Tuesday
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS June 28, 2016 | 75¢
Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper
County renews attorney services
Fits right in
Board allocates $1.5M for 3 years BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SHERRY MIZUTA
Captain Crystal Stout, owner of Morning Star Balloon Co. in Sequim, landed this hot air balloon near Lotus Lane in Sequim at about 8 a.m. Monday after a surprise flight with Sequim’s fire chief, Stephen Vogel, and his wife. She had planned on landing on the west side of Sequim, but winds carried the balloon to the east. Stout said she always checks with landowners before landing on private property.
PORT TOWNSEND — The Jefferson County Board of Commissioners renewed its public defender contract with Jefferson Associated Counsel on Monday, allocating $1.5 million for the service over the next three years. The contract was unanimously approved by a quorum consisting of commissioners David Sullivan and Kathleen Kler. Commissioner Phil Johnson was not present. The Port Townsend law firm has served as an exclusive provider of public defense services since 2005.
Function changed
FAA looking at low race flight BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — The Federal Aviation Administration has begun an investigation into whether a helicopter flew too low at the Race to Alaska starting line last Thursday. In an email, FAA spokesman Ian Gregor said the event was reported Monday morning through the agency’s aviation safety hotline with the FAA’s Seattle Flight Standards District Office taking charge of the investigation. “It is impossible to say how long an investigation will take,” Gregor wrote.
After the meeting, Richard Davies, the firm’s director, said the office’s function has changed since it was awarded the first contract. “Today there is a more collaborative nature of justice and a social service aspect to what we do,” Davies said. “We are dealing with drug, alcohol and mental health issues among our clients, with an attempt to stop the cycle of recidivism.” Davies, 53, has worked as a Jefferson County public defender since 1994. TURN
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Altitude restrictions “While helicopters are not subject to the same altitude restrictions as airplanes, they have to be operated so they don’t pose a hazard to people or property on the surface. “There is no specific foot limit. However, a helicopter should be operated so that the pilot can safely set it down in CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS case of a loss of engine power.” A helicopter flew close to the water at the beginning of the Race to TURN TO FLIGHT/A6 Alaska on Thursday.
CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Richard Davies, whose law firm’s public defender contract was extended Monday, addresses the Jefferson County Board of Commissioners.
Dueling public surveys pointing to impasse PA talks over pier parking situation BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Dueling, unscientific public-opinion assessments are part of an impasse over Feiro Marine Life Center’s proposal to shrink and reduce usage of the long-term public parking lot at City Pier as part of building a new marine science facility.
A survey by the Port Angles Business Association presented to the City Council last week showed a majority of parking lot users favored keeping the Lincoln Street-Railroad Avenue parking lot at City Pier as is. But according to priorities selected during May 12-14 open house gatherings, parking was a low priority for residents with
visions of Feiro’s and the City Pier’s future. “There really needs to be a thorough evaluation of parking in that area,” City Manager Dan McKeen said Friday. The City Council, which does not charge rent to Feiro on the city-owned pier, will decide the lot’s fate. “If in fact a design would include a reduction of parking there, that would prompt an evaluation,” McKeen said.
“We would need to be able to look at other parking that is available in that area or other parking that may be available to mitigate the lost parking at the pier.”
Forging plans Feiro is forging plans that would rely on City Pier visitors parking elsewhere downtown so its aging 35-year-old center can be replaced. A substantially larger educational and display center would be
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made possible by cutting the current 35 parking spaces, which include two handicapped spots, to 10 handicapped and short-term slots for visitors going to Feiro, an adjacent play area and popular, nearby Hollywood Beach, which the city also wants to improve. Two designs are being contemplated that received positive public input during public meetings in May on the project, according to Studio Cascade.
BUSINESS CLASSIFIED COMICS COMMENTARY DEAR ABBY DEATHS HOROSCOPE LETTERS NATION/WORLD
A8 B6 B5 A7 B5 A5, A6 B5 A7 A4
*PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT
PENINSULA POLL PUZZLES/GAMES SPORTS WEATHER
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UpFront
TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Tundra
The Samurai of Puzzles
By Chad Carpenter
Copyright © 2016, Michael Mepham Editorial Services
www.peninsuladailynews.com This is a QR (Quick Response) code taking the user to the North Olympic Peninsula’s No. 1 website* — peninsuladailynews.com. The QR code can be scanned with a smartphone or tablet equipped with an app available for free from numerous sources. QR codes appearing in news articles or advertisements in the PDN can instantly direct the smartphone user to additional information on the web. *Source: Quantcast Inc.
PORT ANGELES main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 General information: 360-452-2345 Toll-free from Jefferson County and West End: 800-826-7714 Fax: 360-417-3521 Lobby hours: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday ■ See Commentary page for names, telephone numbers and email addresses of key executives and contact people. SEQUIM news office: 360-681-2390 147-B W. Washington St. Sequim, WA 98382 JEFFERSON COUNTY news office: 360-385-2335 1939 E. Sims Way Port Townsend, WA 98368
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Newsroom, sports CONTACTS! To report news: 360-417-3531, or one of our local offices: Sequim, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052; Jefferson County/Port Townsend, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550; West End/Forks, 800-826-7714, ext. 5052 Sports desk/reporting a sports score: 360-417-3525 Letters to Editor: 360-417-3527 Club news, “Seen Around” items, subjects not listed above: 360-417-3527 To purchase PDN photos: www.peninsuladailynews.com, click on “Photo Gallery.” Permission to reprint or reuse articles: 360-417-3530 To locate a recent article: 360-417-3527
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS (ISSN 1050-7000, USPS No. 438.580), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Black Press Group Ltd./Sound Publishing Inc., published each morning Sunday through Friday at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. POSTMASTER: Periodicals postage paid at Port Angeles, WA. Send address changes to Circulation Department, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Contents copyright © 2016, Peninsula Daily News MEMBER
Audit Bureau of Circulations
The Associated Press
Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Timberlake apologizes for tweet JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE, WHO praised actor-activist Jesse Williams’ moving speech at the BET Awards, has apologized for responding to a tweet claiming he appropriates black culture. Timberlake tweeted Sunday that he was inspired after Williams spoke passionTimberlake ately about racism and social injustice. A responder tweeted to Timberlake: “Does this mean you’re going to stop appropriating our music and culture?” Timberlake responded:
“The more you realize that we are the same, the more we can have a conversation.” The pop singer said he felt “misunderstood” after some said his response was insensitive. Timberlake ended with: “I apologize to anyone that felt I was out of turn. I have nothing but LOVE FOR YOU AND ALL OF US.” Williams received the humanitarian award at the BET Awards in Los Angeles on Sunday night.
Surprising a fan A New Jersey woman battling lung cancer has received an unforgettable surprise from one of the state’s most famous rockers, Jon Bon Jovi. Rosie Skripkunis said her mother, Carol Cesario, is a lifelong fan of Bon Jovi and has always wanted to meet him. Last month, Skripkunis shared a sign on social
media asking the singer to visit her mother and within an hour Skripkunis was working on Bon Jovi the surprise with Bon Jovi’s team. The meeting was set up under the guise of a free meal at Bon Jovi’s Toms River restaurant, JBJ Soul Kitchen. “I lied to her,” Skripkunis said. “I told her I wrote to his restaurant, that they said they couldn’t pass fan mail on, but that they had invited us for a free meal. It was a free meal, but it was a free meal with Bon Jovi there.” During the meal Saturday, Bon Jovi sneaked in behind Cesario and stood beside her without saying anything. TURN
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NEWSMAKERS/A3
SUNDAY’S QUESTION: Have you ever dreamed of climbing a tall, ice-covered mountain such as Mt. Rainier?
Passings By The Associated Press
JOHN J. SANTUCCI, 85, who as the Queens district attorney from 1977 to 1991 became a lightning rod of controversy in highprofile cases involving a fatal racial attack, a municipal corruption scandal and allegations of lethal police brutality, died Sunday in Mineola, N.Y. His death was confirmed by a grandson, John T. Santucci. Mr. Santucci gained wide attention in December 1986 after one of the most explosive racially motivated crimes in the city at the time — an attack on three black men in Howard Beach, Queens, by a gang of white teenagers, who chased one man onto a highway where he was struck and killed by a car. The two other men and their lawyers refused to cooperate with Mr. Santucci’s office, contending that it had joined in an attempt to cover up vital aspects of the episode. Mr. Santucci denied the accusation, but he said that with the case at an impasse he had no choice but to turn it over to a specially appointed state prosecutor. That prosecutor, Charles J. Hynes, who later became Brooklyn’s district attorney, won manslaughter convictions against three of the attackers, while six others were convicted of lesser charges. Earlier in 1986, Mr. Santucci had been both praised and pilloried in connection with a corruption scandal involving allegations of bribery schemes at city agencies. One defendant was John A. Zaccaro, the husband of Geraldine A. Ferraro, who had been an
assistant district attorney under Mr. Santucci before she was elected to Congress and became Mr. the DemoSantucci cratic candidate for vice president in 1984. Another was Francis X. Smith, the state’s judicial administrator in Queens and a former president of the New York City Council, who had been a longtime friend of Mr. Santucci’s. Mr. Santucci prosecuted Zaccaro on charges that he had joined the Queens borough president, Donald R. Manes, in trying to extort a bribe from a cable television company that had unsuccessfully sought a franchise in Queens. Mr. Santucci prosecuted Smith on perjury charges for his grand jury testimony about meetings and conversations that were said to have been part of the extortion attempt. Zaccaro was acquitted; Smith was convicted and served two months in jail. Mr. Santucci’s supporters said the prosecutions showed that he had not let personal relationships keep him from doing his job. But Ms. Ferraro denounced Mr. Santucci, contending that he had prosecuted her husband only to burnish his image and share the spotlight in an investigation that had been begun by federal prosecutors. Indeed, some of Mr. Santucci’s critics maintained that his office had been lax in investigating political corruption in Queens. They noted that Manes was a central figure in the
bribery plots that had been exposed by the federal prosecutors, headed by Rudolph W. Giuliani, then the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York. Manes committed suicide before he could be prosecuted. Mr. Santucci disputed the accusation of laxity. He said in an interview with The New York Times in 1987 that he had investigated separate allegations of payoffs to Manes before the 1986 scandal, but that he had been unable to make a case.
Yes
16.9%
No
82.3%
Undecided 0.8% Total votes cast: 531 Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.
Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Leah Leach at 360-4173530 or email her at lleach@peninsuladailynews.com.
Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News
multibillion dollar oil rig in the harbor. All Clallam County The floats, designed and youths who have reached built on a rush order in their 21st birthday since Oct. Seattle, will be harnessed 16, 1940, or will reach that on either side of the rig. age by midnight next TuesThey were ordered at a day, are required to register cost of $175,000 after officials at the Selective Service office of Mobil Oil Co., of Houston, in the Port Angeles Armory Texas, and Kaiser Products next Tuesday, July 1. of Oakland, Calif., visited The registration office Port Angeles last week. will open at 7 o’clock in the morning and will close at 1991 (25 years ago) 9 o’clock that night. There After running a gauntwill be but one registration let of hecklers at a public place in the county and it meeting Thursday, developwill be in charge of the ers of the Cape Discovery Selective Service Board. There are certain exemp- Resort on Miller Peninsula tions to the list of those who will submit their site plans to Clallam County planmust register. Few if any young men of Clallam County are on the exemption Laugh Lines list and every youth in the required age group should FOLLOWING THE visit the registration place to [BREXIT] vote, British determine his status. Prime Minister David Cameron actually resigned, 1966 (50 years ago) saying that the country Two exclusively needs new leadership. designed floats are enroute An American was like, to Port Angeles from Seat- “Can you start here next tle today in hopes that they January?” Jimmy Fallon will be able to stabilize the
1941 (75 years ago)
ners for review today. The developers, Peninsula Partners, are seeking approval for a $45 million initial phase of the destination resort to be completed by 1995. County review is expected to last a year. The developers detailed the project at Thursday’s meeting in Sequim. “In a very real sense, we have just begun,” assistant project manager Dan Cudaback said at a packed Carrie Blake Park hall.
Seen Around Peninsula snapshots
A DEER LAYING under a tree near Port Angeles High School. Thought it was a statue until it suddenly moved . . . WANTED! “Seen Around” items recalling things seen on the North Olympic Peninsula. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax 360417-3521; or email news@ peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure you mention where you saw your “Seen Around.”
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS TUESDAY, June 28, the 180th day of 2016. There are 186 days left in the year. Today’s Highlights in History: ■ On June 28, 1778, the Revolutionary War Battle of Monmouth took place in New Jersey; from this battle arose the legend of Molly Pitcher, a woman who was said to have carried water to colonial soldiers, then taken over firing her husband’s cannon when he became injured. On this date: ■ In 1914, Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his wife, Sophie, were shot to death in Sarajevo by Serb nationalist Gavrilo Princip — an act which sparked World War I.
■ In 1919, the Treaty of Versailles was signed in France, ending World War I. ■ In 1939, Pan American Airways began regular trans-Atlantic air service with a flight that departed New York for Marseilles, France. ■ In 1940, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Alien Registration Act, also known as the Smith Act, which required adult foreigners residing in the U.S. to be registered and fingerprinted. ■ In 1950, North Korean forces captured Seoul, the capital of South Korea. ■ In 1964, civil rights activist Malcolm X declared, “We want equality by any means necessary”
during the Founding Rally of the Organization of Afro-American Unity in New York. ■ In 1989, about 1 million Serbs gathered to mark the 600th anniversary of the Battle of Kosovo in 1389. ■ In 1996, the Citadel voted to admit women, ending a 153-yearold men-only policy at the South Carolina military school. The unanimous decision by the school’s governing board came two days after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the all-male admissions policy at Virginia Military Institute. ■ Ten years ago: Israeli warplanes buzzed the seaside home of Syria’s president and bombed Hamas targets in Gaza to pressure
Palestinian militants into freeing a kidnapped Israeli soldier, Cpl. Gilad Shalit. ■ Five years ago: Taliban fighters raided an international hotel in Kabul and killed 10 people on the eve of a conference to discuss plans for Afghan forces to take over security when international troops left by the end of 2014. ■ One year ago: Authorities in upstate New York captured David Sweat, one of two convicted murderers who’d escaped from the Clinton Correctional Facility on June 6; Sweat was apprehended two days after his fellow escapee, Richard Matt, was shot and killed in a confrontation with law enforcement.
UpFront
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016
A3
Newsmakers Celebrity scoop â– By The Associated Press
CONTINUED FROM A2 political statements on issues ranging from racial injustice to the U.S. presiVideo shows Cesario dential election. yelling out, “Oh my God!� Sheila E., jamming on after seeing the singer. the drums and guitar, singThe family ended up ing and dancing without spending the night with Bon Jovi, talking for hours shoes, closed the threehour-plus show at the and even getting the Microsoft Theater in Los chance to listen to some of Angeles with “Let’s Work,� his new music. “A Love Bizarre,� “The He gave Cesario an Glamorous Life,� “America� autographed guitar and a and more. book, as well as a kiss on She was joined by “Purthe cheek. ple Rain� actor Jerome “She slept with the book Benton and Prince’s exhe gave her,� Skripkunis wife, Mayte Garcia, who said. danced alongside the background dancers throughout BET Awards the set. The BET Awards — or They ended by raising a “The Prince Tribute purple guitar in the air as Show� — featured emothe audience cheered them tional and energetic perfor- on. mances from Sheila E., Hudson, rocking a whitehooded blazer, and Wonder, Stevie Wonder and Jenclad in a purple suit, sang nifer Hudson honoring the Purple One, along with “Purple Rain� — a month
tar while a photo montage of Prince appeared on the purple-lit stage. Janelle Monae was animated and funky as she danced skillfully and ran through Prince tunes, including “Kiss,� “Delirious� and “I Would Die 4 U.� Bilal was sensual and passionate during “The Beautiful Ones,� even lying on the floor while singing near the end of the performance. The Roots backed Bilal, and the band was also behind Erykah Badu THE ASSOCIATED PRESS as she performed “The BalSheila E., left, and Mayte Garcia stand on stage lad of Dorothy Parker,� following a performance in tribute to Prince at singing softly as she the BET Awards at the Microsoft Theater on grooved in place. Sunday in Los Angeles. After singing an original song, Maxwell went into after the piano-playing icon This time, Hudson was “Nothing Compares 2 U,� performed the song with a vocal powerhouse, delivchanging some of the lyrics Madonna at the Billboard ering screeching vocals while honoring Prince. Music Awards, which BET while Wonder played piano Though the BET criticized on Twitter. and Tori Kelly was on gui- Awards were heavy on hon-
oring the icon who died April 21, the show went from Prince to political throughout the night. “Grey’s Anatomy� actor Jesse Williams, who earned the humanitarian award for his efforts as an activist, gave a fiery, nearly six-minute speech that brought the audience to its feet and earned a rousing applause. “We’re done watching and waiting while this invention called whiteness uses and abuses us, burying black people out of sight and out of mind while extracting our culture, our dollars, our entertainment like oil, black gold, ghettoizing and demeaning our creations then stealing them; gentrifying our genius and trying us on like costumes before discarding our bodies,� he said onstage.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, June 28, 2016 PAGE
A4 Briefly: Nation Court overturns conviction ruling for Va. governor WASHINGTON — A unanimous Supreme Court on Monday overturned the corruption conviction of former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell in a ruling that makes it harder to prosecute elected officials accused of bribery. The justices ruled the jury received faulty instructions about what constitutes bribery under federal law. McDonnell McDonnell was convicted in 2014 of accepting more than $165,000 in gifts and loans from a wealthy businessman in exchange for promoting a dietary supplement. The former governor said he never took any official action to benefit Star Scientific Inc. CEO Jonnie Williams or pressured other public officials to do so. McDonnell said he simply performed routine courtesies for Williams such as setting up meetings and hosting events.
The Colorado State Patrol said the girl was hospitalized with serious injuries after the train headed from Chicago to Los Angeles hit the van as it drove across the tracks Sunday. The crash happened at a railroad crossing in a rural area near Trinidad, about 15 miles from the New Mexico border. Trooper Art Gumke said the crossing is marked with signs but doesn’t have gates to stop vehicles. The girl’s parents were identified as 32-year-old Stephen Miller and 33-year-old Christine Miller of Trinidad. Their daughters, ages 6, 2 and 8 months, also died.
Puerto Rico bill urged
WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew on Monday warned of widespread consequences if the Senate fails to act before Friday on a rescue package for debt-stricken Puerto Rico. The U.S. territory owes a $2 billion debt payment to creditors on July 1. The House already passed legislation to create a new control board and restructure some of the U.S. territory’s $70 billion debt. In a letter, Lew said the crisis in Puerto Rico “will ratchet up to an even higher level” if Congress doesn’t act in the next four days. Girl survives crash He said that if the island defaults on the July 1 payment, LAS ANIMAS COUNTY, the government may be forced Colo. — A 4-year-old girl is the sole survivor of a crash between to lay off police officers, shut down public transit or close a a minivan and an Amtrak train that killed her parents and three hospital. sisters in southern Colorado. The Associated Press
Supreme Court strikes Texas abortion limits Justices decide that state’s law made obstacles, undue burden BY MARK SHERMAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court struck down Texas’ widely replicated regulation of abortion clinics Monday in the court’s biggest abortion case in nearly a quarter century. The justices voted 5-3 in favor of Texas clinics that had argued the regulations were only a veiled attempt to make it harder to get abortions in the nation’s secondmost populous state.
Limit the right Justice Stephen Breyer’s majority opinion for the court held that the regulations are medically unnecessary and unconstitutionally limit a woman’s right to an abortion. Texas had argued that its 2013 law and subsequent regulations
do little or nothing for health, but rather strew impediments to abortion, cannot survive judicial inspection” under the court’s earlier abortion-rights decisions. She pointed specifically to Roe v. Wade in 1973 and Planned Parenthood v. Casey in 1992. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas dissented.
were needed to protect women’s health. The rules required doctors who perform abortions to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals and forced clinics to meet hospital-like standards for outpatient surgery. Bends the rules
Few health benefits Breyer wrote that “the surgical-center requirement, like the admitting privileges requirement, provides few, if any, health benefits for women, poses a substantial obstacle to women seeking abortions and constitutes an ‘undue burden’ on their constitutional right to do so.” Justices Anthony Kennedy, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan joined Breyer. Ginsburg wrote a short opinion noting that laws like Texas’ “that
Thomas wrote that the decision “exemplifies the court’s troubling tendency ‘to bend the rules when any effort to limit abortion, or even to speak in opposition to abortion, is at issue.’ ” Thomas was quoting an earlier abortion dissent from Justice Antonin Scalia, who died in February. Scalia has not yet been replaced. Alito, reading a summary of his dissent in court, said the clinics should have lost on technical, procedural grounds. Alito said the court was adopting a rule of, “If at first you don’t succeed, sue, sue again.”
Briefly: World Rajoy’s party also won an election in December but no other major party was willing to help BEIRUT — Suicide bombers him form a killed five people and wounded government, a at least 15 in a northwestern political sceRajoy Lebanese village near the Syrnario that reian border on Monday, witnesses emerged Monday and could and paramedics said. leave Spain with a caretaker The attack took place in the mainly Christian village of Qaa, government for many more months. a few hundred yards from the Speaking after a party leadfrontier. The state-run National ership meeting, Rajoy said votNews Agency said four suicide bombers took part in the attack. ers had backed his party’s strategy of seeking a coalition with No group immediately claimed the Socialists and Ciudadanos. responsibility. An eyewitness said the four French open inquiry attackers raised suspicions when they passed through the PARIS — French authorities village before dawn. When civil- opened a manslaughter inquiry ian village guards called out to Monday into the May crash of an them, they threw a hand greEgyptAir plane that killed 66 nade. The witness spoke on con- people, saying there is no evidition of anonymity for fear of dence so far to link it to retribution. terrorism. Prosecutor’s office spokesman New coalition rejected Agnes Thibault-Lecuivre said the inquiry was launched as an MADRID — Mariano Rajoy, accident investigation, not a terthe leader of Spain’s conservative Popular Party, tried to form rorism investigation. She said a “grand coalition” Monday after French authorities are “not at all” favoring the theory that the his party won the country’s plane was downed deliberately, unprecedented repeat election though the status of the inquiry — but his offer was quickly could eventually change if evirejected by both the center-left dence emerges to that effect. Socialists and the businessInvestigators decided to start friendly Ciudadanos party. the probe before waiting to anaThe Popular Party won 137 seats in Sunday’s vote but again lyze the plane’s flight data and fell short of capturing the major- voice recorders, based on evidence gathered so far, she said, ity in the 350-seat Parliament without elaborating. that it had won in a 2011 election. The Associated Press
Five are killed, 15 wounded in suicide bombing
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
STILL
ON GUARD
A member of the Iraqi counterterrorism forces stands guard near Islamic State group militant graffiti in Fallujah, Iraq, on Monday. Thick clouds of black smoke billowed over northwest Fallujah on Monday as dozens of homes continued to burn a day after the city was declared “fully liberated” from the Islamic State group.
U.K. appeals for calm while concerns rise, crisis deepens BY DANICA KIRKA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LONDON — British and European leaders appealed for calm Monday as concern over the U.K.’s exit from the European Union and its deepening political crisis triggered further gyrations in financial markets and hit confidnce in the economy.. In his first appearance before the House of Commons since Thursday’s referendum, U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron stressed that the country’s economy can withstand the shockwaves created by the vote, and that it is in a far better position than it was for
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the 2008 financial crisis. “It is clear that markets are volatile, there are some companies considering their investments and we know this is going to be far from plain sailing,” Cameron said.
Ready for future “However, we should take confidence from the fact that Britain is ready to confront what the future holds for us from a position of strength.” The leaders of European heavyweights Germany, Italy and France were to huddle later Monday to discuss a strategy to han-
dle Britain’s exit, trying to hone a common message that negotiations need to get underway quickly on the exit. German Chancellor Angela Merkel wouldn’t comment on whether it’s acceptable for London to wait, but said that a “longterm suspension” wouldn’t be in either side’s economic interest. “The notification has to be sent by the British government — I have neither a brake nor an accelerator,” she said. Cameron said he had spoken with Merkel and French President Francois Hollande, and made plain this was not the time to start the process.
. . . more news to start your day
West: Crews see progress in Calif. fire containment
Nation: Court upholds gun ban in domestic violence
Nation: Two men believed dead found alive in W.Va.
World: Suicide bombing kills 14, wounds 32 in Iraq
CREWS MADE PROGRESS against a wildfire that killed two people and destroyed 200 homes as it tore through mountain communities in central California, leaving little time for residents to flee the fast-moving flames. About 2,000 firefighters increased containment on the nearly 68-squaremile blaze to 40 percent, federal fire officials said Sunday evening. But the death toll could rise as cadaver dogs search for remains in neighborhoods occupied by many retirees on fixed incomes, officials warned. Besides those destroyed, 75 homes were damaged. Evacuations were still in place Monday.
THE SUPREME COURT has upheld the broad reach of a federal law that bans people convicted of domestic violence from owning guns. The justices on Monday rejected arguments that the law covers only intentional acts of abuse and not those committed in the heat of an argument. The case involved two Maine men who said their guilty pleas for hitting their partners should not disqualify them from gun ownership. The dispute drew interest from advocates for victims of domestic abuse who say the law applies to reckless behavior as well as intentional misconduct.
TWO MEN WHO were presumed dead when a camper was swept away in rushing waters during the West Virginia floods have been found alive, officials said Monday. The discovery of the men lowers the death toll to 23, officials said. The men were either camping or getting ready to set up camp when the rain started last Thursday, said Timothy Rock, spokesman for the West Virginia Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management. They left their gear and their truck at the camp site in the Blue Bend area of the Monongahela National Forest and caught a ride out with another party.
IRAQI OFFICIALS SAID a suicide bomber targeting a Sunni mosque west of Baghdad killed 14 and wounded 32 Monday night. The attack struck an Abu Ghraib mosque as worshippers gathered to pray after breaking their fast during the holy month of Ramadan. No group has yet claimed responsibility for the attack, but it does not necessarily bear the hallmarks of Islamic State group attacks. Islamic State group attacks — of which Baghdad and surrounding areas experienced an uptick in last month — generally target Shiite civilians and security infrastructure.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016
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Friday arraignment set for PA rape suspect abandoned house on West Second Street, the police narrative says. The woman told police the man forcibly had sex with her at the house. She was able to escape after the man “passed out,” she told police. She then went to Olympic Medical Center where she made the report and a sexual assault examination kit was completed. After Port Angeles police issued a press release the same day, police received a
call saying that Johnson matched the description that was provided, the police report says. On June 14, police completed a composite sketch of the suspect, which wasn’t released to the public.
Clallam County plans to review provision of HR legal services
Heaven is the place where all the dogs we ever loved come to greet us. Bo’sun was born April 9, 2001, to wonderful parents in Brentwood, California, with several brothers and sisters. He was by far the largest of his siblings, which should have been notice that he would always be a food hog. Being retired Coast Guard and long-time sailors, it seemed natural to name him after the Bosun’s Mate on a Coast Guard Cutter. “Boats” was one of his nicknames, just like on a Cutter along with the ever popular “Bo.” Bo’s new family included an elderly super-mutt named Airey (lovingly referred to as Grandma) and his big sister Zeta, a Rottweiler. Zeta quickly taught Bo’sun essential skills, such as using the dog door so we missed the usual trials and tribulations of potty training a stubborn Bichon Frise. Airey passed away a few months before Bo’sun and his family came to live in Sequim in 2003, where he loved the country life. Zeta was very protective of Bo’sun all of her life, which Bo’sun enjoyed flaunting around other large dogs. A Rough Collie named Gracie came to live with us just before Zeta’s life ended early, at age 7, due to osteosarcoma. Around the same time, Bo’sun’s epilepsy worsened and we nearly lost him; an additional medication kept him seizure free for the rest of
BY JESSE MAJOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES –– A Port Angeles man arrested for investigation of kidnapping and rape charges is scheduled for arraignment at 1:30 p.m. Friday in Clallam County Superior Court. Maxx Edward Johnson, 26, remained in the Clallam County jail Monday, held on $150,000 bond. Johnson is being held for investigation of first-degree rape and first-degree kid-
BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Clallam County will take a second look at how it provides legal representation in collective bargaining and other employment-related matters. Commissioners on Monday directed staff to negotiate a five-month contract extension with Bullard Law to bide time for a re-examination of a long-standing pact for human resources legal services. Clallam County’s oneyear contract with Bullard Law expires Aug. 1. The Portland, Ore., firm has represented the human resources department for about 30 years, Human Resources Director Rich Sill told commissioners Monday. “What I’m interested in is some alternatives so that we can put three or four on the table and have a discussion about the pluses and minuses of each,” Commissioner Mark Ozias said in a nearly three-hour work session. “Is it worth saving money here, or are we losing institutional knowledge, or is it worth changing the paradigm? But we can’t have that [discussion] unless we have some alteratives.”
Request for proposals Commissioners are expected to issue a request for proposals for human resources legal services next month. “We haven’t done that in my time here,” said Board Chairman Mike Chapman, a 16th-year commissioner who is running for state representative in November. “We have continually rolled over the contract.”
napping charges for allegedly kidnapping a woman at knifepoint during the early morning hours of June 11, leading the woman to various locations around Port Angeles, then raping her in an apparently abandoned building, court documents say. The victim told police she was walking near the alley behind Safeway on South Lincoln Street when an unknown man approached her from behind and held a knife to her
throat, according to the probable-cause statement filed last Friday. The woman told police the man, who she didn’t know, repeatedly said the name “Max” and said he was 26 years old.
Abandoned house The man then took the woman to various places surrounding downtown, including the beach in the west side of Estuary Park, before he took her to an
are: ■ Steve Robins, senior attorney for the Northwest Justice Project. ■ Heidi Greenwood, a senior assistant city attorney for the city of Port Angeles. ■ Craig Ritchie, recently-retired Sequim city attorney and former Clallam County prosecuting attorney. ■ Danetta Rutten, retired lead juvenile probation officer. ■ Preston Kayes, retired drug court coordinator. ■ Carol Mortensen, family law attorney. ■ John Troberg, parttime Clallam County deputy prosecuting attorney and a former public defender. “All of the applicants meet the court-system experience guidelines we asked for,” County Administrator Jim Jones said. Commissioners will consider a resolution forming the committee July 12. “This is a good group,” Chapman said. Chapman thanked Kayes, the county’s first drug court coordinator, for his participation. “This is one of the many things where we’re trying to take a fresh look at something that we haven’t taken a fresh look at for a long time,” Ozias told Kayes. “I really appreciate your engagement and the engagement of the other volunteers. It’s really helpful to me, certainly, and I believe the rest of the board, to have the assistance of others in helping us understand what our alternatives might look like.”
“What I’m interested in is some alternatives so that we can put three or four on the table and have a discussion about the pluses and minuses of each.” MARK OZIAS Commissioner, Clallam County Chapman said he envisioned a public process similar to the recent selection of a county hearing examiner. In that example, commissioners issued a request for proposals and assembled an ad hoc committee to review the qualifications of the applicants. Andrew Reeves of Sound Law Center was chosen over three other candidates for hearing examiner May 31. Commissioners will consider approving a contract with Reeves’ firm today. “I think the board was really pleased with how the process went with the hearing examiner, and I think the public was pleased with the decision we reached,” Chapman said. “And now we’re contemplating going through a similar process.”
Special attorney The selected attorney for human resources will likely be appointed as a special deputy prosecuting attorney. Clallam County is paying Akin Blitz, a Bullard Law labor attorney, $345 per hour under the soon-toexpire contract. Prior contracts with Bullard Law were four years in length. Sill said the human resources department has saved a “tremendous amount of money” this year by bringing legal support such as investigations and clerical work in-house.
The department as a whole has spent 18 percent of its budgeted amount for the year, Sill said. “This year is an off year in terms of [labor] negotiations,” Sill added. “Next year, we’re going back into negotiations again. That will be for the next four-year contract involving eight bargaining units.”
Legal defense
In other discussion from the work session, commissioners agreed to form a seven-member committee to help them determine the best way to provide legal defense to criminal defendants who can’t afford to hire their own lawyer. Commissioners signed a one-year contract extension with Clallam Public Defender last December. An ad hoc committee will recommend a structure for the public defense delivery system in 2017 and beyond. It will not make a recommendation on the contractor. Four basic options for public defense are keeping the current system with one contractor providing public defense in all courts, bidding separately for district court, establishing a public defense ombudsman and establishing a new county department. ________ The ad hoc panel could also recommend another Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be option. reached at 360-452-2345, ext. Those who volunteered 56450, or at rollikainen@peninsula to serve on the committee dailynews.com.
An officer saw Johnson in the downtown area and arrested him last Thursday.
________ Reporter Jesse Major can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 56250, or at jmajor@peninsula dailynews.com.
Death and Memorial Notice BO’SUN April 9, 2001 June 23, 2016
Bo’sun his life. Bo’sun and Gracie bonded and made many long and memorable RV trips with us, including one to Alaska and one to the Arctic. There are still photos of them on the Alaska MILEPOST website. Marli, a Lab/Golden Retriever mix, joined the family six years ago and Bo spent the rest of his life pretty much ignoring her. This is the same thing Bo did with Timmy, a Lhasa Apso mix, who came via WAG to live with us last year. While Bo’sun was being evaluated recently for a bladder infection, prostate cancer was discovered. We kept him comfortable until it was no longer possible and he crossed the Rainbow Bridge the morning of June 23, 2016. Our eternal gratitude to all of the staff at Blue Mountain Animal Hospital who took care of Bo’sun for many years; particularly Dr. Nicole Wagnon who helped him through this last illness. Also our gratitude goes to Stephanie at Greywolf Grooming who always lovingly kept him looking his best.
More than independent senior living . . .
Hadlock library to host ‘Spider’ show PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT HADLOCK — The West African trickster Anansi the Spider will be brought to life by the Oregon Shadow Theatre performing live children’s theater at Jefferson County Library on Wednesday. Free shows will be at 2 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. at the library at 620 Cedar Ave. Based upon West African
folklore, “Anansi the Spider” is a cross-cultural story about an extremely clever yet singularly foolish and greedy spider who loves to eat but hates to work. In this story, Anansi meets a river goblin, fights a chimpanzee and plays a trick on his village. As shadow puppeteer Deb Chase manipulates and gives voice to 60 puppets from behind the
Briefly . . . Fort Worden PDA board set to meet PORT TOWNSEND — The Fort Worden Public Development Authority Board of Directors will meet at the Fort Worden Common, 200 Battery Way, from 9 a.m. to noon, Wednesday.
COEUR D’ALENE, Idaho — The father of a Salt Lake City businessman who placed an Idaho newspaper ad seeking women interested in marrying his 48-year-old son has received about a dozen inquiries. Arthur Brooks had planned to meet potential candidates at a Coeur d’Alene resort, but son Baron Brooks told the Spokesman-Review on Sunday that its managers asked his father not to conduct interviews there after getting barraged with media requests. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press
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shadow screen, Mick call 360-385-6544. Doherty acts as storyteller, providing the audience with music, voices and sound What’s up in effects using marimba, our harbors Ghanaian hand drum and and bays? thumb piano. Doherty studied with Read “On the master drummer Obo Addy Waterfront” by to train for the show. The David G. Sellars. colorful shadow puppets are Sundays in based on African designs. For more information, PENINSULA DAILY NEWS see www.jclibrary.info or
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TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016 — (J)
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Pier: Feiro calling for combined NOAA facility CONTINUED FROM A1 Those designs would increase the center’s footprint — the present singlestory building is 3,500 square feet — to a 10,000-square-foot footprint at a cost of $3 million to $3.7 million. A 13,400to 16,000-square-foot, twostory building would house Feiro and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration educational displays along with public restrooms and Feiro administrative offices. Feiro officials are calling the combined facility a Feiro/NOAA discovery center.
PAUL GOTTLIEB/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
The City Pier parking lot at Hollywood Beach would be reduced in size under a plan to enlarge the Feiro Marine Life Center, located on the pier.
Final recommendation Feiro Executive Director Melissa Williams said Friday that Studio Cascade will present a final recommendation later this summer on the two designs, known as “Klallam Cove” and “Peabody Place.” The recommendation will include results of an additional online master plan design survey on the Pier’s future. “It’s a matter of how you fit everything into what community wants to see on the Pier,” Williams said. Council members got an earful on impacts of reducing the size and use of the parking lot at their June 21 meeting. “It would be detrimental
to use of the City Pier and to residents who use it to park their cars and the people who go there for their activity,” said Jon Fager, treasurer of the Port Angeles Business Association.
127 people surveyed Fager, a retired nuclear inspector, said the business association conducted a survey of 127 local City Pier parking lot users from noon to 6 p.m. June 17-20 that showed a vast majority favored keeping the parking lot as is. PABA survey participants were told in a brochure that “a group of concerned citizens strongly
opposes any plan that would reduce parking or access to the Hollywood Beach area.” They were asked to “save the parking lot for the community.” Fager said 62 local respondents opposed eliminating the lot, two were in favor, 36 did not express an opinion and 27 were neutral. Of 62 out-of-town City Pier users, 26 opposed elimination while 36 were neutral. The destination for half the out-of-town users was “other, including Feiro,” according to survey results. “There were very few
people going to Feiro when we were taking the survey,” Fager said Friday. Young Johnson, president of the Port Angeles Downtown Association, who owns H2O Waterfront Bistro across Railroad Avenue from the Pier, said downtown entrepreneurs wanted Feiro to grow but not at the expense of losing the parking space. “It is all about convenience for our community,” she told City Council members.
Bottleneck But in a letter that was read to the council and was written by Feiro Secretary
Andy Geiger, council members were told the facility is “a bottleneck” by being too small to meet Feiro’s current demands. “We believe walking or biking to an improved City Pier will expose people to businesses they may not have encountered before,” Geiger said in the letter, “As one of the top ‘outdoor towns’ in the U.S., we should be proud of the opportunity to add more steps and keep our countywide obesity rates as low as possible.” According to results of priorities discussed May 14 in a public meeting organized for Feiro by Studio Cascade Inc. of Spokane, respondents to the May 12-14 assessment said parking was the second lowest priority among 10 that they rated. Their top feature was a consolidation of Feiro and NOAA into the discovery center. “We know there has to be some parking,” Mark Hinshaw, a principal in Walker Macy Landscape Architecture of Portland, Ore., said May 14 at the public meeting on the Klallam Cove and Peabody Place designs. “We know that has been the subject of some discussion,” he acknowledged. But whether the current number of Pier parking lot spaces needs to remain “is another kind of question,” Hinshaw said.
“That question probably gets asked in the context of a larger parking-demand study for downtown. “You can’t just look at one lot and say, ‘we need that parking.’ “It’s totally illogical. “You have to look at the entire supply of parking, how it’s being used, who’s using this lot.” Bill Grimes of Studio Cascade said the ratings exercise is a valuable design tool. “It is the expression of what the client might be looking for, the client being the overall community,” he said. The Waterfront and Transportation Improvement Plan, headed by Studio Cascade and approved by the City Council in 2011, called for replacing 22 City Pier parking lot spaces with parking now located three blocks east of Feiro at Railroad Avenue and Oak Street. Back then, Feiro was considering relocating away from the Pier to Oak and Front streets. “We have new council members who are different than in 2011,” Nathan West, community and economic development director, said last week. “They may have different opinions.”
________ Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 55650, or at pgottlieb@ peninsuladailynews.com.
Flight: Examining posted video Legal: Services CONTINUED FROM A1 well away from the boats and then dropping down to The blue helicopter just above the water while began circling the harbor at several hundred observers about 5:45 a.m., first staying watched the start of the race in Port Townsend. Preliminary reports said the helicopter flew as low as 8 to 15 feet above the water.
Death and Memorial Notice
Video The FAA is currently examining a video of the incident that was posted on the Peninsula Daily News website at http://tinyurl. com/PDN-Helicopter, Gregor said. Port Townsend Police Department spokesman Luke Bogues said the helicopter’s blades were below
WILLIAM G. RHODES MAJOR USAF (RETIRED) March 7, 1919 June 18, 2016 At his request, services for William G. Rhodes will be graveside at Mt. Angeles Memorial Park on Wednesday, June 29 at 2 p.m. The full obituary was published Sunday, June 26.
Interim leader selected as PA port’s new director PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
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He favors that aspect of law because his goal was to work in criminal public defense and providing civil legal services. “This job allows me to do both of those things,” he said. “I like helping people.” The firm employs five lawyers, three of whom work exclusively as public defenders while the other two, Davies included, spend a portion of their time on civil cases. During his public defense tenure, Davies has defended several highvisibility clients, most notably Michael Pierce, who was convicted of double murder in November 2014 in his fourth trial. The accompanying publicity in a case does not affect Davies’ strategy, he said. “I just do the job as best I can,” he said. “As for Pierce, I was impressed by this little county’s ability to allow him a full and fair trial, although it took a number of times.” While five firms bid to provide public defense services in 2011 when the last contract was renewed, Jefferson Associated Counsel was this year’s sole bidder according to County Administrator Philip Morley. At the meeting, Sullivan attributed the lack of competition to the firm’s quality of work and that they are well established.
Four venues The firm is responsible for representing indigent clients in four venues: adult Superior Court (felony), adult District Court (mis-
uring his public defense tenure, Davies has defended several high-visibility clients, most notably Michael Pierce, who was convicted of double murder in November 2014 in his fourth trial.
D
demeanor), Juvenile Court and Mental Health Court. If the firm has a conflict, the county has allocated local firms to fill in. The total contract allocates $295,782 for the remainder of 2016, $623,416 in 2017 and $647,437 in 2018. The commissioners have the option of extending the contract to 2021 without calling for another bid, the contract states. The contract can be terminated with a 30-day written notice by either party should the other violate its terms. If the contract expires prior to a new agreement, the firm will receive monthly payments equivalent to 1/12 of the previous yearly contract. The contract is based on a point system that assigns a value to each case, with one point representing a misdemeanor case and an annual allocation of 1,125 points for the firm and 300 points per attorney. The contract has provisions for adjustment if the case loads fall below 90 percent or above 103 percent of the projected yearly total.
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period of being interim,” Goschen said. “[I’m pleased] that I will have PORT ANGELES –– this opportunity to build The Port of Port Angeles selected Karen Goschen of upon a foundation I’ve already started.” Sequim to be its next top Goschen will succeed administrator during its Ken O’Hollaren, who regular meeting Monday. resigned effective Dec. 31. Port commissioners O’Hollaren succeeded said Goschen, who has Jeff Robb, who resigned served as interim execuin June 2013. tive director for six Port Commissioner months, has proven in that Colleen McAleer called time that she has what it the commission’s decision takes to lead the district. “I’m very pleased that to hire Goschen as the executive director the the commissioners “single most important expressed confidence in me and that we have decision the three of us worked well during the will make.”
BY JESSE MAJOR
June’s Birthstone
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immediately identified or charged. The pilot told police he was hired by a television news crew to film the proceedings. He said the news crew was encouraging him to fly lower, and he expressed remorse for his decision, according to police. Corrigan reported the incident to the FAA on Thursday, according to a Local probe press release. Immediately after the Police sources were not incident, Port Townsend available for further comPolice Officer Bill Corrigan ment Monday. began conducting a local ________ investigation. Jefferson County Editor Charlie Corrigan said the pilot Bermant can be reached at 360was a 44-year-old man from 385-2335 or cbermant@peninsula Federal Way who was not dailynews.com.
the masts of the ship on several occasions and the rotor wind blew paddleboarders off course. Emergency dispatchers at JeffCom 911 received several calls Thursday at about 6 a.m., Bogues said. Several witnesses submitted their photographs and videos of the incident to police, Bogues said.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, June 28, 2016 PAGE
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Short-sleeve weather heats Forks ACCORDING TO WEATHER apps and word-ofmouth, Forks’ days of rain were coming to an end sometime Saturday. Mike and WEST END Darcy Riggan have been naviNEIGHBOR gating the wet weather to Zorina paint the exteBarker rior of their house a cheerful four-color scheme. At noon, the paint cans were opened as heavy clouds were breaking up. Downtown, as I moseyed on Forks Avenue, it was easy to distinguish locals from tourists. Locals, anticipating the break in weather, were wearing shorts and tank tops. Tourists were in black, wearing long-sleeve shirts and sweaters. Banners announcing Forks’ “Old Fashioned Fourth of July” celebration and American flags put up by city employees on lightposts, rustled in a breeze blowing the dampness away. A matte-black 1923 Ford cruised around town, the driver’s smile easy to see in the topless rig. Native to Twilight, a spacious store selling the usual touristy items such as T-shirts, jewelry paintings and magnets, had a
ZORINA BARKER/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Bob Stark, owner of Forks True Value, shows off the two signs he recently acquired to add to his collection of historical items. steady stream of visitors. “We aren’t too busy,” said Chris Rohdey, the employee behind the register. “Memorial Day was busy.” Across the street, where Forks’ only stoplight is stationed, Bob Stark was active helping customers coming to his Forks True Value hardware store. He addresses most folks approaching his register by their first name and almost seems to know what they want before they have a chance to tell him. Dave West handed him a piece of metal, and Stark marched off to a distant aisle to find a screw that fit just so. “I’m cleaning out my dad’s shop, and Bob told me if I found
anything rusty to bring it in and he’d add it to his collection,” West said. Stark, a well known collector of “old stuff,” was excited about his most recent acquisitions. He led me out to the shed-like portion of his building where he stores the fencing, pipe and animal feed. There was a long brown and yellow sign I recognized from the old Hang-Up Tavern which operated a few doors down. It closed more than a decade ago. The other sign was from Art’s Place Tavern, an oasis that shuttered its doors before my time in this town or even on this earth. At the other end of the block, Shay Gooding was tinkering away
Peninsula Voices Panhandlers I am disgusted by reading the ugly, heartless, ignorant statements made by Port Angeles City Council members regarding needy folks downtown begging for pittances [“More PA Patrols In Panhandling Push,” June 23 PDN]. It’s poorhouse talk from a Charles Dickens novel to assert that these folks deliberately and consciously choose to beg as a tax-avoiding strategy. Who deliberately would choose the degrading and demeaning activity of
spending all day pleading for handouts, mostly from citizens who turn away. Using Homeland Security federal dollars to fund increased police patrols to protect allegedly terrified shoppers is absolutely “[Donald] Trumpian.” It is disappointing to read the un-Christian judgments referring to beggars as “entrepreneurs” who are making “tax-free money” and “living a free lifestyle . . . because it pays off.” I’ve observed very few people stopping to give even a dollar or two.
I’d like proof of those earning hundreds of dollars as City Councilwoman Cherie Kidd asserted in the article. Some of these folks asking for a few bucks are shamefully forgotten “hard luck” veterans, young people dumped from foster care or fleeing abusive homes, and long-term unemployed people whose benefits and food stamps were cut by punitive legislation. They are mostly folks who are impoverished (yes, some suffering addictions) by unforeseen and uncon-
on a computer. His business, Olympic Tech Goods Services, shares large shop space with Olympic Sporting Goods, owned by his dad, Bob Gooding. I felt careless when I realized I put my notebook on the glass screen of a LCD television he was waiting on parts to repair. “Please don’t write on that,” the younger Gooding casually said. Gooding had been working on a couple of computers that day, one with an overheating problem and another that wouldn’t boot up. In this crammed area also is Yella Dog Fly Shop, owned by Gordon Gracey. Running outside, I caught Gracey, the man who ties fishing
OUR READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND
flies, as he was getting ready to leave with the senior Gooding. “I mostly do draggin’ fly fishing,” Gracey said. He explained that he isn’t using dragon-fly nymphs to attract fish, but just dragging flies across the water. This dry sense of humor permeates conversations held in any sector of the shop. Laura Farrell was behind the desk of the Forks branch of the North Olympic Library System. She took me outside to show me the Rocambole Spanish red garlic she’d planted 10 months ago in the four planter boxes outside “to add height” to the boxes. Farrell caressed the garlic scapes. “If you want to make the garlic bulb grow fat, you cut the scapes, but I am keeping them because they look graceful, like ballet dancers,” she said. As I walked back to my car, I got down to some short sleeves under the full strength of the sun.
_________ Zorina Barker lives in the Sol Duc Valley with her husband, a logger, and two children she home-schools. Submit items and ideas for the column to her at zorina barker81@gmail.com, or phone her at 360-327-3702. West End Neighbor appears in the PDN every other Tuesday. Her next column will be July 12.
trollable circumstances inflicted by our capitalist society — not choices made freely by individuals. Where is the Christ-like ethic on caring for the needy, hungry, sick and imprisoned: “Truly I say to you, inasmuch as you did it not to one of the least of these, you did it not to me.” PA Forward sounds like PA Backward — next, they’ll be suggesting mandatory workhouses for the penniless poor. Sylvia Marshall Meyer, Port Angeles
British vote revives nationhood THE LEAVE CAMPAIGN won the referendum on withdrawing Britain from the European Union because the arguments on which the Remain side relied made Leave’s case. The Remain campaign George began with a Will sham, was monomaniacal with its Project Fear, and ended in governmental thuggishness. The sham was Prime Minister David Cameron’s attempt to justify Remain by negotiating EU concessions regarding Britain’s subservience to the EU. This dickering for scraps of lost sovereignty underscored Britain’s servitude and achieved so little that Remainers rarely mentioned it during their campaign. Project Fear was the relentless and ultimately ludicrous parade of Cassandras, “experts” all, warning that Britain, after more than a millennium of sovereign existence, and now with the world’s fifth-largest economy, would endure myriad calamities
were it to end its 23-year membership in the EU. Remain advocates rarely even feigned enthusiasm for the ramshackle, sclerotic EU. Instead, they implausibly promised that if Brexit were rejected, Britain — although it would then be without the leverage of the threat to leave — would nevertheless somehow negotiate substantially better membership terms than Cameron managed when Brexit was an option. Voters were not amused by the Cameron government’s threat of what critics called a Punishment Budget to inflict pain on pensioners (e.g., no more free bus passes) and others because Brexit might cause GDP to contract 9.5 percent and home prices might plummet 18 percent. Voters did not like being told that they really had no choice. And that it was too late to escape from entanglement in the EU’s ever-multiplying tentacles. And that the very viscosity of the EU’s statism guarantees its immortality. Voters chose the optimism of Brexit. Sixty years after Britain’s humiliation in the Suez debacle, Britain has a spring in its step,
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confident that it will flourish when Brussels no longer controls 60 percent to 70 percent of the British government’s actions. Britain was last conquered by an invading army in 1066. In 2016, it repelled an attempted conquest by the EU’s nomenklatura. By breaking the leftwardclicking ratchet that moves steadily, and only, toward more “pooled” sovereignty and centralization of power, Brexit refutes the progressive narrative that history has an inexorable trajectory that “experts” discern and before which all must bow. The EU’s contribution to this fable is its vow to pursue “evercloser union.” Yes, ever. To understand why Brexit could and should be the beginning of an existential crisis for the EU, look across the English Channel to France. There, King Clovis recently was invoked 1,505 years after his death in 511. Before a particular battle, Clovis promised that if the God to whom his Christian wife prayed would grant him victory, he would become a Christian. He won the battle and converted. Recently, Nicolas Sarkozy,
France’s once and perhaps future president, said France was “born of the baptism of Clovis,” it has a Christian tradition and remains “a country of churches, cathedrals, abbeys and shrines.” Actually, 71 percent of the French say religion is unimportant to them and fewer than 4.5 percent attend weekly church services. But Sarkozy was aligning himself with the palpable desire in France and elsewhere in Europe to resist the cultural homogenization that is an intended consequence of EU’s pressure for the “harmonization” of the laws and policies of its 28 disparate member nations. In Paris these days there are marches by a group called Generation Identitaire, described as the “hipster right.” It aims to rally “young French and Europeans who are proud of their heritage.” A recent statement on its website declared that “Islamist attacks” and “the migrant invasion” made 2015 “a turning point in the history of our country.” The statement continued: “The French have been silent for too long. . . . It is time to show our determination to live on our land, under our laws, our values 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 ■ Sports; 360-417-3525; sports@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 ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way, 98368; 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com
with respect to our own identity.” Sarkozy, the son of Greek and Hungarian immigrants, sympathizes. Euroskepticism is rising dramatically in many EU nations. There might be other referendums. Or the EU might seek to extinguish this escape mechanism. A poll in Sweden indicated that it might follow Britain out. In France, there could be a campaign for Frexit. Such was the Remain side’s intellectual sloth, it wielded the threadbare aspersion that advocating withdrawal amounted to embracing “isolationism.” Actually, Brexit was the choice for Britain’s international engagement as a nation. The revival of nationhood is a prerequisite for the reinvigoration of self-government through reclaimed national sovereignty. Hence June 23, 2016, is now among the most important dates in post-war European history.
_________ George Will is a Washington Post Writers Group columnist. His column appears in the PDN every Tuesday. Email georgewill@washpost. com.
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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TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016
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The Olympic Medical Center Auxiliary recently awarded $1,500 scholarships to students who are pursuing medical studies. From left are Malcolm Alexander, president, OMC Auxiliary; scholarship recipients Victoria Kuch, Jessup Schoff and Michelle Bennison; Patty Glannon, scholarship chairwoman, OMC Auxiliary; and Eric Lewis, OMC chief executive officer.
$ Briefly . . . Co-op farm, garden gives dividends SEQUIM — Mike Youngquist, general manager of The Co-op Farm and Garden in Sequim, has announced that the store had another year of growth in 2015 and distributed the surplus funds as patronage dividends. Youngquist said, “This distinguishes us from other types of corporations. As a co-op, we don’t give our profits to a pool of outside investors; our owners are the stakeholders who our business affects most.” A patronage dividend is a refund issued to those who purchase goods or services from a cooperative. Checks totaling $35,000 were distributed to 1,857 patrons. Checks were written in amounts from $5 to $600.
Aspartame soda NEW YORK — Diet Pepsi made with aspartame is returning to shelves in the U.S., after PepsiCo saw sales plummet following its reformulation of the drink last summer to remove the artificial sweetener. PepsiCo said it will offer “Diet Pepsi Classic Sweet-
ener Blend” made with aspartame starting in September, in 12-ounce cans, 2-liter bottles and 20-ounce bottles. The move is intended to appease fans who don’t like the taste of the reformulated drink, which is made with the artificial sweetener sucralose. But PepsiCo Inc. said Diet Pepsi made with sucralose, commonly known by the brand name Splenda, will remain its primary diet soda offering. Those cans will be silver, while the “classic” Diet Pepsi with aspartame will come in light blue packaging. When PepsiCo removed aspartame from Diet Pepsi in August, it said the change was the No. 1 request by customers. Industry executives have blamed the declining sale of diet sodas on concerns people have about the ingredient. Several years ago, CocaCola Co. tested ads in select newspapers defending the safety of the sweetener. PepsiCo’s replacement of the sweetener from Diet Pepsi tested the theory that it was to blame for fleeing customers, but the plan seems to have backfired. In the first quarter of this year, sales volume for Diet Pepsi sank 10.6 per-
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Market watch June 27, 2016
-260.51
Dow Jones industrials
17,140.24
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4,594.44
Standard & Poor’s 500
2,000.54
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Russell 2000
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cent, according to industry tracker Beverage Digest.
Gold and silver Gold for August rose $2.30, or 0.2 percent, to settle at $1,324.70 an ounce Monday. September silver fell 5.3 cents, or 0.3 percent, to $17.786 an ounce. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press
Brexit could make for less-friendly regulations BY BRANDON BAILEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO — Silicon Valley’s biggest businesses could face tougher regulations following Britain’s decision to withdraw from the European Union, and some might have to leave London to attract the best employees. Many U.S. tech companies now count on Europe for a quarter or more of their business. Beyond facing a financial downturn as the pound’s value erodes, these companies might find Europe a more challenging environment in which to do business. It could take a year or two before the picture becomes clear. For now, what’s certain is the U.K.’s exit will be complex and unprecedented, with repercussions crossing the Atlantic and reaching all the way to the U.S. West Coast. Meanwhile, U.K. tech companies might have to leave the country to follow their customers and funding sources. Here are some ways U.S. and U.K. tech companies might be affected: ■ Silicon Valley could lose a moderating voice: Industry groups say that U.S. tech companies could face tougher rules without Britain serving as a moderating counterbalance against Germany, France and other countries that prefer stricter oversight. For example, France has pushed Google to meet a more expansive interpreta-
tion of an EU court ruling that requires internet companies to recognize an individual’s “right to be forgotten.” Under the ruling and subsequent guidance from EU regulators, Google has removed search results that link to online information about individuals who complain that the information is outdated or unnecessarily invades their privacy. Google makes those results invisible to anyone searching from Europe, but French authorities want the company to go further and hide results worldwide, even outside EU jurisdiction. ■ A new set of regulations. And uncertainties: The exit could give tech companies a chance to lobby U.K. policy makers directly, and it throws into question, at least in Britain, stricter EU privacy rules due to take effect in 2018. But it also could make things more complex and expensive by giving U.S. companies yet another set of rules to comply with. For the next few years, companies will face uncertainty, which research firm Forrester said will impede companies’ ability to tailor services and advertising based on personal data. ■ Border controls could drive out U.S. companies: Many U.S. tech firms have their European headquarters and data centers in Ireland, in part for legal and tax reasons. But several have big sales operations and teams of software developers in London, in part because it’s
easier to hire people there, given that city’s attractiveness to immigrants from the rest of Europe. “The free movement of workers between the U.K. and the EU arguably made London into the top tech startup talent pool in all of Europe,” U.S. research firm CB Insights said in a report. CB Insights warned of a “brain drain” if the U.K.’s exit results in stricter immigration controls. While some leading U.S. tech companies were publicly neutral on the vote, Microsoft had spoken out against withdrawal. Michel Van der Bel, Microsoft’s chief executive for the U.K., warned in a May 17 blog post that staying in the EU was an “important criteria for continued and future investment by Microsoft and others.” Microsoft declined comment following last week’s vote. ■ U.K. tech companies might also leave: Tech firms based in London could also see an exodus by some of their biggest customers — banks and financial services companies, which are expected to head for the continent if Britain’s decision leads to new tariffs or other barriers to financial transactions. Crawford del Prete, a tech industry analyst with research firm IDC, said tech companies like to be close to their customers and might follow them out. Funding for new tech startups could also dry up in Britain.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, June 28, 2016 SECTION
CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, BUSINESS, WEATHER In this section
B Tennis
Veteran Murray eyeing new test BY HOWARD FENDRICH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LONDON — For all that he’s achieved in more than a decade as a professional tennis player, from the two Grand Slam titles to the No. 2 ranking, from an Olympic gold medal in singles to a Davis Cup championship, Andy Murray is about to do something he never has: face a fellow Brit at Wimbledon. On Centre Court today, Murray will play Liam Broady, a 22-year-old wild-card entry who is ranked 235th. “I know Liam fairly well. We practiced a bit earlier this year,” Murray said. “He’s a good guy. Works hard. . . . Look forward to it. But, I mean, it will be a bit strange. It’s never happened before for me.” This will be Murray’s 56th career match at the All England Club, where in 2013 he became first British man in 77 years to win the championship. For Broady, whose sister Naomi lost in the first round Monday, it will be his third match at the grass-court major tournament. There are other reasons to think this one might be rather one-sided. Murray, for example, has never lost to a player ranked as low as Broady in a tour-level match. And Broady, for his part, has never defeated anyone ranked higher than 138th, although that career-best victory did come at Wimbledon, a year ago against Marinko Matosevic. Plus, Murray is 10-0 in firstround matches at Wimbledon. This is the first all-British men’s match at the All England Club since 2001 — and the first at any Grand Slam tournament since the 2006 U.S. Open.
Serena starts title defense Defending champion Serena Williams begins on the Centre Court schedule against an opponent with an unusual backstory. Amra Sadikovic is a 27-year-old from Switzerland who is ranked 148th and made it into her first Grand Slam field via qualifying rounds. There’s more: Sadikovic decided two years ago to retire from tennis, because she was not enjoying the sport and was having financial problems. After taking 13 months off, she returned. Asked Sunday whether she knows anything about Sadikovic, Williams replied: “Not yet. But normally, my coach obviously does a lot of research, or the most that he can. Then we go from there. “It doesn’t matter who I play.” That said, Williams is interested in finally getting underway at this year’s edition of the tournament. “I’m definitely ready to start playing at this point,” Williams said. “I’m kind of over practicing every day for two hours, then going to the gym for some time.”
Kyrgios-Stepanek A contrast in, um, experience is featured today on Court 2, where 21-year-old Nick Kyrgios takes on 37-year-old Radek Stepanek. Kyrgios is seeded 15th, has a loud personality and loud game, and reached the Wimbledon quarterfinals in 2014, knocking off Rafael Nadal along the way. Stepanek, a wild-card entry ranked 121st, also has been a quarterfinalist at the All England Club — all the way back in 2006. If he can eliminate Kyrgios, Stepanek would be the oldest man to win a match at Wimbledon since Jimmy Connors made it to the third round at age 38 in 1991.
Wawrinka-Fritz Stan Wawrinka is a two-time major champion who is seeded No. 4, but he also has been a first-round loser at Wimbledon five times. His opponent is 65th-ranked American Taylor Fritz, who at 18 is the youngest man in the draw and is seeking his first career Grand Slam match win.
Crosscutters take four in Kitsap Legion-ball team stays undefeated BY MICHAEL CARMAN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
BREMERTON — The Olympic Crosscutters American Legion baseball team went 4-0 over the weekend at the 17U Bankers Invite Tournament at the Kitsap County Fairgrounds. “Our tournament format was interrupted due to a com-
plete rain out on Thursday,” Cutters coach John Qualls said. “The tournament was then just turned into a round robin with no championship game.” The Cutters opened play with a 9-5 win against North Kitsap on Thursday. They followed up by beating Elma 14-6 and BurlingtonEdison 6-3 on Saturday and knocked off Olympic 5-1 Sunday night. Tied at 1-1 entering the top of the sixth inning against Olympic, Logan Shaw reached
base on a walk. A Gavin Velarde single moved Shaw to second and a double steal put runners at second and third. Shaw then scooted home with the eventual winning run on a passed ball on a 3-2 count to Lane Dotson. Velarde later scored on an error for a 3-1 Cutters’ lead. Matt Bainbridge added an insurance run in the sixth when he singled to right field, advanced on Dane Bradow’s single to center and Joel Wood’s walk and came home on a
bases-loaded walk of Cole Dotson. Dotson allowed one run on three hits in five innings of work but left the game with a no-decision. Jake Sparks and Shaw pitched a scoreless inning apiece to lock down the win. Dane Bradow went six innings on the mound against Burlington-Edison, scattering six hits and allowing three runs, two earned, while striking out five and walking two to pick up the win. TURN
TO
CUTTERS/B3
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Seattle manager Scott Servais, left, argues with umpire Gerry Davis after being ejected from Sunday’s loss to the Cardinals. It was the first career ejection for Servais, who is in his first year as a manager.
Servais joins the club M’s skipper should take advice from Lou Pinella SCOTT SERVAIS WAS hired to manage the Mariners last October, but it took him until late June to join the brotherhood you might call a fraternal disorder. During his team’s 11-6 defeat to the St. Louis Cardinals on Sunday, Servais collected his first managerial ejection. Whatever Servais did to get kicked out of the game was not discernible from a distance, or even up close. But umpires are experts at identifying subtleties not apparent to the naked eye, which is why they call so many balks. At issue between Servais
and home-plate umpire Carlos Torres was Shawn O’Malley’s strike-three swing that didn’t appear to be a swing. The call seemed critical at the time because the Mariners, down 6-3, had a runner on first base in the bottom of the sixth inning. “It was very close,” said Servais, who wanted Torres to ask first base umpire Rob Drake for a second opinion on O’Malley’s swing. Torres not only refused to comply, he gave Servais the boot. The manager made the trip to the clubhouse with a brief layover at home plate. “I went out and talked to him
after I got tossed,” Ser- John vais contin- McGrath ued. “I am pretty sure you could tell he missed the call because he would not respond. That was pretty frustrating, just from a respect standpoint. I had already been tossed out of the game, you can at least talk about it. He didn’t feel there was a need to.” Moments later, watching the game on his office television, Servais saw Franklin Gutierrez launch a Jaime Garcia pitch for a three-run homer into the Mariners’ bullpen. The seesaw game was tied
6-6, but what was looking like a barnb u r n e r series finale in the bottom of the Next Game sixth soon became a Today burned-out vs. Pirates b u l l p e n ’ s at Safeco Field Time: 7 p.m. longest day. Six home On TV: ROOT runs were surrendered after James Paxton couldn’t work past the fifth in a grind-itout performance absent the crispness of his last three starts. “I saw some pitches up,” Servais said. “I had a really good view sitting in my office. You can see more from there.” TURN
TO
MCGRATH/B3
Durant, Anthony to lead USA BY BRIAN MAHONEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — Kyrie Irving took one last shot on the flight home from the NBA Finals, hoping LeBron James would play in the Olympics. James isn’t going to Rio, and neither are many more of basketball’s best players. The Americans think they’ll be just fine with who they have. “We should be heavily favored,” Golden State’s Klay Thompson said. “I mean, 12 NBA stars, very unselfish guys, very versatile team, we definitely should be favored. It’s a disappointment if we don’t win gold.” The U.S. selected the roster Monday, led by Kevin Durant and Carmelo Anthony, it hopes can do that for the third straight time. Durant and Anthony are the only players with Olympic expe-
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The U.S. men’s Olympic basketball team was revealed Monday. The team will compete in the Summer Olympics in August. rience after a number of stars, including James, decided to skip Rio. Also chosen were: Golden State’s Draymond Green and Harrison Barnes; Toronto’s Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan; Indiana’s Paul George; Chicago’s Jimmy Butler; Sacramento’s DeMarcus Cousins and the Clip-
pers’ DeAndre Jordan. Irving was the MVP of the 2014 Basketball World Cup on a U.S. team that included Thompson, Cousins and DeRozan and easily won gold. The Americans should roll into Rio as the favorites. Yet they won’t look as imposing as expected after the withdrawals
of NBA MVP Stephen Curry and All-Stars such as Russell Westbrook, Chris Paul and James Harden. “As far as the talent goes and the level of play, I’m pretty sure that that’s still going to be the same,” Anthony said. TURN
TO
USA/B3
B2
SportsRecreation
TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016
Today’s
SPORTS ON TV
Latest sports headlines can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.
Scoreboard Calendar
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Today
Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”
Noon (47) GOLF PGA, PGA Professional Championship, Round 3 (Live) 5 p.m. (313) CBSSD Fast Pitch NPF, Chicago Bandits vs. USSSA Florida Pride (Live) 5 p.m. (26) ESPN Baseball NCAA, Coastal Carolina vs. Arizona, College World Series, National Championship (Live) 6 p.m. (306) FS1 Boxing Premier Champions, Edner Cherry vs. Lydell Rhodes (Live) 7 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball WNBA, Dallas Wings at Los Angeles Sparks (Live) 7 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Pittsburgh Pirates at Seattle Mariners (Live)
SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY
Today No events scheduled.
Wednesday Baseball: Olympic Crosscutters at Central Kitsap, doubleheader, at Central Kitsap High School, 3 p.m.
Baseball American League East Division W L Baltimore 45 30 Boston 41 34 Toronto 41 36 New York 37 37 Tampa Bay 31 43 Central Division W L Cleveland 44 30 Kansas City 39 35 Chicago 38 38 Detroit 38 38 Minnesota 24 51 West Division W L Texas 49 27 Houston 39 37 Seattle 38 38 Oakland 32 43 Los Angeles 32 44
Pct GB .600 — .547 4 .532 5 .500 7½ .419 13½
Pct GB .645 — .513 10 .500 11 .427 16½ .421 17
Sunday’s Games Minnesota 7, N.Y. Yankees 1 Cleveland 9, Detroit 3 Baltimore 12, Tampa Bay 5 Chicago White Sox 5, Toronto 2 Kansas City 6, Houston 1 Texas 6, Boston 2 L.A. Angels 7, Oakland 6 St. Louis 11, Seattle 6 Monday’s Games All games, late. Tuesday’s Games Texas (Hamels 8-1) at N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 5-4), 4:05 p.m. Boston (Porcello 8-2) at Tampa Bay (Archer 4-10), 4:10 p.m. Cleveland (Kluber 7-7) at Atlanta (Wisler 3-7), 4:10 p.m. Miami (Conley 4-4) at Detroit (Pelfrey 1-7), 4:10 p.m. Minnesota (Gibson 0-5) at Chicago White Sox (Quintana 5-7), 5:10 p.m. St. Louis (Wacha 3-7) at Kansas City (Ventura 6-4), 5:15 p.m. Toronto (Happ 9-3) at Colorado (Butler 2-4), 5:40 p.m. Houston (McCullers 3-2) at L.A. Angels (Lincecum 1-1), 7:05 p.m. Baltimore (Jimenez 4-7) at San Diego (Johnson 0-5), 7:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Niese 6-5) at Seattle (Iwakuma 6-6), 7:10 p.m. Oakland (Graveman 3-6) at San Francisco (Suarez 3-1), 7:15 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Boston at Tampa Bay, 9:10 a.m. Miami at Detroit, 10:10 a.m. Toronto at Colorado, 12:10 p.m. Houston at L.A. Angels, 12:35 p.m. Baltimore at San Diego, 12:40 p.m. Texas at N.Y. Yankees, 4:05 p.m. Cleveland at Atlanta, 4:10 p.m. Minnesota at Chicago White Sox, 5:10 p.m. Kansas City at St. Louis, 5:15 p.m. San Francisco at Oakland, 7:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at Seattle, 7:10 p.m.
National League Washington
Wednesday
Pct GB .595 — .527 5 .500 7 .500 7 .320 20½
East Division W L Pct GB 44 32 .579 —
4 a.m. (26) ESPN Tennis ITF, Wimbledon, Day 3 (Live)
HOOPS
WITH THE
HUSKIES
The Avalanche Black 7th grade girls basketball team attended the University of Washington high school team camp earlier this month. The team met and interacted with Washington coach Mike Neighbors and Huskies players. Avalanche Black went 3-2 at the camp with two wins against Seattle Prep and another against Issaquah High School. From left, Washington players Deja Strother and Kelli Kingma, Anna Hull, Abby Weller, Emilia Long, assistant coach Kenton Long, Myra Walker, Hannah Reetz, Washington coach Mike Neighbors, Camille Stensgard, Olympic Avalanche head coach Joe Marvelle, Jaida Wood, Maddie Cooke, instructor Arvin Mosely and Washington’s Katie Collier. New York Miami Philadelphia Atlanta
40 34 41 35 32 45 26 49 Central Division W L Chicago 48 26 St. Louis 39 35 Pittsburgh 37 40 Milwaukee 34 41 Cincinnati 29 47 West Division W L San Francisco 49 28 Los Angeles 42 36 Colorado 36 39 Arizona 36 42 San Diego 33 44
.541 3 .539 3 .416 12½ .347 17½ Pct GB .649 — .527 9 .481 12½ .453 14½ .382 20 Pct GB .636 — .538 7½ .480 12 .462 13½ .429 16
Sunday’s Games Cincinnati 3, San Diego 0 Miami 6, Chicago Cubs 1 Atlanta 5, N.Y. Mets 2 Washington 3, Milwaukee 2 San Francisco 8, Philadelphia 7 Colorado 9, Arizona 7 St. Louis 11, Seattle 6 Pittsburgh 4, L.A. Dodgers 3 Monday’s Games L.A. Dodgers 5, Pittsburgh 4 All other games, late. Tuesday’s Games N.Y. Mets (Harvey 4-9) at Washington (Giolito 0-0), 4:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Lester 9-3) at Cincinnati (Lamb 1-4), 4:10 p.m. Cleveland (Kluber 7-7) at Atlanta (Wisler 3-7),
4:10 p.m. Miami (Conley 4-4) at Detroit (Pelfrey 1-7), 4:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Urias 0-2) at Milwaukee (Anderson 4-7), 5:10 p.m. St. Louis (Wacha 3-7) at Kansas City (Ventura 6-4), 5:15 p.m. Toronto (Happ 9-3) at Colorado (Butler 2-4), 5:40 p.m. Philadelphia (Eickhoff 5-9) at Arizona (Greinke 10-3), 6:40 p.m. Baltimore (Jimenez 4-7) at San Diego (Johnson 0-5), 7:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Niese 6-5) at Seattle (Iwakuma 6-6), 7:10 p.m. Oakland (Graveman 3-6) at San Francisco (Suarez 3-1), 7:15 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, 9:35 a.m. Miami at Detroit, 10:10 a.m. Toronto at Colorado, 12:10 p.m. Baltimore at San Diego, 12:40 p.m. Philadelphia at Arizona, 12:40 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Cleveland at Atlanta, 4:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Milwaukee, 5:10 p.m. Kansas City at St. Louis, 5:15 p.m. San Francisco at Oakland, 7:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at Seattle, 7:10 p.m.
Transactions Baseball American League BOSTON RED SOX — Optioned RHP William Cuevas to Pawtucket (IL). Selected the contract
of INF Mike Miller from Pawtucket. NEW YORK YANKEES — Assigned 1B Ike Davis outright to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). SEATTLE MARINERS — Agreed to terms with C P.J. Jones on a minor league contract. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Optioned LHP Chad Girodo to Buffalo (IL). Recalled RHP Ryan Tepera from Buffalo. National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Designated RHP Alexi Ogando for assignment. Recalled RHP Mauricio Cabrera from Mississippi (SL). Sent 3B Gordon Beckham to the GCL Braves for a rehab assignment. CHICAGO CUBS — Optioned LHP Gerardo Concepcion to Iowa (PCL). Selected the contract of RHP Joel Peralta from Iowa. CINCINNATI REDS — Recalled RHP Jumbo Diaz from Louisville (IL). Sent RHP Homer Bailey to Louisville for a rehab assignment. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Optioned LHP Elvis Araujo to Lehigh Valley (IL). Reinstated RHP Vince Velasquez from the 15-day DL. Sent RHP Dalier Hinojosa to Lehigh Valley for a rehab assignment. PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Designated RHP Curtis Partch for assignment. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Recalled RHP Rafael Martin from Syracuse (IL). Sent RHP Jonathan Papelbon to Potomac (Carolina) for a rehab assignment. American Association JOPLIN BLASTERS — Released OF Jesus Solorzano. KANSAS CITY T-BONES — Released INF Anthony Asalon. SIOUX CITY EXPLORERS — Sold the con-
tract of INF Noah Perio to the L.A. Dodgers. SIOUX FALLS CANARIES — Released OF Chris Grayson. Can-Am League ROCKLAND BOULDERS — Released LHP Donnie Joseph and INF Ray Frias. SUSSEX COUNTY MINERS — Signed OF Brenden Webb. Frontier League RIVER CITY RASCALS — Released 2B Mike Porcaro. SCHAUMBURG BOOMERS — Sold the contract of INF Nick King to the Pittsburgh Pirates. WASHINGTON WILD THINGS — Released LHP Brandon Hinkle.
Football Canadian Football League WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS — Signed DB Terrence Frederick to the practice roster.
Hockey National Hockey League ARIZONA COYOTES — Signed G Louis Domingue to a multi-year contract. CALGARY FLAMES — Traded D Pat Sieloff to Ottawa for RW Alex Chiasson and signed Chiasson to a one-year contract. DETROIT RED WINGS — Signed LW Drew Miller to a one-year contract extension. NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Signed F Filip Forsberg to a six-year contract. Named Wade Redden assistant director of player development.
Soccer North American Soccer League JACKSONVILLE ARMADA — Transferred F Matt Fondy to Carolina.
College SOONER ATHLETIC CONFERENCE — Named Stan Wagnon commissioner. BUCKNELL — Named Lisa Francisco women’s golf coach. EAST CAROLINA — Named Amanda Barnes women’s lacrosse coach. NEW JERSEY CITY — Named Joe Cullen men’s soccer coach. NEW MEXICO — Named Glenn Cain men’s basketball strength and conditioning coach. UTICA — Promoted Sam Catterson to associate head cross country and track and field coach. YALE — Named Danielle McNamara women’s tennis coach.
Seahawks to report for training camp July 29, Huskies add 6-6 guard registered public can attend starting July 30 Harold Baruti to roster BY GREGG BELL MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE
RENTON — They are almost back. The Seahawks will report to their Virginia Mason Athletic Center for training camp for the 2016 season on July 29. That’s 15 days before their first preseason game (at Kansas City on Aug. 13). They begin training camp on the field July 30 at team headquarters in Renton. Fans will begin getting their chance to watch that Saturday workout plus a dozen other practices through August 16 when public registration begins through the team this Thursday. The team announced fans must register on seahawks.com beginning on Thursday at 10 a.m. The Seahawks said Monday: “Registration will be available on a first-come, first-served basis and fans 15 years or younger must be accompanied by an adult. Only fans that register through trainingcamp. seahawks.com will be allowed to attend practice.” The team said last year all practices sold out, and more than 34,000 fans reg-
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Seahawks Jimmy Graham, left, and Russell Wilson sign autographs at training camp in 2015.
istered for training camp. Season-ticket holders and “Blue Pride” wait-list members can pre-register for a limited number of training-camp view spots. The team will email those invites to those appropriate recipients today and Wednesday. An $8 transportation fee will be charged per person, as fans will be required to park at an off-site location and be shuttled to VMAC before and after each practice. Only fans arriving at VMAC via the designated shuttle will be allowed into practice. The VMAC parking lot will be completely
closed to the public.
Lynch back in town Marshawn Lynch is returning to Seattle for a Seahawks reunion -- playing softball. Three-time All-Pro cornerback Richard Sherman announced Monday on his Twitter account Lynch will be among the participants in Sherman’s fourth annual celebrity softball game, July 10 at Safeco Field in Seattle. Lynch participated last year, as well, along with numerous Seahawks and non-NFL celebs such as Kevin Durant. Lynch, from Oakland,
hasn’t been around the team since he played his final game for it in midJanuary in the playoff loss at Carolina. A couple weeks later, during Super Bowl 50, the 30-year-old star running back tweeted his retirement: a photo of a pair of spikes hanging on a line. Sherman’s website for the event said Lynch will be joined at this year’s softball game by Seahawks Kam Chancellor, Jermaine Kearse, Doug Baldwin, Thomas Rawls, Cliff Avril and Justin Britt. Others listed as scheduled to participate are recently retired Seahawk Ricardo Lockette, now-Oakland Raider Bruce Irvin, Hall-of-Fame wide receiver Jerry Rice, rap star Snoop Dogg, Sounders soccer star and U.S. national team member Clint Dempsey, Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald, New York Giants receiver Odell Beckham, Jr., Seattle native and NBA veteran Jamal Crawford. More than 20,000 fans attended Sherman’s charity softball game last year. A portion of the proceeds go to Richard Sherman’s Blanket Coverage Family Foundation, plus other local charities.
BY CHRISTIAN CAPLE MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE
The Washington Huskies men’s basketball team is adding another guard to its roster for the 2016-17 season. Harold Baruti, a 6-foot-6 guard who prepped at Mountain Mission School in Grundy, Virginia, signed a financial-aid agreement to play for the Huskies, the Washingtonannounced on Monday. “We’re very fortunate at this late of date to sign a player of Harold’s caliber,” Washingtoncoach Lorenzo Romar said in a statement released by the school. “Walking in the door he immediately becomes one of our most athletic players. He’s only been playing organized basketball in the states for two years, so here’s another player with tremendous upside that will grow in our system and will have an impact on our program.” Baruti moved to the United States two years ago from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, his home country. He averaged 11.6 points and 7.0 rebounds as a senior last season at Mountain Mission. Baruti visited Michigan
Basketball in May, and reportedly received recruiting attention from other high-major schools. He reportedly committed to Utah in May but re-opened his recruitment a short time later, apparently due to an issue with the admissions office. Scout.com consideres Baruti a 3-star recruit, as does Rivals.com. His signing gives the Huskies the full allotment of 13 scholarship players heading into the 2016-17 season (Dan Kingma, the former walk-on who was placed on scholarship last season, will remain so). Baruti joins 5-star point guard Markelle Fultz, New Zealand center Sam Timmins and guard Carlos Johnson in UW’s 2016 recruiting class. “It’s a blessing to join the program and have the opportunity to improve my game and get better,” Baruti said in a statement. “Coach Romar is a trustworthy, genuine guy that I am happy to get to play for. The style of basketball that the Huskies play is fast with a lot of guards which I think I can grow into pretty well.”
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016
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M’s leaning toward starting Walker Thursday BY T.J. COTTERILL MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICES
SEATTLE —Help is on the way. If all goes as Mariners manager Scott Servais said he expects, Taijuan Walker should be ready to make his next start on Thursday when the Mariners host the Baltimore Orioles. Walker missed his last start because of tendinitis in his right foot. Both he and Wade Miley threw a bullpen session early Sunday, and Servais said they’re “leaning toward� Thursday for Walker. “Walk felt fine,� Servais said. “He should be lined up to make a start before we go out on the road. “He’s anxious. . . . I expect everything to be a go going forward.� And Miley said Saturday that he’s “ready to go� following a rehab start at Short-A Everett. So barring any setbacks, he should start Wednesday. The Mariners officially listed Wednesday’s starting pitcher as TBA. With Walker skipping a start and Miley (shoulder) and Felix Hernandez (calf) on the disabled list, the
Mariners traded for Wade LeBlanc to go with Hisashi Iwakuma, James Paxton and Nathan Karns. So what happens if/when Miley and Walker return this week? Paxton didn’t have his best stuff in Sunday’s 11-6 loss to St. Louis. He allowed five runs in five innings, but had a 3-1 lead after four innings. Servais said he didn’t expect this to shake Paxton’s confidence. Prior to Sunday, Paxton had struck out 27 batters in 26 innings, with a 2.77 ERA, not counting his first Mariners start — when he lasted 3 2/3 innings and was tagged for eight runs (three earned) in a loss to the San Diego Padres. LeBlanc tossed six scoreless innings and allowed three hits in his Mariners debut last week. Karns has struggled in his past four starts, posting a 7.36 ERA in 18 1/3 innings. But Servais noted that Karns had a stretch this season where he was one of the M’s most consistent starters. And he leads the team with 84 strikeouts. Servais said he wouldn’t want a six-pitcher rotation. “It’s good that we’ll actu-
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Seattle starting pitcher Taijuan Walker throws against Tampa Bay earlier this month. ally have to make some tougher decisions here,� Servais said. “Obviously, what Wade LeBlanc did the other day
was huge for us. We feel good about running him out there. We’ll have some good discussions with [general manager] Jerry [Dipoto]
and the coaching staff, and Martin before Saturday’s we’ll have a plan.� game about keeping more balls on the ground. Leadoff leader “I talked to him a little before the game — hits, atServais elected to slide center fielder Leonys Mar- bats, controlling his at-bats, tin down from leadoff to the maybe taking a little bit off No. 8 hitter for Sunday’s of the gas with two strikes,� game against Cardinals Servais said. “Choke up and try to left-hander Jaime Garcia. Servais said it was a make contact.� matchup thing. It allowed him to get Ketel Marte’s Minor details right-handed bat at the top Double-A Jackson outof the order against a lefty. fielder Tyler O’Neill has But consider how Martin, a left-handed batter, reached base safely in 67 of has hit as a leadoff — he 72 games this season. He went 3 for 5 there in Satur- has hits in 62 games. O’Neill was the Mariday’s 5-4 win over the Carners’ third-round draft pick dinals, and is hitting .400 (20 for 50) there for the in 2013 and is 21. He’s hitting .314 so far season. He was 2 for 3 on this season with 13 home Sunday. But at leadoff he’s been runs and 59 RBIs. the best in the bigs for players who have at least 50 at- On tap bats there. He’s batting .257 Seattle resumes interwith a career-high 11 home league play today with a runs for the season. “[Saturday] he hit three two-game home series balls on the ground and against the Pittsburgh they were in good spots. Pirates. Mariners rightHopefully it continues,� Ser- hander Hisashi Iwakuma (6-6, 4.45 ERA) is scheduled vais said. “He’s a key part to our to start against Pirates leftoffense, and he needs to get hander Jonathan Niese on base — hit, walk, hit-by- (6-5, 4.93). The game will be telepitch, whatever it is. Just vised on Root Sports and get on base.� Servais said he spoke to broadcast on 710-AM.
McGrath: Steak dinner Cutters: Team speed CONTINUED FROM B1 Servais now is on the bottom of a list whose career leader is Bobby Cox. The former Braves skipper, who also managed the Blue Jays, was thrown out of 161 games. Among those in the Top 10 are the usual suspects — John McGraw (132), Earl Weaver (94), Leo Durocher (94), Tony La Russa (87) — but reputations can be deceiving. For instance, Ron Gardenhire, not famous for his outbursts with the Twins, had 65 ejections — one more than Lou Piniella, still perceived in Seattle as The King of All Tirades. Piniella long has insisted the animosity he had for umps was overrated. “I respect umpires, I’ve always respected them,� Piniella said before his 2014 induction into the Mariners Hall of Fame. “Whenever I had a particular argument, I’d go to their locker room the next day and tell them, ‘Listen, I’m sorry for the ruckus last night, it’s nothing personal.’�
As a token of his sincerity, Piniella often gave umpires a gift certificate at a downtown Seattle steakhouse. Umpires being umpires — most of them would take a barefoot walk over a mile of shattered glass for a free appetizer — the gift cards worked every time. “Sometimes I’d go there and argue with the umpires and yell, ‘Where are you going to eat tonight?’ � Piniella said. “Fans thought we were really getting into it, and we were just talking about having dinner somewhere.� As Servais suggested, he hasn’t built up much cachet with baseball’s Blue Man Group. Umpires advance to the major leagues just as players do — through the minors — and they often get to know each other years before they find themselves reunited in the big leagues. But this is Servais’ first season as a manager at any level. Still, he’s familiar with the drill. The lifelong football fan had a linebacker’s mean
streak as a baseball player, and in 1996, his participation in a classic Cubs vs. Mets brawl at Shea Stadium — instigated by pitcher Pete Harnisch, the once and future close friend of Servais who now works for the Mariners as an assistant for minor league player development — resulted in an ejection and $500 fine for the Cubs catcher. Whatever Servais did Sunday (or, more specifically, said) wasn’t as overt as his 1996 tackle of Harnisch, but it was enough for him to be sent to his room for three innings. Asked how been long it has been since he was ejected, Servais could only recall that it’s been “a long time, back in my playing days. “It won’t be the last.� If that’s the case, here’s some advice: Apologies usually work, and steak dinners work even better.
________ John McGrath is a sports columnist at The News Tribune. He can be contacted at jmcgrath@ thenewstribune.com.
England boss quits after Euro loss THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
up after the Euros, so now is the time for someone else to oversee the progress of this young, hungry and extremely talented group of players.�
CONTINUED FROM B1 ing forward. This year it was exacerbated by circum“We don’t have as many stances beyond anyone’s of the big-name guys that control, and that was the we’ve had before, but I reality, the speculation and think so far this is a great the circumstance in Rio,� group of guys and they’re Team USA’s JerryColanhungry. They want to play.� gelo said. Anthony said he talked “So somewhat more to doctors and people who challenging, but at the end have been to Brazil about of the day, and this is importhe risks of the mosquito- tant: This is not about who borne virus. isn’t here, this is about who “Prior to this year, in the is here.� past we dealt with things Anthony becomes the like free agency, injuries, first U.S. men’s basketball personal issues that might player to appear in four prevent someone from mov- Olympics.
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Cutters 14, Elma 6, 5 innings Cutters 1 4 6 1 2 — 14 12 0 Elma 1 1 0 2 2 — 6 7 1 WP- Velarde; LP- Coonse (X-X) Pitching Statistics Olympic: Velarde 3 1/3 IP, 3 H, 3 R, 2 BB, 6 K; B. Bradow 2/3 IP, 2 H, R, BB, K; Williams IP, 2 H, 2 R, 3 BB. Elma: Coonse 3 IP, 9 H, 11 R, 5 BB, K; Burbidge 2 IP, 3 H, 3 R, 4 BB. Hitting Statistics Olympic: Porter 2-3, R, SB, 3 RBI; Munyagi 3-3, 3 R, 2 SB; Velarde 1-1, BB, 2B, 2 SB, 3 R, 2 RBI; Bruner 1-2, 2 R, 2 RBI; D. Bradow 2-3, BB, 2B, 2 R; Bainbridge 1-3, R, RBI; Bitegeko 1-2, BB, 3 SB, R, RBI. Elma: Robinette 2-3, R, 2 RBI; French 2-3, 2 R.
________ Compiled using team reports.
Durant set a U.S. record by averaging 19.5 points in London and also was the MVP when the U.S. won the 2010 world championship. “Shoot, when you’re playing with the best players in the world, it makes it easy,� Durant said. “I’m just going out there and playing my game. They take all the pressure off of me.� Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski will coach the Americans for the third and final time, tying Henry Iba’s team record.
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Burlington-Edison: Stewart 4 IP, 8 H, 5 R, BB, K; Ross 2 IP, H, R, 3 K. Olympic: D. Bradow 6 IP, 6 H, 3 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 5 K; Shaw IP, 0 H, 0 R, K. Hitting Statistics Burlington-Edison: Hansen 3-3, 2B, R, RBI; Wright 1-3, 2B, R, RBI. Olympic: Porter 2-3, 2B, R, 2 RBI; Velarde 2-2, SB, 2 R, RBI; Bainbridge 1-3, R, RBI; D. Bradow 1-3, RBI; Bitegeko 1-2, R; Shaw 1-1, R.
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NICE, France — Gary Cahill was lying face down on the field in disbelief. Dele Alli was squatting on the turf with his head in his hands. It was utter humiliation for England. First-time finalist Iceland embarrassed the inept stars of the Premier League on Monday, dumping them out of the European Championship in the round of 16. And the man who presided over yet another night
of English ignominy immediately quit. Roy Hodgson had little choice. The coach’s four-year contract was due to expire after Euro 2016 but he accepted immediately after the 2-1 loss to Iceland that there was no way he could stay in the job. “I would have loved to stay on another two years. However, I’m pragmatic and know that we’re in the results business,� Hodgson said. “My contract was always
CONTINUED FROM B1 with a double, a walk, three runs and two RBIs and Ben A bases-loaded infield Bruner drove in a pair of single by Matt Bainbridge runs to lead the Cutters followed by a two-run dou- offensively. The Cutters (11-0) will ble to right field by Justin Porter and an RBI single by visit Central Kitsap for a Dane Bradow put the Cut- doubleheader on Wednesters up 4-1 in the bottom of day. the third inning. Cutters 5, Olympic 1 Velarde added an RBI single and later stole home Cutters 0 0 0 1 0 3 1 — 5 7 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 —1 3 6 in the bottom of the fifth to Olympic WP- Sparks; LP- Dower pad the Cutters’ lead. Pitching Statistics The Cutters used 11 Cutters: C. Dotson 5 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 2 BB, 6 K; IP, 0 H, 0 R; Shaw IP, 0 H, 0 R, K. steals, three by Anthony Sparks Olympic: Dower 7 IP, 7 H, 5 R, 3 ER, 10 BB, 3 K. Bitegeko, and two apiece by Hitting Statistics Shaw, Rwehabura Munyagi Cutters: Velarde 2-4, 2 BB, 3B, SB, 2 R; L. Dotson 2-2, 2 BB; D. Bradow 1-2, BB, R; Bitegeko 1-3. Jr, and Velarde, to run away Olympic: Dower 1-3, Fernandez 1-2, R; Turnwist 0-1, SAC, RBI. from Elma. Munyagi and Bitegeko Cutters 6, Burlington-Edison 3 each stole home during the Cutters’ 6-run third inning. Burlington-Ed. 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 — 3 6 1 Cutters 0 0 4 0 2 0 x —6 9 0 Porter went 2 for 3 with WP- D. Bradow; LP- Stewart; SV- Shaw Pitching Statistics three RBIs, Velarde was 1-3
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Fun ’n’ Advice
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Dilbert
❘
❘
Classic Doonesbury (1986)
Frank & Ernest
Garfield
❘
❘
DEAR ABBY: My boyfriend, “Paul,” and I have been together for five years. We want to get married, but his mother is Catholic and she doesn’t approve because I am an Alaskan Native, which from her perspective makes me a pagan. Paul hasn’t attended church or held any Catholic views for many years, but he won’t tell his mother because he’s afraid it would devastate her. She has told me we are living in sin, that our marriage could cause him to be excommunicated, and if we have children, they’ll be bastards who will go to hell. I am hurt and confused over this and don’t know what to do or say about it. Every time I try to talk to her, she tries to persuade me to convert, which I don’t want to do. I’d like to have a relationship with her, but I don’t want to have to change who I am for her to approve of me or my future children. What advice can you give me to help me get through my situation? Doomed to Hell in Alaska
by Lynn Johnston
❘
by G.B. Trudeau
by Bob and Tom Thaves
Rose is Rose
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❘
you or stop trying to convert Van Buren you, and it has gone beyond the point of concern for your soul to just plain insulting. She isn’t going to change, and as long as your boyfriend is afraid of “devastating” her, your situation won’t change either. A marriage to him under these conditions won’t be easy, so please think twice about it.
Abigail
Dear Abby: Some good friends of mine were unable to have kids because of a medical issue. They recently adopted a preteen daughter, and the adoption became final a few months ago. They are now having an “adoption party” where everyone can come and hang out and just have a good time. What is the etiquette for such a celebration? It’s being held at a park where there is lots to do. Should I bring a card, a gift for the child, something for the parents or nothing? Confused in Arizona
by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer
ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
❘
by Hank Ketcham
Dear Confused: What a wonderful occasion to celebrate! It would be thoughtful, generous and welcoming if you brought along a gift for the girl, and I’m sure it would be appreciated not only by their daughter but also by the new parents.
________ Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, the late Pauline Phillips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.
The Last Word in Astrology ❘
by Brian Basset
Dennis the Menace
DEAR ABBY
Dear “Doomed”: Are you sure your boyfriend wants to be married? Your problem isn’t his mother; it’s that he can’t find the backbone to tell her he plans to marry you with or without her approval. Paul’s mother’s thinking is outdated. Non-Catholic Alaskan Natives are not “pagan”; the majority are Christian. As for your future children being “bastards doomed to hell” — she’s repeating an ancient prejudice, and that’s all it is. It is no longer the position of the Catholic Church to excommunicate people who marry out of the faith. You asked my advice; here it is: The woman is a religious bigot. She’s unlikely to ever approve of
by Jim Davis
Red and Rover
B5
Mom’s disapproval looms large over couple’s future
by Scott Adams
For Better or For Worse
TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016
Pickles
❘
by Brian Crane
by Eugenia Last
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Keep a close eye on your belongings. Put more effort into simplifying your life and keeping things mellow. Use your intelligence to deal with emotional matters and do your best to learn as much as you can before you make a move. 3 stars
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Speak up and present your talents and skills. Your charismatic personality will help you sway others to see things your way. A new position will turn into an opportunity to start over. Consider making a move and keep an open mind. 5 stars
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Be on the lookout for someone who is trying to take advantage of you. Don’t fall for sweettalk or bullying. Stick to familiar people and places to avoid any sort of run-in that might cause you problems. Protect your valuables. 5 stars
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Some of the most interesting conversations will happen behind closed doors or within the confines of a very small group. It’s best not to divulge secrets. A personal interest will develop through the revival of an old friendship. 3 stars
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Take it upon yourself to make the personal changes that will help give you a trendy new look. Keeping up with the times will help you advance. Enjoy some downtime with someone you like to share your accomplishments with. 4 stars
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Check out your options and you will find a great opportunity. Your involvement in a group effort will pay off and introduce you to new people. Don’t make an impulsive emotional decision. Time is on your side. 2 stars
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Get everything in order before you share information or make a presentation. You’ll be criticized if you lack the backup information necessary to answer questions. Precision and detail will make a difference. Rely on past experiences. 4 stars
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Work toward something that allows you to show off your creative skills or will help you persuade others to lend you a helping hand. Intellectual collaborations will lead to an interesting partnership with someone different from you. 3 stars
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Work until you reach your goal. The chance to share what you have accomplished with someone special will help to push you in a new direction. Plan to present, promote and network all you can. Trust your instincts. 4 stars
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Think outside the box. If you let emotional matters escalate, you will fall behind schedule. Make responsible changes at home or to your personal life instead of taking care of other people’s responsibilities. Love is in the stars. 2 stars
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Travel or attending a trade show or conference will help you decide how you want to move forward. Growth, enlightenment and romance should be your priorities. A personal pick-me-up will do you good. 3 stars
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Look for a pleasurable way to spend your time. Getting together with someone who shares your likes and interests will bring you closer together. A personal change looks promising. Update your appearance and socialize more. 3 stars
The Family Circus
❘
by Bil and Jeff Keane
Classified
B6 TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016
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CHEV: ‘06 Monte Carlo, b e a u t i f u l , 2 d r, 9 1 K RUGER MINI: 14, with m i l e s , p e r f e c t c o n d . flash hider, adjustable s i g h t , s c o p e m o u n t s, $6400. (360)681-4940 scope and hard case. DAEWOO: NEWPRICE $650. (360)457-4409. 1 ownr. ‘02 Hatchback Cold A/C Auto. Trans. 85K miles. $1,850 obo. WANTED: Full Time Steve (360)457-5402. Employment. Moving t o Po r t To w n s e n d . Over 25 years in the electrical distribution and wholesale. Presently work as Electrical Construction Purchasing Agent. Good references and no criminal or drug record. Call Brett at (530) 558-8250. MOUNTAIN BIKE. Specialized Stump jumper 29’er. Showroom Condition, less than 100 miles. WANTED: Riding lawnD i s c b ra ke s, L o cko u t mowers, working or not. suspension. Have origi- Will pickup for free. Kenny (360)775-9779 nal Sales slip and manuals. (360)302-0141.
FOUND: Cell phone, 8th and Eunice, call to identify. (360)452-8607 FOUND: DOG, Female pit bull white/red . She recently had puppies. (360)775-5154 FOUND: DOG, male, tricolored Bassett Hound, 700 block Cays Rd. Sequim. (360)775-5154 FOUND: Silver Schnauz e r, m a l e , C a m p b e l l Ave. (360)775-5154. F O U N D : S m a l l bl a ck dog, female, Dungeness Meadows, in April. (360)683-0179 FOUND: Small Equipment, south of Sequim. Contact Sequim Police. (360)683-7227
MOVING: Must sell operating hot dog stand. Can be mobile. All papers, work permits in order. Will train to operate. See at Around Again, Sequim or call (360)504-2649. $5500 obo.
4026 Employment General
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. Auto Detailer Looking for a experienced full time detailer. Willing to train the r i g h t p e r s o n . Va l i d dr iver’s license, dependable, energetic, courteous required. Apply in person at PRICE FORD
All you need to cash in on this opportunity are a garage sale kit from the Peninsula Daily News and a garage sale ad in classified.
FREE GARAGE SALE KIT • Signs • Pen • Price Stickers • Tips and Rules • Arrows
7513324
classified@peninsuladailynews.com
CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507 CARETAKERS: Wanted HJ Carroll Par k. 20hrs/wk maintenance in exchange for nice full hook up RV Site. Call Matt Tyler, Jefferson County Parks & Rec, 360-385-9129. Send resume mtyler@countyrec.com
CLALLAM TRANSIT SYSTEM IS NOW RECRUITING FOR PARATRANSIT DRIVERS! Position offers a flexible 7 CEDARS RESORT IS w o r k s c h e d u l e w i t h NOW HIRING FOR THE benefits and the opportunity to help those in FOLLOWING need. Beginning hourly POSITIONS wage is $9.47; increas• Banquet Server ing to $11.94 after com• Busser/Host pletion of training and • Customer Service probation; with the maxiOfficer • Deli/Espresso Cash- m u m r a t e o f $ 1 7 . 0 5 . Health care coverage ier a n d p e n s i o n o f fe r e d . • Dishwashers Please visit our website • Facilities Porter at http://clallamtran• Gift Shop Cashier sit.com/About-Us/Em• Groundskeepers ployment-Oppor tunties • Cook for an application packet • Slot Cashier/Attenor stop by the CTS Addant • Table Games Dealer ministration Building at 830 W. Lauridsen, Port • Casino Ambassador To apply, please visit our Angeles. Deadline to A p p ly : Ju ly 5 , 2 0 1 6 . website at AA/EEO. www.7cedars resort.com
7 CEDARS RESORT IS NOW HIRING FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS • Banquet Server • Busser/Host • Customer Service Officer • Dishwasher • Facilities Porter • Gift Shop Cashier • Groundskeepers • Cook • Slot Cashier/Attendant • Deli Cashier To apply, please visit our website at www.7cedars resort.com
CARE COORDINATOR CASE AIDE 40 hrs/wk, located in the Sequim Information and Assistance office. Provides support to seniors and adults with disabilities. Good communication and computer skills a must. Bachelor’s degree behavioral or health science and 2 yrs paid social service exp, WDL, auto ins. required. $17.38/hr, full benefit pkg, Contact Information and Assistance, 800801-0050 for job descrip. & applic. packet. Open until filled, preference given to appl. rec’d by 4:00 pm 7/12/16. I&A is an EOE.
TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD:
DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY JeffCo Prosecuting Attor ney seeks DPA for Superior Court and Deputy Coroner duties. Must be admitted to practice law in Washington, trial exp. as DPA, City Atty. or Pub. Def. preferred. Union exempt. Salary $57,871-$77,774, DOQ. Job descr. and application available at JeffCo Commissioners’ Office or http://www.co. jefferson.wa.us/commissioners/employment.asp. Applications m u s t b e r e c e i ve d o r postmarked by 4:30 pm 7/8/16. EOE DISHWASHER/COOK: Needed immediately for fast paced friendly environment. 4 days a week. Please apply in person at the Spr uce Goose Cafe, 310 Airport Rd., Port Townsend.
H AY S TA C K E R S Needed!. Need reliable hay stackers for the spring/summer season at Olympic Game Farm! Experience a plus. Apply in person at 1423 Ward Rd, Sequim. Please, no phone calls. Licensed Veterinary Tech/Assistant (Full time) Must be avail. weekends. Pick up application at Angeles Clinic For Animals, 160 Del Guzzi Dr., P.A.
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CARE COORDINATOR CASE AIDE 40 hrs/wk, located in the Sequim Information and Assistance office. Provides support to seniors and adults with disabilities. Good communication and computer skills a must. Bachelor’s degree behavioral or health science and 2 yrs paid social service exp, WDL, auto ins. required. $17.38/hr, full benefit pkg, Contact Information and Assistance, 800801-0050 for job descrip. & applic. packet. Open until filled, preference given to appl. rec’d by 4:00 pm 7/12/16. I&A is an EOE.
4026 Employment General
4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General EARN EXTRA $$CASH$$ Perfect Supplemental Income CARRIER ROUTE AVAILABLE Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Is looking for an individual interested in a Po r t A n g e l e s a r e a route. Interested parties must be reliable, be 18 yrs. of age, have a va l i d Wa s h i n g t o n State Drivers License, proof of insurance and reliable vehicle. Early m o r n i n g d e l i v e r y, deadline for delivery: 6:30 a.m. Email resume and any questions to Jasmine at: jbirkland@ peninsuladailynews.com No phone calls please
Guest Service Agent $11 - $14, DOE Housekeepers Starting $10.50 Apply in person at 140 Del Guzzi Dr. P.A.
Seeking Physical Therapist and Physical Therapist Assistant. Outpatient therap i s t - ow n e d p ra c t i c e seeking a PT and PTA who is manually s k i l l e d , a n d e n j oy s working as a team with the physical therapist. Uptown is a relaxed, caring outpatient rehabilitation setting. Our clinic is located in an ar tist colony on the O l y m p i c Pe n i n s u l a near Seattle and multiple outdoor recreation areas. Opportunity for work-life balance is ptimal. Competitive salar y, C E U r e i m bu r s e ment, Health insurance, Sick leave, Student mentorships, Va c a t i o n . S e n d r e sume to: www.uptown therapy.com or Fax 360 385-4395
MEDICAL ASSISTANTLPN/RN needed par ttime, for a family practice office. Resumes can be dropped off at 103 W. Cedar St. in Sequim
Independant Carrier in search of Substitute Carrier for Combined Motor Route for Sequim Area Substitue(s) needed fo r we l l m a i n t a i n e d motor route. Training required starting in July. Interested parties must be 18 yrs. of age, have a valid Washington State Drivers License and proof of insurance. Early morning delivery Mond ay t h r o u g h Fr i d ay and Sunday. Please call Gary (360)912-2678 LOAN OFFICER ASST. Evergreen Home Loans is seeking a dynamic individual to join our Sequim Branch. We are seeking an experienced Loan Officer Assistant with strong problem solving and organization skill set and an emphasis on customer service is a MUST! If interested p l e a s e s e n d yo u r r e sume to madkisson@ evergreenhomeloans. com
MAINTENANCE LEAD $16 - $20, DOE Apply in person at 140 Del Guzzi Dr. M A N AG E R : F u n e r a l home manager/funeral director assistant. F/T in a meaningful career, AA D e gr e e o r l i fe ex p e r. highly considered. Must be well spoken, compassionate and emotionally composed. Professional grooming (no visible tattoos or piercings) and dress required. Must be able to lift 50# on occasion. Starting at $16/hr. Background check req. Email resumes to: jayrozsorensen@ hotmail.com
GARAGE SALE ADS Call for details. 360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714
Support Staff To wor k with adults w i t h d eve l o p m e n t a l disabilities, no experience necessary, $11 hr. Apply in person at 1020 Caroline St. M-F 8-4 p.m.
REPORTER The Sequim Gazette, an award-winning weekly community newspaper in Sequim, WA., is seeking a general assignment reporter. Assignments will i n c l u d i n g ev e r y t h i n g from local government and politics to investigative pieces and more. If you have a passion for community journalism, can meet deadlines and produce people-oriented news and feature stories on deadline (for pr int and web), we’d like to hear from you. Experience with InDesign, social media and photo skills a plus. Minimum of one year news reporting experience or equivalent post-secondary education preferred. This fulltime position includes medical, vision and dental benefits, paid holidays, vacation and sick leave, and a 401k with company match.
One of the top weeklies in Washington State, the S e q u i m G a ze t t e wa s named the top newspaper in the state in its circulation size by the Washington Newspaper Publishers Association in 2005-2008 and 2010, and among the nation’s best in 2011 and 2012 ( N a t i o n a l N ew s p a p e r Association). We are a small newsroom, covering the stories of the Sequim-Dungeness Valley on the Nor th Olympic Peninsula. We are part of Sound Publishing, the largest community media organization in Washington State. Interested individuals should submit a resume with at least 3 non-returnable writing samples i n p d f fo r m a t t o c a reers@soundpublishng.com or by mail to SEQ/REP/HR Depar tment, Sound Publishing, Inc., 11323 Commando Rd. W, Main Unit, Everett, WA 98204
91190150
ATTENTION ADVERTISERS: No cancellations or corrections can be made on the day of publication. It is the Advertiser’s responsibility to check their ad on the first day of publication and notify the Classified department if it is not correct. Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., is responsible for only one incorrect insertion. All advertising, whether paid for or not, whether initially accepted or published, is subject to approval or rescission of approval by Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc. The position, subject matter, form, size, wording, illustrations, and typography of an advertisement are subject to approval of Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., which reserves the right to classify, edit, reject, position, or cancel any advertisement at any time, before or after insertion. Neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., investigates statements made directly or indirectly in any advertisement and neither makes any representations regarding the advertisers, their products, or their services or the legitimacy or value of the advertisers or their products or services. In consideration of publication of an advertisement, the Advertiser and any advertising agency that it may employ, jointly and severally, will indemnify and hold harmless Black Press Ltd./ Sound Publishing, Inc., their officers, agents, and employees against expenses (including all legal fees), liabilities, and losses resulting from the publication or distribution of advertising, including, without limitation, claims or suits for libel, violation of privacy, copyright or trademark infringement, deception, or other violations of law. Except as provided in this paragraph, neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall be liable for any damages resulting from error in or non-publication of ads, whether paid for or not, including but not limited to, incidental, consequential, special, general, presumed, or punitive damages or lost profits. The sole and exclusive remedy against Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., for any error in, or non-publication of, an ad shall be a refund of the cost of the ad or the printing of one make-good insertion, at the discretion of the Publisher; provided that Advertiser and/or its agency has paid for the ad containing the error or which was not published; otherwise, the sole remedy shall be one make-good insertion. No claim for repetition shall be allowed. No allowance shall be made for imperfect printing or minor errors. Neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall be liable for failure to print, publish, or circulate all or any portion of an advertisement or of advertising linage contracted for, if such failure is due to acts of God, strikes, accidents, or other circumstances beyond the control of Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc. Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall not be liable for errors in or non-publication of advertisements submitted after normal deadlines. Any legal action arising from these terms and conditions or relating to the publication of, or payment for, advertising shall, if filed, be commenced and maintained in any court. Other terms and conditions, stated on our Advertising Rate Cards and Contracts, may apply. This service is not to be used to defraud or otherwise harm users or others, and Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., reserves the right to disclose a user’s identity where deemed necessary to protect Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., or others or to respond to subpoenas or other lawful demands for information. All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
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. EXOTIC FRUITS Solution: 11 letters
E M I L R I F F A K S E M I L By Jeffrey Wechsler and Jason M. Chapnick
Monday’s Puzzle Solved
G C R A M B U T A N E N I A U
A H E R Y E A Z A R A A U W M
L E L L E R G O T S I G R I A
L I D O P E B K A L O P I T A O Q U A T P E ګ ګ W A O ګ ګ B P Y A N R E A A I R E S R A S A B O A A O N N O N G U A O N O L R T F R A T S K I W I G E O N I P
A A Y N O G A R D T G M E O E
S S A C O M D R N A S A L U P
B L O O M E L P P A R E T A W
A C K E E I N O O T A K S A S
6/28
© 2016 Universal Uclick www.wonderword.com Download the Wonderword Game App!
Ackee, Agave, Araza, Bloom, Cocona, Dragon, Gooseberry, Kaffir Lime, Kiwano, Kiwi, Limes, Longan, Loquat, Lucuma, Lychee, Pepino, Persimmon, Pewa, Pitaya, Platonia, Pomegranate, Pulasan, Rambutan, Rose Apple, Salak, Salmonberry, Santol, Sapodilla, Saskatoon, Soursop, Star Apple, Star Fruit, Trees, Ugni, Water Apple, Yangmei Yesterday’s Answer: Honor THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
TRUTE ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
CANTE
33 Alert 35 Born 6/28/1926, director of the answers to starred clues 36 Golden rule word 37 Saturn and Mars 40 Like a fork in the road 43 With keen perception 47 Welcoming store window sign
6/28/16
49 Hockey great Bobby 50 Pine secretion 51 Island in “Jaws” 52 Strikeout king Ryan 56 Put in a hold 57 Transgressions 58 Mile or minute 59 Weather Channel stat 61 Juilliard deg. 62 Inaccurate 63 Boxer fixer
Book now for year long services including ornamental pruning, shrubs, h e d g e s a n d f u l l l aw n ser vices. Established, many references, best rates and senior discounts. P. A. area only. Local 360 808-2146
105 Homes for Sale Clallam County Affordable 4BR Home At the end of a quiet dead end street you’ll find this warm and welcoming 4 br, 1 ba, home. The 4th bedroom could m a k e a g r e a t fa m i l y room or office! Lovely southern exposure front yard with hanging foliage, picket fence, partial m o u n t a i n v i ew s, a n d patio area that is great for dining al fresco! Fully enclosed back yard with cedar fencing, an apple tree, and a large shed that provides plenty of additional storage. Located just minutes from town in a sur prisingly quiet neighborhood. MLS#301216 $175,000 Windermere Port Angeles Kelly Johnson (360)477-5876
FSBO: 3 br., 1.5 bath, freshly remolded bathroom, attached 2 car garage, nice culdesac neighborhood roomy front and backyard. $210,000.(360)477-1647
HUGE PRICE REDUCTION 3 Br, 3.5 Ba. Master, kitchen, laundry, living and dining on main level. Pr ivate suite upstairs and downstairs. Large storage room. Built in 2005. Paved sidewalks, dog park, yard maintenance, fenced play area. 2 - 1 car garages. MLS#292318/877431 $310,000 Carol Dana Lic# 109151 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East 360-461-9014 Mountain-View Charmer This 3 br, 2.75 ba home is situated on a level 3+ acres just minutes from town! Heated by a rustic wood stove w/ stone surround in the family room, propane fireplace in the living room, and an electric heat pump. Guest suite on main level and master suite on 2nd level both w/ walk-in close t s. S p a c i o u s m a s t e r b a t h w / t i l e d wa l k - i n shower and tub. Den + a bonus room. Enjoy breathtaking unobstructed mountain views from the covered front porch or from the lovely patio area w/ hot tub and low maintenance landscaping. MLS#300401 $369,900 Windermere Port Angeles Kelly Johnson (360)477-5876 New to the market! First time on the market! This beautful 3br, 2ba, S u n l a n d N o r t h t ow n home with large den/office has an abundance of skylights and custom built-in cabinetry throughout. This home abuts a n a t u r a l g r e e n b e l t fo r added back yard privacy. $329,900 Team Tenhoff (206)853-5033 Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim
FSBO: Well built 2 Br, 1 Ba. home located at 423 E. 7th St. in Por t Angeles with newer appliances, newly refinished o r i g i n a l w o o d f l o o r s, spacious, many wind ow s, m o u n t a i n v i ew and amazing storage. $149,500. Water View! (360)460-1073 Custom home with a stunning water view! The Great Mountain Views large open kitchen flows Beautiful 1820 SF, two i n t o a s p a c i o u s d i n level home located in ing/living area complete town with easy access to with a brick propane firemost everything. The liv- place. Top of the line aping area is located up- p l i a n c e s a n d d o u b l e stairs and can be ac- everything, a built in escessed via elevator or presso machine, large stairway. Features in- wa l k - i n p a n t r y a n d a clude an open kitchen & W o l f p r o p a n e s t o v e living area with hard- make this kitchen every wood flooring. 2 br, and c h e f s d r e a m ! M a s t e r 2 ba., on the upper level. suite features large masA two car garage plus ter bath with two walk-in den/office on the lower closets and propane firelevel w/ half bath. Very place. Private backyard low maintenance land- is fully fenced with a scaping. southern exposed deck, MLS#301024 $275,000 hot tub and greenhouse. Tom Blore MLS#300506 $579,000 360-683-4116 Remax Prime PETER BLACK Marcus Oden REAL ESTATE 360-683-1500
Mountain Views Bring your house plans! Soils test completed level 1.15 ac. building lot with 180 mountain views lot is completely fenced with wire fencing, close to golfing, discovery trail and sequim amenities, no manufactured or mobile homes allowed MLS#960319/301185 $70,000 Deb Kahle lic# 47224 1-800-359-8823 (360)683-6880 (360)918-3199 WINDERMERE SUNLAND Need Garage Space? A t t a c h e d g a ra g e, d e tached, workshop, upd a t e d k i t c h e n , fa m i l y room, living room, 1509 SF., 3 Br, 1 Ba, cedar siding, newer roof, windows and decking, fresh exterior and interior paint 0.24 acre, sunny lot, lots of yard space for gardening/play. MLS#300778 $189,000 Team Thomsen CBU COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY (360)808-0979 New and Beautiful Massive amounts of light filter in from all directions illuminating the rooms from the Swedish hardwood floors to the granite counter tops to the lofty cathedral ceiling. Remodeled from the studs out in 2012, every room offers something new & beautiful. 4 BR, 3.5 BA provides ample living space that emulates Northwest living on 10 acres. You’ll love the koi pond and waterfall that spans the professionally landscaped back yard. The 2,751SF shop provides both functionality and storage for any hobby. MLS#291348 $595,000 Windermere Port Angeles Michaelle Barnard (360)461-2153 Private Retreat with Views! Great salt water views from this 3 br/2 ba, home just West of Port Angeles! Heated by an energy efficient heat pump and a rustic wood stove in the living room w/ vaulted ceilings. Master suite w/ private balcony. Large back deck and patio w/ a hot tub is a great spot for entertaining. Outside you’ll find fruit trees, herb garden, fenced garden and shed. Close to a community trail to a nearby beach. 2 parcels available. Buy home w/ 3 acres for $385,000 or h o m e w / 5 a c r e s fo r $418,000. MLS #300715 $418,000/ MLS #300716 $385,000 Windermere Port Angeles Kelly Johnson (360)477-5876
HODARI
WRUCEF Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Yesterday’s
❘
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: TRULY TIPSY FRIGID LOUDLY Answer: The owner of the maid service was making a — TIDY PROFIT
by Mell Lazarus
311 For Sale 505 Rental Houses 1163 Commercial 105 Homes for Sale Manufactured Homes Clallam County Clallam County Rentals Spacious and Elegant Home O ve r 3 0 0 0 S F, l a n d scaped corner lot. large living room with solid oak floors and Italian stone hear th propane FP. 3Br, 2.5Ba, massive Fr e n c h b ay w i n d ow s. dining room with sliding glass doors out to an elevated deck. huge rec room + bonus room. MLS#301200/962738 360-683-4844 Dave Sharman Lic#17862 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East
Sequim/Dungeness Great lot near beach with Beach Access. Private and quiet with open feeling. 3/8 acre next to open space. Safe neighborhood, plenty of parking. Heated, insulated large shop. Separate art studio. Well and septic. Older mobile home with approx. 1,000 sq ft including studio and laundry. $119,900. (360)681-7775
505 Rental Houses Clallam County
SUNNY SIDE of Lake Sutherland Cabin with Sweeping views of lake and mountains. Stay and play? Make some money too? Rent it? VRBO, have your cake and eat i t t o o ! 1 B r, 1 B a p a r k model, 397 SF., updated, plus bunk / guest h o u s e , 1 7 0 S F, w i t h bath, both furnished. Boat and jet ski lift. $274,900. Shown by appt. (360)460-4251 UNDENIABLE RUSTIC CHARM This home is a Country Hide Away, must see. Nearly 3,000 SF of living space with unique cabinetry that must be seen. Enjoy outbuildings, rolling lawns and plenty of acreage. One look and you will fall in love with this mountain retreat. MLS#301174/960322 $329,000 Dan Erickson 461-3888 TOWN & COUNTRY
(360)
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311 For Sale Manufactured Homes 1111 CAROLINE ST. PA: ‘79 mobile, large addition on 2 full fenced lots, 3 plus br., 2 ba., remodeled kitchen and bathroom. New tile flooring, new vinyl windows, all appliances included, No owner financing, Price reduced. $75,000. 452-4170 or 460-4531
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4026 Employment 4080 Employment 4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Momma General Wanted Wanted Clallam County Clallam County OFFICE PERSON Andrew’s Lawn SerEntry level, P/T to F/T vices. mowing, edgexcellent customer ser- i n g , t r i m m i n g a n d vice, busy office, detail more. friendly efficient oriented. Apply in per- s e r v i c e . ( 3 6 0 ) 9 1 2 son: 2291. Olympic Springs 253 Business Park Loop C A R E G I V E R : N i g h t s, Sequim, WA 98382. days, light house keep(360)683-4285 ing, cooking and errands. Call Janet. REPORTER (360)683-7817 The Sequim Gazette, Dons Handy Services a n awa r d - w i n n i n g w e e k l y c o m m u n i t y Weeding, pruning, weed newspaper in Sequim, eating, landscape imWA., is seeking a gen- provement. many other eral assignment re- jobs ask. (484)886-8834 por ter. Assignments will including ever ything from local government and politics to investigative pieces and more. If you have a passion for community jour nalism, can meet deadlines and produce people-oriented news and feature stories on deadline (for KINGDOM CLEANING print and web), we’d R o u t i n e & m o v e o u t like to hear from you. cleanings, organizing Experience with InDe- services. Call us today! sign, social media and Senior and veteran disp h o t o s k i l l s a p l u s. counts available. We are Minimum of one year licensed AND insured! news reporting experi- Kingdom Cleaning: e n c e o r e q u i va l e n t (360)912-2104 post-secondary educaKingdom-Cleaning.net t i o n p r e fe r r e d . T h i s full-time position in- PRIVATE CAREGIVER: cludes medical, vision I offer good, personal and dental benefits, and home care, shop, paid holidays, vacation c o o k , o r t ra n s p o r t t o and sick leave, and a appts. PA/Sequim area, 4 0 1 k w i t h c o m p a ny good local references. match. Interested indi(360)797-1247 viduals should submit a resume with at least 3 non - returnable writing samples in pdf format to careers@soundpublishng.com or by mail to SEQ/REP/HR Department, Sound Publishing, Inc., 11323 Commando Rd. W, Resident Wanted 24/7 Main Unit, Everett, ADULT HOME CARE. WA 98204 One of the top week- We currently have a Val i e s i n Wa s h i n g t o n cancy for One Resident State, the Sequim Ga- to live in our home and zette was named the receive one-on-one care top newspaper in the for only $4,500 a mo. state in its circulation Private Pay Only. 360size by the Washing- 977-6434 for info. ton Newspaper Publishers Association in WANTED: Full Time 2005-2008 and 2010, Employment. Moving and among the nat o Po r t To w n s e n d . tion’s best in 2011 and Over 25 years in the 2012 (National Newselectrical distribution paper Association). and wholesale. PresWe are a small newsently work as Electrical r o o m , c o ve r i n g t h e Construction Purchasstories of the Sequiming Agent. Good referDungeness Valley on ences and no criminal the North Olympic Peor dr ug record. Call ninsula. We are part of Brett at Sound Publishing, the (530) 558-8250. largest community med i a o r g a n i z a t i o n i n Young Couple Early 60’s W a s h i n g t o n S t a t e . available for seasonal Visit us at cleanup, weeding, trimwww.soundpublishming, mulching & moss ing.com removal. We specialize in complete garden resSEQUIM SCHOOL DIST torations. Excellent refSeeking substitute bus erences. 457-1213 d r i v e r s ; w i l l t r a i n . Chip & Sunny’s Garden Apply Online: Tr a n s f o r m a t i o n s . L i www.sequim.k12.wa.us c e n s e # C C (360)582-3418 CHIPSSG850LB.
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ACROSS 1 Official on a baseline 4 “Cheers” mixologist 9 Warehouse club with 652 locations 13 “Cheers” location 14 Place for a queen 15 Request 16 Alter __ 17 *1977 Hitchcock parody 19 Turn in for cash 21 Smooth transitions 22 Laptop port letters 23 Air gun shot 26 “Wrong!” 27 Muslim holy city 29 Go for eagerly, as a chance 31 “All bets __ off” 32 Tanzania neighbor 34 Self-satisfied 38 Broadcast 39 As if in shock 41 Ambient music pioneer Brian 42 Suburb of Phoenix 44 Remington 700s, e.g. 45 British “Inc.” 46 Journalist Chung 48 Boxcar stowaways 50 Amassed, as debts 53 Fast sports cars 54 Incoming flight info: Abbr. 55 Hams it up 57 Green Giant’s “Little Green” buddy 60 *1976 parody of pre-talkies 64 Tip jar bill 65 Slanted type: Abbr. 66 Insult 67 Kipling’s young spy 68 The Big Apple, in addresses 69 Rides the breeze 70 Gas additive brand
TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016 B7
Properties by
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452-1326
6010 Appliances
RANGE AND FRIDGE: Estate by Whir lpool. electric, like new, $300 each. (360)582-0503.
6040 Electronics
TV: 65” Samsung smart HD TV. one year old. $640. (360)683-7676
6050 Firearms & Ammunition
COLT: AR-15 M4, new, extra’s. $1,225. (360)640-1544
RUGER MINI: 14, with flash hider, adjustable s i g h t , s c o p e m o u n t s, scope and hard case. $650. (360)457-4409.
6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
FIREWOOD $200/cord 665 Rental (360)460-3639 P.A.: 2 bd, 1 ba, with Duplex/Multiplexes garage, yard, no smoking / pets. $900. P.A.: 433 E. First St. 2 F I R E W O O D : O P E N (360)452-2082 B r. , 1 b a t h , N o p e t / AGAIN IN JULY $179 smoke. $650, first, last, delivered Sequim-P.A. 3 cord special $499. SEQUIM: Char ming 2 $650. dep. 461-5329. (360)582-7910 Br., lots of extras, pets? www.portangelesfire Water, yard care inc. Peninsula Classified wood.com $1,200. 460-4943. 360-452-8435
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B8 TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 661493673 6-19
SERVICE D •I •R •E •C •T •O •R •Y
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 6065 Food & Farmer’s Market
9820 Motorhomes
EGGS: Farm fresh from f r e e r a n g e c h i cke n s . $4.25/dzn. Weekdays (360)417-7685
M I N I M OTO R H O M E : ‘95 GMC Safari Van, full sized AWD. Removable back seats (2) for sleepi n g , s t o ve o r c o o l e r. HANGING BEEF: 1/2 or Check it out. Runs good. 1/4, $2.50 lb. Grass fed, New tires (travel). $3500 no antibiotics. (360)452-6178 (360)912-4765 MOTORHOME: Southwind Stor m, ‘96, 30’, 6075 Heavy 51K, great condition, lots Equipment of extras. $17,500. (360)681-7824 TRACTOR: And implements, 2000 Hercules tractor (Chinese), real workhorse, 2 cylinder diesel with low gearing, 4’ mower and 40” tiller, great for large property. $7,000. (206)799-1896 or privT R AV E L S U P R E M E : pro@live.com ‘01 38.5 ft. deisel pushe r, b e a u t i f u l , e x c e l . cond. coach. 2 slides, 2 6080 Home LED TVs and upgraded Furnishings LED lighting. 83K miles. LIFT CHAIR: Recliner 8.3L Cummins $47,500. with motor. $300. Bur- (360)417-9401 gandy. (360)808-0373 W I N N E BAG O : ‘ 8 9 , MISC: Dark Oak China Class C, 23’ Ford 350, Hutch, very good condi- 5 2 K m l . , w e l l m a i n tion, leaded glass doors, t a i n e d , g e n e r a t o r , l i g h t e d i n t e r i o r. $ 5 0 0 $7,500. (360)460-3347 obo. Noritake China 12 place setting, white and 9832 Tents & blue plums, 6899 CounTravel Trailers tryside. $150 obo. (360)504-3038
6100 Misc. Merchandise DAEWOO: NEWPRICE 1 ownr. ‘02 Hatchback Cold A/C Auto. Trans. 85K miles. $1,850 obo. CRUISER: ‘10 Fun Finder, 18’ with tipout and Steve (360)457-5402. awning, barbecue, miM I S C : ‘ 8 2 L i v i n g s t o n crowave/convection ovboat, 12’, crab pots in- en, large fridge/freezer, cluded. $500. Antique air conditioning. Sleeps upright piano, from Eng- 4. Very little use, neat land $500. Cement mix- and clean. $14,000. (360)928-3761 er $50. . 681-0673 MISC: Prices reduced. Tr a n e h e a t p u m p , XE1000, 2 ton unit. $400. 2 Fuel tanks, 500 gal., never used, $300. 200 gal., for $100. (360)385-1017
6115 Sporting Goods
MOUNTAIN BIKE. Specialized Stump jumper 29’er. Showroom Condition, less than 100 miles. D i s c b ra ke s, L o cko u t suspension. Have original Sales slip and manuals. (360)302-0141.
HARTLAND: ‘13, Trailrunner, 26’, sleeps 6, great condition. $12,500. (360)460-8155 KEYS: ‘07, 25’ (19’ SLB) Clean as a whistle, dometic fridge/freezer,AC, awning, dual marine batteries, electric tongue jack, new tires, winter cover and other upgrades. $10,000. (360)457-8588
9050 Marine Miscellaneous BOATS: 15’ Adirondak g u i d e b o a t , 1 2 ’ p a ck boat. Both are kevlar and fiberglass with oars, caned seats and seatbacks. YakPacker boat t ra i l e r bu i l t fo r t h e s e boats with spare tire and mount. All lightly used. $6,700. (360)319-9132 GLASSPLY: ‘79, 16ft. 70 hp and 8 hp Johnson included. ‘96 EZLoad t r a i l e r. G o o d c o n d . $5,000. (360)683-7002 GLASTRON: ‘78 15’ EZLDR 84, 70hp Johnson, won’t start. $800. (360)912-1783
SAN JUAN CLARK BOATS, 28’, Ready to sail, excellent for cruising or racing, rigged for easy single handling, all lines aft, sleeps 4 easily, standing room 6’2” in cabin. NEW factory eng i n e , Ya n m a r 2 Y M 1 5 diesel 15hp, trailer 34’, dual axle with spare inver ter 2000 watt (12v DC to 110AC) with microwave, new 120 JIB Taylor Sails, main sail cover + spare 110 Jib Har king Roller Sur ler Auto Helm 1000 - compass with bulkhead mount GARMIN 182 GPS with charts, navagation station with light. $15,500. (360) 681- 7300
9817 Motorcycles
H A R L E Y: ‘ 0 5 D y n a Glide. 40K mi. Lots of extras. $8,500 obo. (360)461-4189 HARLEY DAVIDSON: ‘05, Road King Police, 88 cu in, 34k miles, $6,500 firm. 461-2056
H O N DA : 0 6 ” S h a d ow Sabre 1100, like new, K E Y S TO N E : ‘ 0 6 3 1 ’ 1 6 0 0 a c t u a l m i l e s . Zephlin. $6,000 obo or $5499. (360)808-0111 trade for motorhome. (360)461-7987 HONDA: ‘97 1100 Shadow Spirit. Ex. cond. low NOMAD: ‘08 19’ 194/SC m i l e s , m a n y e x t r a s . Clean, well maintained, $2,300. (360)477-3437 sleeps 4. Reduced to $9,500. (360)808-0852 HONDA: ‘98 VFR800, 23K ml., fast reliable, exP ROW L E R : ‘ 7 8 , 1 8 ’ , t ra s, gr e a t c o n d i t i o n . good tires. $2,000. $3,800. (360)385-5694 (360)460-8742 INDIAN: ‘14, Chief Classic, 1160 mi., extras. 9802 5th Wheels $17,000. (360)457-5766
5th Wheel: ‘02 Ar tic Fox, 30’, 2 slide outs, WOOD SPLITTER: 5 hp E x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n . engine, 15” tires and $18,000. (360)374-5534 wheels. $600. Alpenlite 5th Wheel (425)931-1897 97/29ft Exclnt Condtn. KAWASAKI: ‘08 Vulcan New roof, awnings,bat- 900 Classic LT. 14K mi. teries,stove $8500 OBO $3,500. (360)457-6889 6140 Wanted 360-461-0192 & Trades Tr i u m p h T i g e r ‘ 0 1 . NEEDED: Car or small ALPENLITE: ‘83 5th Three-cylinder 955cc, truck, for WWII vet, 40 w h e e l , 2 4 ’ . N E W : f u e l i n j e c t i e d , l i q u i d plus years retired Seattle stove, new refrigera- cooled. Top-box and facF i r e D e p t . W i l l p a y tor, new toilet, new tory panniers. Plenty of $5000. (360)683-4691 hot water heater, new s t o r a g e f o r t o u r i n g . shocks, roof resealed - 31,600 miles. MainteWANTED: Riding lawn- no leaks. $4,000. nance up to date. mowers, working or not. $4,000. (360)301-0135 (360)452-2705 Will pickup for free. YA M A H A : ‘ 0 4 , 6 5 0 V Kenny (360)775-9779 Star Classic. 7,500 original miles, shaft drive, excellent condition, in7030 Horses cludes saddle bags and sissy bars. $4,800/obo. (253)414-8928 HORSE TRAILER: 2 horse, straight load, YAMAHA: Vino, 49cc, 4 Thoroughbred height, stroke, like new. $950. new tires, needs minor Leave message. work, call for details. DUTCHMEN: ‘95 Clas(360)452-0565 (360)417-7685. sic, 26’. Most of its life SORREL MARE: AQHA under roof, ex. cond., 9742 Tires & registered, sweet dispo- everything works. price Wheels sition, eager to please, reduced. $3,800. (360)457-0780 fully trained for trail ridWHEELS AND TIRES: ing, for sale or lease, call New Toyo Open Counfor details. 417-7685. t r y, LT 2 8 5 7 0 R / 1 7 mounted on new Ultra Motorspor t wheels. 7035 General Pets $1,500 obo. Heavy duty running boards with LED lights. $400 obo. English Bulldog Puppy (360)670-1109 For Sale.,She is 7 weeks old,Shot,Health Guaran- JAYCO: ‘07 Jay Flight, teed,Good With Children 24.5 RBS. Sleeps 6, 12’ 9180 Automobiles and AKC Registered, slide-out, 16’ awning, Classics & Collect. Cost $700. Email: a/c, microwave, stereo/ aliceanderson00 DV D w i t h s u r r o u n d AMC: ‘85, Eagle, 4x4, @gmail.com sound, outside shower 92K ml., no rust, needs gas grill. Aqua shed cov- m i n o r r e s t o r a t i o n . L A B R A D O O D L E S : er for storage. $12,900. $3,700. (360)683-6135 (360)928-3146 Only 2 left, 1 male, 1 DODGE: ‘78 Ram female, 8 weeks old, bl a ck , a s k i n g $ 8 5 0 . KO M F O R T : ‘ 0 2 , 2 4 ’ Charger,4x4, $1,800/obo with tip out, great shape, (360)808-3160 Leave message. queen bed, air cond. (360)457-5935 $11,000. (360)461-3049 FORD: ‘60 Thunderbird. Upgraded brakes and ig7045 Tack, Feed & MONTANA: ‘02 36’ 5th nition. New Tires and wheel, very good cond., wheels. Looks and runs Supplies 3 slides, arctic pkg., oak great. $13,500. cabinets, fireplace. (360)457-1348 SADDLE: Crates Ara- $23,000/obo. (360)457b i a n 1 5 . 5 ” W e s t e r n . 4399 or 888-2087 SPRITE: ‘67 Austin Very good cond. $800. Healey, parts car or proCall (360)681-5030 ject car. $3,500. 9289050 Marine 9774 or 461-7252.
9820 Motorhomes
Miscellaneous
ART: “Welford Country COMPUTER DESK: ExCottage”, by Car l Va- cellent condition. $50. lente, “34 X 28”. $49. (360)460-9562 (360)775-8005 COOKIE JAR: Unique BASEBALL MITT: Vin- Seyfer ts pretzels, distage, embossed, Al Ka- play piece, large. $75. (360)681-7579 line Wilson A2171. $30. (360)452-6842 CORNER CABINET: 3 BED: Brass head and oak shelves, doors, nice f o o t b o a r d , r a i l i n g s , for TV. $40. (360)452-9685 queen size. $100. (360)531-0735 COUCH: Chair and OtBIKE: 26” aluminum, 21 toman, matching set, speed, Next F-5, like good condition. $200. (360)460-1207 new. $80. 452-1277 BOBBLEHEAD: John- CRAFTING TABLE: W son and Wilson, 2012 bookcases. Large, with M a r i n e r s H O F, b ra n d drawers. $200. (360)681-8980 new. $40. 457-5790
FIRE PLACE INSERT: HOSE: Raindr ip, .05” PIPE: Native American TA B L E S : ( 2 ) G ra n i t e style, wood, bone, beads topped wood drum taOlder Timber Lake, you mainline for drip system, and leather. $150. new 300’ roll. $35. bles. $45 ea OBO. remove, $40 obo. (360)681-4834 (360)582-1280 (360)452-7266. (206)842-1953 F L O O R L A M P : Ta l l , iPHONE 5: GSM, 16GB, very nice, black and sil- black, charger, earbuds, (2) cases. $125. ver with dimmer. $40. (360)531-2737 (360)504-2160
PLANT STANDS: (2), TA B L E : S m a l l r o u n d stone top, 28”, lower pedestal, 25” diameter, shelf. $15 each or $25 20”h, nice, $25. both. (360)461-4159 (360)457-6431
F O L D I N G TA B L E S : LADDER: 26’, fiberglass extension, commercial (2) 60” X 30”. $25 each. grade. $150. (360)460-4943 (360)457-4399 FREE: (2) radio receivMASSAGE TABLE: ers, U.S. Navy, 1940’s. Nautilus folding table (360)385-1593 (was $479), $199. FREE: Couch, Bassett, (360)681-3076 7’, grey pattern. MATTRESS SET: Pos(360)452-8075 turpedic, queen size, pilFREE: Gold’s Gym 2700 low top, pristine. $200. Powe r g l i d e we i g h t (360)681-0571 bench, you disassemble. M I S C : M a r i n e C o r p. , (805)256-5732 uniform, coat 44R, pants F R E E : H o m e D e p o t 33XL, (2) jackets, other packing boxes, (17) me- item. $45. 683-7994 dium, (12) small, bubble MISC: Matching queen wrap. (509)999-4323 size bed and dresser F R I D G E : W h i r l p o o l with mirror. $130. Model ET18NKXGN05. (360)457-6815 Almond, runs well. $25. N F L JAC K E T: B l a ck , (360)912-3448 Oakland Raiders, older, GOLF CLUBS: 7, 8, 9 excellent cond. $45. irons; 3, 4, 5 hybrids; 3 (360)683-7994 wood, bargain at $5 OFFICE CHAIR: With each. (360) 457-5790. arms, excellent condiGOLF CLUBS: Titleist tion. $25. (360)531-0735 irons, tour edge graphite woods, putter, bag, pull OUTBOARD: Chr ysler 7.5. Runs, for parts. PT. cart. $80. 452-1277 $50. 360-643-3624. GUITAR: Martin, backpacker, with case, steel OUTBOARD: Chr ysler 7.5. runs, for parts. PT. string, evenigs. $165. $50. (360)643-3624. (360)912-3986
POTS: (3) Matching, tall, burgundy, were $400., asking $100. (360)683-8413
BOOKS: Harr y Potter, D E E R H I D E : L a r g e , h a r d c o ve r, # 1 - 7 s e t . tanned beautifuly , soft, great condition. $100. $69. (360)775-8005 (360)681-4834 BOOK: Vintage about Port Angeles, “Conquer- DOG CRATES: folding ing the Last Frontier.” T. metal with pads, 22/30. $25., 28/48. $50. Aldwell. $65. 452-6842 (360)452-9842 CABINETS: 2 Ethan AlDOOR: Oak hollow core. len, for electronics. in frame, rough 32” x $100. (360)681-8980 81 1/2”, $20 OBO CABINET: Sears sewing (360)681-4502 machine walnut cabinet. DRESSER: 9 Drawers, $50. (360)457-8715 large mirror attached. CARD FILE: 18 drawer, $40. (360)928-3371 heavy steel. Ex cond. Good for arts and crafts. EGIFT CARD: $150 value, Men’s Warehouse. $45. (360)457-1185 $100/obo. CHAIR: Lift chair. $200. (360)526-1523 (949)232-3392 E L E C T R I C S H AV E R : CHAIRS: Maple, dining U s e d 2 m o n t h s, c o s t (4). $40. (360)928-3093 $220 asking $80. (360)681-3522 C H E S T WA D E R S : G U I TA R : Wa s h b u r n , OUTBOARD: Evinrude, Women’s size Medium ENTERTAINMENT Cen- used, LGI pack, great 2hp, Runs Good. $50. Q u e e n , N e w i n B ox . ter: Glass doors. $30. starter, evenings. $85. 360-477-0187 $30. 360-477-0187. (360)477-3834 (360)912-3986 PATIO TABLE: with umCLOCK: Grandfather, FENCE POSTS: (18), 4’ HAUL: Master aluminum brella, glass top tubular Cherry finish, Westmini- tall. $22.50. cargo carrier, 49x22.5x8. frame. $50. Will deliver. ster chime. $100. (360)683-7149 (360)477-3834 $75. (360)385-2420 (360)928-9494 FIREPLACE INSERT: I N F L ATA B L E B OAT : RECLINER: Blue, nice COMFORTER: Quilted, “Country”. $35. and comfy. $60. Sevylor , 2-person, new king size, bed skirt. $25. (360)457-8715 (949)232-3392 in box. $35. 582-1280 (360)461-4159 FISHING TACKLE: Sal- LAWN MOWER: Good POKEMON: Cards, over condition, Briggs & Strat- 2900 cards. $100. D O G C R AT E : l a r g e , mon, in the box, all new, (360)457-5299 ton. $30. (206)842-1953 $60. (949)241-0371 $20. (360)504-2160
E E F R E Eand Tuesdays A D SS R F Monday AD
TELESCOPE: Swift, Pa n t h e r m o d e l 8 1 1 , zo o m 1 5 - 4 5 X , t r i p o d . $100. (360)683-4473
R I D I N G L E AT H E R S : T E N T: R i d g e w a y B y Ladies, jacket size 12, Kelty, new, 6-7 person. vest with patches, pants $80. (360)417-7399 size 4. $175. 477-9584 ROCKER: Oak, antique, T I L L E R : C r a f s m a n , small ladies, needlepoint quick star t, mini, used once. $185/obo. rose seat. $150. (360)640-2155 (360)457-6374 ROCKING CHAIR: solid TIRES: (4) Winter studd e d , s i ze 2 2 5 - 6 0 - 1 6 , wood, heavy. $40. used one month. $50 all. (360)457-5299 (360)681-2747 SCRUSHER: Boot and TOOL BOX: Plymouth, shoe cleaner, new. $20. red. 12”x26”x14.5”. $10. (360)928-9494 (360)912-3448 S E W I N G M AC H I N E : S i n g e r, a n t i q u e, w i t h TOOL CHEST: 12 drawgorgeous cabinet. $175. er, Homark, high quality, on casters. $200. (360)683-8413 (360)681-3522 SLEEPER COUCH: Never used. $195. TOOL CHEST: and tool (360)460-9562 box, combo, on wheels. $100. (360)928-3371 SLEEPER SOFA: Excellent condition, earth TRAMPOLINE: Needak tone color. $75. Rebounder, only slightly (360)912-5174 used. $129. (360)681-3076 S M O K E R : Tr a e g e r #bbq055, with cover, 3 TRIMMER: Craftsman, bags pellets. $185. stand behind string, (360)582-7449 $200. (949)241-0371 SOFA: Mixed colors. $90/obo. (360)640-2921
TWIN BED: Great condition, frame, box spring S T R O L L E R : G r a c o , and top mattress, cash. large, in great shape. $99. (360)-683-6748 $45. (360)417-7399 UTILITY TRAILER: TABLE: Antique Mens- Nor thern tool 4x8, 1/2 m a n t a bl e, va l u e d a t ton, folding, used very little. $165. 477-5628 $350. Sacrifice $200. (360)460-4943 VA S E : L a r g e , h a n d TA B L E : D i n i n g , 3 6 ” blown glass from Poround, 12” leaf, 3’x4’. land, beautiful piece. $95. (360)681-7579 $25. (360)452-9685
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9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9434 Pickup Trucks Others Others Others
FORD: ‘13 C-Max Hybrid SEL. 1 Owner. Excellent Cond. Loaded, l e a t h e r, AT, c r u i s e, PS, regen. power brakes, ABS, premium sound/ nav, power lift g a t e, p owe r h e a t e d seats, keyless entry, 41.7 MPG, 70k miles. Down sizing. $14,500/obo. Call (360)928-0168.
FORD: ‘14 Escape Titanium, 29K miles. $21,700. Loaded, like new.(505)994-1091 FORD: ‘94, Mustang G T, c o n v e r t i b l e , f a s t , priced to sell. $3,300. (360)457-0780 HONDA: ‘09, Accord LX. 7 7 K m i l e s , ex c e l l e n t cond.,1 owner. $11,900. (360)749-6633 L I N C O L N : ‘ 9 8 To w n Car. Low miles, 80K, excellent cond. $5,500. (360)681-5068
M A Z DA : ‘ 9 4 , M i a t a , with Rally package, red a n d bl a ck l e a t h e r, 132,009 miles, newer tires. Some paint issues. $2,999. (360)774-0861
Aluminum skiff: 10’, 9292 Automobiles Others custom welded, with oars, electric motor and trailer with spare tire. BMW: ‘07, Z4 3.0 SI, R o a d s t e r, 4 9 K m i l e s, $975. (360)460-2625 w e l l m a i n t a i n e d , l i ke B OAT : 1 5 ’ G r e g o r, new. $18,000. Welded aluminum, no (360)477-4573 l e a k s . 2 0 h p, n e w e r Yamaha. Just serviced CHEVY: ‘01, Roadtrek with receipts. Electric 200 Popular, 78K miles, trolling motor. Excellent VOLVO: ‘02 S-40, Safe V8, runs great. $25,999 t r a i l e r. $ 4 , 9 0 0 . B o b clean, 30mpg/hwy., ex(360)912-3216 (360) 732-0067 cellent cond., new tires, a l way s s e r v i c e d w i t h ITASCA: ‘03, Sundanc- BOAT: Larson, 16’, 40 high miles. $4,995. er, 30’, class C 450, low hp mercury, Eagle (360)670-3345 38K miles, always gar- depth finder, with trailer. BMW: Mini Cooper, ‘04, aged, 1 owner, leveling needs minor work, call 61K ml., 2 dr. hatchback, jacks, auto seek satellite for details. 417-7685 or 1.6L engine, standard, N I S S A N : ‘ 1 1 3 7 0 Coupe. Sports pkg, new TV, entertainment cen- 928-5027 e x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n : tires. Still under warranters, new tires, 2 slides, $7,500. (360)461-4194 ty, 19K mi., immaculate s e e t o b e l i e v e . BOAT: Marlin, with MerCruiser 135 hp. 16’. call CHEV: ‘06 Monte Carlo, inside and out, silver in $44,900/obo 681-7996 5-9pm, $3,800. b e a u t i f u l , 2 d r, 9 1 K color. $24,000. (360)640-2546 ITASCA: ‘15, Navion, (360)457-0979 miles, perfect cond. 25.5’, model 24G, Die$6400. (360)681-4940 SATURN: Sedan, ‘97, sel, 12K ml. exc.cond. 2 UniFlyte Flybridge: 31’, 1971, great, well loved, JAGUAR: ‘87 XJ6 Se- ve r y c l e a n , r u n s bu t slide outs, $91,500. b e a u t i f u l b o a t . Tw i n ries 3. Long wheel base, n e e d s e n g i n e w o r k , (360)565-5533 Chryslers, a great deal. ver y good cond. $76K many new parts, great tires. $400/obo. TOYOTA: ‘88, Dolphin, A steal at $14,500. mi. $9,000. (360)460-4723 $6,500. (360)640-1537 (360)797-3904 (360)460-2789
lN ACCORDANCE WITH THE REVISED CODE OF WASHINGTON (RCW 46.55.130), EVERGREEN TOWING (SEQUIM) #5260 WILL S E L L TO T H E H I G H EST BIDDER THE FOLLOWING VEHICLES ON 0 6 / 3 0 / 2 0 1 6 AT 1 1 : 0 0 am. PRIOR INSPECTION WILL BE FROM 8:00 am UNTIL 11:00 a m . T H I S C O M PA N Y CAN BE CONTACTED AT 360-681-1128 FOR QUESTIONS REGARDI N G T H I S AU C T I O N . THE SALE LOCATION IS: 703 E Washington St. Sequim ‘00 Volk Golf/GTI/Jetta, AIJ5880/ WVWGH21J5Y731249 ‘98 Ford, Taurus LX, ASP6881/ 1FAFP52UXWG192794 ‘05 Chev Malibu AMU7091 1G1ND52F65M249372 ‘04 Kia Sorento AJN6453 JBDYO131246552609 ‘70 GMC 4PU C71169C CE2342264047 ‘98 Acura CL AKG3600 19UYA3148WL001540 ‘01 Volk Passat AVX8131 WVWRH63B71P139695 ‘02 Volk Golf/GTI/Jetta. ASP4454 9BWDE61J424076223 ‘04 Nissan Frontier/ Xterra-ALB3146 5NIED28T24C640957 ‘98 Dodge Caravan ASJ7359 1B4GT54L7WB579148 ‘94 Ford Mustang AUW6852 1FALP4048RF109678 ‘99 Volk, Jetta ASP5575 3VWPA81H9XM211037 ‘98 Volvo Unkown ALB5007 YV1LS5674W1540022 ‘84 Nissan PU C76893C JN6ND01S3EX218610 ‘89 Chrysler Lebaron 920XZD 1C3BC4634KD472338 ‘86 Volvo 245 ADL8789 YV1AX885XG1671883 ‘92 Dodge ASP5505 2B5WB35Y3NK117784 ‘01 Toyota Tundra B26934Y 5TBBT44141S195537
or FAX to: (360)417-3507 Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com
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9556 SUVs Others
CHEV: ‘77 Heavy 3/4 ton, runs. $850. (360)477-9789 DODGE: ‘00 Dakota, 2 wheel drive, short bed, a l l p o w e r, t o w p k g . $5900. (360)582-9769 C H E V Y: ‘ 0 0 L i m i t e d SUV. AWD or 4 wheel D O D G E : ‘ 0 0 P i c k u p, drive, garage kept, new great shape motor and cond. in and out, low body. $3900 firm. miles, loaded with op(760)774-7874 tions, must see. $6,950. (360)215-0335 D O D G E : ‘ 0 8 , D a ko t a H O N DA : ‘ 0 0 , C R - V SLT Crew, 4X4 and V-8, power windows, locks AWD, 5-speed, power and cruise, canopy, 78K w i n d o w s , l o c k s , a n d c r u i s e, a l l oy w h e e l s, miles. clean in and out. $15,995 $5,995 Gray Motors Gray Motors 457-4901 457-4901 graymotors.com graymotors.com FORD: ‘89, F150 Lariat, ex t r a c a b, l o n g b e d , SUZUKI: ‘86 Samari. 5 s p e e d , 4 x 4 h a r d t o p, 136K ml., $2,500/obo. 143K mi. A/C. $5,200. (209)617-5474 (360)385-7728 FORD: ‘95 F250 Diesel, 269K miles, auto/overdrive, good cond. $5000 obo. (360)531-0735
9556 SUVs Others
9931 Legal Notices Clallam County
JEEP: ‘09, Wrangler X, soft top, 59K ml., 4x4, 5 speed manual, Tuffy security, SmittyBuilt bumpers, steel flat fenders, complete LED upgrade, more....$26,500. (360)808-0841
Case No.: 16-4-00190-4 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS (RCW 11.40.030) In the Superior Court of the State of Washington in and for the County of Clallam In Re the Estate of Lavina M. Lavin, Deceased. The personal representative named below has been appointed as personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any o t h e r w i s e a p p l i c a bl e statute of lim-itations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s lawyer at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided und e r R C W 11.40.020(i)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication o f t h e n o t i c e. I f t h e claim is not presented within this time frame, t h e c l a i m i s fo r ev e r barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date of first publication: June 14, 2016 Robert Clark, Personal Representative Lawyer for Estate: R o b e r t N . Tu l l o c h , #9436 GREENAWAY, GAY & TULLOCH 829 E. 8th St., Ste. A, Po r t A n g e l e s, WA 98362 (360) 452-3323 Pub: June. 14, 21, 28, 2016. Legal No.704422
SUZUKI: ‘93 Sidekick. Runs well, have title. $2,000. (360)374-9198 or 640-0004.
9730 Vans & Minivans Others CHEV: ‘96, Astro Van LS, power windows, locks, AWD, 180K miles, $2,000/obo. 808-1295 GMC: ‘95 Safar i Van, Removable back seats, 2 owner. Ex. cond. inside and out. Check it o u t . R u n s g o o d . N ew tires (travel). $3500 (360)452-6178
9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF FORD: 97’, F250 7.3L, WASHINGTON Turbo diesel, tow packIN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM age, 5th wheel tow packa g e, d u e l f u e l t a n k s, power chip, new tranny IN RE THE ESTATE OF BARBARA SAMPSON 2012. $9,900. No. 16-4- 00203-0 (360)477-0917 NOTICE TO CREDITORS Deceased. FORD: ‘97, F350 XLT crew cab, diesel 7.3L, The personal representative named below has automatic, 193k mi, long been appointed as personal representative of this bed, liner, shell, tow bar, estate. Any person having a claim against the decemore. $9.900. dent must, before the time the claim would be (360)582-1983 barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070, by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative's attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor FORD: ‘99 F150 XLT, as provided under RCW 11.40.020(3); or (2) four red, 4.6 V-8, 5 speed months after the date of first publication of the nos t i ck , 4 w h e e l d r i ve, tice. If the claim is not presented within this time 111K miles, excellent frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. condition $7000 This bar is effective as to claims against both the (360)683-3888 decedent's probate and nonprobate assets. GMC ‘10, Sierra 2500 Date of First Publication: June 21, 2016 C r ew ( l i f t e d a n d l i ke n ew ) h e a t e d l e a t h e r, Attorney for Personal Representative navigation, dvd player, H. CLIFFORD TASSIE low miles, 6.0 gas V-8, Address for Mailing or Service: JOHNSON RUTZ & TASSIE loaded with options. 804 South Oak Street $36,995 Port Angeles, WA 98362 Gray Motors (360) 457-1139 457-4901 Pub.: June 21, 28, July 5, 2016 Legal: 706311 graymotors.com
M i n i C o o p e r , ‘ 1 3 S GMC: ‘84 Sierra Classic. Hardtop, 9,300 ml. exc. V-8, auto, with canopy, cond. extras, $19,000. 116K miles. $2200. (951)-956-0438 (360)460-9445 S AT U R N : ‘ 0 1 L 2 0 0 . Power, leather, straight body, new tires. Needs work. $1000. 461-4898
9556 SUVs Others
FORD: ‘04, Escape Xlt, AWD, 54k miles, clean low miles, power windows, locks and cruise, tow package, clean. $9,995 T OYO TA : ‘ 1 0 P r i u s . Gray Motors Leather, GPS, Bluetooth 457-4901 etc. 41K mi. $18,000. graymotors.com (360)477-4405 SUBARU: ‘02 Outback, Low miles, well maintained, new tires. $4,200/obo. 461-1218
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Yesterday
National forecast Nation TODAY
Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 77 50 0.00 14.82 Forks 76 50 0.00 56.71 Seattle 80 60 0.00 23.48 Sequim 76 55 0.00 6.89 Hoquiam 75 52 0.00 42.43 Victoria 75 52 0.00 16.61 Port Townsend 73 52 **0.00 11.81
Forecast highs for Tuesday, June 28
âž¡
Aberdeen 70/53
★
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
★ ★
Low 53 Twinkle light sparkle
69/52 While the sun waves down
68/54 Sunny day is so artful
68/54 68/54 Before clouds take Hopefully they’ll the sky’s crown only be partial
First
Billings 93° | 59°
Strait of Juan de Fuca: W morning wind 5 to 15 kt rising to 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 ft or less building to 2 to 4 ft. W evening wind 25 to 35 kt easing to 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 4 to 6 ft subsiding to 2 to 4 ft.
Denver 91° | 59°
Chicago 69° | 65°
Washington D.C. 88° | 70°
Los Angeles 83° | 68°
July 4
Miami 89° | 77°
Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Spokane Atlantic City 90° | 60° Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Yakima Bismarck 91° | 60° Boise Boston Brownsville © 2016 Wunderground.com Buffalo Burlington, Vt.
Seattle 78° | 57° Olympia 83° | 51°
Tacoma 82° | 57°
Astoria 67° | 54°
ORE.
Hi 90 92 87 67 87 89 81 95 84 87 100 82 92 84 93 90 91
Lo 68 66 63 57 68 71 55 70 62 56 72 55 64 64 77 72 73
Warm Stationary
Pressure Low
High
July 11 July 19
Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonset tomorrow Moonrise tomorrow
9:18 p.m. 5:17 a.m. 2:37 p.m. 2:02 a.m.
Prc
Otlk Rain PCldy PCldy .26 Cldy Rain .28 Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Clr Rain Cldy Clr Clr PCldy .28 PCldy Cldy
TODAY High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 7:18 a.m. 5.9’ 1:32 a.m. 1.5’ 7:56 p.m. 8.0’ 1:23 p.m. 0.9’
TOMORROW High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 8:37 a.m. 5.8’ 2:42 a.m. 0.8’ 8:51 p.m. 8.4’ 2:25 p.m. 1.5’
THURSDAY High Tide Ht Low Tide 9:53 a.m. 5.9’ 3:48 a.m. 9:45 p.m. 8.7’ 3:29 p.m.
Ht -0.1’ 1.9’
Port Angeles
10:10 a.m. 4.1’ 10:06 p.m. 7.1’
4:32 a.m. 2.0’ 3:29 p.m. 2.5’
12:04 p.m. 4.5’ 10:46 p.m. 7.1’
5:23 a.m. 0.9’ 4:34 p.m. 3.5’
1:33 p.m. 5.2’ 11:29 p.m. 7.1’
6:12 a.m. 5:42 p.m.
-0.2’ 4.3’
Port Townsend
11:47 a.m. 5.1’ 11:43 p.m. 8.8’
5:45 a.m. 2.2’ 4:42 p.m. 2.8’
1:41 p.m. 5.5’
6:36 a.m. 1.0’ 5:47 p.m. 3.9’
12:23 a.m. 8.8’ 3:10 p.m. 6.4’
7:25 a.m. 6:55 p.m.
-0.2’ 4.8’
Dungeness Bay* 10:53 a.m. 4.6’ 10:49 p.m. 7.9’
5:07 a.m. 2.0’ 4:04 p.m. 2.5’
12:47 p.m. 5.0’ 11:29 p.m. 7.9’
5:58 a.m. 0.9’ 5:09 p.m. 3.5’
2:16 p.m. 5.8’
6:47 a.m. 6:17 p.m.
-0.2’ 4.3’
*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
-10s
-0s
0s
10s
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
70s
80s 90s 100s 110s
Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press
Casper 86 Charleston, S.C. 90 Charleston, W.Va. 89 Charlotte, N.C. 89 Cheyenne 85 Chicago 90 Cincinnati 92 Cleveland 91 Columbia, S.C. 94 Columbus, Ohio 90 Concord, N.H. 90 Dallas-Ft Worth 97 Dayton 92 Denver 92 Des Moines 90 Detroit 92 Duluth 80 El Paso 95 Evansville 96 Fairbanks 80 Fargo 83 Flagstaff 90 Grand Rapids 88 Great Falls 79 Greensboro, N.C. 86 Hartford Spgfld 89 Helena 84 Honolulu 85 Houston 93 Indianapolis 91 Jackson, Miss. 97 Jacksonville 88 Juneau 60 Kansas City 90 Key West 90 Las Vegas 110 Little Rock 98 Los Angeles 82
The Lower 48
à 122 in Death Valley, Calif. Ä 31 in Leadville, Colo.
Atlanta 87° | 71°
El Paso 89° | 70° Houston 90° | 77°
Cold
July 26
New York 80° | 70°
Detroit 73° | 62°
Fronts
CANADA Victoria 74° | 55°
Ocean: W morning wind to 10 kt becoming 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 2 ft or less. NW swell 6 ft at 9 seconds. W evening wind 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 2 ft or less. NW swell 5 ft at 8 seconds.
La Push
Minneapolis 78° | 56°
San Francisco 72° | 54°
Full
Nation/World
Washington TODAY
Marine Conditions
Tides
New
Cloudy
TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:
Cartography by Keith Thorpe / © Peninsula Daily News
TONIGHT WEDNESDAY ★
Last
Pt. Cloudy
Seattle 78° | 57°
Almanac Brinnon 76/56
Sunny
46 PCldy Louisville 71 PCldy Lubbock 68 Rain Memphis 70 PCldy Miami Beach 53 PCldy Midland-Odessa 69 .03 Clr Milwaukee 74 .02 Cldy Mpls-St Paul 71 Clr Nashville 71 PCldy New Orleans 68 1.40 Clr New York City 63 PCldy Norfolk, Va. 79 Cldy North Platte 71 .96 Clr Oklahoma City 61 Clr Omaha 69 Clr Orlando 69 Clr Pendleton 56 Cldy Philadelphia 72 PCldy Phoenix 72 2.92 Cldy Pittsburgh 57 .44 Rain Portland, Maine 57 Cldy Portland, Ore. 51 Cldy Providence 66 .22 Clr Raleigh-Durham 44 Clr Rapid City 67 Cldy Reno 62 PCldy Richmond 50 Clr Sacramento 77 Clr St Louis 76 PCldy St Petersburg 71 .21 Clr Salt Lake City 75 Cldy San Antonio 73 .30 PCldy San Diego 51 .06 Cldy San Francisco 65 .01 Clr San Juan, P.R. 78 .07 PCldy Santa Fe 87 Cldy St Ste Marie 75 .08 Rain Shreveport 66 PCldy Sioux Falls
93 92 98 91 82 89 88 95 100 87 76 91 95 92 93 89 87 106 92 77 89 77 85 88 98 83 102 96 91 92 91 71 72 88 86 82 94 87
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
90 71 Rain 75 .05 Cldy Syracuse 65 Cldy Tampa 91 74 1.20 Cldy 76 .45 Rain Topeka 91 67 .68 Clr 78 .02 Cldy Tucson 102 76 .11 PCldy 69 .45 Cldy Tulsa 97 74 .07 Cldy 72 .17 Clr Washington, D.C. 86 68 Rain 64 Cldy Wichita 93 70 .13 PCldy 74 .01 Rain Wilkes-Barre 87 64 Cldy 77 .23 Rain Wilmington, Del. 83 61 Cldy 67 PCldy 65 PCldy _______ 62 .61 Cldy Hi Lo Otlk 70 2.30 Cldy 69 PCldy Auckland 61 54 Rain 72 .58 Cldy Beijing 88 70 Cldy 57 PCldy Berlin 73 55 PCldy/Sh 64 Cldy Brussels 66 56 PCldy/Sh 90 Clr Cairo 98 72 Clr 72 Rain Calgary 78 51 Ts 57 PCldy Guadalajara 82 62 PM Ts 64 Clr Hong Kong 90 81 PM Ts 60 PCldy Jerusalem 80 66 Clr 65 PCldy Johannesburg 67 31 Clr 55 Cldy Kabul 88 66 PCldy/Sh 61 Clr London 65 51 PM Rain 63 PCldy 73 53 PM Ts 63 Clr Mexico City 76 62 Ts 76 Clr Montreal 75 55 Clr 78 Cldy Moscow 95 84 Cldy/Ts 64 Clr New Delhi 71 56 PCldy 74 Cldy Paris Rio de Janeiro 76 63 PCldy 67 Cldy Rome 88 65 Clr 52 Clr PM Ts 78 PCldy San Jose, CRica 79 65 64 45 Clr 54 PCldy Sydney 74 68 Cldy/Sh 61 .02 Cldy Tokyo 74 57 AM Ts 77 .42 Cldy Toronto 59 PCldy Vancouver 76 60 Clr
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