:30 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NCAA, Southern Methodist at Stanford (Live)

Friday DL: Zac Marks, sr., North Mason DL: Caleb West, sr., Port Angeles LB: Ryan Aaro, sr., Bremerton LB: Sterling McIntosh, sr., North Mason LB: Kellen Landry, sr., Port Angeles LB: Cole Milyard, sr., North Kitsap DB: Mikhail Papillon, jr., Bremerton DB: Ali Chiquiti, sr., Kingston DB: Branden Currie, sr., Port Angeles DB: Ethan Goldizen, sr., Olympic DB: Dez Johnson, sr., Olympic Second-team Special Teams K: Dylan Reed, jr., Bremerton P: Jacob Kennedy, sr., Port Angeles KR: Brett Heaps, jr., Kingston LS: Ian Beddo, jr., North Kitsap OLYMPIC LEAGUE 1A MVP: David Sua, QB/RB/LB, sr., Port Townsend Offensive MVP: Wesley Wheeler, sr., Port Townsend Defensive MVP: Keegan Khile, sr., Port Townsend Coaching Staff: Port Townsend

Team Sportsmanship: Chimacum Offense QB: George Harris, sr., Klahowya RB: Detrius Kelsall, so., Port Townsend RB: Wiley Hesselgrave, sr., Coupeville WR: Nate Hough, sr., Klahowya WR: C.J. Smith, sr., Coupeville TE: Skylar Stevens, sr., Klahowya OL: David Hoglund, sr., Port Townsend OL: Dylan Leer, jr., Klahowya OL: Brendan Gilbert, sr., Coupeville OL: Lane Dotson, jr., Chimacum OL: Lucas Foster, sr., Port Townsend Defense DL: Lucas Weaver, sr., Klahowya DL: James Gherna, jr., Klahowya DL: Sam Golden, sr., Chimacum DL: David Hoglund, sr., Port Townsend DL: Trevon Noel, sr., Chimacum LB: Detrius Kelsall, so., Port Townsend LB: Keegan Khile, sr., Port Townsend LB: Gabriel Wallis, jr., Klahowya LB: Tyler Vandergriff, so., Klahowya DB: Jacob Ralls, sr., Port Townsend

DB: Dylan Zuber, jr., Klahowya DB: Jake Sargent, jr., Klahowya DB: Matt Torres, sr., Chimacum DB: Hunter Smith, so., Coupeville Special Teams K: Jake Sargent, jr., Klahowya P: Clay Reilley, jr., Coupeville KR: Jacob Ralls, sr., Port Townsend LS: Trevon Noel, sr., Chimacum

Girls Soccer All-League OLYMPIC LEAGUE 2A MVP: Cate Moriarty, MF, sr., North Kitsap Coach of the Year: Mitchell James, North Mason Team Sportsmanship: Kingston and Port Angeles First Team Gemma Ferland, Midfielder, sr., North Kitsap Jenae Arnold, Midfielder, sr., North Kitsap Brian George, Forward, jr., North Kitsap Katie Campana, Defender, jr., Olympic Liz Krotzer, Defender, sr., Olympic

Midnight (47) GOLF EPGA, DP World Tour Championship (Live) Tegan Daviscourt, Forward, sr., North Mason Raven Wolfe, Forward, sr., North Mason Maddie Boe, Midfielder, sr., Port Angeles Alyssa Beach, Midfielder, sr., Bremerton Claire Henninger, Goalkeeper, so., Sequim Second Team Madison Skansi, Defender, sr., North Kitsap Allie Zinn, Defender, sr., North Kitsap Maia Larson, Defender, so., North Kitsap Hanna Troy, Forward, fr., Olympic Morgan McCorkle, Forward, jr., Olympic Lacey Stark, Midfielder, jr., North Mason Dawn Phipps, Midfielder, so., North Mason Taylar Clark, Midfielder, jr., Port Angeles Somiya Watson, Goalkeeper, sr., Bremerton Mattie Clark, Defender, sr., Sequim Courtney Dormaier, Defender, sr., Kingston

Neah: Munyagi has his coach seeing Greene CONTINUED FROM B1 the offseason. “Did a whole lot of weightlift“What I’m liking is now is not ing in the summer, got bigger and only is he throwing the ball well, stronger, and my lineman got a he’s taking off when he needs to whole lot better, too,” Munyagi run it. And he never really had said. Summertime 7-on-7 competithat last year.” A heady comparison even tions with bigger schools such as Sequim, North Kitsap and Port comes to McCaulley’s mind. “He reminds me a lot of Josiah Townsend also helped him Greene right now,” McCaulley develop. “Especially in 7-on-7, we did a said of Neah Bay’s former quarterback, who was a twice named whole lot of throwing and making 1B Player of the Year by The Asso- reads, waiting for the play to break down, and taking off if ciated Press. “His long strides, his decision there was nothing available,” making, he’s throwing the ball Munyagi said. “I’ve worked on my mechanics well. He’s not as fast as Josiah, but I think we are still going a lot over the summer and in through a growth spurt with him practice. And my drop-back. Getting that space between myself yet. “He’s a little gangly — I can’t and the line to drop back and say uncoordinated, but he’s grow- make my reads has been important.” ing into himself. Munyagi also worked on his “So I think he will only get betgame during a visit to the Russell ter each year.” Munyagi’s growth as an offen- Wilson Passing Academy this sive force stems from the work he summer. and teammates put in over Wilson, whose skill set seems

tailor-made for 8-man football, was on hand to offer advice and encouragement. “He’s definitely a player I look up to,” Munyagi said.

Making plays Munyagi has added a touch of Wilson’s game to his own: the ability to improvise. He showed that new skill on a 33-yard TD run in last week’s 68-0 state playoff victory against Clallam Bay. On what was originally a pass play, Munyagi was flushed from the pocket and scrambled to the left sideline. It appeared as if he was hemmed in and would be stopped for a loss, but Munyagi spun completely around, made two Bruins miss and side-stepped to his right, cutting upfield and turning on the jets for a 33-yard TD. “You could tell from that run, he couldn’t have done that last year,” Svec said. “That’s because he’s been hit-

ting those weights and getting stronger and more explosive.” Munyagi’s favorite target is the speedy, and aptly named, Cameron Buzzell, who has buzzed past defenders for 29 receptions, 12 of them TDs, and 630 yards. “I think he has improved a lot,” Buzzell said. “His throwing arm is strong, and his speed, he’s much faster. He can put the ball where it needs to be.”

Becoming a leader

before the season and told me I had to step up,” Munyagi said. “So basically, I’ve just followed his advice and tried to be vocal and support my teammates.” Svec sees growth in his teammate, as well. “He just doesn’t lead by example, he does it vocally, too,” Svec said. “If it’s his fault, he’ll step up and say it was his fault and that he’ll do better the next time. “He’s more involved this year, definitely.” Buzzell also has noticed Munyagi’s role shift this season. “He tries to push other people to do better than what they think they are capable of,” Buzzell said. And this year’s Neah Bay football team has the capability to hoist another state championship trophy, which would be its third straight.

McCaulley dials up the plays and can see the growth in the offense. “I think we are further along offensively this year than we were last year, and a lot of that is Rweha improving his passing and knowing when to take off and run,” McCaulley said. “Cam and him especially have ________ a really strong connection.” Munyagi also has grown into Sports reporter Michael Carman can be his role as a leader. contacted at 360-452-2345, ext. 5250 or at “Coach called me into his office mcarman@peninsuladailynews.com.

Arrieta wins NL Cy Young Award; Keuchel earns AL honor BY BEN WALKER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — Jake Arrieta of the Chicago Cubs aced out Dodgers stars Zack Greinke and Clayton Kershaw for the NL Cy Young Award while Houston lefty Dallas Keuchel won the AL honor Wednesday. In what was expected to be a tighter three-person race, Arrieta got 17 first-place votes for 169 points from members of the Baseball Writers’ Association of Amer-

ica. Greinke drew 10 first-place votes and had 147 points. Kershaw had the other three firsts and 101 points. Arrieta led the majors in wins, going 22-6. He went 11-0 in his last 12 starts, pushing the Cubs into the playoffs for the first time since 2008. The 29-year-old righty had a 1.77 ERA, struck out 236 and pitched a no-hitter. Arrieta was the first Cubs pitcher to win the honor since Greg Maddux in 1992. The Cubs won a major postsea-

son award for the third straight day. Kris Bryant was the NL Rookie of the Year and Joe Maddon was the NL Manager of the Year. The MVP awards will be announced today. Greinke posted a 1.66 ERA that was the lowest in the majors since Maddux in 1995. Greinke went 19-3, fanned 200 and had a scoreless streak of 45 2-3 innings. Kershaw had won three of the previous four NL Cy Youngs. He

struck out 301, the most in the majors since 2002, and went 16-7 with a 2.13 ERA for the NL West champions. Keuchel got 22 first-place votes for 186 points. David Price drew eight first-place votes and 143 points for his split season with Detroit and Toronto and Oakland’s Sonny Gray finished third. Keuchel led the AL in wins, going 20-8 and helping Houston reach the playoffs for the first time since 2005. The bearded

27-year-old with a dominant sinker and sharp slider had a 2.48 ERA and 216 strikeouts. Price went 18-5 with a 2.45 ERA and 225 strikeouts. Traded from Detroit to Toronto in late July, he was a key reason the Blue Jays made their first playoff appearance since 1993. Keuchel became the first Houston pitcher to win the Cy Young since Roger Clemens in 2004, and the first do it since the Astros joined the AL.


SportsRecreation

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015

B3

Preps: Boe, Henninger on soccer first team CONTINUED FROM B1

Nick Snyder and assistants Tom Webster, Terry Khile and Rich Hill were picked as Olympic League 1A’s top coaching staff. Chimacum received the team sportsmanship honor. Olympic League 1A, which consists of just four teams, only has one all-league team. Port Townsend’s Kelsall, a sophomore running back and linebacker, and David Hoglund, a senior offensive and defensive lineman, were each voted to both the offensive and defensive teams. Lucas Foster of Port Townsend and Lane Dotson of Chimacum also made the offensive team. Redhawks defensive back and kick returner Jacob Ralls received defensive and special teams allleague nods. Chimacum senior also made the defense and special teams as a lineman and long snapper. Lineman Sam Golden and Matthew Torres also made the defensive team for the Cowboys.

Olympic running back Geordyn Shinard was named Olympic League 2A MVP, and teammate Matt Becker, a quarterback, received the Offensive MVP. North Kitsap’s Bob Evans was named Defensive MVP. North Mason and Kingston share the team sportsmanship award.

Olympic League 1A Sua, a senior, split time at quarterback and running back while leading Port Townsend to the league title, an undefeated regular season and the school’s first state playoff berth since 2004. he completed 53 of 95 passes for 673 yards and five touchdowns and three interceptions this season. He also led Port Townsend with 738 yards rushing on 81 carries. He had seven rushing touchdowns. Sua started at quarterback most of the season but also spent time at running back after Wheeler suffered a season-ending injury in the seventh game. Sua’s MVP honor comes a year after he won the league’s Offensive MVP award. This year, that award goes to Wheeler, who, in

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Sequim’s Riley Cowan (17) and Gavin Velarde (23) were voted to the Olympic League 2A first team. less than seven games, ran for 730 yards and 17 TDs on 77 carries. Khile led the Redhawks’ defense in solo (49) and assisted

Evergreen League football team Jack Dahlgren was the only Forks player honored by the Evergreen 1A/2A League coaches. Dahlgren, a junior, was named first-team offensive lineman and received honorable mention as a

(78) tackles, as well as sacks (five). He tied with Detrius Kelsall for the team lead in forced fumbles with two. Port Townsend head coach

defensive lineman.

Girls Soccer Olympic League 2A all-league teams Port Angeles midfielder Maddie Boe and Sequim goalkeeper Claire Henninger were voted Olympic League 2A first team by the league’s girls soccer coaches. Boe, a senior, scored five goals and dished out a team-high 11 assists for the Roughriders this season. Henninger, only a sophomore, made more than 175 saves for the Wolves this season. Port Angeles junior midfielder Taylar Clark and Sequim senior defender Mattie Clark were picked for the all-league second team. Olympic League 2A doesn’t have honorable mention, but Port Angeles coach Moseley named three of his players as honorable mention: sophomore forwards Emily Boyd and Sierra Robinson and senior defender Madison St. George. Given the opportunity to do likewise, Sequim coach Brittany Murdach picked midfielder Gretchen Happe, defender Claire Payne and defender/midfielder Chloie Sparks as her team’s honorable mention.

Seahawks expecting Boston’s Ortiz to retire after 2016 Irvin miss 49ers game due to sprained MCL BY JIMMY GOLEN

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOSTON — Red Sox slugger David Ortiz, Boston’s beloved “Big Papi� who helped the cursed franchise end its dynasty of disappointment and cursed out the bombers who attacked his adopted city, said on Wednesday he will play one more year before retiring. On the day that he turned 40, the Dominican designated hitter said in a video posted on The Players’ Tribune that the 2016 season will be his last. The post was titled “40.�

BY NICK PATTERSON THE [EVERETT] DAILY HERALD

RENTON — The Seattle Seahawks will be without linebacker Bruce Irvin when they entertain the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday. Irvin, Seattle’s starter at strong-side linebacker, suffered a sprained medial collateral ligament in his knee late in the Seahawks’ 39-32 loss to the Arizona Cardinals last Sunday, meaning he’ll be unavailable in the short term. “He’s got a sore knee,� Seattle coach Pete Carroll said Wednesday at the Virginia Mason Athletic Center. “He’s going to miss this week unless something miraculous happens. Hopefully we can contain it to a two-week thing if that’s the case.� Irvin is currently tied for ninth on the team in tackles with 30, and he’s tied for second on the team in sacks with 4.5.

Morgan to fill in Carroll said Mike Morgan will play in Irvin’s absence. Morgan filled in against the Cardinals after Irvin went down. Carroll also said rookie defensive end Frank Clark will likely see more time, slotting in on the downs when Irvin would typically be deployed in the pass rush. There was some speculation that with Irvin out, the Seahawks would move weak-side linebacker K.J. Wright to the strong side and slot Kevin Pierre-Louis in at the weak side. However, Carroll nixed that possibility. “We could do that, but we’ve made the decision to go with Mike and leave K.J. alone,� Carroll said. “He’s playing great football and that keeps him at his best

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Seahawks linebacker Bruce Irvin (51) pressures Arizona quarterback Carson Palmer. spot and his strongest spot.� Seattle had one other player leave the game against the Cardinals because of injury.

Richardson’s hammy Receiver Paul Richardson, playing for the first time this season after being activated from the physically-unable-to-perform list, made it through just six snaps before straining a hamstring while making a 40-yard catch, his only reception of the game. Carroll did not know Richardson’s status for the game against the 49ers. “We’re going to find out,� Carroll said. “We’ll know [Thursday]. He’s going to jog [Thursday] and see where it is. “Tests show that he has something, he doesn’t feel it and he has really good strength in his hammy, so it’s a little misleading right now. “We need to find out what that means. We’re not going to know until we start to work him. He’s resting again today and we hope to find out. “He actually feels pretty good about it, he doesn’t sense that he’s hurt, but he did feel it in the game and it did show up on the MRI, so we we’re treating the player instead of the MRI

Clutch bat Ortiz led the Red Sox to three World Series championships, hitting 503 homers in a career of clutch at-bats while serving as the inspi-

ration that turned a tormented franchise into a bigmarket bully. Already treasured for his big hits and even bigger personality, Ortiz further cemented himself in the city’s lore after the 2013 Boston Marathon bombings that killed three people and injured hundreds more. Taking the microphone before the ballclub’s first game back, Ortiz told a Fenway crowd that included the governor and top police officials: “This is our [expletive] city. And nobody’s going to dictate our freedom.�

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right now.� On the plus side, Carroll was optimistic about the possibility of cornerback Jeremy Lane being activated against San Francisco. Lane, Seattle’s nickel corner last season, has spent the entire year on the PUP list because of arm and knee injuries sustained during last season’s Super Bowl. He returned to practice last week, and there had been some talk about the possibility of Lane being activated against Arizona. “He’s going for it,� Carroll said. “He’s going to go for it this week. He’ll be a bit limited [Wednesday] but he’s going to practice and if he can make it through the week then he’s available to us this weekend. “I’d really like to see him play this week.�

FOR THE HOLIDAYS.

Matthews free Receiver Chris Matthews, who was placed on waivers Tuesday, went unclaimed Wednesday. Matthews, a big 6-foot-5 target who had a breakout four-catch, 109-yard performance in last season’s Super Bowl, had just four catches for 54 yards in nine games this season. Matthews is now a free agent.

Horton: Record opah CONTINUED FROM B1 new release. “The captain and crew Watson caught the came unglued, because you large-eyed, orange-red-coljust don’t see these fish ored, disc-shaped opah very often.� while fishing with anchoWatson said he shared vies 45 miles offshore of the fish with the charter Westport in Grays Harbor crew, family and friends. County. “It was not like any fish “Catching the fish was a I’ve tasted, but it was lot of work, but fun. They really good,� Watson said. really fight, and it took a “Every bit of it went to while,� Watson said in a good use.�

“Life is based on different chapters, and I think I am ready to experience the next one in my life,� he told his fans. “I wish I could play another 40 years, so I could have you guys behind me, but it doesn’t work that way. After this year, time is up. So let’s enjoy the season.�

It’s fitting that the record-breaking opah was caught in 2015. Earlier this year, in May, the journal Science reported that opah are the only fish found to be warm-blooded throughout their bodies.

________ Sports Editor Lee Horton, who is filling in for outdoors columnist Michael Carman, can be reached at 360-417-3525 or at lhorton@ peninsuladailynews.com.

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B4

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015

Dilbert

Classic Doonesbury (1985)

Frank & Ernest

DEAR ABBY: I loved the letter from “Ready for the Reunion” (July 31), who wondered why some people in her high school graduating class didn’t respond to the notice of the reunion. Some of us would like to completely forget high school and everything associated with it. I missed my 10th, 20th, 30th and 40th year reunions. I did consider going to the last one, but then I started reading my former classmates’ posts on the reunion website. It seems everyone is retired, wealthy, has numerous grandchildren, at least one retirement home in an exotic locale and spends their time relaxing and jetting around (or so they say). I’m still working, not wealthy, not particularly successful and have moved from my home state to the backwoods of middle America. Basically, I have a boring life, so I have nothing to brag about. I didn’t go. I’m still in contact with the important people in my life from high school and just don’t need the aggravation. Staying Home

by Lynn Johnston

by G.B. Trudeau

things look back on their high school Van Buren days with fondness. I’m guessing that’s because they weren’t picked on for being fat, not coming from a rich family or being a minority. I would rather walk barefoot across broken glass than spend another minute with my high school class. I ignore the invitations because my mother taught me if I can’t say anything nice, I should say nothing at all. Ray in Scottsdale, Ariz.

Abigail

Dear Abby: Successful turnouts often occur as a result of personal outreach from the committee. A personalized note, phone call or other kind of targeted communication (“Dear Susie, we’d love to see you again. Please come.”) will make a difference to an alum. Former Reunion Planner in Washington

Dear Abby: Of the 280 missing students, for a quarter of them to be deceased would be par for the course. “Ready” should create a Facebook Dear Abby: My class just had its Groups page for her high school grad45th reunion. I live 20 miles away but uating class. have never attended one and never will. Ours is very popular; 35 percent of My best friend and I were bullied, our former classmates are already insulted and excluded by our high part of it. school peers. After 45 years, we are Peter in Naples, Fla. still close friends. Neither of us has any desire to see Dear Abby: It is possible that any of those people ever again. many of the graduates never received High school was a miserable expethe invitation. rience for us, and we couldn’t wait to Email contact information, phone graduate and go off to college. numbers and addresses change often. Why would we want to socialize I didn’t receive anything about my with them now? 10-year reunion, but a few of my We forgave them long ago, but have friends said they did. no desire to relive those days. I can’t respond to an invitation I People need to realize that somedidn’t receive. times we move on and don’t need to Rod in Omaha revisit the past. ________ Carol in Georgia

by Bob and Tom Thaves

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: My high school experience was traumatic to the point that it put me in therapy. People who look forward to these by Brian Basset

The Last Word in Astrology ❘ ARIES (March 21-April 19): The partnerships and relationships in your life are undergoing changes. Be careful not to let anger take over. Life is short and can be dealt with in a fashion that is constructive instead of destructive. Love conquers all. 3 stars

Rose is Rose

DEAR ABBY

Dear Staying: Thank you for your input. I received a large number of responses to that letter, many of which were emotionally charged:

by Jim Davis

Red and Rover

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Hurt feelings linger for alum

by Scott Adams

For Better or For Worse

Garfield

Fun ’n’ Advice

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don’t be afraid to ask for favors. Your ideas will spark some interesting comments and could lead to help from an unexpected source. You can accomplish a lot if you are willing to listen, learn and incorporate what you discover into your plans. 4 stars

by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer

Dennis the Menace

by Hank Ketcham

Pickles

by Brian Crane

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Approach sensitive subjects cautiously. Not everyone will be willing to go along with the changes you want to make. Offer positive responses to people, but give them room to add their own creative input. 3 stars

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Don’t leave yourself open to criticism or emotional scrutiny. You’ll have to move quickly if you are faced with deception or unexpected setbacks. Uncertainty is the enemy. Don’t mince words or mislead others. Fairness is a must. 2 stars

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Question everything before you take action. It will take a significant amount of thought and deliberation to make the right choices. Not everyone will be up-front and you may have to pry to find out where you stand. 3 stars

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Lay out your financial plans. Put your ideas on paper and go over details with a fine-toothed comb. Talk to people who have experience in your field. Steer clear of anyone showing inconsistency. Don’t let your ego cost you. 4 stars

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Don’t give up on a dream, but try to have a practical approach in place. You can make positive personal changes and achieve greater happiness if you are honest about how you feel. Try to stay away from people who bring you down. 5 stars

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Be careful not to become too dependent on anyone. You’ll be fed false information if you are gullible. Ask questions even if someone gives you a hard time. Make personal and financial changes based on your needs. 3 stars

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Be true to yourself and CANCER (June 21-July you will have no regrets. A 22): Live and learn. Take variety of people you have part in events that will give worked with and trusted in you a better view of the way the past will help you now. other people live. A new ven- Your passion and dedication ture or business trip will will spark a greater interest require a lot of time, imagi- in your projects. 2 stars

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Schedule some time for an interview, meeting or just to talk about possibilities with someone who can help you with an idea you want to pursue. Favors will be granted as long as you offer incentives. 3 stars

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): A demanding individual will try to lead you in a direction that isn’t practical. Engage in something that will bring about positive changes and make you more appealing to someone you’d like a closer relationship with. 2 stars

ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

nation and input in order to turn a profit. 5 stars

by Eugenia Last

The Family Circus

by Bil and Jeff Keane


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Thursday, November 19, 2015 PAGE

B5

PA couple launches BBQ business at farmers market PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Brad and Catie Tesreau have launched their barbecue business, Blues City Barbecue LLC, at the Port Angeles Farmers Market, held Saturdays at The Gateway center at Front and Lincoln streets. Blues City Barbecue is a Memphis, Tenn.-style barbecue featuring pulled pork, ribs and a Memphis original: BBQ nachos. All meat is slow-smoked over charcoal and hickory.

Brad and Catie Tesreau have launched their barbecue business at the Port Angeles Farmers Market.

Three startups want millennials to start saving money with apps Services cater to people who are under 35

Information for services ■ Acorns: Automatically puts money away for users. See https://www.acorns.com for more information. ■ Digit: Looks at account activity to compare earning and spending. See https://digit.co for more information. ■ Stash: Lets users invest in about 30 different ETFs. See https://www.stashinvest.com for more information.

BY JOSEPH PISANI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — Millennials, it’s time to pick up the phone and start saving. That’s the message from digital saving companies such as Acorns, Digit and Stash that cater to people while, do the work for savers by automatically transunder 35. ferring small amounts from a checking account to savServices for phones ing or investment accounts. They offer services for “I think that these apps the smartphone that aim to are useful,” said Paul be easy to use, have low fees and don’t require large Golden, a spokesman for the nonprofit National deposits. Stash, for example, lets Endowment for Financial users invest in the stock Education, because they teach people the habit of market for as little as $5. Digit and Acorns, mean- putting small amounts of

high for some millennials. “By and large big banks and brokerage firms are not focused on millennials,” said Douglas A. Boneparth, a certified financial planner and partner at Life and Wealth Planning, which advises many millennials. “They are more focused on baby boomers that have assets today.”

Saving is challenging money into savings.

Targeting young people The startups, all of which launched in the past year and a half, said they are targeting young people that have been ignored by traditional banks and brokerage firms. Many of them charge fees or require a minimum opening deposit that might be too

Saving money can be a challenge for millennials because many are saddled with student loan debt, Boneparth said. But he warns that those who want to use the apps still need to come up with financial plans and goals, like knowing what they are saving for and a plan to reach that goal, instead of just setting their savings on autopilot and forgetting it.

$ Briefly . . . Washington state jobless rate steady OLYMPIA — Washington state’s unemployment rate held steady at 5.2 percent for the second month in a row. The latest report Wednesday from the state’s Employment Security Department shows that Washington state saw an overall gain of 6,900 new jobs in October. The state’s private sector grew by 9,800 jobs but the public sector lost 2,900 jobs. The jobless rate in the Seattle-Bellevue-Everett region of Western Washington rose slightly to 3.8 percent in October, from 3.6 percent in September. Unemployment statistics for Clallam and Jefferson County are expected to be released Tuesday. The national unemployment dropped slightly to 5 percent, from 5.1 percent last month. The latest report from Washington estimates the state gained 85,800 jobs in the past year on a not seasonally adjusted basis. A majority of those jobs were in the private sector.

Takata airbags DETROIT — Cars and trucks from the 2008 model year or older that were originally sold or registered in high humidity areas along the U.S. Gulf Coast are getting top priority for repairs as the government commences the massive Takata air bag inflator recall.

Real-time stock quotations at peninsuladailynews.com

Market watch Nov. 18, 2015

Dow Jones industrials

247.66 17,737.16

Nasdaq composite

89.18 5,075.20

Standard & Poor’s 500

33.14 2,083.58

Russell 2000

18.54 1,171.74

NYSE diary Advanced: Declined: Unchanged: Volume:

2,404 709 107 3.9 b

Nasdaq diary Advanced: Declined: Unchanged: Volume:

1,929 915 133 1.9 b AP

Honda Motor Co. leads all automakers with nine models designated as having the highest risk from air bag inflators that can explode with too much force, spewing metal shrapnel into drivers and passengers. Fiat Chrysler was second with seven. On Nov. 3, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration took control of the recall, which covers 19.2 million vehicles and is the largest in U.S. history.

Gold and silver Gold for December gained 10 cents, or 0.36 percent, to settle at $1,068.70 an ounce Wednesday. December silver fell 9 cents, or 0.6 percent, to $14.081 an ounce. The Associated Press

Peninsula MARKETPLACE IN PRINT & ONLINE PLACE ADS FOR PRINT AND WEB: Visit | www.peninsuladailynews.com

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SNEAK A PEEK PENINSULA DAILY NEWS s

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1009 Fountain St., P.A. CHRISTMAS SALE 3 Br., 2 ba, garage, no RAINED OUT smoking/pets. $775, plus Repeat sale, Fr i.-Sat. dep., reference check. 11/20-11/21, 9-3 p.m., (360)928-2165 1638 W. 12th, 1 block West of I Street. CollecBOOKCASE: Barrister, t o r s H o l i d ay D e c o r (lawyer), four sections, That’s got to go, moving. Oak, pre-float glass, in New stuff added - lower f a m i l y s i n c e e a r l y prices, xmas, plush, or1 9 2 0 ’ s , p i c t u r e s naments, ceramics, available. $750. glassware, unique col(360)417-9401 l e c t a bl e ’s. A l s o t oy s, games, guy stuff in garBROADBAND age. Alley entrance for INSTALLER both sales. Part time, P.A. / Forks. Pay DOE, Resume: MISC: Baby crib, conjobs@crescomm ve r t s t o t o d d l e r b e d , wifi.com, brand new, never used, v/f (360)775-3001 e s p r e s s o w o o d , n ew Peninsula Classified mattress, $150 firm. (360)477-6976 360-452-8435

3010 Announcements ADOPTION: Super Fun Family Vacations, NYC Executive, Financial Security, Lots of LOVE awaits 1st baby. Expenses paid 1800-243-1658 CALL FOR PHOTOS Olympic Medical Center seeks submissions of local nature photography for permanent display in their new medical office building in Port Angeles. For details, including submission requirements and selection criteria, contact janderson@ olympicmedical.org with “MOB Photos” in the subject line. CHURCH OF CHRIST (360)797-1536 or (360)417-6980 Jefferson County Noxious Weed Control needs board members, NoxiousWeeds@co.jefferson.wa.us

GARAGE SALE ADS Call for details. 360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714

Place Your Ad Online 24/7

Retired single male, 5’7” 160lbs, non smoker, non drinker, looking for single lady friend in the Sequim or PA area. (360)406-0412

3020 Found

M OV I N G S A L E : Fr i . Sat., 8-3pm, 532 Woodridge Dr. Pt. Ludlow. Furniture, clothes, tools, kitchen, appliances, glassware, xmas decor, gr e a t b a r g a i n s, d o n ’ t miss! VOLUNTEERS: Br ing us your holiday cheer. Looking for groups and organizations to volunteer spreading holiday cheer to our residents. Singing, musicals, storytelling etc. Please call or come by Park View Villas, 8th and G St. (360)452-7222 WA N T E D : Fo u n t a i n pens and other writing items. (360)457-0814 LOST: Cat, Orange Tabby, no tail. M and 6th St. 11/11. (360)797-4252 LOST: Dog, Pekingese Te r r i e r m i x . T h e r a py dog. 8th and chase. 11/16 (360)808-1278.

4026 Employment

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4080 Employment General General General General General Wanted ADMISSIONS: Nor th Olympic Healthcare Network has one position 7 CEDARS RESORT IS open in admissions to NOW HIRING FOR THE w o r k w i t h o u r b i l l i n g FOLLOWING PT/FT team verifying insurance POSITIONS: eligibility and patient registration. This position is • Banquet Server full time with benefits. If (PT-Nights) you would like a reward• Cocktail Server (PT) • Deli/Espresso Cash- ing career with an established medical practice ier/Attendant please send your re• Dishwasher sume to: (PT-Nights) North Olympic • Dishwasher Healthcare Network (PT-Nights) 240 West Front Street • Dishwasher Napoli’s Port Angeles WA 98362 (PT-Days) • Gift Shop Cashier (On-Call) CARE COORDINATOR • Host/Busser CASE AIDE: 40 hrs/wk, (PT-Nights) located in the Sequim In• Napoli’s Cook formation & Assistance (FT/PT) office. Provides support • Napolis Cashier/At- to seniors & adults with tendant (PT) disabilities. Good com• Table Games Dealer munication & computer (FT/PT) skills a must. Bachelor’s Fo r m o r e i n fo r m a t i o n d e gr e e b e h av i o ra l o r a n d t o a p p l y o n l i n e , health science and 2 yrs please visit our website paid social service exp, at WDL, auto ins. required. $15.56/hr, full benefit www.7cedars pkg, Contact: Informaresort.com tion & Assistance, Native American 800-801-0050 for job depreference for scrip. & applic. packet. qualified candidates. Open until filled, preference given to appl. rec’d ACCEPTING APPLICA- by 4:00 pm 11/23/2015. T I O N S fo r C A R R I E R I&A is an EOE. ROUTE Por t Angeles Area. Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. C L A L L A M T I T L E Interested parties must COMPANY is now acbe 18 yrs of age, have cepting resumes for an valid Washington State e n t r y l eve l e m p l oy Driver’s License, proof of ment opportunity. This insurance, and reliable position requires exvehicle. Early morning cellent customer serdelivery Monday-Friday vice skills, very strong and Sunday. Apply in typing computer profiperson 305 W 1st St, or ciency, a high degree s e n d r e s u m e t o of dependability with tsipe@peninsuladaily- the ability to accurately news.com. NO PHONE follow detailed instructions. Drop off your CALLS PLEASE. current resume in person at either of our locations, Sequim or Pt Angeles

General FOUND: Bag of clothes, 5th and Baker in vacant O F F I C E A S S I S TA N T lot. 11/4 (360)775-8864 (Operations Depar tF O U N D : K e y s , o n e ment): Requirements inunusual key. Discovery clude, Two years’ office trail between 10th and ex p e r i e n c e w i t h t w o 18th. (360)565-6509 years specialized experience in administration or FOUND: Lactating black related payroll/accountc a t . W o o d c o c k a n d ing work, excellent comWard Rd. No collar. puter, writing, communi(360)775-5154. cations, and math skills. Hiring Range: $38,714 FOUND: Red and white $52,066. Excellent benemale Boxer, River Rd. fits. Application available area. Call Pet Posse, at Clallam Transit Sys(360)775-5154 tem, 830 W. Lauridsen Blvd., Port Angeles, WA 98363, and at 3023 Lost www.clallamtransit.com. ( 3 6 0 ) 4 5 2 - 1 3 1 5 . E E O. LOST: Calico female cat APPLICATIONS MUST Administrative i n t h e 1 0 1 J o s l i n R d BE RECEIVED NO LATAssistant ER THAN 5 p.m., De- JCHS is seeking somearea. Call Pet Posse, cember 4, 2015. (360)775-5154 one to support the office, coordinate events, and BROADBAND LOST: Cat, big, fluffy, manage membership INSTALLER blonde, 6 toes, Doss and data. Job description at Part time, P.A. / Forks. Scrivner. 11/11. JCHSmuseum.org. Send Pay DOE, Resume: (360)461-5210 Resume to 540 Water jobs@crescomm St, Port Townsend, WA wifi.com, www.peninsula 98368 immediately. v/f (360)775-3001 dailynews.com

LICENSED NURSE’S Come join our team at Sherwood Assisted Living. Flexible hours, with benefits. Fill out an application at 550 W Hendr ickson Rd, Sequim, WA or contact Casey, Staff Development. (360)683-3348

PLUMBERS: Journey / Specialty license required. New Const. exp. a must. Paid holidays/vacation. Call (360)683-8336

CAREGIVERS: Our new management team is dedicated to serving the needs of our residents at Sherwood Assisted Living. We are looking for caring and compassionate caregivers to become a part of our new team and join our mission of enhancing the l i ve s o f a g i n g a d u l t s throughout our community. We have a variety of shifts available with c o m p e t i t i ve p ay a n d benefits. Find out more about this fulfilling career opportunity. Apply at 550 W Hendrickson Road or call Casey, the Staff Dev e l o p m e n t M a n a g e r, (360)683-3348 Experienced auto detailer needed, full time, full benefits. Price Ford Lincoln 457-3333 contact Joel MECHANIC: Local logging company in search of exper ienced dependable shop mechanic. (360)460-7292 Office Manager Full time, MUST have MGMT experience, Must love people. $14hr plus benefits. Mail resume to Peninsula Daily News PDN #717/Manager Port Angeles, WA 98362 PATIENT NAVIGATOR Nor th Olympic Healthcare Network has one position open for a Social Worker to work with our team as a Patient Navigator. This position is full time with benefits. If you would like a rewarding career with an established medical p ra c t i c e p l e a s e s e n d your resume to: North Olympic Healthcare Network 240 West Front Street Port Angeles WA 98362

Por t Townsend Paper Corporation, a division of C r o w n Pa p e r G r o u p, p r o d u c e s K r a f t p u l p, paper, containerboard, and specialty products by blending virgin and recycled fibers at our mill operations in Port Townsend, Washington. We offer a variety of sustainable solutions to our customers. We strive to be good neighbors and valued par tners in the community and to preserve the environment. The mill in Por t Townsend, Washington is currently seeking applicants fo r s eve ra l p o s i t i o n s. P u r c h a s i n g M a n a g e r, (salary range 50k – 65k), Stores Specialist, (salary range 40k – 47k), Assista n t F i b e r M a n a g e r, (salary range 55k – 75k), i n a d d i t i o n t o a ve r y competitive benefits package. If you are interested in this exciting opportunity with a growing c o m p a ny, o r wa n t t o learn more about the positions, please go to our w e b s i t e a t www.ptpc.com/ and reference the employment section to review the position description and submit a detailed resume. Por t Townsend Paper and Crown Paper Group are equal opportunity employers.

Support Staff To wor k with adults w i t h d eve l o p m e n t a l disabilities, no experie n c e n e c e s s a r y, $ 1 0 . 5 0 h r. A p p l y i n person at 1020 Caroline St. M-F 8-4 p.m. T E M P O R A RY PA R A TRANSIT DRIVER: Applications now being accepted for TEMPORARY PARATRANSIT DRIVER (Port Angeles Base) with Clallam Transit System. A temporary Employee is hired on a continuous basis to work 867 hours or less per calendar year, and is expected to work less than 70 hours per month. Temporar y Employees are not eligible for benefits other than those required by statute (e.g., coverage under a workers’ compensation plan). $12.65 per hour after completion of training. Job description and application available at CTS Administration Office, 830 W. Laur idsen Blvd., Por t A n g e l e s , WA 9 8 3 6 3 . 360-452-1315, or online a t w w w. c l a l l a m t r a n sit.com. A number of eligible candidates may be retained on a next hire list for the Port Angeles b a s e fo r s i x m o n t h s. POSITION IS OPEN UNTIL FILLED. EEO/AA

Veterinary Clinic Full Time Receptionist Busy medical clinic, c o m p u t e r ex p e r i e n c e n e c e s s a r y, ex c e l l e n t salary and benefits. Resume and referrences to H a d l o c k Ve r t e r i n a r y RAINSHADOW HOME Clinic, 842 Ness Corner Rd., Por t Hadlock WA. SERVICES • Caregivers- P/T, F/T, 98339 will train. • Pa r t t i m e p r i v a t e VOLUNTEERS: Br ing us your holiday cheer. duty nurse. Looking for groups and Call (360)681-6206 organizations to volunteer spreading holiday cheer to our residents. ROUTE DRIVER Singing, musicals, storyEstablished routes, ex- telling etc. Please call or cellent pay and bene- come by Park View Vilfits, clean driving las, 8th and G St. record. (360)452-7222 Olympic Springs 253 Business Park Lp. GARAGE SALE ADS Carlsborg, WA 98324 Call for details. 360-683-4285 360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714

Alterations and Sewing. Alterations, mending, hemming and some heavyweight s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o you from me. Call (360)531-2353 ask for B.B. PRIVATE CAREGIVING / Housekeeping / Care Companion. Affordable rates guaranteed to beat any others in town while providing top notch care and in home ser vices Call Nicki 360-504-3254

105 Homes for Sale Clallam County CENTRALLY LOCATED! PRICE REDUCED! 3 BD one level home with large living room featuring a wood stove insert, kitchen with wall oven, p l e n t y o f c a b i n e t s fo r storage and access to the private patio - great for summer bbqs and entertaining! Formal dining room with lots of natural light through the large picture window. Three bright and cheery bedrooms with large closets. Home is heated by an energy efficient heat pump. Fully fenced in southern exposure back yard is great for a large garden. One car attached garage MLS#290977 $149,900 Kelly Johnson (360) 477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES CHERRY HILL CHARMER! Classic home tucked in the heart of Cherry Hill. Hardwood floors, formal dining room 3 BR, 2 BA, full unfinished basement and beautifully landscaped yard with a white picket fence. MLS#292185 $269,000 Jennifer Holcomb (360) 460-3831 (360) 457-0456 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES


Classified

B6 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015

DOWN 1 Light sources 2 “Ran” director Kurosawa

By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle — horizontally, vertically, diagonally and even backward. Find them, circle each letter of the word and strike it off the list. The leftover letters spell the WONDERWORD. YOGI BERRA (1925-2015) Solution: 10 letters

P L A Y E R H O U S T O N L M

S M S I I G O Y W T M I J W O

O G H E H A R A R R U O I R N

R N O E E E L E A O R T T E E

T I R L G K H C L L T E W N L

S T T A L C N T E I I Y R C I

A T N D T E S A C P O P O E N

Y A M A E T G I Y R R A L V E

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

© 2015 Universal Uclick www.wonderword.com Download the Wonderword Game App!

By Ed Sessa

3 Ones with fab abs 4 Similarly sinful 5 Broke down 6 “Then again,” in tweets 7 Dismiss 8 Fuel type 9 “Soldier of Love” Grammy winner 10 Nonstick cookware brand 11 Anti-consumerist portmanteau popularized in a 2001 best-seller 12 2011 animated film set in Brazil 13 PC file extension 18 Stillwater’s state: Abbr. 21 Capitol insider 25 Novelist De Vries 26 Pastoral poems 28 Athlete lead-in 29 It’s not hot for long 30 Submission encl. 31 Last stroke, usually 32 Common maladies 33 French postcard word 34 Utter disgust 35 “No __!” 39 ISP alternative

11/19/15 Wednesday’s Puzzle Solved

J I L M I T Y E S R E J W E N

11/19

All-star, Astros, Baseball, Batting, Carmen, Catcher, Causes, Coach, Dale, Eight, Hits, Home Runs, Houston, John, Josie, Larry, Lawdie, Lawrence, Legend, Major League, Manager, May, Mets, Mike, Navy, New Jersey, New York, Observe, One-liners, Paolina, Pietro, Player, Short, Stadium, St. Louis, The Hill, Tim, Tony, Walk, Witticisms, Yankees, Yogiisms Yesterday’s Answer: OnStar 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.

RAGDU ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

OSMEO ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

40 Author of macabre tales 41 Old cereal box stat 43 Weblike 46 Before, of yore 47 Largish jazz ensemble 48 Maxwell Smart’s nemesis 52 “The Devil Wears __” 53 Motrin competitor

DIAMOND QUALITY Nice 3BR 2BA Sunland home with a den. This home has a lovely floor plan with a beautiful brick fireplace and new granite counter tops in the kitchen and bathrooms. New tiled floors, new roof in 2010 and solar panels installed in 2014. Or iginal owner, and has been very well taken care of. MLS#291420 $325,000 Kim Bower 360-477-0654 360-683-3900 Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim

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5000900

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11/19/15

54 Party hearty 55 “Go ahead, make my day!” 57 Lana of Superman lore 58 Film feline 59 Silhouette of a bird, for Twitter 60 You might pick up a pebble in one 61 Attention from Dr. Mom 62 Milne marsupial

RULSYE

NERLKE

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

Ans: Yesterday’s

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: YOUTH DICEY SPIRAL SEESAW Answer: Napping came so naturally for him, he could do it with — HIS EYES CLOSED

105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County

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ACROSS 1 __ Men, pop band whose name derives from its members’ homeland 5 Bit of a speech 9 Prolonged look 14 Instruments for Israel Kamakawiwo’ole 15 Case for notions 16 Attach 17 Bar for some dancers 19 “The Grand Budapest Hotel” actor 20 Kiss a frog, so it’s said 22 Org. that holds your interest? 23 LBJ agency 24 Reuters competitor 27 All out 32 Complain 36 Attic forager 37 Family nickname 38 Went too far with 40 Street vendor’s snack 42 Cosmetic surgeon’s procedures, briefly 43 Nursery supply 44 Salts 45 Evasive language 49 NBC sketch comedy 50 Portuguese king 51 Not connected 56 Snoring, e.g., and a literal hint to what’s hidden in 20-, 27- and 45Across 61 Case study? 63 Like one who really gets IT? 64 Sea divers 65 Switch ending 66 Carpe __ 67 Cuban music genre 68 Daly of “Judging Amy” 69 Everyone, in Essen

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

STEPS AWAY FROM CARRIE BLAKE PARK 3 Bedroom, 2-1/2 Baths, 2 Car Garage, Full RV Hook-up $299,000 Tom Blore 360-683-4116 PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE

DUNGENESS MEADOWS Clean 2-bedroom home, close to the Dungeness River. Updated kitchen and flooring. Nice little backyard for gatherings. Dungeness Meadows is known for its 9-hole golf course, clubhouse/ pool, and friendly atmosphere. Minutes from town with a private feel. MLS#292052/858326 $65,000 Jake Tjernell 360-460-6250 TOWN & COUNTRY

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HISTORIC VICTORIAN CHARMER! PRICE REDUCED! Located on a double lot in the desirable Cherry Hill area w/ awe-inspiring curb appeal & attention to detail. This 4 bed/2 bath home features a large kitchen w/ breakfast nook & original hardwood floors, grand dining room w/ bay windows & living room w/ wood stove & detailed woodwork. New double hung vinyl windows, plantation shutters & updated wiring. Fenced in back yard w/ landscaping & raised garden beds. Two covered front porches and back porch. MLS#291659 $295,000 Kelly Johnson (360) 477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES

NEW PRICING! 2 BD, 2 BA, 1512 SF. On one acre, large kitchen, breakfast bar & open dining room, master bath w/soaking tub & separate shower, vaulted ceilings, skylights, great floorplan, carport, 2 storage sheds, landscaped yard. MLS#863212/292122 $192,500 Deb Kahle lic# 47224 (360)918-3199 WINDERMERE SUNLAND

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NICELY UPGRADED HOME 3 BR 2 BA Over 1900 S F, V i n y l w i n d o w s & vaulted ceilings, spacious kitchen, breakfast bar & pantr y, well appointed master br, oversize garage. MLS#798232/291110 $210,000 TEAM SCHMIDT Lic#15329 Lic#15328 (360)918-3199 WINDERMERE SUNLAND

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OPEN HOUSE Newer mfg home in 55+ p a r k . Wa l k i n p a n t r y, skylights, large kitchen, 2 BR with office (3rd BR?). Detached insulated workshop. Park rent i n c l u d e s wa t e r / s ew e r / g a r b a g e. Pa r k a p proval required. MLS#291761/838754 $107,000 Carolyn & Robert Dodds lic# 73925 & 48709 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East 360-460-9248

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses 1163 Commercial Clallam County Clallam County Rentals OPEN HOUSE Tw o l u x u r y m a s t e r suites, great room, chef ’s kitchen, raised eating bar, large sunroom, and view of the Strait. Dark hardwood floors, built-in speakers, builtin vacuum system, a n d hy d r o n i c h e a t e d floors. MLS#292115/862441 $359,900 STEPHANIE GOULD (360)683-4131 John L. Scott See the stunning views of Strait of Juan de Fuca, Mt. Baker, and Protection Island from this amazing home at nearly the top of a quiet neighborhood. Cobbled driveway, peaceful sun room, custom leaded glass, and more! MLS#291156 $475,000 Stacey Price Professional Realty Services (360)670-3560

(360)

H 1/1 LK DAWN $600/M A 1BD/1BA $675/M A 2BD/2BA $775/M D 2BD/2BA $875/M H 3/1.5 JOYCE $975/M

H 2/1 FRESHAWATER BAY $1100/M H 3BD/2BA $1300/M H 4/3 WATERVIEW $1700/M

HOUSES/APT IN SEQUIM

H 2+BD/1BA $1100/M H 3/2 SUNLAND $1400/M

308 For Sale Lots & Acreage DIAMOND PT. waterfront lot. Double waterfront lot on Diamond Pt. lagoon. Septic installed. U t i l i t i e s ava i l a bl e o n street. Amazing views of Discover y Bay, Strait, Whidbey and San Juans. Birding, boating, fishing paradise in quiet, f r i e n d l y c o m m u n i t y. Community beach park with boat ramp and picnic facilities. $229,000/obo. Call 360683-7043 for details.

Properties by

Properties by

The VACANCY FACTOR is at a HISTORICAL LOW

INVESTMENT PROPERTIES are in

452-1326

P.A: Furnished Apt., all

Inc. utilities, references.

(360)457-3027.

The VACANCY FACTOR is at a HISTORICAL LOW

SEQ: 1 Br., in Discovery Bay, very private, on the beach. Shared laundry. No smoking / drinking / pets. Fully fur nished. $695 mo. includes utilities. (360)271-6247

1163 Commercial Rentals

INVESTMENT PROPERTIES are in

DEMAND!

452-1326

C L A L L A M B AY : A frame on 2 bd, 1 ba., 4.29 acres. 5 miles to Lake Ozette approx 1,500 sf., with orchard. Good hunting / fishing. Needs some TLC. Call for details. $80,000. (509)684-3177

STORAGE/Light Industrial: 3 spaces for rent. Space 3, 1350 sq. ft. w/office $675. per monthSpace 30, 1350 sq. ft. $520. per monthSpace 25, 2,000 sq. ft. $780. per monthAvailable now, call 360460-5210, for questions or to view.

6005 Antiques & Collectibles BOOKCASE: Barrister, (lawyer), four sections, Oak, pre-float glass, in family since early 1920’s, pictures available. $750. (360)417-9401

6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves FIREWOOD: $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special $499. (360)582-7910 www.portangelesfire wood.com Living Room gas stove. all pipes and tank $2,000/obo. (360)565-0392

6065 Food & Farmer’s Market

TURKEYS: Dressed turkeys, truly free range, Heritage breed, Inc. organic, Bourbon Red. $4lb. Call Ron Grotjan (360)461-5026

DEMAND!

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

505 Rental Houses Clallam County

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

SWEEPING SALT WATER VIEWS Unobstructed SW & Mtn COMPLETE LIST @ Views!, 3 BR - 2-1/2 BA 2620 SF/ Born in 1997, 1111 Caroline St. Port Angeles Walk to Nearby Peninsula College, PA Fine Arts, Community Playhouse / 1009 Fountain St., P.A. Sculpture Par k, Open 3 Br., 2 ba, garage, no Concept, Vaulted Ceil- smoking/pets. $775, plus ings, Beautifully Land- dep., reference check. scaped Gardens, Locat(360)928-2165 ed on a Private Cul de Sac. 605 Apartments MLS#291673 $355,000 Clallam County Team Thomsen UPTOWN REALTY (360)808-0979

Properties by

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The VACANCY FACTOR is at a HISTORICAL LOW

INVESTMENT PROPERTIES are in

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452-1326

8182 Garage Sales Momma PA - West

CHRISTMAS SALE RAINED OUT Repeat sale, Fr i.-Sat. 11/20-11/21, 9-3 p.m., 1638 W. 12th, 1 block West of I Street. Collect o r s H o l i d ay D e c o r That’s got to go, moving. New stuff added - lower prices, xmas, plush, or6115 Sporting naments, ceramics, Goods glassware, unique colBIKE: ‘84 Schwinn Man- l e c t a bl e ’s. A l s o t oy s, ta Ray Springer. Lots of games, guy stuff in garage. Alley entrance for chrome $485. both sales. (360)457-1289

by Mell Lazarus

ATTENTION MUSICIANS Retirement sale Everything goes Strait Music, Port Angeles (360)452-9817. music@straitmusic.net

417-2810

HOUSES/APT IN PORT ANGELES

6105 Musical Instruments

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015 B7

6080 Home Furnishings

6125 Tools

6135 Yard & Garden

Jefferson County

MATTRESS: Serta, king size, double pillow top, like new, two twin box spr ings, metal frame. $475/obo. (360)385-5536

M OV I N G S A L E : Fr i . Sat., 8-3pm, 532 Woodridge Dr. Pt. Ludlow. Furniture, clothes, tools, kitchen, appliances, glassware, xmas decor, MISC: Baby crib, con- gr e a t b a r g a i n s, d o n ’ t ve r t s t o t o d d l e r b e d , miss! brand new, never used, e s p r e s s o w o o d , n ew 8180 Garage Sales mattress, $150 firm. PA - Central (360)477-6976. Friends of the Library MISC: Lg. beige recliner, $50. Sm. beige hide-a- Friends of the Librar y b e d c o u c h , r e - u p h o l - Bag of Books sale Nostered with new mat- vember 19, 20 and 21, tress, very good cond. doors opening at 10:00 a . m . w i t h n ew b o o k s $50. (360)452-2471 added each day. Fill a SOFA: Cream color, 2 b a g f o r o n l y $ 2 . 0 0 . big cushion, 4 large back Stock up now because cushion and 2 throw pil- there will be NO bag of l o w s , a l l m a t c h i n g . books sale in December. $225/obo. INDOOR GARAGE (360)683-9829 S a l e : T h u r s. - Fr i . , 9 - 3 p.m., 520 E. Park Ave., St. Andrew’s Place. Lots 6100 Misc. of everything-furniture, Merchandise lamps, tables, dishes, G a r a g e a n d S h o p clothes, small appliancD o o r s : N E W r e m o d e l es, books, and more. plans changed, sell at Place your ad at cost call for sizes and $ peninsula install also avail. dailynews.com (360)732-4626

LONG DISTANCE MASSAGE TABLE No Problem! E a r t h l i t e, w i t h c ove r. Pad, electric pad, cart, Peninsula Classified bolsters, books, misc. 1-800-826-7714 $350. (360)504-2448. Visit our website at www.peninsula dailynews.com Or email us at classified@ peninsula dailynews.com

7035 General Pets P E D I G R E E D B L AC K LAB PUPPIES!!!!. It’s puppy time in Sequim! We have 2 females and 5 males ready to go to l ov i n g h o m e s. T h e s e puppies come from impressive hunting lines and will make great family and companion dogs. Call Matt at 307254-5540.

TRUCK CAMPER: ‘08 Northstar TC650 pop-up slide in truck camper. This camper is in EXCELLENT/like new condition. Asking $13,500 O B O, s e r i o u s bu ye r s only please. I can be reached @ (253)861-6862

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

9820 Motorhomes

B ay l i n e r : ‘ 7 9 M u t i ny, 16’, engine needs work, $1,100/obo. Leave mesDODGE: Ram, ‘95, Mod- sage.(360)452-1611 el 236 3,500 Explorer Class B, 67K ml., runs BOAT: ‘88 Invader, 16’, g r e a t , v e r y c l e a n . 1 6 5 H P M e r c r u i s e r, $14,000. (360)775-0651 open bow, low hours. $2,900. (360)452-5419. MOTORHOME: Damon ‘95 Intruder. 34’, Cum- B O AT : S e a r a y, 1 8 ’ , mins Diesel, 2 air condi- 135hp Mercury. $8,000 tioners, satellite dish, re- obo. (360)457-3743 or built generator, all new (360)460-0862 f i l t e r s a n d n ew t i r e s C-Dory: 22’ Angler mod$17,000/obo. el, 75hp Honda, 8hp Nis(360)683-8142 san, E-Z load trailer, like RAVEN: ‘95, 32’, low new. $16,500/obo 452miles, GM turbo diesel, 4143 or 477-6615. solar panels, great condition, many extras, be- FIBERFORM: ‘78, 24’ Cuddy Cabin, 228 Merlow book. $12,900/obo. cruiser I/O, ‘07 Mercury (360)477-9584 9.9hp, electronics, d o w n r i g g e r s . $11,000/obo 775-0977 GLASSPLY: 19’ Cuddy cabin, inboard 470, 15 hp Johnson kicker, raTIFFIN: ‘04, Phaeton, dio, fish finder, $3,000. (360)457-7827 40’, diesel, 4 slides, full kitchen, W/D, enclosed MOORAGE: Available, shower, 2nd vanity in Por t Townsend, 6 mo. br., auto jacks, duel AC, minimum, 40’ slip. generator, inverter, pull(206)817-1394 out basement storage, back up camera, lots of MOTOR: Mercur y, ‘06, i n s i d e s t o ra g e, gr e a t 60hp Bigfoot, t. handle condition. $59,950. Se- $5,000 /obo. (360)477quim. (720)635-4473. 3695 or (360)457-7317

9832 Tents & Travel Trailers

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

TRAILER: ‘99 Sierra, TWIN V: ‘95, 18’, Fiber2 5 ’ , n e e d s T L C . g l a s s , l o a d e d , V H F, $6,000/obo. 417-0803. GPS, fish finder, Penn downriggers, Bass UTILITY TRAILER: ‘02, chairs for comport. 45 hp Aztex. 6X8. $700. Honda 4 stroke, Nissan (360)460-2855 4 stroke kicker, electric crap pot puller, all run great. Boat is ready to 9802 5th Wheels go. $7,000. (360)6813717 or (360)477-2684

G A R AG E S A L E : Fr i . Sat., 9-3pm, FOUR SEASONS RANCH CLUBHOUSE, 673 Strait View Dr. TREASURES GALORE! Fishing gear, fur niture, electronics, household, spor ts, t ow y s, j ewe l r y, s o m e MISC: Scaffold, Bil-Jax, new in boxes, shop for 5TH WHEEL: 2000, Forest Ranger, 24’, 6 berth, 5 ’ x 7 ’ , 8 s t a g e s , 1 6 Xmas!. slide out, A/C. $6500. frames, braces, 5 (360)797-1458 planks, $1,000. Senco duel tank roll-in com7030 Horses 5th Wheel: ‘94 Holiday pressor. $500. Rambler Imperial, 34’, 2 (360)460-2855 HORSE: 11 Year old, slideouts, clean and well WOODWORKING tools: Quarab gelding, 15.1 maintained. $8,000/obo. (808)895-5634 Grizzly 16” drum sander, hands, gets along with like new $450. Grizzly ever yone, great comd u s t c o l l e c t o r, $ 1 0 0 . panion horse. Not 100% F o r e s t R i v e r : S i e r r a Grizzly 15” planer blade sound in back leg due to Lite, ‘00, 21’ clean, 8’ type, $750. Shop Fox 6” old injury, vet gave go slide, sleeps 6, everyJoiner, $300 obo. Gen- ahead for light riding. To thing in excellent condierator 5000 240, $500. approved home. $500. tion. $6,000. (360)452-2148 Used once for 2 hours. (360)732-4893 (360)565-6221 HORSE: 9 yr old AQHA 9808 Campers & mare, broke, calm and Canopies 6140 Wanted l eve l h e a d e d . Wo u l d & Trades make a good 4-H project. $1800. with tack. W A N T E D : F o u n t a i n Please leave message. pens and other writing (360)670-5307 items. (360)457-0814 MISC: Motorcycle ramp, aluminum, new, $100. Tr u c k t o o l b o x e s $100/ea. Power tools, $25/ea. Rolling wor kbenches, $100./ea. 5 ton jack, $75. Garden tools, $10/ea. (360)452-4179.

FENCING: (80) Old growth cedar fence B E D S : A n t i q u e s o l i d rails. Clear. Approx. 11’ brass twin beds, with long. $7.00 ea. obo. Sequim. (360)683-3212 mattress. $600/both. (360)640-4723 FENCING: (80) Old HOME FURNISHINGS g r o w t h c e d a r f e n c e Oak table, 66L x 42W, rails. Clear. Approx. 11’ with leaf and 6 uphol- long. $7.00 ea. obo. Ses t e r e d c h a i r s . $ 8 0 0 . quim. (360)683-3212 Wood drawing board, $100., Desk $50. 8120 Garage Sales (360)683-2617

Visit our website at www.peninsula dailynews.com Or email us at classified@ peninsula dailynews.com

8183 Garage Sales PA - East

9832 Tents & Travel Trailers

EMAIL US AT classified@peninsula dailynews.com

‘02 27’ Shasta Camp LONG DISTANCE trailer : Never used, in No Problem! storage, $12,000 obo. 1995 Nomad, 18 ft. in Peninsula Classified storage, $4000 1-800-826-7714 (360)765-3372

9817 Motorcycles HARLEY DAVIDSON: ‘ 0 4 L o w R i d e r. 3 7 0 0 miles, loaded, $8,500. (360)460-6780 Harley Wide Glide: ‘93 well maintained Low miles, custom paint extras. $6,800 TEXT 360300-7587 H/D, ‘05 Dyna Wide Glide, blk with lots of chrome, lots of aftermarket stuff + extras. $9,500. (360)461-4189. H O N DA : ‘ 8 3 V F 7 5 0 , $1,500. (360)457-0253 evenings.

9742 Tires & Wheels

9180 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles Classics & Collect. Others

CADILLAC: ‘85, Eldorado Biarritz, clean inside a n d o u t . 1 0 9 k m l . LINCOLN: ‘10 MKZ, PRISTINE, 53K ml. All $3,800. (360)681-3339. options except sun roof PONTIAC: ‘06 Solstice, and AWD. Car has al5 s p. c o nv. , 8 K m i l e s, ways been garaged, oil Blk/Blk, $1500 custom changed every 5K miles, wheels, dry cleaned on- and has just been fully ly, heated garage, driven detailed. You will not find car shows only, like new. a better car. $14,995. brucec1066@gmail.com $17,500. (360)681-2268 or text (630)248-0703. V O L K S WA G O N : ‘ 7 8 Beetle convertable. Fuel TOYOTA: ‘14 Prius C. injection, yellow in color. 1200 miles, like new, $9000. (360)681-2244 with warranty. $16,900. (360)683-2787

9292 Automobiles Others

TOYOTA : ‘ 9 8 C a m r y, 217K ml. 2 owner car. $3,700/obo. ACURA: ‘98 Model 30. (360)928-9645 171K mi. Loaded. Runs g o o d , l o o k s g o o d . VOLVO: ‘03, Sedan, 2.4 $2,300. 681-4672 turbo, 86K ml., single owner, ex. cond. $7,000. CHRY: ’04 PT Cruiser (360)531-0715 77K Miles, loaded, power roof, new tires, looks great, runs great, clean, 9434 Pickup Trucks s t r o n g , s a fe, r e l i a bl e Others transportation. call and leave message $5,200. CHEV: ‘02, Avalanche (360)457-0809 1/2 ton, 5.3 L, tow pkg, 4x4, air bags. leather, DODGE: ‘73, Dart, good excellent in and out. 84k condition, runs well, m i . , $ 1 2 , 5 0 0 / o b o . bench seat, 88K ml. ( 9 0 7 ) 2 0 9 - 4 9 4 6 o r $5,000. (360)797-1179. (360)504-2487

SNOW TIRES: Mounted, alloy wheels. Michelin Ice, 225/60R16: 16”x 7” wheels; 5-110/5-115 bolt pattern. Very good; $300 obo for set. FORD : ‘05 Focus Hatch (360)683-8855. back. Clean and reliable, S T U D D E D T I R E S : 4 , 122K mi. $5,500 obo. (360)912-2225 265/65R-17 112T, Hankook, RW11. Less than 3,000 miles. 2 yr. old. HONDA: ‘04 CR-V LX AWD - 2.4L i-VTEC 4 $400/obo. C y l i n d e r, Au t o m a t i c, (360)417-5625. Power Windows, Door Locks, and Mirrors, 9180 Automobiles Cruise Control, Tilt, Air Classics & Collect. Conditioning, CD/Cassette Stereo, Dual Front 1 9 3 0 R o a d s t e r. 1 9 3 0 Airbags. 88K ml. $9,995 Ford Model A Roadster VIN# pickup truck. Beautiful teal green exterior with JHLRD784X4C025524 Gray Motors black fenders and interi457-4901 or and customized vinyl graymotors.com c o nve r t i bl e t o p. 1 9 8 6 Nissan running gear rec e n t l y t u n e d u p. R e ceived many trophies; s t i l l g e t s s t a r e s. A p praised at $30,000; priced at $22,500 to sell. Call 360-775-7520 or 457-3161. HONDA: ‘08 Civic Sedan. Very clean fun stick shift, beautiful midnightblue paint (minor rock chip pitting to the front), rubber floor mats, pioneer CD player/radio, large digital speedomet e r d i s p l a y. 8 7 K m i , $9200 (360)477-3019 B M W : ‘ 0 7 Z 4 3 . 0 S I HYUNDAI: ‘09 Sonata, R o a d s t e r. 4 7 K m i l e s, 79K miles, Auto, 1 ownw e l l m a i n t a i n e d , l i ke er, no smoking. $7,850. new. $17,999. (509)731-9008 (360)477-4573 HYUNDAI: ‘92 Sonata, CADILLAC: ‘67, Eldora- l o w m i l e s , 5 s p. d e do, 2 door, hard top, pendable. $1,250. fwd, good motor, trans, (360)775-8251 and tries, new brakes need adj. Have all parts VW: ‘86 Cabriolet, cona n d ex t ra s, m a t c h i n g ver tible. Wolfberg Edin u m b e r s, r e s t o r a t i o n tion, all leather interior, project car. $3,000/obo. new top. Call for details. (360)457-6182 $4,000. (360)477-3725. CADILLAC: ‘84 El Dorado Coupe 62K ml., exc. cond. 4.1L V8, $8,500. (360)452-7377

MAZDA: ‘01 Miata. Silver w/beige leather interior. 53K mi. $8,000. (360)808-7858

MAZDA: ‘88, RX 7, convertable, nice, fresh motor and tans. $7,000. (360)477-5308

SATURN: ‘02 L200 sedan. 198k miles, runs good. $1,500. (360)4619559 or 461-9558

CHEV: ‘95 3/4 ton, 4x4 ex. cab, long bed. with canopy. $3,000. Sequim (425)220-1929

CHEVY: ‘89 Silverado, full bed, 74K miles, new tires, runs great. $2500. (360)504-1949

CHEVY: ‘96 S10 LS Extended Cab 2WD 4.3L Vor tec V6, Autom a t i c, A l l oy W h e e l s, Canopy, Bed Mat, Power Windows, Door Locks, and Mirrors, Cruise Control, Tilt, Air Conditioning, Cassette S t e r e o, R e a r Ju m p Seats, Dual Front Airbags. Only 136K ml. $4,995 VIN# 1GCCS19X4T8108916 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com

DODGE: ‘03 Dakota Club Cab SXT 4X4 P i ck u p - 3 . 9 L V 6 , 5 Speed Manual, Alloy Wheels, Tow Package, S p r ay - I n B e d l i n e r, Cruise Control, Tilt Wheel, Air Conditioning, CD Stereo, Dual Front Airbags. 86K ml. $9,995 VIN# 1D7HG12X43S258440 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com

FORD: F-350 Super Duty ‘03, Dually V-10 Auto, cruise, incredible A/C, 11ft ser vice box,1,600lb Tommy Lift, all top quality, runs perfect always maintained with syn oil, set up to tow anything but never has. Truck belonged to the owner of a elevator company so it’s had an easy life. 162K miles uses no oil, truck needs nothing. $8,500. (360)477-6218 Sequim

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B8

ClassifiedAutomotive

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Exploding battery not uncommon Dear Doctor: I pressed the pushbutton start on my 2012 Volkswagen Passat TDI and heard a loud bang, like a shotgun going off. All of the electrical systems went dead. I opened the hood and saw smoke coming from the battery and noticed the top and sides of the battery were blown out. I had the Passat towed to the dealer, and he said it was a maintenance issue, but I argued that this was a dangerous defect. What should be done? Michael Dear Michael: As for this being a defect, I disagree. Car battery explosions are more common than you think. The explosion is caused from fumes emitting from the battery, so any spark under the hood that occurs will ignite the fumes. Batteries that are covered in a plastic housing conceal acid fumes. The new AGM-style batteries seem to have eliminated the fume problem, and also, the battery industry is getting away from the wet lead acid battery.

Cold start Dear Doctor: We have a 9434 Pickup Trucks Others FORD: ‘03 F150 SuperCab Lariat FX4 Stepside 4X4 - 5.4L Triton V8, Automatic, Alloy Wheels, Brand New T i r e s, L e e r To n n e a u Cover, Running Boards, Tow Package, Privacy Glass, Power Rear Slide r, Key l e s s E n t r y, 4 Door, Power Windows, Door Locks, Mirrors, and Drivers Seat, Leather Bucket Seats, A d j u s t a bl e Pe d a l s , Cruise Control, Tilt, Air Conditioning, CD/Cassette Stereo, Automatic Climate Control, Dual Front Airbags. 95K ml. $12,995 VIN# 2FTRX08L63CA13575 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com

THE AUTO DOC 1994 CadilDeVille. Damato lac Last winter, the dead battery would need a jump every single day. I purchased a new battery in the spring, and it worked all through the warm weather until we hit a cold 32-degree night recently in the fall. Please help, as winter is approaching. I cannot understand what is wrong. Janine Dear Janine: Vehicles need batteries that are the correct size and equipped with the correct cold cranking amps. Your DeVille needs to be checked to determine which circuit has the highest amount of parasitic current draw. I have seen everything, from the OnStar, the module in the trunk, power seat switch, internal radio failure, trunk/hood lights and even a faulty alternator cause battery issues.

Junior

9556 SUVs Others

Remote starter Dear Doctor: My daughter has a 2014 Volkswagen Touareg diesel. Do you know of any automatic starters for this vehicle? The dealer said this Volkswagen does not offer an automatic remote starter. Ed Dear Ed: There are many remote starters on the market. Most are installed by automotive accessory installation centers, such as shops that install radios and aftermarket accessories. I have used the Viper brand in my vehicles and have been very satisfied.

Car cover Dear Doctor: I’m considering using a car cover during the winter months for my new Mercedes-Benz. The cover would not be removed for a solid 4½ months. Mercedes is offering a three-layer cover, but at Autozone, they are offering a

FORD: ‘05 Escape 4x4. 161K mi. Grandma car, we l l m a i n t a i n e d , o n e owner, good plus SUV. $4,000 firm. (360)4523102 after 5pm.

five-layer cover that is $200 cheaper. What do you advise? Aaron Dear Aaron: The problem I have with any car cover that is on a vehicle for an extended period, especially in the harsh winter, is the wear on the exterior paint from winter winds shifting the cover, even everso-slightly. Another concern is the moisture issue from snow, rain and ice. If you do want to buy a car cover, then I recommend you check with the car cover manufacturer for their recommended use. I personally use soft-cloth style covers on my cars for inside storage. You can go online to www.covers4cars.com. Note: Do not buy a cheap car cover. Buy the cover that will not cause wear to the paint.

________ Junior Damato is an accredited Master Automobile Technician, radio host and writer for Motor Matters who also finds time to run his own seven-bay garage. Questions for the Auto Doc? Send them to Motor Matters, P.O. Box 3305, Wilmington, DE 19804, or info@motormatters.biz. Personal replies are not possible; questions are answered only in the column.

2016 Ford Escape Titanium 4WD BASE PRICE: $23,100 for S FWD; $25,300 for SE FWD; $27,050 for SE 4WD; $29,505 for Titanium FWD; $31,255 for Titanium 4WD. PRICE AS TESTED: $36,570. TYPE: Front-engine, all-wheel drive, five-passenger, compact sport utility vehicle. ENGINE: 2-liter, double overhead cam, turbocharged, EcoBoost, inline four-cylinder. MILEAGE: 21 mpg (city), 28 mpg (highway). LENGTH: 178.1 inches. WHEELBASE: 105.9 inches. CURB WEIGHT: 3,732 pounds. BUILT IN: Louisville, Ky. OPTIONS: Equipment group 301A (includes biXenon headlamps, rain-sensing wipers, blind spot monitoring, Active Park Assist) $1,735; 2-liter EcoBoost engine $1,195; navigation system $795; 19-inch, nickel-painted, aluminum wheels $695. DESTINATION CHARGE: $895. The Associated Press

9556 SUVs Others

CHEVY: (2) Suburbans. NISSAN: ‘00 Exterra XE ‘87 and ‘83. $500 ea. 4x4. Runs great, has all t h e ex t ra s, n ew Toyo (360)928-9436 tires and custom alloy wheels. Must see! 271K CHEVY: ‘91 Suburban, miles. Want to trade for 4x4, 3rd row seats, lift- commuter car, must be ed, straight body, good reliable and economical. tires, 141k miles, runs (360)477-2504 eves. good, transmission leak, needs work. $1000.obo. WANTED: ‘05-’12 PathLeave message. finder, 4Runner or Xterr(360)808-3802 ra. Under 100K, cash. (360)963-2122 C H E V Y : ‘ 9 9 , Ta h o e , 4x4, 4 dr. all factory options. $3,500. (360)452- 9730 Vans & Minivans Others 4156 or (361)461-7478.

GMC: ‘95 Yukon, 4x4, FORD: ‘08 Ranger. 4 good body, r uns well. door, 4x4 with canopy, Winter ready. Studded tires, leather, loaded. stick shift. $14,500. $1,600/obo. (360)477-2713 (360)461-4898 FORD: ‘90, F250, runs good, new tires, $1,500. GMC: ‘98 Jimmy SLE, (360)452-7746 Great Deal. White, one owner, good condition, FORD: ‘99, F350, 5.4 213K miles, V6, 4WD, Tr i t o n V 8 , a u t o m a t i c, 4-speed Auto trans. with c a n o p y , 1 7 2 k m l . over drive, towing pack$6,000. (360)928-2099. age, PS/PB, Disc ABS brakes, AC, $2250 o.b.o. Call (206) 920-1427

FORD: F250SD 4x4. XLT SuperCab, 4x4, 8’ b e d , 7 . 3 d i e s e l a u t o. 218K miles; have maintenance records. Ver y clean. Never in accident, Ex. condition. Original owner. $13,000. (360)683-1626

Find a technician who uses Alldata and Identifix to get to the bottom of this issue with your DeVille’s battery.

Car of the Week

There’s a better way to get attention.

CHEV: ‘03 Astro Cargo Va n , 1 0 2 , 0 0 0 m i l e s , $4,500 o.b.o. (360)477-8591 CHEVY: ‘06 Uplander, nice cond. 92K miles. $6,000. (360)683-1260 GMC: ‘98 Safari SLE. 85K miles, third row seat, auto, very clean. $3,995. (360)417-6649 PLYMOUTH: ‘95 Van, new tires, brakes, shocks, struts, etc. $2,899. (360)207-9311

Grab Their ATTENTION!

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JEEP: ‘01 Grand Cherokee, runs good, clean, good tires. $3850. (360)683-8799

Pictures

JEEP: ‘95 Jeep YJ Daily Driver. 184k miles, new engine pro install at 157k mi. 4 cyl 2.5L 5 spd tran. Good drive train, No off road abuse. Good rubber, Multiple soft tops included adn 2nd set of tires/rims. KBB at $4,500. $3,900. (360)461-6460

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GMC: ‘91 2500. Long bed, auto. 4x2, body is KIA: ‘08 Rondo LX V6, straight. $3,700 obo. low miles. Auto., loaded (360)683-2455 runs great. $5,800/obo. (360)460-1207 CHECK OUT OUR NEW CLASSIFIED SUZUKI: ‘87 Samari. 5 WIZARD AT speed, 4x4, ex. tires, ex. www.peninsula cond., many new parts. dailynews.com $4200. (360)385-7728

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3.3L V6, AUTO, NEW TIRES, ROOF RACK, PRIV GLASS, KEYLESS, DUAL SLIDING DRS, PWR WINDOWS, LOCKS & MIRRORS, CRUISE, TILT, AC, DUAL ZONE CLIM CTRL, REAR AC, CD, DUAL FRT AIRBAGS, ONLY 93K MILES! ACCIDENTFREE CARFAX! SPARKLING CLEAN INSIDE & OUT! *

4.6L V8, AUTO, TRAC CTRL, ALLOYS, NEW TIRES, RUNNING BOARDS, TOW, KEYLESS, 4 FULL DRS, PWR WINDOWS, LOCKS, MIRRORS & DRV SEAT, PWR REAR SLIDER, CRUISE, TILT, AC, MP3/CD, ONLY 54K MILES! CLEAN CARFAX! LIKE-NEW COND! *

2.2L 4 CYL, 5 SPD MAN, PWR WINDOWS, LOCKS & MIRRORS, CRUISE, TILT, AC, CD/CASS, DUAL FRT AIRBAGS, ONLY 92K MILES! CARFAX-CERTIFIED 1 OWNER! GOOD COND INSIDE & OUT! RUNS & DRIVES GREAT! HARD-TOFIND 5 SPD MODEL! AFFORDABLE COMMUTER! *

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

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


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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015 B9

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B10

WeatherWatch

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015 Neah Bay 43/35

Bellingham 44/31 g

➥

Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 42/34

Port Angeles 46/34

Olympics Snow level: 2,500 feet

Forks 47/34

Sequim 45/32

Port Ludlow 46/34

Yesterday

National forecast Nation TODAY

Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 58 40 0.88 37.37 Forks 55 38 0.36 80.60 Seattle 56 38 0.24 37.56 Sequim 53 37 0.28 14.78 Hoquiam 57 41 0.60 46.69 Victoria 59 40 0.90 23.91 Port Townsend 55 28 **0.24 15.22

Forecast highs for Thursday, Nov. 19

Last

New

First

Sunny

Billings 41° | 27°

San Francisco 68° | 51°

Minneapolis 34° | 30°

Denver 46° | 22°

Chicago 47° | 44°

Los Angeles 79° | 54°

Miami 84° | 76°

➥

Fronts

Low 34 Clouds drift across the moon

SATURDAY

Port Angeles Port Townsend Dungeness Bay*

Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Spokane Atlantic City 39° | 29° Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Yakima Bismarck 40° | 32° Boise Boston Brownsville Š 2015 Wunderground.com Buffalo Burlington, Vt.

Seattle 47° | 42° Tacoma 46° | 41°

Olympia 46° | 39° Astoria 51° | 43°

ORE.

TODAY

TOMORROW

Hi 48 48 41 07 57 70 56 66 58 51 75 46 47 45 91 61 45

Lo 22 33 32 -7 45 56 43 38 45 37 69 13 43 31 67 47 25

4:31 p.m. 7:28 a.m. 1:20 p.m. 12:42 a.m.

Prc

.20 .31 .04 .01 .03

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

SATURDAY

High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 6:17 a.m. 7.6’ 5:59 p.m. 7.0’ 12:19 p.m. 3.4’

High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 7:14 a.m. 8.1’ 12:34 a.m. 1.2’ 7:20 p.m. 7.0’ 1:33 p.m. 2.7’

High Tide Ht 8:07 a.m. 8.6’ 8:35 p.m. 7.1’

Low Tide 1:36 a.m. 2:40 p.m.

Ht 1.5’ 1.7’

9:01 a.m. 7.1’ 8:13 p.m. 4.5’

1:32 a.m. 0.7’ 3:55 p.m. 4.0’

9:43 a.m. 7.2’ 9:56 p.m. 4.6’

2:34 a.m. 1.5’ 4:40 p.m. 2.9’

10:23 a.m. 7.3’ 11:35 p.m. 5.1’

3:38 a.m. 5:22 p.m.

2.3’ 1.7’

10:38 a.m. 8.8’ 9:50 p.m. 5.6’

2:45 a.m. 0.8’ 5:08 p.m. 4.4’

11:20 a.m. 8.9’ 11:33 p.m. 5.7’

3:47 a.m. 1.7’ 5:53 p.m. 3.2’

12:00 p.m. 9.0’

4:51 a.m. 6:35 p.m.

2.6’ 1.9’

9:44 a.m. 7.9’ 8:56 p.m. 5.0’

2:07 a.m. 0.7’ 4:30 p.m. 4.0’

10:26 a.m. 8.0’ 10:39 p.m. 5.1’

3:09 a.m. 1.5’ 5:15 p.m. 2.9’

11:06 a.m. 8.1’ 5:57 p.m. 1.7’

4:13 a.m.

2.3’

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

-10s

-0s

Casper 47 Charleston, S.C. 76 Charleston, W.Va. 65 Charlotte, N.C. 67 Cheyenne 36 Chicago 58 Cincinnati 59 Cleveland 67 Columbia, S.C. 71 Columbus, Ohio 61 Concord, N.H. 47 Dallas-Ft Worth 64 Dayton 63 Denver 40 Des Moines 60 Detroit 62 Duluth 49 El Paso 57 Evansville 67 Fairbanks -7 Fargo 45 Flagstaff 49 Grand Rapids 65 Great Falls 51 Greensboro, N.C. 63 Hartford Spgfld 49 Helena 54 Honolulu 86 Houston 77 Indianapolis 59 Jackson, Miss. 82 Jacksonville 81 Juneau 33 Kansas City 61 Key West 83 Las Vegas 59 Little Rock 73 Los Angeles 72

34 62 59 55 33 56 58 58 59 57 16 49 57 30 49 57 49 36 62 -8 37 25 54 28 49 22 36 73 50 56 55 70 29 45 76 45 52 49

0s

.03

.80 .03

.17 .01 .40 .93 1.52 .38 .02 .07 .02 .01 1.81 .24 3.06 .01 .44 .91 .03 2.71

571353869

Mon-Sat 10:30am-5:30pm | Sun. 11am-4pm 315 E. First St. | Port Angeles | 360. 808.9144

10s

20s 30s 40s

50s 60s

70s

80s 90s 100s 110s

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

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

65 54 75 85 62 54 54 73 83 49 67 37 62 58 85 61 57 63 64 47 58 49 67 47 49 66 62 69 83 38 73 69 61 88 46 50 73 54

59 32 56 78 38 53 54 65 58 44 59 22 42 42 71 40 41 45 54 20 45 27 53 22 29 48 39 59 74 33 44 52 49 77 28 46 50 40

.06 3.23 .11 1.36 1.13 .05 1.41 .05 .05 .48 .02

.76

1.52 .14 .21 .35 3.62 .87

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

Syracuse Tampa Topeka Tucson Tulsa Washington, D.C. Wichita Wilkes-Barre Wilmington, Del.

51 87 62 59 63 61 61 55 58

34 74 45 37 47 46 40 39 42

Clr Cldy .15 Cldy Clr .36 PCldy Cldy .01 PCldy PCldy Cldy

_______ Hi Lo Otlk Auckland 68 60 Cldy/Rain Beijing 39 32 Rain Berlin 53 44 Sh/Wind Brussels 54 46 AM Sh/Rain Cairo 77 59 PCldy Calgary 30 12 PM Snow Guadalajara 83 57 PCldy Hong Kong 81 73 Cldy/Humid Jerusalem 64 50 Clr Johannesburg 73 58 Sh/Ts Kabul 63 34 Cldy London 54 45 Cldy Mexico City 73 55 PCldy Montreal 53 40 Cldy/Rain Moscow 38 35 Rain/Snow New Delhi 85 54 Hazy Paris 60 52 Cldy/Sh Rio de Janeiro 92 78 PCldy/Ts Rome 63 51 PCldy San Jose, CRica 75 63 Cldy/Ts Sydney 104 68 Clr Tokyo 60 52 Rain Toronto 57 35 PCldy/Sh Vancouver 45 30 Clr

Tinnitus, or “ringing in the ears,� affects 50 million Amercians and is often linked to hearing loss.

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FUNCTIONAL FASHION

High

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

Tinnitus Focused HEARING Healthcare

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Low

Cartography Š Weather Underground / The Associated Press

peninsuladailynews.com

And a newly opened MAN CAVE!

Pressure

Warm Stationary

Dec 18 Nov 25

Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise today Moonset tomorrow

CANADA Victoria 45° | 38°

Ocean: NE morning wind 5 to 15 kt becoming to 10 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft subsiding to 2 ft or less in the afternoon. W swell 7 ft at 11 seconds. NE evening wind to 10 kt becoming E 5 to 15 kt after midnight. Wind waves 2 ft or less building to 1 to 3 ft after midnight. W swell 6 ft at 11 seconds.

LaPush

Dec 11

Nation/World

Washington TODAY

Strait of Juan de Fuca: NE morning wind 5 to 15 kt becoming to 10 kt. Wind waves 2 ft or less. SE evening wind to 10 kt becoming NE after midnight. Wind waves 1 ft or less.

Tides

MONDAY

48/36 46/36 48/37 The light stays for Until clouds return More rain. Must and take it away be Monday a crisp day

45/34 Sunshine will arrive soon!

Marine Conditions

SUNDAY

Dec 2

Brownsville, Texas Ă„ 7 in Taos, N.M.

Atlanta 66° | 51°

El Paso 66° | 37° Houston 75° | 53°

Full

Ăƒ 91 in

New York 64° | 55°

Detroit 54° | 49°

Washington D.C. 69° | 58°

Cold

FRIDAY

Cloudy

TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:

Cartography by Keith Thorpe / Š Peninsula Daily News

TONIGHT

Pt. Cloudy

The Lower 48

Seattle 46° | 41°

Almanac

Brinnon 45/36

Aberdeen 50/37

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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