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Tuesday

Roster battles start

More showers feeding the flowers B10

M’s manager considers open spots for spring B1

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS March 22, 2016 | 75¢

Port Angeles-Sequim-West End

Bids for Senate, House to start

Purple flower power

Van De Wege, Chapman step up BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

ALANA LINDEROTH/OLYMPIC PENINSULA NEWS GROUP

Visitors enjoy Blackberry Forest during the annual Sequim Lavender Weekend in July 2015.

Lavender Weekend contends for best floral fest honors the Best Flower Festival category in the USA Today 10Best Readers’ Choice contest selected by readers of USA Today and 10Best. The annual festival draws tens of thousands of visitors for three days of activities organized by the Sequim Lavender Growers Association and the OLYMPIC PENINSULA NEWS GROUP Sequim Lavender Farmers Association. Mary Jendrucko, executive director SEQUIM — Sequim’s lavender is for the Sequim Lavender Growers Assogaining some national attention once ciation, said she was unaware they were again as the Lavender Weekend holds in the running for the contest or how steady at 15th out of 20 in its bid to be they were entered. named best flower festival in the nation. “I know you can vote once a day for The Sequim Lavender Weekend is one the duration of the contest, which ends of 20 flower festivals in the running for on March 28,” she said.

Supporters voting online for Sequim’s iconic celebration

Voting runs through 12 p.m. Eastern on March 28. A panel of experts including Cindy Brockway, program director of cultural resources at The Trustees of Reservations; Katy Moss Warner, president emeritus of the American Horticultural Society; and Abby Hird, program director for Botanic Gardens Conservation International-U.S., nominated the 20 festivals in the running. In the contest’s description, it says of the Sequim Lavender Weekend: “Each July, Washington’s Dungeness Valley is blanketed in purple. TURN

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FEST/A6

SEQUIM — A political ripple caused by the retirement announcement of state Sen. Jim Hargrove began Monday, with two candidates announcing their election plans. State Rep. Kevin Van De Wege, in his fifth term in the Legislature, announced that he will relinquish that seat in order to run for the state Senate seat Hargrove is vacating at year’s end. Minutes after Van De Wege’s announcement, fourterm Clallam County Commissioner Mike Chapman announced his intention to Van De Wege run for Van De Wege’s seat. Hargrove, 62, announced March 10 he will not seek re-election. The Hoquiam Democrat has been a member of the state Senate since 1993. He had previously served in the state House of Representatives from 1985 to 1992. Hargrove — along with Rep. Steve Tharinger and Chapman Van De Wege, both Sequim Democrats — represents the 24th District, which covers Clallam and Jefferson counties and part of Grays Harbor County. Van De Wege, 41, said last week he wasn’t sure if he would run for the Senate, while other potential office seekers were waiting for Van De Wege’s decision before making their own plans. “I’m excited to announce my candidacy to the state Senate,” Van De Wege said in a news release distributed to the media Monday afternoon. TURN

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POLITICS/A6

Former PA employee lawsuit starts today Jury selection to begin in civil trial BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Four years after she was fired, former city Finance Director Yvonne Ziomkowski will have her day in court. Jury selection in her wrongfultermination civil trial, presided over by Judge Erik Rohrer, begins at 9 a.m. this morning in Clallam County Superior Court. Eighty potential jurors have been called, and opening arguments are expected to begin at 1:30 this afternoon, Superior Court Administrator Lindy Clev-

enger said Monday. Ziomkowski, represented by Port Angeles lawyer Karen Unger, is asking for unspecified damages for age and sex discrimination, wrongful discharge and negligent infliction of emotional distress. Then-City Manager Kent Myers fired Ziomkowski March 15, 2012, for cashing out more vacation hours than the 80 allowed annually under a city policy that permitted them to be transferred into employee retirement accounts. Ziomkowski, at the time 59, said in her May 14, 2013 lawsuit that before she was fired, she suffered through a hostile work envi-

ronment marked by age and sex discrimination. She said those responsible included Myers, City Public Works and Utilities Director Glenn Cutler, Human Resources Director Bob Coons, and Police Chief Terry Gallagher, all of whom have since left city employment. But she says while other department heads violated the cash-out rules, only she suffered the consequences of violating a policy that the state auditor said was inconsistently applied by the city in a manner “not clearly supported by its policies.” Ziomkowski’s claims have been challenged by Seattle lawyer Shannon Ragonesi, representing the city under its liability cover-

age with the Wa s h i n g t o n Cities Insurance Authority. “The injuries and damages claimed by [Ziomkowski] were proximately Ziomkowski caused or contributed to by the fault of the plaintiff,” Ragonesi said in her answer to the lawsuit. Ziomkowski, at at-will employee, has since repaid $28,862 in leave that she said she accrued. “Only the plaintiff was expected to return funds she had

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Duane Webb, MD

Thursday, March 24 at 6 p.m.

TO

TRIAL/A6

100th year, 69th issue — 2 sections, 18 pages

Presented by Dr. Duane Webb, Board-Certified Gastroenterologist

Tuesday, March 22 at 6 p.m.

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INSIDE TODAY’S PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Colon Cancer: Causes, Treatment and Prevention Olympic Memorial Hospital - Linkletter Hall 939 Caroline Street, Port Angeles

earned,” Unger said in court documents. Unger defended what her client did as being “permitted by city policy and practiced by all others in a similar position of authority,” she said. “All of these other individuals were male.” She also alleges that Ziomkowski was “intentionally excluded from decision-making meetings,” was “ridiculed, intimidated or insulted” by department heads, and was unfairly targeted by a State Patrol investigation requested by city officials. That investigation did not result in criminal charges against any employees.

BUSINESS CLASSIFIED COMICS COMMENTARY DEAR ABBY HOROSCOPE LETTERS NATION PENINSULA POLL

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UpFront

TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 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

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The Associated Press

Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

to play a superhero, you got to look in the body like a superhero. I knew the BEN AFFLECK camera was HOPES Batman fans who Affleck going to be were skeptical of him playlooking at ing the caped crusader in me and the guillotine was “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” realize how there so I knew I had to be ready.” seriously he took the role. When Warner Bros. “The most difficult thing made the announcement about making this movie, nearly three years ago that honestly, was the physical Affleck would play Bataspect,” Affleck told The man, some fans weren’t Associated Press on Sunthrilled, and the backlash day on the red carpet for led to petitions asking the the film’s New York prestudio to remove him. miere at Radio City Music Eventually, it blew over, Hall. and the two-time Oscar Affleck said he wanted winner feels proud to be to be in shape, so he part of the Batman legacy. worked out hard. “I’m really honored to be “Having to be in the part of a tradition that gym every day, 6 in the Christian Bale and morning . . . I wasn’t used Christopher Nolan, great to that kind of workout talents, worked on. regimen,” Affleck said. Michael Keaton, Val “Fans have come to expect that if you’re going Kilmer, George Clooney,

Affleck says he’s serious about Batman

Tim Burton, great talents. So I just wanted to do my best. I think we did something different, but something that is still very much Batman,” Affleck said. Co-star Jesse Eisenberg shared a similar experience when he was cast as Superman’s archnemesis, Lex Luthor. Eisenberg, famous for his role as Mark Zuckerberg in “The Social Network,” empathized with his critics. “I can assure them as critical as they are of me, I’m more critical. No one is more concerned or critical or worried about doing a good job than I am,” Eisenberg said. Amy Adams, who plays Lois Lane in the film, praised both Eisenberg and Affleck. “I think the audience is going to have to decide for themselves. [I] got to see it, and I was blown away,” Adams said.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL SUNDAY’S QUESTION: What’s your favorite spring flower?

Passings By The Associated Press

ROGER AGNELLI, 56, a former banking executive who helped turn the Brazilian company Vale into a global mining giant, died Saturday when his private plane crashed in São Paulo, Brazil. Mr. Agnelli, his wife Andrea and their children, Ana Carolina and João, were en route to a Mr. Agnelli wedding in Rio de Janeiro when the Comp Air 9 turboprop monoplane slammed into two homes just minutes after taking off, killing all seven people aboard, according to Reuters and a statement released by Vale. The others on the plane were the pilot and the spouses of the Agnellis’ children. The company statement did not indicate the cause of the crash. Mr. Agnelli took over as president and chief executive of Vale in 2001 after nearly 19 years at one of the country’s largest banks, Banco Bradesco, which is a major shareholder in Vale. The company was at the end of a process of privatization that had begun in 1997, though the government retained a stake in the company. Under Mr. Agnelli, Vale grew into one of Latin America’s biggest companies: the second-largest mining company in the world at

the time, and the largest producer of iron ore. Known by some as the “Iron Man,” Mr. Agnelli was a tough negotiator and a bold executive who expanded the company’s reach into markets in Asia, particularly China. In 2006, he presided over the company’s $18 billion purchase of Inco, a Canadian nickel producer, the largest acquisition that had ever been made by a Latin American company, Vale said.

the button-down; the venerable Brooks Brothers haberdashery had borrowed the style from British polo players decades earlier, and it had been romanticized here and there in popular culture. In John O’Hara’s 1935 novel Appointment in Samarra, Caroline English dreamily recalls Ross Campbell as “one of those Harvard men, tall and slim and swell, who seem to have put on a clean shirt just a minute ago — soft white shirt with button-down collar — and not to have had a new suit in at ________ least two years. He was not ELLIOT GANT, 89, the rich; he ‘had money.’ ” But the Gants translast of the founders of the formed the button-down into Gantmacher brothers of a mass-market must. Brooklyn, died March 12 in Within decades the shirt Boston. had become so universal, as Linguists can’t precisely much a uniform of the day pinpoint when “buttonas the proverbial gray flandown” was redefined from nel suit, that the comedian cutting-edge collegiate to Bob Newhart was riffing on uniformly conformist, but Madison Avenue’s “buttonthe marketing expertise of the Gantmacher brothers of down mind.” Still, though the buttonBrooklyn probably had down became a symbol of something to do with it. uniformity, it was not Beginning in the late immune to innovation. 1940s, Martin and Elliot The Gant brothers perGantmacher popularized the fected the collar’s shape, button-down shirt as a de known as the perfect roll, rigueur garment for Ivy formed by the front edges of League and Madison Avethe buttoned collar. nue men. They were so taken with their success, in fact, that Seen Around not long after their company Peninsula snapshots was rebranded Gant in 1949, the brothers adopted IT MAY BE mid-March, the label as their surname. but the new snow on the The Gants did not invent top of the Olympics is a far cry from last year’s view. Nice to have our area Laugh Lines “refrigerator” back . . .

Lottery

TRUMP TOWER IN Chicago was struck by LAST NIGHT’S LOTlightning during the IlliTERY results are available nois primary, which Donald on a timely basis by phon- Trump went on to win. ing, toll-free, 800-545-7510 Nobody was hurt, but or on the Internet at www. God was like, “Crap, I missed.” walottery.com/Winning Jimmy Fallon Numbers.

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.”

Crocuses

8.1%

Tulips

28.7%

Daffodils

42.8%

Hyacinths Undecided

11.6% 8.8% Total votes cast: 554

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

Three other rooms are out of commission because [Port Angeles]: Daffodils of smoke damage. Although and yellow candles decoall units were in use, no rated the tea table Wednesone was injured. day afternoon when the Presbyterian Women’s Council held its annual tea 1991 (25 years ago) Administrators at the and garden sale in the North Olympic Peninsula’s social hall of the church. three largest school disMrs. T.M. Bourm and tricts sympathize with Mrs. E. Harding presided teachers’ demands for at the tea table. increased school funding. The guests were enterBut they draw the line tained with vocal solos by when teachers threaten to Mrs. Edward Fitzgerald, strike. accompained by Miss “A strike would be danYulanda Carbonetti. gerous to the welfaire of the kids and destructive to 1966 (50 years ago) the relationship between Kathleen Gunter, manthe community” and the ager of the Prairie Motel in schools, Port Angeles school Forks, explained today the Superintendent John Pope cause of the Friday night said. fire in units 13 and 14 has A strike would disrupt still not been established. and possibly shut down It broke out in unit 13, classes in Port Angeles and completely demolishing the Sequim. room. The adjoining numSchool would simply ber 14 unit is also a burned close in Port Townsend, shell. administrators say.

1941 (75 years ago)

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS TUESDAY, March 22, the 82nd day of 2016. There are 284 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On March 22, 1941, the Grand Coulee hydroelectric dam in Washington state officially went into operation. On this date: ■ In 1638, religious dissident Anne Hutchinson was expelled from the Massachusetts Bay Colony for defying Puritan orthodoxy. ■ In 1765, the British Parliament passed the Stamp Act to raise money from the American colonies, which fiercely resisted the tax. The Stamp Act was repealed a year later. ■ In 1929, a U.S. Coast Guard vessel sank a Canadian-registered

schooner, the I’m Alone, in the Gulf of Mexico. The schooner was suspected of carrying bootleg liquor. ■ In 1933, during Prohibition, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a measure to make wine and beer containing up to 3.2 percent alcohol legal. ■ In 1945, the Arab League was formed with the adoption of a charter in Cairo, Egypt. ■ In 1963, The Beatles’ debut album, “Please Please Me,” was released in the United Kingdom by Parlophone. ■ In 1976, principal photography for the first “Star Wars” movie, directed by George Lucas, began in Tunisia. ■ In 1995, convicted Long

Island Rail Road gunman Colin Ferguson was sentenced to life in prison for killing six people. ■ Ten years ago: More than 125,000 hourly workers of General Motors Corp. and auto supplier Delphi Corp. were offered buyouts to help cut the companies’ huge labor costs. A Gabon-bound ferry sank off the coast of Cameroon; more than 120 people are believed to have died. ■ Five years ago: Yemen’s U.S.backed president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, his support crumbling among political allies and the army, warned that the country could slide into civil war as the opposition rejected his offer to step down by the end of the year.

NFL owners meeting in New Orleans voted to make all scoring plays reviewable by the replay official and referee; also, kickoffs would be moved up 5 yards to the 35-yard line. ■ One year ago: CIA Director John Brennan, in an interview on Fox News Sunday, said the leader of Iran’s elite Quds Force was contributing to instability in Iraq and complicating the U.S. mission against terrorism. The U.N. special envoy for Yemen, Jamal Benomar, warned an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council in a video briefing from Qatar that events were pushing the Arab country “to the edge of civil war.”


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, March 22, 2016 P A G E

A3 Briefly: Nation Obama, Castro meet in Cuba for historic talks HAVANA — Brushing off decades of distrust, President Barack Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro shook hands Monday in Havana’s Palace of the Revolution, a remarkable moment for two countries working to put the bitterness of their Cold War-era enmity behind them. Obama and Castro stood together as a Cuban military band played the national anthems of Cuba and the United States: stunning Castro sounds in a country where resistance to the U.S. has been part of the national mission for decades. Greeting each other warmly, the two leaders inspected an honor guard before sitting down in front of American and Cuban flags. American companies, eager for opportunities in Cuba, were wasting no time. Obama announced that tech giant Google had struck a deal to expand Wi-Fi and broadband Internet on the island 90 miles south of Florida.

ment right to bear arms does not extend to government buildings or the parking areas that serve them. The case involved Colorado resident Tab Bonidy, who has a permit to carry a concealed handgun. He sought a court order striking down the regulation after learning he would be prosecuted for carrying his gun while picking up mail at his local post office or leaving it in his car. The Obama administration argued that the Second Amendment does not restrict laws forbidding guns in sensitive places such as schools and government buildings.

U.S. sets up outpost

WASHINGTON — The U.S. has set up a small Marine artillery outpost in northern Iraq to protect a nearby Iraqi military base where U.S. advisers are helping Iraqi combat troops plan and prepare for a counteroffensive in Mosul, a U.S. spokesman said Monday. “It is a fire base,” Col. Steve Warren, spokesman for the U.S. military headquarters in Baghdad, told reporters at the Pentagon. It is the first such base established by the U.S. since it returned forces to Iraq in 2014 in response to the Islamic State group’s takeover of Mosul and other areas of northern and western Iraq, Warren said. He said it should not be considered a combat outpost because it is behind the front lines Court denies gun case located and is not initiating combat WASHINGTON — The with the extremists. Supreme Court won’t hear a dis“Their primary mission is to pute over a U.S. Postal Service protect, obviously, Americans,” regulation that bans guns from Warren said, referring to the U.S. post office property and adjacent advisers in that area. He declined parking lots. to say how many U.S. advisers The justices on Monday let are working with the Iraqis there stand an appeals court ruling but said it is fewer than 100. that said the Second AmendThe Associated Press

Federal judge seeks shield for sealed files BY JEFF HORWITZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — A federal judge has asked the Obama administration to shield from public disclosure court records related to the once-secret criminal history of a former Donald Trump business partner. In an unusual order prompted by an unsealing request from The Associated Press, U.S. District Judge Brian M. Cogan said that unless the Justice Department acts before April 18, he will decide whether to make the court files public under the assumption that federal prosecutors don’t care.

Trump associate The case involves Felix Sater, a Trump business associate who pleaded guilty in a major Mafialinked stock fraud scheme in the late 1990s and cooperated with the government. The AP reported in December that, even after learning about

Sater’s background, Trump tapped Sater for a business development role in 2010 that included the title of senior adviser to Trump, and had an office in the Trump Organization’s headquarters.

Criminal past Sater’s criminal past initially drew attention because of his ties to Trump, now the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination. But legal disputes over information related to Sater’s efforts to cooperate with the government — which was ongoing during the period he worked with Trump — also raises questions about court secrecy. “It seems to me that the government has a unique interest in keeping documents that relate to cooperation agreements under seal,” Cogan wrote in his order. “The government should speak and assert its position as to

whether the public’s right to access each document in the record is outweighed by a compelling need for secrecy.” Lawyers for the AP had asked the judge to justify sealing a fiveyear criminal contempt proceeding in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York. Not only did Cogan seal all documents in the contempt case, he also initially censored the AP’s request that he unseal his justification for being withheld from public view.

Times request When The New York Times asked the judge to make public the AP’s request to release the documents, that request was kept secret, too. Late last week, the judge also made requests by the AP and the newspaper publicly accessible — but ordered that the parties to the case file any responses to them under seal.

Briefly: World North Korea fires more missiles into nearby sea SEOUL, South Korea —North Korea fired five shortrange projectiles into the sea on Monday, Seoul officials said, in a continuation of weapon launches it has carried out in an apparent response to ongoing South Korea-U.S. military drills it sees as a provocation. The projectiles launched from a site near the northeastern city of Hamhung flew about 125 miles before landing in waters off North Korea’s east coast, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said. The firings came three days after Seoul said North Korea launched its first medium-range ballistic missile into the sea since early 2014, ignoring U.N. resolutions against such tests.

U.S. fails to respond to its proposals on a joint response, the Russian military will have to start unilaterally using force against those Rudskoi who break the cease-fire, starting today.

Belgians seek details

BRUSSELS — Authorities do not know the “exact path” taken by Salah Abdeslam, a key suspect in the Paris attacks who had crisscrossed Europe ahead of the Nov. 13 bloodbath then fled the scene, a Belgian federal prosecutor said Monday. Abdeslam, suspected as a logistician in the attacks that killed 130 people, was arrested Friday after a four-month manhunt in the same neighborhood in Brussels where he grew up. Russia warns U.S. Belgian prosecutor Frederic MOSCOW — Russia on Mon- Van Leeuw told reporters at a news conference in Brussels day warned the United States that it will start responding uni- that investigators hope to find out the details of Abdeslam’s laterally to cease-fire violations actions between the Nov. 13 in Syria if the U.S. refuses to attacks and his arrest, “if he coordinate rules of engagement decides to tell us.” against violators. Abdeslam, 26, was interLt. Gen. Sergei Rudskoi of the viewed three times Saturday. Russian General Staff said in a statement Monday that if the The Associated Press

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ALL

THE RAINBOW’S COLORS

Indian Hindu widows throw flower petals and colored powder during Holi celebrations at Gopinath temple, southeast of New Delhi, India, on Monday. A few years ago this joyful celebration was forbidden for Hindu widows. Widows were expected to live out their days in quiet worship, dressed only in white, their very presence considered inauspicious for all religious festivities.

Obama signs directive for new long-term drought goals BY DARLENE SUPERVILLE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama on Monday directed the federal government to come up with a less reactionary and more long-term strategy for dealing with drought. About 12.5 percent of the continental U.S. was experiencing drought as of mid-March, said Alice Hill, a key Obama aide on this issue. That translates into more than

Quick Read

39 million people, or about oneeighth of the U.S. population, living with drought in the lower 48 states, mostly in the West and with much of California suffering through its fifth year of dryness. Obama issued a presidential memorandum and separate action plan Monday that sets forth a series of goals for the federal government. They include sharing more information about drought risks with state, regional, tribal and local authorities, and improving

coordination of federal droughtrelated activities. Drought affects the food supply and infrastructure, hurts the economy and increases energy costs, according to the action plan. Drought conditions are also expected to become increasingly more severe due to climate change. Combating climate change is a top environmental priority — as well as a legacy issue — for Obama, who has tackled the matter on a variety of fronts.

. . . more news to start your day

West: Escalator fire forces Las Vegas hotel evacuation

Nation: Woman injured in Georgia college explosion

Nation: Drug cases decline but seriousness increases

World: Elephants kill five in two attacks in India

AN ESCALATOR FIRE sent smoke billowing into parts of Las Vegas’ glitzy Caesars Palace, sending three hotel workers to the hospital with smoke inhalation and leading to an evacuation early Monday, fire officials said. The Clark County Fire Department said the fire reported about 3:30 a.m. came from the top of the main escalators at the promenade level into the hotel’s convention center and spread to curtains. Caesars Entertainment Corporation spokeswoman Jennifer Forkish said 140 hotel rooms on three floors of the Palace Tower were evacuated for about two hours.

FIRE CREWS ARE investigating a report of an explosion at a college in suburban Atlanta, where a woman was seriously injured. Gwinnett County Fire Deputy Chief Charles Wells said it happened in a women’s restroom at Georgia Gwinnett College in Lawrenceville on Monday. Wells said in an email a woman who works for the school’s food service contractor suffered burns and “potential blast injuries.” Wells said she is expected to survive. Wells said all students are safe. Georgia Gwinnett College said on its website that Building A was closed for the rest of the day.

THE NUMBER OF federal drug prosecutions has dropped in the past year, but the cases that are pursued involve more serious crimes, the Justice Department announced Monday. Federal prosecutors also are charging drug criminals less frequently with crimes carrying rigid mandatory minimum punishments, Deputy Attorney General Sally Quillian Yates said in an interview with The Associated Press. Fewer than half of all drug cases in fiscal year 2015 involved charges with a mandatory minimum sentence, in which punishments are closely tied to drug quantity, according to new data from the U.S. Sentencing Commission.

ELEPHANTS KILLED FIVE people in two separate attacks in eastern India. One of the animals died after being tranquilized. Senior forest official Ajay Das said one man was killed Monday morning after he walked out of his home in a village in the Burdwan district of West Bengal state. The man encountered five elephants, and he was tossed in the air and trampled by one of them. In a separate encounter Sunday in another part of the district, four people were killed when three elephants attacked them. Das said one elephant in that group was tranquilized and later died.


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PeninsulaNorthwest

TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2016

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Tickets on sale for Peninsula College’s spring jazz concert

Clallam seeks panel for hearing examiner position

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

BY ROB OLLIKAINEN

PORT ANGELES — The Peninsula College Foundation will present an evening of jazz standards as “Tom & Linda Play Hoagy & Cole� during its spring concert Friday. Tickets are available for the 7 p.m. concert in Maier Hall on the Port Angeles Peninsula College campus at 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd. Tickets are $15. They are available online at Brown Paper Tickets or www.pencol.edu/ foundation. They will be sold at the door on a space-available basis. Seating is limited, and last year’s spring concert sold out.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Clallam County is seeking volunteers to help commissioners select the next hearing examiner. Hearing examiners adjudicate land-use matters in a quasi-judicial role, ruling on appeals of Department of Community Development decisions and a variety of permits. Five candidates have applied for the key position, but only one volunteer has stepped up to serve on an ad hoc interview committee that will assist the board in the selection. Commissioners since February have sought representatives of the environmental community, building industry and legal profession to serve on the screening committee.

Tom Varner Tom Varner is internationally known as a pioneer of jazz/improvised/new music on the French horn, Peninsula College said in a news release. His visit will be his first performance on the North Olympic Peninsula. Since relocating with his family to Seattle in 2005, Varner has performed at the Vancouver, Earshot and Bumbershoot festivals; the Seattle Art Museum; and the Royal Room, Tula’s and other clubs, while serving as assistant professor of jazz performance at Cornish College of the Arts. In addition to his 14 CDs as a leader/composer, he plays on more than 70 other CDs with such performers as Miles Davis and Quincy Jones, Steve Lacy and John Zorn. Varner won the 2000 Jazz Composers Alliance Composition Award and has been awarded residencies at the MacDowell, Civitella and Blue Mountain arts colonies. He has received grants from the NEA and the Doris Duke Foundation/Chamber Music America.

Just one volunteer Darlene Schanfald of the Sierra Club North Olympic Group was the only person to volunteer, County Administrator Jim Jones said. “We’ve already been told that nobody from the prosecutors office, DCD [Department of Community Development] or any of the judges would want to be on said committee because of potential conflicts,� Jones told commissioners in their Monday

Linda Dowdell Prior to life on the North Olympic Peninsula, pianist Linda Dowdell toured the world as musical director of Mikhail Baryshnikov’s White Oak Dance Project and the Mark Morris Dance Group. While living in New York City, she worked closely with Hoagy B. Carmichael, son of the songwriter, developing a musical using Carmichael songs, as well as producing concerts and tours of his music. Dowdell has known Varner since their childhood in Millburn, N.J., and, with bassist Ted Enderle, will perform interpretations of songs by two wellknown songwriters from Indiana: Hoagy Carmichael and Cole Porter. Dowdell and Enderle performed with Friends of Brubeck at last spring’s Peninsula College Foundation concert. “What a treat to play these wonderful songs with Tom and Ted,� Dowdell said. “Tom is so innovative and dexterous, a true master. The color the French horn brings is absolutely unique. “What fun to reinterpret these familiar songs, like ‘Star Dust’ and ‘Night and Day,’ with a new instrument and an old friend.� Proceeds from the event, sponsored by Wilder Auto, support students and programs at Peninsula College. For more information, contact Cheri Jessup, foundation specialist, at cjessup@pencol.edu.

YAKIMA — The Yakima County Sheriff’s Office said a couple who tried to hire a hit man to kill the woman’s exhusband has been arrested. The man and woman, who live in Richland, were booked into the Yakima County jail Saturday on suspicion of solicitation to commit murder. The sheriff’s office said

Try one more time “I definitely think it makes sense to try at least one more time,� Ozias said of the recruiting effort. “If that still doesn’t work then, OK, we’ll do something different.� No date has been set for the interviews with the five candidates, Human Resources Director Rich Sill said. Contracts with current Hearing Examiners Lauren Erickson and William Payne will expire at the end of May. Commissioners decided in January to hire a primary hearing examiner rather than continue a split rotation. Erickson and Payne have rotated hearings for a flat fee of $2,250 per case. The primary hearing examiner will operate under

BY MARTHA BELLISLE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

an unidentified person contacted law officers saying the man wanted to hire someone to kill the woman’s ex-husband, who lives in Vancouver.

Text message proof The Yakima HeraldRepublic said the sheriff’s office obtained text messages that backed up the informant’s story.

SEATTLE — An amputated foot, a fractured hand and a fingertip crushed so badly it had to be surgically removed were among the injuries suffered by workers at the Seattle tunnel project last year — injuries that resulted in about $700,000 in workers’ compensation claims. A review of worker safety records by The Associated Press shows the laborers, carpenters and engineers who remained on the job while the giant boring machine called Bertha was being fixed suffered sprained ankles, backs and elbows, scratched eyes, and burned arms and feet. The contractor was cited and fined twice in 2015 for safety violations, records show. Sixty of those injured workers filed workers’ comp claims — a rate almost as high as the 63 filed in 2014, but higher than the 42 in 2013 and 11 in 2012. Since 2012, 185 workers have filed injury claims that are expected to top $2.5 million, with $1.3 million in

medical costs, according to data from the Department of Labor and Industries, Division of Occupational Safety and Health. Laura Newborn, spokeswoman for the Washington State Department of Transportation, said the tunnel contractor logged more than 1.2 million hours of work in 2015. She said most of the workers’ compensation claims were for injuries that did not result in time away from work. “The safety of the traveling public, our employees and the workers on construction sites is WSDOT’s top priority,� Newborn said in an email. “We continue to work with Seattle Tunnel Partners to ensure that safety remains the highest priority.� Bertha was designed to build a double-decker traffic tunnel to replace the earthquake-damaged Alaskan Way Viaduct, but it didn’t move an inch in 2015 until the end of the year. It had barely started in January when the governor shut it down after a sinkhole appeared over the tunnel. Gov. Jay Inslee criticized

Kevin Tracy

Staff has developed a 10-point list of requirements from qualified providers. No commissioner objected to the request for proposals Monday. The selected content provider will host a library of county meetings with an unlimited storage capacity. Citizens will be able to view commissioner meetings, which occur at 9 a.m. Mondays and 10 a.m Tuesdays, at any time through a link on the county’s website. “It’s more about putting a product out there that the majority of the Clallam County citizens can access at their leisure, and not based on any kind of broadcast channel requirement or something like that,� said Allen Coleman, information systems specialist. The estimated cost to the county will be less than $12,000 per year. “I’m really excited to see how this works out,� Ozias said. “I think it’s going to be really excellent for our citizens.�

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

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flange beams that were strapped together “in a fashion that allowed them to be a trap for the signal person receiving the load,� the report said. State inspectors returned to the project in November after a worker lost the tip of his finger in another accident. In that case, a crane lowered a cage containing three men into the tunnel shaft and when they climbed out, one of the men put his hand in the “pinch point� of the door and closed it on his finger, according to the inspector’s report. The fingertip was crushed and had to be amputated. The worker returned to the job the next day on light duty. Inspectors went to the project site in June after receiving a complaint about welding fumes, according to another report. The complaint said the site had inadequate respirator protection when workers were welding, cutting or grinding. That exposed other workers to particulate matter and fumes, the complaint said.

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the contractor, Seattle Tunnel Partners, and said he had “great concerns about public safety� if the project went forward without knowing why it happened. The sinkhole and a tilting barge that dumped tunnel dirt into the bay and damaged a dock were not the only mishaps with the multi-billion dollar project. The 2015 injury claims ranged from thousands of dollars for cuts and eye injuries, to tens of thousands of dollars for sprains and dislocations, the data shows. The construction craft laborer who lost his foot after it was struck by a falling object had the highest claim to date: $515,525. The fractured hand, a $25,000 claim, led to an investigation by the regulatory agency and ultimately three safety citations and a $21,000 fine, according to records. The state inspector discovered the person who was supposed to oversee a 150ton crane and rigging crew was inside the tunnel “and nowhere near the crane,� the citation said. The crane carried two

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a three-year contract with the county. In other discussion from the work session, Community Development Director Mary Ellen Winborn volunteered to be Clallam County’s representative on the Port Angeles Regional Chamber of Commerce board. “It’s a very positive group of people, so I’m really excited to do that,� Winborn said. Jones has served as the county representative on the chamber board for the past 10 years. He was a Port Angeles School District representative for four years prior to that. Marc Abshire, new executive director of the Port Angeles Regional Chamber of Commerce, has said chamber by-laws limit terms to three years, Jones said. The chamber has reserved ex officio, non-voting positions for the county, city of Port Angeles, Port of Port Angeles and Olympic National Park. “It would be a refreshing change to have someone who’s not in the legislative body but on the community development side of things,� Chapman told Winborn. “You have my 100 percent support if you want to serve, if you would be willing to serve.� Next week, commissioners will consider a request for proposals for live-video

Injuries increase for Seattle’s tunnel project; $700K in claims

Couple arrested in murder-for-hire plot THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

work session. “So really, it’s up to you.� Commissioner Bill Peach suggested a representative of the county Planning Commission. “That would be a good compromise,� Board Chairman Mike Chapman said. “I think you could find somebody from that group.� Commissioner Mike Ozias said he would pitch the opportunity to members of the North Peninsula Building Association at their breakfast meeting today.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2016

A5

Former Fine Arts Center director, 66, dies BY ARWYN RICE

reflect on the life of Jake Seniuk, former executive director of the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center. He was a visionary, and a driving force in the success of the Fine Arts Center for more than 23 years,” the statement said.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Jake Seniuk, former longtime executive director of the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center, has died in Seattle. Seniuk, 66, was diagnosed with duodenal cancer in 2014, and was with his partner, Donna James of Seattle, until his death Friday.

Retired in 2012 He was director of the Fine Arts Center for 23 years, from 1989 until his retirement in 2012. He was curator for all the exhibits at the Fine Arts Center during his tenure, and in 2000, Seniuk established Webster’s Woods Art Park, an outdoor sculpture exhibition on a forested trail outside of the arts center building on East Lauridsen Boulevard.

‘Art Ranger’

Seniuk worked as program manager for Art in Public Places at ArtsWA, which acquires, places and cares for artwork in state-funded building projects statewide. “Jake leaves behind a vast legacy as an artist and arts supporter and our thoughts are with his friends and family,” the Washington State Arts Commission said Monday. The Washington State Art Collection contains several of his artworks, the commission noted. Seniuk’s lightbox display, “Ten Archetypes: Shadow: Select/Suspect Theodore Bundy/Joseph McCarthy,” was included in an exhibition at the The Washington Center for the Performing Arts in Olympia.

The board said Seniuk had a passion for fostering art’s role in the Port Angeles community and took on the role of administrator, fundraiser, curator and as the “Art Ranger,” leading tours of Webster’s Woods Art Park. “Port Angeles, the Olympic Peninsula, and the entire region will miss his energy, artistry, intelligence PENINSULA DAILY NEWS FILE and wit,” the statement Jake Seniuk is seen here in June 2012. ________ said. Seniuk’s influence was Reporter Arwyn Rice can be No information was While the Fine Arts Cen- a statement Monday also felt statewide. reached at 360-452-2345, ext. available Monday regard- ter was closed Monday, its regarding his death. Before he was hired to 56250, or at arice@peninsuladaily ing a memorial for Seniuk. board of directors released “With deep gratitude we manage the arts center, news.com.

Briefly . . . Mountlake Terrace culvert in February died of asphyxia due to a plastic bag wrapped over her head and freshwater drowning. The Snohomish County Medical Examiner said SEQUIM — The next Monday the manner of Sequim School District lis- 53-year-old Cheryl DeBotening event will be held er’s death remains undetoday at 4 p.m. in the termined. Sequim High School DeBoer was reported library, 601 N. Sequim Ave. missing Feb. 8 after she This public event, orga- failed to show up at work nized by district officals to at Fred Hutchinson Cancer let stakeholders voice Research Center. thoughts on last February’s Police say she had school facilities bond elecplanned to meet a friend at tion, is expected to last one a park and ride but later hour. texted to say she’d take a “This is not meant to be a bus instead. Her car was Q&A session, a presentation found near the transit cenor a debate. This is meant ter in Mountlake Terrace. only to offer Sequim commuPolice said a group of nity members the opportuvolunteers found DeBoer’s nity to give their opinion,” body Feb. 14 in a large, Superintendent Gary Neal grassy area about a mile said in a news release. and a half southeast of Attendees will have the where DeBoer’s vehicle was opportunity to address located. Neal and school board repPolice are investigating resentatives with their the death as a homicide. remarks. Written comments will Clinton campaign also be accepted. Paper SPOKANE — Former forms will be provided as President Bill Clinton told needed. a crowd in Spokane that “What we hope to his wife, Hillary Clinton, achieve with these listening events is to gather com- would expand access to colmunity input regarding the lege education if she were elected president. last school construction Bill Clinton was cambond,” Neal said. paigning in Spokane and “The input will be Vancouver, Wash., on Monrecorded, categorized and made available on the Dis- day in the run up to Washington’s Democratic cautrict’s website. This inforcuses this Saturday. mation will be used to At Spokane Falls Comguide our future planning.” munity College, Bill ClinListening events are ton said Hillary Clinton also scheduled for Thursdoesn’t believe college day at 6 p.m. and Saturday should be free for everyone at 11 a.m., both in the but she would widen grant Sequim High School programs, raise taxes on library. A session was also the wealthy to help pay for held last Saturday. college and make college For more information, loans a lot more like mortphone 360-582-3264. gages, bundled together and payable over a speciCause of death fied period of time at low MOUNTLAKE TERinterest. RACE — Officials say a Peninsula Daily News woman found dead in a and The Associated Press

Public input on Sequim bond sought

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

EXPLORING

DIFFERENT CULTURES

Peninsula College student Anne Gibb of Joyce looks over informational displays explaining cultural aspects of native tribes of the Olympic Peninsula and Vancouver Island during the college’s second-annual Culture Fair on Friday in the Pirate Union Building on the college’s Port Angeles campus. The fair included guest artists demonstrating native crafts and other presentations on tribal history.

Renton apartment shooting on Sunday leaves 1 dead, 1 injured THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE — Authorities say a shooting at a Renton apartment complex has left one man dead and another critically injured. The Seattle Times reported that police say an

armed intruder had broken into an apartment and killed a man inside Sunday. A woman in the apartment grabbed her gun and fired back at the intruder, wounding him. Officers had arrived to

All three people involved, find the intruder injured in the parking lot. who have not yet been identified, appear to have known Critical condition each other. Police say the woman in Police say he underwent surgery for his wounds at a the apartment is not facing hospital where he remained any charges for the shootin critical condition. ing.

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A6

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TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2016 — (C)

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Politics: Running as Democrats CONTINUED FROM A1 advocate for those who need it most.” “It’s an opportunity to keep working on creating Both Democrats family wage jobs, champiBoth are running as oning our public schools Democrats. and working to keep Chapman, 52, began his improving the quality of life political career as a Repubfor every resident on the lican, changed to indepenPeninsula.” Chapman in his release dent and joined the Clallam said: “I’m basing my cam- County Democrats in paign around creating more November. Van De Wege currently opportunities and support for the communities, fami- serves as majority whip lies and businesses of the with the House Democratic Caucus, a position he has Olympic Peninsula.” “I am running for the held since 2010. He curstate House of Representa- rently serves on the Agritives to be a passionate culture and Natural

Resource Committee, Health Care Committee, Rules Committee and is a member of the Commerce and Gaming Committee. Van De Wege is a lieutenant with the Clallam County Fire District No. 3 and lives in Sequim with his wife Jennifer, a high school teacher. They have two children, Allison and Jackson. Prior to his election as Clallam County commissioner, Chapman served as a local law enforcement officer and U.S. Customs inspector. In that position, he is credited with appre-

hending terrorist Ahmed Ressam in 1999 and thwarting Ressam’s plan to bomb Los Angeles. Chapman and his wife of 27 years, Bobbi, reside in Port Angeles and have two sons, Larsson and Anders. Candidate filing takes place from May 9 to May 13. The top two vote recipients for each office in the Aug. 2 primary election will advance to the Nov. 8 general election.

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

Trial: Auditor’s office examination CONTINUED FROM A1

ALANA LINDEROTH/OLYMPIC PENINSULA NEWS GROUP

First-time lavender weekend-goers, Amie Stegall and her daughter Daisy, traveled from Yelm to pick lavender at Blackberry Forest Farm during Sequim’s festival two years ago.

Fest: Event set

to run July 15 to 17 in Sequim CONTINUED FROM A1 Skagit Valley Tulip Festival, Portland Rose Festival “The fragrant Sequim and Daffodil Festival. Lavender Festival celeThis year’s event, which brates the Lavender Capi- runs July 15-17 for its 20th tal of North America with a year with free farm tours range of events, including farm tours, street fair, kids and its street fair, is touted activities, live music and all as the largest lavender things lavender, including event in North America. To vote for Sequim Lavinfused libations.” The event is running ender Weekend, go to against other Pacific North- http://tinyurl.com/PDNwest attractions like the 10bestlavender.

It was initiated after the state Auditor’s Office had already determined no intentional wrongdoing or misappropriation was committed by any city employees. “Any irregularities or inconsistencies appear to be the result of interpretations that varied over time or gaps in city policies,” according to the Auditor’s Office report.

$37,595 in cash-outs The report concluded that the city paid out a total of $37,595 in cash-outs — most of which was to Ziomkowski — that exceeded what was allowed under city policy, according to court records. The city ordered the State Patrol investigation despite agreeing with the findings of the Auditor’s Office — conduct Ziomkowski said showed a pattern of discrimination against her. “When considered in totality, a rational trier of

he discrimination included Myers using the term “blondie,” telling her or other employees they looked nice or that he liked their outfits, and that he would come too close to her or hug her, Ragonesi said, referring to court records.

T

fact could reasonably find that the WSP referral was part and parcel to a pattern of discrimination over the course of time,” then Superior Court Judge George L. Wood said in an Aug. 4, 2014 ruling on a motion to strike claims in the lawsuit — though adding that the law relative to the case “is not crystal clear.”

551 hours of leave Ragonesi said Ziomkowski knowingly cashed out of 551 hours of leave — dramatically increasing withdrawals in 2009-2011 — that not only exceeded city policy but was not comparable, for example, to Gallagher asking for 60 hours of cash-out that he sought on Dec. 22, 2006, a week before he was eligible

or other employees they looked nice or that he liked their outfits, and that he would come too close to her or hug her, Ragonesi said, referring to court records. Ziomkowski said Gallagher told her to “cool off” while they were discussing a telecommunications utility fund, and that Coons called a former City Clerk a “glorified secretary” and said a female city customer service clerk had become “hysterical” over attributing an asthma attack to the air quality in City Hall. “Plaintiff stated she is not alleging these comments are inappropriate, ‘like woman/man.’ but just that they were inappropriate,” Ragonesi said. “Plaintiff did not provide any dates when these comments were made. “They were made some time during the 24 years she worked at the City.”

to do so. Ziomkowski’s actions were “based on her incorrect assumption there was a policy somewhere that allowed this,” Ragonesi said. “She failed to make sure there was a City policy that allowed her to cash out an unlimited number of leave hours into her retirement funds.” Ragonesi said Ziomkowski alleged age and sex discrimination after her termination, Ragonesi said. “In all of her written responses to Mr. Myers regarding the leave cashout issue, Plaintiff never ________ once complained of discrimination,” Ragonesi said. Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb The discrimination can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. included Myers using the 55650, or at pgottlieb@peninsuladaily term “blondie,” telling her news.com.

Jailed PT teacher is held on $150K bond BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — A Superior Court judge on Monday imposed a $150,000 bond on a Port Townsend High School teacher who allegedly threatened the school’s principal. “The alleged threat was extraordinary,” Jefferson County Superior Court Judge Keith Harper told defendant James Keith Miller, 52, on Monday. “I am not sure you will follow the court’s orders [for no contact].” Miller is being held for investigation of one count of burglary in the second degree and one count of harassment, threats to kill. Under Washington RCWs, burglary is defined as entering a property or structure with the intent to commit a crime and does not indicate intent for theft. He is scheduled for arraignment at 8:30 a.m. Friday in Jefferson County

Superior Court, 1820 Jefferson St. Miller, a mathematics teacher who is now on paid administra- Miller tive leave, is accused of threatening to kill principal Carrie Ehrhardt during a Friday breakfast meeting at the Bayview Restaurant. The two met to discuss his future with the district. The meeting also included Miller’s union representative.

‘Security reasons’ Port Townsend Police Officer Jeremy Vergin was also in the restaurant in plainclothes “for security reasons,” according to the probable cause statement, but he did not hear the conversation. According to the statement, Miller told Ehrhardt 541275754

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she was “the [expletive] reason that I am not able to see my children and I’m going to [expletive] kill you.” At that time, Ehrhardt completed a protection order application against Miller “based on her concern this is a very real threat,” according to the statement. Hours after the meeting, Miller drove to the high school campus where he

entered his former classroom where students were present. Miller began removing personal items from the wall, appeared to be talking on his cellphone, described personal details of his life to students and started asking the teenagers if anyone had been talking about him since he was placed on leave earlier in the year, according to police.

Vergin, along with Sgt. Garin Williams, arrived at the classroom and took Miller into custody.

Recomended bond Deputy Prosecutor Julian St. Marie recommended $150,000 bond Monday while public defender Richard Davies, acting on Miller’s behalf, asked that he be released

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Port Townsend High School Vice Principal Scott Wilson, Principal Carrie Ehrhardt and Port Townsend Police Officer Jeremy Vergin visited Jefferson County Superior Court on Monday, watching the video appearance of teacher James Miller, who is accused of threatening Ehrhardt.

on his own recognizance. Davies is a public defender but had not been formally retained. Miller made his initial court appearance through a video link from the jail which caused some difficulty as he could not adequately hear or see the proceedings, he said repeatedly. At various times, he said that Jail Superintendent Steve Richmond “is not treating me kindly” and that radios in the jail were making it impossible for him to hear. In an effort to hear, Miller leaned forward and pushed the microphones closer to the speaker which caused an echo effect in the courtroom. On two occasions, Miller interrupted the proceedings and shouted that he could not hear; Harper told him to “keep quiet.” Davies said that Miller should not be penalized for his outbursts. “We have used video to make it easier for law enforcement but it has problems,” Davies said. “I don’t think the court should hold it against him if he wants what he is constitutionally entitled to — to see and hear what’s going on.” Miller was being held in Jefferson County Jail as of Monday.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, March 22, 2016 PAGE

A7

Forks auction nets $70,000 JULIO GARCIA, WHO is graduating from Forks High School this June, was just one of many students who worked all weekend at the 52nd annual Quillayute Valley Scholarship Auction in the Forks High School commons. Garcia said WEST END he wants to apply for NEIGHBOR money raised from the aucZorina tion to participate in PeninBarker sula College’s welding program. “Depending on how much we sell, the more money we have available to us to help us pay for school,” he said while handing off an auctioned painting. Garcia numbered items and assisted Cole Johnson, another senior, who took photos for www. searchforks.com/qvsa. It was essential for people watching online so they could call on the telephone and place bids for items like the wetsuit he was photographing. By noon Sunday, the auction raised more than $40,000. A majority of bigger-ticket items were still to come in the afternoon — such as the 2002 Hyundai Accent donated by Wilder Auto Center in Port Angeles. The two-day event raised $70,146.63 donations to surpass the gaol of $57,000. Parent and auctioneer Josh Goakey used funds from the auction 21 years ago to help pay his way to Wyoming Technical Institute. His own daughters will be seniors next year. The auditorium was filled with people and families of all ages. At the front of the room was a giant screen that had displays of the bidding sheets for the 12 items up for bid. By weekend’s end, around 1,500 items moved across that screen, Qullayute Valley schools Superintendant Diana Reaume said.

ZORINA BARKER

Parents of high school seniors who worked a food booth Sunday include, in the back from left, Candace Germeau, Becky Hamlin, Tim Brown, Shar Possinger, Kathy Coburn, Shelli Leons, Shane Pegram, Nicole Johnson, and Jason and Roxann Bennett. In the front row from left are Jeanna Snell, Lori Capp, Jen Adams and Heather Engeseth. The group posed together near the Spartan statue of the Forks High School commons last weekend during the 52nd annual Quillayute Valley Scholarship Auction. In a busy corner of the room, Ron Hurn entered details of each item after its bidding session closed. Wooden models made and donated by the inmates of Olympic Corrections Center always fetch high prices, such as the log truck that sold for $600 or the classic car that brought in $1,000. Hurn’s wife, Tracy, leaned over his shoulder and said an apple pie made by Rene Engeseth had sold earlier for $150. Tracy, joined at the table by her sister, Tina Hagen, recorded donation and sale information. The sisters worked the auction in the mid-’80s when they were in school. The event, Tracy said, is “like a big community gathering or a

family reunion.” Patti Holz comes out to Forks from Mount Vernon each year to participate in the auction. She usually spends 12 hours a day recording item information. Holz has been a board member for 23 years for the Quillayute Valley School District Scholarship Fund Inc. “This is a social gathering that gives me the opportunity to see people I don’t see otherwise,” she said. Over at the cashier table sat Edith Henry. Behind her were piles of sold inventory. “My husband, Bob Henry, was the very first recipient of funds from the auction in 1964,” Henry recalled. “That allowed him to attend

Pacific Lutheran University.” Henry returned to Forks in 1978 as the town dentist. Joe Soja was at another laptop monitoring the stream via Skype to Forks 1490 AM. Businesses including Forks Outfitters broadcast the auction over their speaker systems. Roxann Bennett and Kathy Coburn were selling food, donated by family and friends, at the senior parent food booth. Proceeds went to Senior Safe Night, which is separate from the auction fund. The senior parent group takes in between $4,000 and $7,000 each year. Thao Truong made delicious chow mein. This also was the first year

the booth offered ceviche, a traditional Mexican appetizer. Shelli Leons was selling $1 raffle tickets for a variety of baskets that included one with a weekend stay at Kalaloch Lodge. “This is the biggest community event and I just like being here,” she said.

________ 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 zorinaarker81@ gmail.com, or phone her at 360327-3702. West End Neighbor appears every other Tuesday. Her next column will be April 5.

Learning lessons from outrage THERE IS SO much we have learned from this painful election season and the rise of a demagogic real estate developer. We have learned that a Charles human brandBlow ing machine who grew up in the shadows and spotlight of New York City’s cutthroat media knows intuitively how to exploit that media. We have learned that too many in the media are ever so willing to be exploited if the exploitation is mutual and money is to be made. We have learned what conditions make the prime environment for the rise of a demagogue: disaffection, demographic change, the demise of hope and opportunity and the dislocation of traditional power and privilege from automatic inheritance of prosperity. We have seen that divisive, dangerous leaders don’t necessarily rise because of stirring oration or a clear and compelling vision.

They can be quirky, disarming and idiosyncratic, with a vague, hollow message that says little even as it promises much. We have learned the dangers of doubting the depravity and desperation of some who would follow such a man despite, or possibly even because of, his offensive rhetoric and outrageous policies. We have learned just how much ugliness exists in this country, and what it looks like when it finds a voice, a leader and a reason to gather and unite. We have learned that the Republican establishment has no clue who the Republican base is anymore, or if they do, they thought wrongly that they could control them by feeding them crumbs of obstruction and vague aspirationalism from their table of excess. In fact, that base has been gorging itself on fear and anger, vileness and the possibility of violence. As Rolling Stone reported last week in the following exchange with the Republican pollster Frank Luntz: “Republicans didn’t listen,” says Luntz. “They didn’t hear the anger because they spent too much time in Washington and

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not enough in the rest of America. “The Republican finance people, the donor class, they didn’t see it and didn’t hear it, and by the time they did, it was too late.” Luntz compared it to a horror film: “You know something’s out there, but you don’t see it until you’re getting stabbed.” When you compare your own base to the killer in a slasher flick, you know you have a problem. We have learned what it looks like when a party eventually wakes up to itself being overtaken and undone and throws itself into convulsions to rescue itself from a creature of its own creation. As The New York Times reported Saturday, Republican leaders adamantly opposed to their own front-runner’s candidacy “are preparing a 100-day campaign to deny him the presidential nomination” with a “delegate-by-delegate lobbying effort” that would cast him as “a calamitous choice for the general election.” The article continued, saying that “an effort to block him would rely on an array of desperation measures, the political equivalent of guerrilla fighting.” It’s war.

But for all those looking on in horror and disbelief, I hope that we have learned something else, something great. I hope that we learn to constantly center the ideal at that core of the current offense: enlightenment, equality and idealism. I hope that we learn that progress is not an unfailingly upward, inexorably positive movement, but an awkward and clumsy dance in which we lurch forward three steps and stumble back two. I hope we learn that citizenship and comfort in a free society is not free. It comes at a cost. You must work to grow and maintain our liberty, because there are forces that would undo and dismantle those liberties. We must stay awake and engaged, informed and involved if we are to continue to move out of darkness and into light. I hope we learn that if one is not actively working to dismantle oppressive forces and inclinations in oneself and in society, one’s silence and inaction provide support for their continuation and prosperity. Inertia is no respecter of ideology. It can move right just as eas-

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

ily as it can move left. It can move toward the better just as easily as toward the worse. There is no moment in a republic when there is a lull in the fight. The battles always rage. The enemy stays busy. Nothing that is won stays won without vigilant protection. We, as a country, again find ourselves standing at the precipice, staring into the darkness of the void, and we must fight our way back from it. And this is not just about being against the real estate developer. It’s more. It’s about being for something: nobility, honor and character, righteousness, civility and togetherness. We have to decide who we are as a country, not as an opposition force but as a positive, proactive force, and use all levers of power to which we have access to bring our vision of America into reality. The rise of the real estate developer has drawn into sharp relief the idea that doing nothing and expecting to preserve or extend progress isn’t an option.

________ Charles Blow is a columnist for The New York Times.

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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PeninsulaNorthwest

TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2016

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Man free after nearly 3 decades in prison BY NINA SHAPIRO THE SEATTLE TIMES

SEATTLE — On his first night of freedom, after COAST GUARD AIR STATION/SECTOR FIELD OFFICE PORT ANGELES nearly 30 years in prison, Barry Massey went to Walmart. LAZE SINKS BOATS IN ORT RCHARD He had heard about its vastness, its array of An aerial photo taken by Port Angeles Coast Guard personnel choices, its round-the-clock late Sunday shows the Port Orchard Yacht Club marina lined hours. He walked the aisles, with a containment boom after a fire destroyed 10 structures and marveling, but wanted sank six recreational boats earlier that day. The Associated Press more time to carefully consaid no injuries were reported in the fire. Fire crews were able to sider. A few days later, he prevent the flames from reaching 38 vessels and boathouses. knew what to buy: a bike. Personnel from local, state and federal agencies had worked to He took it out to the clean up the marina and mitigate the pollution in the water. Walmart parking lot, and rode — fast. “Best thing ever,” he recalled. “I felt literally like a kid again.” That’s what he was — a kid — when he went to prison for a robbery-turnedmurder in which he participated at age 13. Tried as an adult, he was THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cemetery workers fol- munity for holding a cerethe youngest person in the lowed a plot map to where mony to honor the gent who country, at 14, sentenced to SEATTLE — A 1906 Fredreksen was recorded to really deserves it.” life without parole. Medal of Honor recipient rest. They dug down about 4 The whereabouts of 376 of who was quietly buried in inches and uncovered a tem- 3,471 Medal of Honor recipiMandatory sentence Seattle more than 60 years porary marker. It read “E. ents remain unknown. ago without ceremony or a Fredreksen, 1867-1950.” Fredreksen was born in It was a mandatory senheadstone will receive full Fredreksen and his Copenhagen in 1867, immi- tence for aggravated murmilitary honors at a grave- gravesite will be recognized grated to the United States der — one that in 2012 was side service Friday. and honored at a 2 p.m. cer- when he was 17 and enlisted called into question by the Emil Fredreksen was one emony that is open to the in the U.S. Navy in 1897. U.S. Supreme Court. of 11 men awarded the public. He served on more than Mandatory life senMedal of Honor for their Ronald Roberts, funeral 20 ships, in roles as boiler- tences, the justices ruled in actions aboard the gunboat honors program manager for maker, fireman and quarter- Miller v. Alabama, constiUSS Bennington in San Navy Region Northwest, will master. His highest rank was tuted cruel and unusual Diego in 1905. oversee the ceremonies, chief watertender, which was punishment for juveniles, The Danish immigrant which will include a rifle responsible for tending to ignoring their “immaturity, died in 1950 at the U.S. detail, flag pole team, bugler fires and boilers in a ship’s impetuosity, and failure to Marine Hospital in Seattle. and chaplain. engine room. appreciate risks and conseWith no known next of kin, Fredreksen received a quences.” Once the Medal of Honor he was buried at Evergreen Historical Society has located rare peacetime Medal of An earthquake in the Washelli Memorial Park in recipients, it typically buys a Honor for his actions when a realm of juvenile justice, Seattle, The Kitsap Sun marker. But in this case, boiler exploded on the USS the ruling prompted a reported. Johnston said it wasn’t nec- Bennington. change of state law that He was forgotten until essary because the cemetery Of the 179 men aboard, went even further — allowJanuary when Ray Johnston, agreed to get a marker and 66 died and 46 were seri- ing more than 200 prisona member of the Medal of have a ceremony. ously wounded in the Navy’s ers, including those senHonor Historical Society, “My job’s done, I located worst peacetime disaster. tenced as juveniles to more tracked down Fredreksen’s him,” Johnston said of Fredreksen was commended than 20 years, to apply for for “extraordinary heroism release. location through pension Fredreksen. “The kudos go to the com- displayed in the line of duty.” records. Massey’s case was the first to be heard by the state Indeterminate Sentence Review Board. On Feb. 16, he walked out of the Monroe Correctional Complex to a world he had never seen as an adult. Prison, he said, “is all I knew. I knew nothing about being free anymore.” A 6-foot, 210-pound 42-year-old, Massey had never driven a car, drunk alcohol or used public trans-

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Next steps A week into freedom, wearing a black shirt and one of the first pairs of jeans he had ever picked out for himself, Massey said he was going to take some time figuring out his next steps. His wife, now an investigator with the Snohomish County Office of Public Defense, took an extended leave to be with him.

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portation other than a school bus. He’s had to get up to speed not only on a wealth of societal changes, but on what it means to live on the outside as a grown man with a wife and child. In a 2009 prison ceremony, Massey married a woman he met 12 years earlier, while he was an inmate at Monroe and she was a corrections officer. Rhonda Massey’s now 15-year-old daughter from a previous relationship considers Massey her dad, the couple say, seated side by side one afternoon in the Monroe house they now share. For many of Massey’s supporters — including Richard Mitchell, former general counsel to Gov. Chris Gregoire, and criminal justice reformers nationwide — his release offered cause for celebration. His attorney, Maureen Devlin, said it symbolized “a recognition that we don’t give up on children — ever. They can change.” And yet, she acknowledged, “this isn’t a day of celebration for everyone.” The family of Paul Wang, the Steilacoom marina store owner shot twice and stabbed repeatedly in the 1987 robbery, “has been through hell.” The family and Pierce County Prosecutor Mark Lindquist have consistently opposed Massey’s release. “I lost my childhood too,” Elissa Wang, the slain store owner’s daughter, wrote in a letter read aloud at a 2006 clemency hearing for Massey. “I am very, very remorseful,” Massey said. “I’m just going to make my actions speak for me rather than saying it again and again.”

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He was, by all accounts, unusually immature. Psychologists who examined Massey before sentencing assessed his mental age as 9.9. He was afraid of the dark and couldn’t sort objects by color or shape. When he arrived in prison, Massey said, officials “didn’t know what to do with me.” Scared but scrappy, he got into fights. “I had a bad attitude,” he acknowledged, and periodically landed in solitary confinement because of it. He turned himself around, he said, after realizing the toll that was taking on his mom, who visited regularly. Older inmates also helped set him straight, in part by introducing him to books. To get in more reading time and avoid temptation, he kept his personal TV under his bunk for months at a time. “I was like, ‘Man: this is Super Bowl weekend!’” recalled one of his closest friends in prison, Gerald Hankerson, now president of the Seattle King County NAACP. Massey said he read fantasy, taking note of who was the hero and who was the villain, and why. “It made me realize I had to get my moral compass together,” he said. He moved on to literature, biography and philosophy, earning his GED along the way. “The Count of Monte Cristo” was a favorite, he said, teaching him that, like the book’s hero, he could look upon his cell as a source of sustenance. Strange as it sounds, he talks about prison as providing him with “opportunities” he wouldn’t have had growing up in his tough Tacoma neighborhood. The biggest opportunity, he said, was time — to read, think and exercise. Lifting weights became another consuming passion. “At some point, I found me,” he said.

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Whether he goes back to school or looks for a job, he said, he wants to volunteer with youth programs, as he did in prison as part of a group of inmates who talked to visiting teenagers. The message he said he most wants to convey: “that peer pressure is real.” Massey said he was seeking the approval of then-15-year-old Michael Harris when he became a partner in crime, first sneaking into the home of an elderly woman and robbing her, and then holding up Wang. Massey has long said he did not take part in the violence, although that remains in dispute. Whoever did the actual killing, the boys afterward cleaned out the cash register and grabbed fishing rods and candy. “I didn’t need anything,” Massey allowed, explaining that his mother, who worked for a custodial service run by his stepdad, provided amply for him. “It’s difficult for me to go back to that 13-year-old boy,” he added. “I’m not him anymore.”

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, March 22, 2016 SECTION

CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, BUSINESS, WEATHER In this section

B Mariners

All-Peninsula Football Offensive MVP

Roster battles will soon heat up BY BOB DUTTON MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

PEORIA, Ariz. — The spring calendar shows an open date today for the Seattle Mariners in their 33-game Cactus League schedule. It’s what comes next that matters most. “For our competitions in camp,” manager Scott Servais said, “it is crunch time. The fifth starter spot. Where we’re at at first base. Backup catcher, that’s a compeServais tition there.” And the bullpen. Don’t forget the bullpen. Even with the herd of relief candidates thinning notably in recent days, there’s still at least one spot still available, probably for a righthander, in the seven-man unit.

STEVE MULLENSKY/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Port Townsend’s David Sua gets pushed out of bounds after picking up a first down during the Redhawks’ postseason victory over Bellevue Christian. In his only season starting at quarterback, Sua led Port Townsend in rushing and passing.

Brantly catching up That there is competition at backup catcher rates as a mild surprise and underscores how quickly Rob Brantly made an impression after being acquired March 12 in a waiver claim from the Chicago White Sox. “The reports coming in were that he was an offensive player,” Servais said, “that he had success at the minor-league levels with the bat. Defensively, he’s been better [than expected]. “He’s made a little adjustment with his throwing. Just a minor tweak that Dan Wilson and I threw at him, and he took it and ran with it. “I like the player. I like what he brings. It makes it interesting for us. Another option.” The Mariners initially viewed Brantly as spring depth in the event of an injury to either starter Chris Iannetta or projected backup Steve Clevenger. If the latter two remained healthy, they’d try to retain Brantly by sneaking him through waivers. Not anymore; Brantly has a chance to win a job. “Both of those guys are out of options,” Servias said, “so you have to make your choice.” Clevenger has seemingly done nothing to jeopardize his status. His defense has also been better than anticipated, and he drew high marks Saturday from Servias for his handling of Felix Hernandez. “He had a lot of challenging balls to block,” Servais said. TURN

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M’s survive Maeda, beat Dodgers 6-3 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Kenta Maeda retired 14 of 15 batters but it wasn’t enough for the Los Angeles Dodgers, who dropped a 6-3 decision to the Seattle Mariners on Monday. Nelson Cruz put the Mariners on top with a three-run homer off Dodgers left-hander Luis Avilan in the sixth. Maeda allowed four hits over five innings, including a double and two singles to the first three batters he faced. He finished with two earned runs allowed and five strikeouts. In a duel of starters from Japan, Maeda had the advantage over Hisashi Iwakuma, who worked 4 1/3 innings and gave up three runs on eight hits. Justin Turner hit his first home run of the spring off Iwakuma in the first. Turner also had a pair of doubles.

Commanding respect PT quarterback Sua is all-area offensive MVP BY MICHAEL CARMAN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — The seeds of the Port Townsend football team’s run to a 10-1 record and the school’s first state playoff appearance in 11 years were planted well before the season started. Forward momentum began to build when head coach Nick Snyder entrusted senior David Sua with the reins of the team’s offense as the starting quarterback. “I decided to go with the guy

who I thought was the best leader,” Snyder said. “He never made me question that decision. He immediately stepped up, started organizing 7-on-7 workouts without the coaches, he’d follow up on guys and make sure they’d put in their work in the weight room or running. “When we got to football camp last summer, and after people got to see him lead the team, I had other coaches coming up and saying they’d love to have a player that could command as much respect and

attention as David Sua.” Sua’s play on the field garnered a similarly high level of respect and attention from opponents. He was voted the Olympic League 1A MVP, splitting time at quarterback and running back while leading Port Townsend to a second-straight league title and an undefeated regular season. Sua completed 53 of 95 passes for 673 yards and five touchdowns and three interceptions this season. He also led the Redhawks with 738 yards rushing and seven rushing touchdowns on 81 carries. The Redhawks’ offense also improved its scoring average by 10 points from 2014, putting up 45 points per game. Sua’s performance has

ALSO . . . ■ Complete All-Peninsula football offensive team/B3

earned him the All-Peninsula Football Offensive MVP, as determined by a poll of area coaches and the Peninsula Daily News sports staff. “I came into the season thinking we wouldn’t be as strong offensively because we lost guys, we lost big linemen,” Sua said. “But I knew we were going to be fast. I thought we’d lose a lot of strength. But that didn’t change a bit. I’d say this was the best group I was able to play with — our linemen were extremely intelligent in everything we did.” TURN

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Bulldogs playing like champs Gonzaga looks unbeatable in NCAA Tourney THERE IS SOMETHING I don’t understand about the Gonzaga basketball team. It has to do with the second number I keep seeing when the Bulldogs’ record is put in parentheses. You know, John like this: Gonzaga (28- McGrath 7). These guys have lost seven times? Seriously? How did that happen? During the Zags’ 40-minute floor show Saturday in Denver, where they drove at will on Utah, dominated both ends of the boards and played defense with the kind of tenacity that drains an opponent’s energy before extinguishing its spirit, Gonzaga looked unbeatable. Which brings me back to that goofy number — the “7” to the right of the “28” — insisting the Zags are not unbeatable. They lost to Texas A&M and

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Gonzaga’s Domantas Sabonis, left, outplayed Utah’s ballyhooed center Jakob Poeltl, right, during the Bulldogs’ 82-59 second-round pounding of the Utes on Saturday. BYU by a point, lost to Arizona and UCLA by five points, lost to SMU by nine, lost twice to Saint Mary’s. That happened. The record isn’t a mirage. As recently as two weeks ago, Gonzaga’s chances at qualifying for an 18th consecutive NCAA tournament berth appeared to be no better than marginal.

It had to vanquish the regular-season defeat to BYU in the West Coast Conference semifinals, then get past Saint Mary’s for the guaranteed invitation. Done and done, and the Zags keep doing. Sophomore forward Domantas Sabonis’ versatile shooting skills in the lane — he can go left or right, with either hand — are matched by a dexterity

to grab a rebound with either hand. Forward Kyle Wiltjer stands 6-foot-10 and can score from anywhere. Fellow senior Eric McClellan, a guard who transferred from Vanderbilt, is debunking any notion of the Zags’ supposed back-court vulnerability. TURN

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SportsRecreation

TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2016

Today’s

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

Scoreboard Calendar Today Baseball: Sequim at Coupeville, 3:30 p.m.; Montesano at Forks, 4 p.m. Boys Golf: North Kitsap at Port Angeles, 3 p.m.; Klahowya at Port Townsend, 3 p.m. Girls Golf: North Kitsap at Port Angeles, 3 p.m. Boys Soccer: Sequim at Coupeville, 6 p.m.; Forks at Elma, 7 p.m. Girls Tennis: Klahowya at Port Angeles, 4 p.m.; Sequim at Bremerton, 4 p.m.; Chimacum at North Kitsap, 4 p.m. Softball: Muckleshoot at Quilcene, 3:45 p.m.; Montesano at Forks, 4 p.m. Track and Field: Port Angeles, Klahowya at North Mason, 3:15 p.m.

Wednesday Baseball: Chimacum at Port Angeles, 4:15 p.m.; Sequim at Klahowya, 4:15 p.m.; Olympic at Port Townsend, 4:15 p.m. Boys Golf: Sequim at Chimacum, 3 p.m. Boys Soccer: North Kitsap at Port Angeles, 6:45 p.m. Softball: Chimacum at Port Angeles, 4 p.m.; Sequim at Klahowya, 4 p.m.; Olympic at Port Townsend, 4 p.m.

Thursday Baseball: Forks at Montesano, 4 p.m. Boys Golf: Port Angeles at Klahowya, 3 p.m.; Port Townsend at North Mason, 3 p.m. Boys Soccer: Tenino at Forks, 6 p.m.; North Mason at Port Townsend, 6:45 p.m. Girls Golf: Port Angeles at Klahowya, 3 p.m. Girls Tennis: Bremerton at Port Angeles, 4 p.m.; Sequim at Kingston, 4 p.m.; Chimacum at North Mason, 4 p.m. Softball: Seattle Lutheran at Quilcene, 3:45 p.m.; Forks at Montesano, 4 p.m. Track and Field: Sequim, Olympic, Coupeville at North Kitsap, 4 p.m.; Chimacum, Clallam Bay, Neah Bay, Bremerton, Kingston at Port Townsend, 3:15 p.m.; Forks, Montesano, Eatonville at Elma, 3:30 p.m.

College Basketball NCAA Men’s Tournament FIRST FOUR Tuesday, March 15 Florida Gulf Coast 96, Fairleigh Dickinson 65

Wichita State 70, Vanderbilt 50 Wednesday, March 16 Holy Cross 59, Southern 55 Michigan 67, Tulsa 62 EAST REGIONAL Round of 64 Thursday, March 17 North Carolina 83, Florida Gulf Coast 67 Providence 70, Southern Cal 69 Indiana 99, Chattanooga 74 Kentucky 85, Stony Brook 57 Friday, March 18 Stephen F. Austin 70, West Virginia 56 Notre Dame 70, Michigan 63 Wisconsin 47, Pittsburgh 43 Xavier 71, Weber State 53 Round of 32 Saturday, March 19 North Carolina 85, Providence 66 Indiana 73, Kentucky 67 Sunday, March 20 Notre Dame 76, Stephen F. Austin 75 Wisconsin 66, Xavier 63 At Wells Fargo Center - Philadelphia Regional Semifinals Friday, March 25 Wisconsin (22-12) vs. Notre Dame (23-11), 4:27 p.m. North Carolina (30-6) vs. Indiana (27-7), 6:40 p.m. Regional Championship Sunday, March 27 Semifinal winners SOUTH REGIONAL Round of 64 Thursday, March 17 Miami 79, Buffalo 72 Wichita State 65, Arizona 55 UConn 74, Colorado 67 Kansas 105, Austin Peay 79 Friday, March 18 Villanova 86, UNC Asheville 56 Iowa 72, Temple 70, OT Hawaii 77, California 66 Maryland 79, South Dakota State 74 Round of 32 Saturday, March 19 Miami 65, Wichita State 57 Kansas 73, UConn 61 Sunday, March 20 Villanova 87, Iowa 68 Maryland 73, Hawaii 60 At KFC YUM! Center - Louisville, Ky. Regional Semifinals Thursday, March 24 Villanova (31-5) vs. Miami (27-7), 4:10 p.m.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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

Kansas (32-4) vs. Maryland (27-8), 6:40 p.m. Regional Championship Saturday, March 26 Semifinal winners MIDWEST REGIONAL Round of 64 Thursday, March 17 Butler 71, Texas Tech 61 Virginia 81, Hampton 45 Iowa State 94, Iona 81 UALR 85, Purdue 83, 2OT Utah 80, Fresno State 69 Gonzaga 68, Seton Hall 52 Friday, March 18 Syracuse 70, Dayton 51 Middle Tennessee 90, Michigan State 81 Round of 32 Saturday, March 19 Virginia 77, Butler 69 Iowa State 78, UALR 61 Gonzaga 82, Utah 59 Sunday, March 20 Syracuse 75, Middle Tennessee 50 At The United Center - Chicago Regional Semifinals Friday, March 25 Virginia (28-7) vs. Iowa State (23-11), 4:10 p.m. Syracuse (21-13) vs. Gonzaga (28-7), 6:40 p.m. Regional Championship Sunday, March 27 Semifinal winners WEST REGIONAL Round of 64 Thursday, March 17 Duke 93, UNC Wilmington 85 Yale 79, Baylor 75 Friday, March 18 VCU 75, Oregon State 67 Oklahoma 82, Cal State Bakersfield 68 Texas A&M 92, Green Bay 65 Northern Iowa 75, Texas 72 Oregon 91, Holy Cross 52 Saint Joseph’s 78, Cincinnati 76 Round of 32 Saturday, March 19 Duke 71, Yale 64 Sunday, March 20 Oklahoma 85, VCU 81 Texas A&M 92, Northern Iowa 88, 2OT Oregon 69, Saint Joseph’s 64 At The Honda Center - Anaheim, Calif. Regional Semifinals Thursday, March 24 Oklahoma (27-7) vs. Texas A&M (28-8),

4:37 p.m. Oregon (30-6) vs. Duke (25-10), 6:40 p.m. Regional Championship Saturday, March 26 Semifinal winners FINAL FOUR At NRG Stadium - Houston National Semifinals Saturday, April 2 South champion vs. West champion East champion vs. Midwest champion National Championship Monday, April 4 Semifinal winners

Baseball Mariners 6, Dodgers 3 Monday’s Game Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi K.Marte ss 3 2 1 0 C.Crawford lf 3 0 0 0 T.Smith ss 0 0 0 0 Thompson lf 2 0 1 0 Sardinas cf 4 2 2 0 Puig rf 3120 Robertson cf 0 0 0 0 Noel pr-rf-cf 2 1 1 0 Cano 2b 4 0 1 2 Ju.Turner dh 3 1 3 3 Mariscal 2b 0 0 0 0 Guerrero dh 2 0 0 0 N.Cruz rf 4 1 1 3 Gonzalez 1b 2 0 1 0 O’Neill rf 0 0 0 0 Bellinger pr-1b 1 0 0 0 Lind 1b 3 1 1 1 Utley 3b 3000 J.Montero 1b 1 0 0 0 R.Segedin 3b 1 0 0 0 S.Romero lf 3 0 0 0 Grandal c 1000 E.Navarro lf 1 0 0 0 A.Barnes c 3 0 0 0 Clevenger c 3 0 0 0 Pederson cf 3 0 2 0 Brantly c 1 0 0 0 B.Hicks 2b 1010 Iannetta dh 3 0 1 0 Culberson ss 3 0 0 0 O’Malley 3b 3 0 0 0 Herrera 2b-rf 4 0 0 0 Totals 33 6 7 6 Totals 37 311 3 Seattle

Seattle 200 004 000—6 Los Angeles 101 010 000—3 DP—Seattle 1, Los Angeles 1. LOB—Seattle 1, Los Angeles 9. 2B—K.Marte (4), Ju.Turner 2 (4). HR—N.Cruz (2), Lind (2), Ju.Turner (1). SB—K.Marte (3), Sardinas (2), Puig (1), Noel (6). IP H R ER BB SO Seattle Iwakuma 41/3 8 3 3 1 3 Montgomery W,1-0 2/3 0 0 0 1 1 Zych 1 0 0 0 0 2 Roach S,1-1 3 3 0 0 0 3 Los Angeles Maeda 5 4 2 2 0 5 Avilan L,0-2 BS,1-1 1/3 3 4 4 1 0

SPORTS ON TV

Today 10:30 a.m. (26) ESPN Baseball, Spring Training, Tampa Bay Rays vs. Cuba (Live) 12:30 p.m. (319) PAC12 Beach Volleyball NCAA, Long Beach State vs. USC (Live) 2 p.m. (319) PAC12 Beach Volleyball NCAA, California vs. USC (Live) 4 p.m. (319) PAC12 (320) PAC12WA Track & Field NCAA, Jim Bush Invitational (Live) 4 p.m. (26) ESPN Basketball NCAA, Valparaiso vs. St. Mary’s, NIT Tournament, Second Round (Live) 5 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA, Houston Rockets at Oklahoma City Thunder (Live) 5:30 p.m. (304) NBCSN Hockey NHL, Los Angeles Kings at Minnesota Wild (Live) 6 p.m. (26) ESPN Basketball NCAA, BYU vs. Creighton, NIT Tournament, Second Round (Live) 7:30 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA, Memphis Grizzlies at Los Angeles Lakers (Live) 2/ Hatcher 0 0 0 1 3 0 Jansen 1 0 0 0 0 1 2/ 0 0 0 0 Howell 3 0 Y.Garcia 11/3 0 0 0 0 0 Umpires—Home, Roberto Ortiz; First, Jim Joyce; Second, Tripp Gibson; Third, Adam Hamari.

Transactions BASEBALL Major League Baseball MLB — Named Jorge Perez-Diaz as senior vice president and special counsel, litigation and international affairs. American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Optioned RHP Erik Johnson to Charlotte (IL). Reassigned RHP Tyler Danish and INF Steve Lombardozzi to their minor league camp. DETROIT TIGERS — Optioned RHP Jose Valdez to Toledo (IL). Assigned RHP Preston Guilmet, LHP Drake Britton, C Miguel Gonzalez, INFs Dominic Ficociello, Tommy Field and JaCoby Jones and OFs Mike Gerber and Jason Krizan to their minor league camp.

M’s: Decision at first base must come soon CONTINUED FROM B1 partner because Dae-Ho Lee has a late March opt-out clause in his “He not only blocked them, he minor-league contract. The choice initially seemed to kept them very close to him. We be between Lee and Jesus Monfeel this guy has improved. tero, who is out of options. But “When we first acquired him, both have been outplayed by SteI called him, and I said, ‘Hey, fen Romero, who has an option man, I know you can hit a little bit. You’ve got to catch.’ He’s been remaining. Keeping Romero, open to the things that Dan Wil- though, means the club risks losing the other two. son and I have thrown at him, The Mariners, by their but there still is competition.” actions, continue to indicate Luis Clevenger and Brantly each Sardinas is their choice over offer the benefit of being a lefthanded complement to Iannetta, Chris Taylor and Shawn O’Malley as the roster’s utility who is a right-handed hitter. infielder. Sardinas started MonWhoever wins the job figures to day in center field and will likely start 60-plus games; Iannetta has never started more than 105 draw future duty at first base. “Being a super super-utility games in his 10-year career. player,” Servais said, “is a plus. “If you have to pinch-run late Infield competition in the game [for Lind or the The Mariners are approaching other first baseman], you burn decision time regarding a righttwo players. You not only have to handed-hitting first baseman to use a pinch-runner, you have to put a guy in there at first.” serve as Adam Lind’s platoon

That won’t be necessary if Sardinas proves capable of playing first base.

Bullpen breakdown Six of the seven bullpen spots appear set with closer Steve Cishek and three other right-handers: Joaquin Benoit, Tony Zych and Joel Peralta; and two lefties in Vidal Nuno and Mike Montgomery. If lefty Charlie Furbush beats the odds and is ready by opening day, the Mariners — if they want to keep their preferred mix of five righties and two lefties — face a choice between Montgomery, who is out of options, and Nuno, who has one left. The Mariners could opt for Nathan Karns as their fifth righty reliever if he gets beaten out by lefty James Paxton in the competition for final rotation spot.

General manager Jerry Dipoto recently raised that possibility. “We want to take the 12 guys who give us the best chance win day after day,” Dipoto said. “We feel that, at any certain point, those two guys [Karns and Paxton] are going to be among our best 12.” The Mariners have four other right-handed bullpen candidates still in camp: Donn Roach, Casey Coleman, Mayckol Guaipe and Blake Parker. (Joe Wieland is still in camp but appears ticketed for the rotation at Triple-A Tacoma. Reliever Justin De Fratus returned last week on a minor-league deal but isn’t viewed as likely candidate at the start of the season.) Parker began the spring with five scoreless outings but raised concerns Saturday with a shaky performance when brought back after one day of rest. “He was down a lot last year

[because of an elbow injury],” Servais said. “We’ve taken it easy on how much we’ve used him and how much rest he’s gotten between his outings. “The last time out, we brought him back one day sooner, and he wasn’t quite as sharp. “But he has had a good spring. He’s opened some eyes.” Guaipe and Coleman have each pitched better after some early wobbles, but Roach is emerging as a serious late candidate. Once slotted for the Tacoma rotation, Roach has eight scoreless innings in his last three outings. He closed out Monday’s 6-3 victory over the Dodgers with three brisk innings. “He can give you length,” Servais said. “We want to keep him stretched out so that if it doesn’t work in the bullpen, he can be a [starting] option for us in Tacoma.”

WTA Tour CEO assails ‘alarming’ criticism of female players THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. — The former tournament director at Indian Wells who now runs the WTA Tour calls his successor’s critical comments about women’s tennis players “disappointing and alarming.” Before Sunday’s finals at the BNP Paribas Open, current tournament director Raymond Moore said women “ride on the coattails of the men.” He later issued a written apology. Moore’s longtime colleague at Indian Wells, Steve Simon, became the WTA’s CEO last fall. “As the tournament director of one of the pre-eminent events in professional tennis, the comments

Tennis made today by Raymond Moore were extremely disappointing and alarming,” Simon said in a statement late Sunday. “The WTA stands on its own and was founded on the principles of equality and empowerment. I am proud of all the strong athletes on the WTA who put in hard work and sacrifice every single day. “Tennis as a whole is enriched by the contributions and accomplishments of every player, both male and female.” The president of the U.S. Tennis Association also repudiated

Moore’s comments Monday. Katrina Adams, who played on the WTA Tour for 12 years, reiterated the USTA and U.S. Open’s commitment to player equality. “There is no place in this sport for antiquated, sexist or uninformed ideologies,” she said in a statement, “and the comments made yesterday in no way reflect the beliefs of the vast majority of those in the tennis world.” Moore, a 69-year-old former touring pro from South Africa, oversees the $7 million tournament in the California desert featuring the men’s and women’s tours. In the event’s early days, he and fellow ex-player Charlie Pas-

arell started PM Sports Management, which oversaw the tournament as it expanded. Moore became the event’s CEO in 2012. “In my next life when I come back I want to be someone in the WTA because they ride on the coattails of the men. They don’t make any decisions and they are lucky. They are very, very lucky,” he said. “If I was a lady player, I’d go down every night on my knees and thank God that Roger Federer and Rafa Nadal were born, because they have carried this sport.” He also referred to women’s players as “physically attractive and competitively attractive.” Moore later apologized, calling his

comments “in extremely poor taste and erroneous.” “I am truly sorry for those remarks, and apologize to all the players and WTA as a whole,” the statement said. “We had a women’s final today that reflects the strength of the players, especially Serena and Victoria, and the entire WTA. “Again, I am truly sorry for my remarks.” Serena Williams and Victoria Azarenka also criticized Moore’s comments after they played in the final Sunday. “Obviously, I don’t think any woman should be down on their knees thanking anybody like that,” Williams said after she lost 6-4, 6-4.

McGrath: Zags’ defense shutting down stars Utah’s 7-foot center Jakob Poeltl, the Pac-12 Player of the McClellan led all scorers Sat- Year, was limited to five points urday with an effort remarkable Saturday. Two fouls put him on for its efficiency: he took 12 shots the bench for the final six minutes of the first half, a misfortune and finished with 22 points. that figured to be mitigated by But it’s defense that has the fresh legs Poeltl brought into vaulted Gonzaga into the Sweet 16. The Bulldogs allowed (encour- the second half. Uh, no. While the clock ticked aged?) Seton Hall guard Isaiah down as the point differential Whitehead — MVP of the Big expanded from 10 points to 20, East tournament — to attempt 24 shots in the first-round game. Poeltl seemed to be sucking for air at mile-high altitude. He went 4 for 24. CONTINUED FROM B1

An obvious conclusion about Gonzaga’s 82-59 blowout is that the Zags, slotted at No. 11, were as under-seeded as the Utes, at No. 3, were over-seeded. Another obvious conclusion is that the Pac-12’s ballyhooed revival as a legitimate power conference in basketball was a sham. The whole world is watching, and the next time anybody associated with the Pac-12 bemoans the conference’s history with

East Coast Bias, the early elimination of six teams from the 2016 NCAA tournament will be introduced as Exhibit A evidence. Not that the Zags care. They’re off to Chicago, where they’ll be thrust into a strange situation: A No. 11 seed seen as a favorite to advance to the Elite Eight. Beyond that? Anything is possible. The team I saw Saturday played basketball with precision and ebullience and confidence.

These are potential national champions. As for those seven regular-season defeats, unfathomable and yet wholly documented, I’ve got only one explanation. Somebody keeping score on the sideline table got the numbers wrong.

________ John McGrath is a sports columnist at The News Tribune. He can be contacted at john.mcgrath@thenewstribune.com.


SportsRecreation

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2016

B3

All-Peninsula Football Offense Players were selected by area football coaches and the sports staff of the Peninsula Daily News.

David Hoglund

Nate Weller

Zach Hebert

Isaiah Nichols

Lane Dotson

Gavin Velarde

Port Townsend (Senior) Offensive Line

Quilcene (Senior) Offensive Line

Sequim (Senior) Offensive Line

Port Angeles (Senior) Offensive Line

Chimacum (Junior) Offensive Line

Sequim (Sophomore) Wide Receiver/Returner

Two-time All-Peninsula honoree was voted 1A All-State honorable mention by AP. All-Olympic 1A first-team offensive and defensive line.

Associated Press 1B All-State offensive lineman. Named to SeaTac League first team on both offensive and defensive lines.

Picked for the Olympic League 2A Division first team as an offensive lineman by league’s coaches. First All-Peninsula nod.

Voted secondteam offensive line. Switched between guard and center throughout the season.

Named All-Olympic League first team at offensive line, but was a force on both lines and as a punter.

All-Olympic League 2A first team as a receiver and returner. Led Wolves in receiving (25-453) and (17-264). Scored 11 total touchdowns.

Cameron Buzzell Kellen Landry

Cole Svec

Wesley Wheeler

Clayton Willis

David Sua

Neah Bay (Junior) Wide Receiver

Port Angeles (Senior) Running Back

Neah Bay (Junior) Running Back

Port Townsend (Senior) Running Back

Clallam Bay (Freshman) Running Back

Port Townsend (Senior) Quarterback/RB—MVP

Caught 38 passes for 791 yards and 15 TDs. Also ran for 184 yards and three scores. Voted 1B All-State at defensive back by AP.

Carried Riders’ offense for most of the season. Led PA in rushing (513 yards) and receiving (22 for 204 yards). Olympic 2A second-team LB.

Named 1B All-State offense and honorable mention defense by Associated Press. Ran for 1,337 yards and 24 TDs on 119 carries.

Olympic 1A Offensive MVP averaged 9.5 yards per carry. Rushed for 730 yards and 17 TDs despite playing in only seven games.

Scored 27 TDs. Rushed for 1,827 yards and caught 12 passes for 457 yards. All-NWFL first-team offense and secondteam defense.

Voted Olympic League 1A MVP. Led Redhawks in passing (673 yards with 5 TDs) and rushing (738 yards with 7 TDs).

Nick Snyder, Port Townsend—Coach of the Year: Led Redhawks to first state playoff berth since 2004. Port Townsend won Olympic League 1A championship for second consecutive year while finishing with a 10-1 record. Only loss was to eventual runner-up King’s. Honorable Mention: Rwehabura Munyagi Jr. (Neah Bay); Lucas Foster (Port Townsend); Riley Cowan (Sequim); Kenny Gale (Forks); Jack Ellison (Sequim); Paul Van Rossen (Port Angeles); McCabe Story (Crescent); Noah Christansen (Sequim); Joe Danz (Port Angeles); Thomas Winfield (Sequim); Carson Marx (Port Townsend); Alan Greene (Clallam Bay).

Sua: Grasped importance of good decisions CONTINUED FROM B1 understanding of the game. “The biggest thing about Football is the prefer- playing QB is making really ence for the three-sport ath- good decisions, which he lete (he also plays basket- did,� Snyder said. “I think the hardest ball and baseball). “The intensity level,� thing to do is to make a QB Sua said. “Everything about be a good decision maker. “He understand how it, there’s just a different type of feeling than I get important that was from with every other sport I day one after being a backup to Jacob [King] and play. “You have to use more [Jeff] Seton. “I think he understood than just your physical skills in football. It offers up that better than any quarlife lessons, there’s always terback the last four years.� A power runner at 5-footsomething to learn in football. I’ve played 12 or 13 11 and 215 pounds, Sua years now, and every day said his running style was there’s something new to practical. “I’m not too fast, so I’d learn.� Snyder called Sua a rather go straight up,� Sua “coach on the field� for his said.

Snyder said Sua had a different type of speed, maybe not one that’s noticeable during a 40-yard dash drill.

‘He had game speed’ “He just ran people over,� Snyder said. “His speed, if you clocked him, it wasn’t real fast, but he had game speed. If he needed to beat somebody to a spot in a game, he could make the run in time.� Sua started at quarterback most of the season but also spent time at running back after Wesley Wheeler suffered a season-ending knee injury during the Redhawks’ second time facing Klahowya.

Clint Dempsey to play for U.S. at World Cup qualifying in Guatemala THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Landon Donovan. Dempsey last played for the team in July, when he led all Gold Cup scorers with seven goals in six games. The match Friday is the first of home-and-home qualifiers. Guatemala plays the Americans on March 29 in Columbus, Ohio.

5 and wore Wheeler’s No. 44 jersey. “That was awesome,� Snyder said. “That kind of sums him up right there. Wesley meant a lot to him, a lot to all of us. David understood what that gesture would mean to Wesley and what it would mean to the team.� All part of being a captain in his senior season. “One of the most important parts was being a leader with the same group of kids that I had played with since we were little,� Sua said. “Being a leader came easy because I’d been playing with Keegan Khile, Jacob Ralls, Ezra Easley since grade school, with

Lucas Foster and Wesley Wheeler since high school. “They all made it easy as a leader because they trusted me.� Snyder said Sua’s legacy is already present in younger Redhawks players. “It’s there in Detrius [Kelsall] and Berkely [Hill] right now,� Snyder said. “He’s set the bar for what a QB needs to be, the commitment in the offseason, the passion in his play. “He’s a winner is what he is. He was a blessing for us at every position.�

________ Sports reporter Michael Carman can be contacted at 360-4522345, ext. 57050 or at mcarman@ peninsuladailynews.com.

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Dempsey, who plays for the Seattle Sounders, was left off the USA roster for two qualifying matches in November. Coach Jurgen Klinsmann cited the need to look at younger players. Dempsey has 48 goals while playing for Team USA, second all-time behind the 57 scored by

Wheeler’s severe injury could have derailed the team in an important league game, but not on Sua’s watch. “When Wesley got hurt, on David’s first play at fullback, he broke off and went 55 yards for a touchdown,� Snyder said. Sua said that combination of events remains an emotional memory. “Wesley sat there on the stretcher and watched the whole play,� Sua said. “Before he left [for the hospital], I wanted to climb in the ambulance with him and talk to him, but I didn’t know if I would get a flag.� He continued his tribute the next game when he switched from his usual No.

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Fun ’n’ Advice

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Dilbert

TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2016

Parents of cutters need to listen

by Scott Adams

Dear Readers: I promised “Heartbroken Mom From Anywhere” (Oct. 5) to print letters from readers offering suggestions about helping her teen daughter, who is a cutter:

For Better or For Worse

Classic Doonesbury (1986)

Frank & Ernest

Garfield

by Lynn Johnston

DEAR ABBY

found that some of these children Van Buren have been sexually molested. Dear Abby: I am a 33-year-old Some told their woman who has cut for many years, parents and were starting early in high school. not believed What concerns me is the mom because it was the doesn’t completely understand mother’s boyfriend, what’s going on. a family friend or Not many people do. a relative. Self-harm is a cry for help from Carrying this someone who doesn’t know how to around is a heavy voice his or her emotions. burden. I, too, was bullied and didn’t know Parents need to show the child how to express the pain I was feeling, they will look into the allegation. so I took it out on my body. Over the We should be a safe place for our years, it became my coping mechakids to offload all their fears and nism, although an unhealthy one. insecurities, because we have a duty Helping someone who is selfto protect them from abuse. harming requires understanding and In the Field in Brooklyn, N.Y. a licensed professional to identify the emotions and suggest better ways to Dear Abby: I have been a cutter express them. from age 9 to the present — age 22 One that worked for me was — though now it’s less frequent. doing puzzles. It was a way to keep The biggest mistake my parents my mind and hands busy. and friends made when I was really This teen also needs to know she destructive was forcing me to comis not alone. Parents need to listen. mit to ultimatums. I cannot stress how important it is It turned my cutting into a for cutters to know someone is there shameful thing, isolated me and for them with love and no judgment. made it impossible to talk about it. Knows From Experience I advise “Heartbroken” to keep in Missouri talking to her daughter (not nagging) about cutting, bullying, school Dear Abby: I grew up in a dysand things the girl likes. functional household with abusive Share activities with her. Take her parents. hiking, bicycling, to museums or movWhen I would cut, it was like I ies. Spending time with her is imporcould feel all my pent-up emotions tant for distraction and bonding. leaking out through the wounds on Physical activity can help my legs. depressed individuals feel better. The physical pain was bearable And she should understand that and distracted me from everything recovery is never a straight line. that was going on in my life, and I There will be hiccups, setbacks would feel a little bit better about and days when it doesn’t seem like it myself and a little less desperate. will get better. Cutting is a powerful addiction. Eventually, with therapy (via Even now, more than 10 years later, counselors, bonding with friends/ when things get bad I feel a compul- family, connection with nature/anision to just make one small cut. mals) and learning better coping What helped me to stop cutting habits, she will improve. Patience wasn’t counseling or medication; it and support are imperative. was becoming passionate about Kyle in Pennsylvania active hobbies that allowed me to ________ release my bottled-up feelings and Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, stress and feel good at the same time. known as Jeanne Phillips, and was Former Cutter in Minnesota also founded by her mother, the late Pauline Phil-

by G.B. Trudeau

by Bob and Tom Thaves

by Jim Davis

Red and Rover

Abigail

lips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.

Dear Abby: I have worked in psychiatry for 10 years and have

by Brian Basset

The Last Word in Astrology ❘

Rose is Rose

by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer

by Hank Ketcham

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Don’t waffle when it comes to your professional goals. If you want to excel or make a change, take action and make it happen. It’s up to you to fuel your own fire and strive to reach your dreams. 3 stars

taken advantage of by someone manipulative. Put more emphasis on personal change, learning and expanding your friendships with those who will help you reach your goals. Take a proactive position when it comes to your beliefs. 3 stars

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Listen to the voice of reason and discuss your plans with someone able to influence your decision and help you make your dreams come true. A joint venture is likely to pay off. Sharing will propel you forward. 5 stars

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Believe in yourself and what you can accomplish. Don’t let anyone’s negativity hold you back or cause you to underestimate what you are capable of. Offer love and kindness, but don’t make sacrifices that will deter your success. 3 stars

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Listen, assess the situation you face and make choices based on what is in your best interest. You cannot give in to emotional manipulation or temptation. If you desire change, make sure your motives are genuine. 2 stars

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Delve into intriguing situations and look for ways to pursue what fascinates you. Work toward a goal that will impress your peers, employers or teachers. It’s up to you to bring about the changes that will CANCER (June 21-July improve your life. 3 stars 22): Surround yourself with SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. creative individuals who will 21): What you put out, you encourage you to explore will get back in spades. your own ideas. Make Don’t hesitate to offer sugromance and collaboration gestions or pitch in to help with others a priority, but a cause. Your intuitive inteldon’t go into debt trying to keep up with others. 4 stars ligence will allow you to shine and motivate others to help you make a differLEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Protect against loss or being ence. 4 stars

ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

Dennis the Menace

B5

Pickles

by Brian Crane

The Family Circus

by Eugenia Last

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Gather information and be certain before making a move that will have an impact on your reputation. Don’t let anyone lead you down a path of temptation. Recognize what is in your best interest. Be willing to say “no.” 2 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Check over your plans, investments and any upcoming legal or medical procedures. It’s always better to be safe and in control. Don’t let someone’s unexpected changes send you on a wild goose chase. Ride out the storm. 5 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Make personal changes that will encourage you to look for a job that will bring you a greater sense of satisfaction. Someone or something from your past will help you recognize what you want to see unfold in your life. 3 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Partnerships will pose limitations if you let anger take over. Don’t say or do something you’ll regret. Treating others with a little love and compassion will improve your situation. 3 stars

by Bil and Jeff Keane


Classified

B6 TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2016

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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DISTRIBUTOR: Mission Tortilla distributor rare opportunity deliver products to grocery stores on the Olympic Pen. $70k plus truck. (360)460-6434.

H OW M AY I H E L P ? Many tools, many skills, general handyman, hauling, home and property, fruit tree care, shopping, pruning, etc. (360)477-3376

Deadline: Friday at 4 p.m. Ad 1

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3 month, temporar y, full-time shipping position available immediately. Some knowle d g e o f wa r e h o u s e and shipping operations not mandator y but highly recommended. Computer literacy a must. $11 an hour, Mon.-Fri. 7am-3:30pm. Send resume to emp l oy m e n t @ f i s h p a c bay.com

ACCEPTING APPLICAT I O N S fo r C A R R I E R RO U T E Po r t A n g e l e s Area. Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Interested parties must be 18 yrs of age, have valid Washington State Driver’s License, proof of insurance, and reliable vehicle. Early morning delivery Monday-Friday and Sunday. Apply in person 305 W 1st St, or send resume to tsorensen@ soundpublishing.com NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.

Name

Call 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 www.peninsuladailynews.com

4026 Employment General

AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE ADVISOR Koenig Subaru is currently accepting application for an energetic, multi-tasking, organized, personable, hard-working individual with verifiable references. Full time with great benefits. Apply in person, or call (360)457-4444 and ask for Bill. LOOKING for reliable dedicated caregivers to help people at home. Small friendly agency. Our staff love working for us. (360)681-6206

BAKERY-CAFE Opening baker, Cashier/Meals/Barista Experience preferred Part to Full time. Olympic Bagel Co. 802 E. 1st St., P.A. CARRIER: Accepting applications for substitute carrier in Sequim for Peninsula Daily News a n d S e q u i m G a ze t t e. Hours and pay to be determined by Contracted carrier. Email Jasmine at jbirkland@soundpublishing.com. NO PHONE CALLS LUBE TECH Full-time, valid WSDL required. Apply at 110 Golf Course, P.A. in the Quick Lube. Facilities Maintenance Commercial Pipefitter/Plumber The Port of Port Angeles is seeking qualified applicants for the position of Facilities Maintenance Commercial Pipefitter/Plumber. Applicants mu s t h ave a t l e a s t 5 years of experience as a licensed commercial pipefitter/plumber. Must be a team player who has skills & experience in the commercial construction & maintenance fields. Material procurement & computer skills are preferred. The starting hourly rate range is $27.14 to $29.21 DOE, plus an outstanding benefit package. Applications & job descriptions may be obtained at the Por t Admin Office, 338 West 1st St., PA between 8am-5pm M-F & also online at www.portofpa.com . Applications will be accepted until 5pm Thursday, March 31st. Drug testing is required. Other testing may be required. REPORTER The South Whidbey R e c o r d , i n Fr e e l a n d , WA, is seeking a fulltime general assignment reporter with writing experience and photography skills. This position is based out of our office on Whidbey Island. The primary coverage will be city government, business, sports, general assignment stor ies; and may include arts coverage. Candidates must have excellent communication and organizational skills, and be able to work effectively in a deadlinedriven environment. Proficiency with AP style, pagination and digital imaging using Adobe InDesign and Photoshop software is preferred We offer a competitive hourly wage and benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401K (currently with an employer match.) Email us your cover letter, resume, and include five examples of your best work showcasing your reporting skills and writing chops to: car e e r s @ s o u n d p u bl i s h i n g . c o m , AT T N : HR/RSWR Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the wor kplace. Check out our website to find out more about us! w w w. s o u n d p u b l i s h ing.com

B O O K K E E P E R : Po r t Angeles law firm currently seeking experienced full-charge bookkeeper. Working knowledge of Quickbooks and Excel is required. The right candidate should be detail oriented, have excellent verbal communication skills as well as good interpersonal skills and the ability to multi-task. Working knowledge of Wo r d a n d O u t l o o k a plus. Full time with benefits, or par t time, salary DOE. Reply by March 23, 2016 to Peninsula Daily News P.O. Box 289 Bookkeeper Port Angeles, WA 98362

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DISTRIBUTOR: Mission Tortilla distributor rare opportunity deliver products to grocery stores on the Olympic Pen. $70k plus truck. (360)460-6434.

911 DISPATCH. JEFFCOM 911 is currently taking applications for two full time positions. Dispatchers answer emergency & non-emergency calls & perform radio dispatch services in a multi-jurisdictional communications center. Successful applicants must pass a background investigation, psychological evaluation, polygraph, and a hearing exam. Salar y range is $2896-$4473 monthly, plus benefits. Please visit our website to obtain an application packet at w w w. j e f f c o m 9 1 1 . u s . We request absolutely no phone calls to the 911 center. Email SFortino@jcpsn.us with any questions regarding the positions or the application process. Resumes will not be accepted in lieu of a completed job application. We are an equal oppor tunity employer.

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3023 Lost

4070 Business Opportunities

MITSUBISHI: ‘05 Father & Sons’ Eclipse GTS, Loaded, Landscape Service maint. records, new since 1992. 1 time clean tires, brakes, V-6 auto, ups, pruning, lawn mainafter market exhaust, tenance, weeding, orpremium sound, sun ganic lawn renovations. roof, black leather inMISC: DR Power Trim- terior, excellent condi(360)681-2611 mer. 8.75 HP, self-pro- tion. 135K ml, $5,500. FORD: F150, ‘94, XLT, pelled, battery / manual (360)457-1766 4x4, runs good, good star t, used 4 Hr. New tires, excellent shape, no 1 2 ” B e ave r B l a d e fo r rust. $3,300. brush unused, tune up RIDING (360)683-8084 kit with plug, belts, oil, filLAWNMOWERS ter and 70’ blue cord. $400 to $700. HALIBUT: Fresh, whole S p a r e m ow - b a l l , l i ke Call Kenny only. (360)963-2021 brand new. $1,100. (360)775-9779 (360)457-2943 WANTED: Riding lawnmowers, working or not. SEQ: 2Br. and 1Ba. Will WANTED: Sawdust for Will pickup for free. be painted and reroofed. animal bedding. Call (360)417-7685 Kenny (360)775-9779 $39,000. (360)775-6433

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

CHURCH OF CHRIST (360)797-1536 or (360)417-6980

L O S T: 3 / 1 8 / 1 6 : G ray male cat, Smokey, Mariposa Ln, near Hooker Rd. (360)775-5154

MATTRESS SET Queen sized, double pillow top mattress and b ox s p r i n g i n p e r fe c t condition. $100. (360)460-2113

Mail to:

Employment 4026 Employment 3010 Announcements 4026 General General

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General

Healthcare ManageGeneral ment Position S e e k i n g ex p e r i e n c e d hardworking healthcare EXPERIENCED management professionPLUMBER al to oversee a regional Full-time, benefits. homecare operation. P.A., (360)452-8525 Strong leadership, management and communications a must. Excellent NURSING: Busy, ambupay and benefits. Apply latory clinic, is looking to expand the nursing deat www.kwacares.org par tment. If you enjoy your nursing career and are looking for a change SOCIAL MEDIA AND or new outlook we would MARKETING like to talk to you. Job COMMUNICATION duties include, but are CONTRACTOR not limited to patient (Everett, WA) Sound Media, a division care, using electronic of Sound Publishing Inc., medical records, phone is seeking a Contractor calls and documentation, to lead its social media medication administraand marketing communi- tion and wor king with cations. Requires some- families. We offer medione who is passionate cal / dental / vision insuabout Social Age Tech- rance, 401K, uniform alnologies and under- lowance, and many stands the cross channel other benefits. Submit campaign strategies of- your resume to Nor th fered by an innovative, Olympic Healthcare Net21st century consultative work, 240 W Front St, Po r t A n g e l e s, WA marketing team. A m o n g m a n y o t h e r 98362, attention Human things, this person will Resources. be responsible for: Developing enterpriseReceptionist and Vet level online and offline Tech/Assistant marketing communica- (Full time) Must be avail. t i o n s p l a n s a n d exe - weekends. Pick up applicutable strategies, to be cation at Angeles Clinic delivered and managed For Animals, 160 Del across multiple channels Guzzi Dr., P.A. written for unique target audiences. Planning and Developing content and Economic c o py a p p r o p r i a t e fo r Development Manager press releases, online channels (web, digital), The Makah Tribal Counand marketing campaign cil is seeking a Commumessaging. nity Planning & EconomFor mulating custo- i c D e v e l o p m e n t mizable marketing com- Manager who is enthumunications solutions for siastic and thrives on e a c h u n i q u e c l i e n t challenges. Responsible t h r o u g h a t h o r o u g h for administration and needs-assessment, en- supervision of commus u r i n g r e c o m m e n d e d nity planning and ecocampaign strategies and nomic development derelated tactics meet or partment. exceed client expecta- Minimum requirements: tions. Bachelor’s or Masters Position may require a ( p r e fe r r e d ) d e gr e e i n bachelor’s degree and at Land Use & Urban Planleast 5 years of experi- ning, Public Administraence in the field or in a tion, or Business Adminr e l a t e d a r e a , o r a n istration or related field; equivalent combination or 8 years of work expeof education and practi- rience may be substitutcal experience. ed; or combination of 3 This is an independently years technical land use contracted position and & urban planning experiis paid as outlined in the ence plus education. contract. Must also have 5 years To apply, please send a relevant wor k exper icover letter and resume ence with 2 years of suto careers@soundpu- p e r v i s o r y ex p e r i e n c e blishing.com, please in- and 2 years of expericlude ATTN: SocMedia- e n c e w i t h Tr i b a l e n Con in the subject line. tities/communities. PosiCheck out our website to t i o n c l o s e s 3 / 2 5 / 1 6 find out more about us! @5pm. Send resume to: www.soundpublishMTC Human Resources ing.com and PO BOX 115 Neah Bay, www.soundmediWA 98357 email: tabiabds.com tha.herda@makah.com

SEQUIM SCHOOL DIST Seeking substitute bus drivers; will train. Apply Online: www.sequim.k12.wa.us (360)582-3418 Service Advisor Opportunity Immediate service advisor position is open at Wilder Auto. If you’re looking for a positive career change, like worki n g w i t h p e o p l e, t h i s could be for you! The Wilder team has great benefits, 401k, medical and dental, and a great work schedule, paid training, college tuition plan for your children! Please email your resume to: hr@wilderauto.com Substitute Carrier for Combined Motor Route Peninsula Daily News and Sequim Gazette Individual(s) interested must be 18 yrs. of age, have a valid Washington State Drivers License and proof of insurance. Early morning delivery Monday through Friday and Sunday. Hours and pay to be determined by C o n t r a c t e d c a r r i e r. Email: jbirkland@sound publishing.com NO PHONE CALLS SUPPORT COORDINATOR: Family Caregiver Support Coordinator for Jefferson County, working out of O3A/ I&A’s Por t Townsend office, providing all ser vices throughout the county. $17.44/hr, 40 hrs/wk. Responsibilities include assessing needs and coordinating services for unpaid family caregivers; performing outreach and community education; information and assistance activities; wor k w i t h s u p p o r t g r o u p s. FULL Benefit Package includes medical, dental, family vision, state retirement and more. Req. BA in Behavioral or Human Ser vices and 2 years paid social service experience or BA and four years paid social service, and a current WDL. Contact O3A (Olympic Area Agency on Aging) at 360 385-2552/8008 0 1 - 0 0 5 0 fo r j o b d e scription and application packet. Extended closing date of March 28, 2016. O3A is an EOE.

SERVICE TECH: Por table Toilet Technic i a n . F u l l t i m e M - F, some weekends. Bill’s Plumbing, appy in person at: 425 S. 3rd. Ave., Sequim

4080 Employment Wanted ADEPT YARD CARE Mowing, weeding eating (360)797-1025 A FINISHED TOUCH Lawn Mowing (360)477-1805 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.

ANDREW’S LAWN SERVICES Friendly, efficient service. Satisfaction guaranteed. Commercial and residential, mowing, edging, tree pr uning, hedge and shrub trimming, leaf blowing. Sequim local, since 2004 (360) 912-2291 BRYAN’S LAWN SERVICE (360)461-7506

CAREGIVER: Exper ienced. Special loving care. Sequim, local ref’s. Karen (360)808-7061 or (360)683-0943. CAREGIVER: Long time good local references. P.A./Sequim. (360)797-1247

ENVIOUS GREENS Currently accepting NEW lawn mowing acc o u n t s. S e q u i m bu s i ness since 2010(Licensed&Insured). Booked solid in other Depts. Call for a MOWI N G b i d t o d ay O w n e r / O p e r a t o r Mike:360*808*9638

Father & Sons’ Landscape Service since 1992. 1 time clean ups, pruning, lawn maintenance, weeding, organic lawn renovations. (360)681-2611

FRUIT TREE EXPERT Ornamental and shrubs too. Book now for year long lawn services also. Semi retired many references. P. A. area only. Local (360)808-2146.

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. THE SKELETON COAST Solution: 5 letters

S A I L O R S E N O T S M E G

T H N C R O S S B O N E S E H

S L A T O A F R I C A W O O K

C T A T E N N B D T A L S C U

A W A S E L I G A K O T O C N

S S T R E E O C O G I R D I E

T L E L B H O R E L E R R A C N O ‫ ګ ګ‬ I L E ‫ ګ ګ‬ K R A P I H Y A L R H C A I F P C A A A I E R E D L I S I B U A R E M N A Z S S R H I M B N A C L O N E L E P

M I E C F A L O R Y X S A V H

U N H I S S N A G A T E O O A

R E M O T E S T E N R A G N N

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

By Ed Sessa

DOWN 1 Imperfection 2 Grain in some cakes 3 Where billions live 4 Rising air current 5 City VIPs 6 Like taffy 7 Cusack or Crawford 8 Bobby of the Bruins 9 Outlaw 10 Shortstop’s realm 11 Furniture maker, e.g. 12 “Puss in Boots” baddie 13 Signaled yeses 21 Geeky type 22 Singer Garfunkel 24 Derogatory 25 Husband of 1Across 26 “Miracle on 34th Street” actor Edmund 27 Pick a fight (with) 28 Restaurant reviewer 30 Superdome NFLer 31 Tons

3/22/16

3/22

Africa, Agate, Angola, Antelopes, Arid, Barren, Beaches, Cape, Castle, Cheetahs, Clay, Crimson, Crossbones, Elephant, Fria, Garnets, Gemstone, Geological, Himba, Hostile, Iconic, Kunene, Lichen, Lion, Oases, Oryx, Park, Remote, Rock, Rumble, Safari, Sailors, Salt, Sand, Seals, Shoreline, Stark, Terrace, Torra, Toscanini, Ugab, Volcanic, Zebras, Swakop Yesterday’s Answer: Exposed

Monday’s Puzzle Solved

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

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

FOREF ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

33 “SNL” producer Michaels 34 Piercing tool 38 13 popes 39 Teamed, as oxen 42 Highly respected 45 Baby bottle parts 47 __-man band 48 Meryl of “The Iron Lady” 50 Great, in show biz 51 It may be furrowed

3/22/16

GEPTIL

52 “__ Lama Ding Dong”: doo-wop hit 53 Sot 54 Wheels for the well-heeled 55 Akimbo limbs 56 “Divine Secrets of the __ Sisterhood” 58 Magazine fillers 59 Fond du __, Wisconsin

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

Black Diamond Area So much to offer here. Beautiful 2 bedroom water view log home, huge 2 story shop , pole barn, cabin, 2 separate parcels, 2 bedroom manufactured home, 9+ acres, fenced & cross fenced too. Property is ideal for a Wedding Venue, Winery, Brewery, horses and so much more. This is your once and a lifetime oppor tunity to come live your dream. Here is the address to the online tour : view.paradym.com/3773484 MLS#300362 $735,000 Jennifer Holcomb (360) 460-3831 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES

Excellent Neighborhood Born in 1975 – 0.32 acre lot, 2,253 sf, family rm & living r m, newer vinyl windows, 3 car attached garage, private/fenced back yard. MLS#300277 $210,000 Team Thomsen COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY (360) 808-0979

FSBO: 181 Sunland Dr. Sequim. Sunland Home, Southern mountain views accent this over 3,000 sf., 4 br, 3 ba home. Features include a studio apartment that rents for $650 per, professionally landscaped with irrigation system, LR with fireplace, formal DR, large family room with stove, basement w i t h t wo c a r g a ra g e, food storage room and elevator. $324,900. Call Ida. (360)683-2248 Gorgeous & well maintained 1930s home, 2448 sq ft, 4 beds, 2 baths, a must see to appreciate the many unique features of the past as well as modern touches to enjoy a style of living few homes provide. Fenced in backyard with greenhouse, detached 2-car garage. MLS#300161 $260,000 Ania Pendergrass Remax Evergreen (360)461-3973

Yesterday’s

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: BOTCH ENJOY SYSTEM REDUCE Answer: It wasn’t the minutes spent at the table that caused his weight gain, it was the — SECONDS

by Mell Lazarus

BBecause ecause you can never have too much! have

Need Cash?

HAVE A GARAGE SALE! up to 15 lines of text for only

$20.95 includes a

FREE GARAGE SALE KIT! CALL TODAY 360-452-8435 or 1-800-826-7714

Where buyers and sellers meet!

61246814

GREAT INVESTMENT Property with ADU off alley. Two rental units in a great location. Located close to schools and in the center of town. Close to many shopping and dining alter natives. Close to new city hall. MLS#300367/908371 $215,000 Eric Hegge (360)460-6470 TOWN & COUNTRY

FSBO: 2 br., 2 ba., plus office, 2 car garage withattached 10x24 shop. Open concept, one acre located Hidden Valley Estates, built end 2012 View Olympic Mts. 40 FSBO: 2 BR, 1 Ba. 1096 Pa r k w ay H e i g h t s D r, sf., centrally located, Port Angeles. $254,500. fenced backyard with (509)-435-1553 huge garden beds, large kitchen, new counterJust Listed! tops, lg. covered porch, detached garage, corner Interesting one acre parlot, heat pump and new cel with some character. Trees and rolling terrain. windows. $165,000. M a n u fa c t u r e d h o m e s (360)417-3704 are allowed here! Power t o p a r c e l . Wa t e r i s Gorgeous Mountain hooked up. All you need Views! C h a r m i n g 3 b e d / 2 . 7 5 is the septic system and bath home situated on a you are ready to build. level 3+ acres just min- Loaded with wild rhodoutes from town! Heated dendrons!! Quiet Diaby a rustic wood stove w/ mond Point area offers stone surround in the access to miles of trails family room, propane fire- and beaches. MLS#300060 $39,000 place in the living room, Ed Sumpter & an electric heat pump. 360-808-1712 Guest suite on main level Blue Sky Real Estate & master suite on 2nd Sequim level both w/ walk-in closets. Spacious master bath w/ tiled walk-in SUNLAND HOME shower & tub. Den + a 2 BD, 2 BA, Office, 1945 b o n u s r o o m . E n j o y S F, o n 1 4 t h Fa i r way. breathtaking unobstruct- Large Kitchen, Cooking ed mountain views from Island, Breakfast Bar & the covered front porch Pa n t r y, N e w C a r p e t , or from the lovely patio Flooring, Paint In/Out & area w/ hot tub & low Garage Door, Vaulted maintenance landscap- C e i l i n g s, L a r g e W i n ing. dows/Skylights, Open MLS#300401 $369,900 Floor Plan, Guest BD, Kelly Johnson Indoor BBQ, Green(360) 477-5876 house w/Power, Water & WINDERMERE Workbenches. PORT ANGELES MLS#898395/300228 $284,500 MOUNTAIN VIEWS Deb Kahle lic# 47224 3.77 Acres of pasture1-800-359-8823 land; soils are regis(360) 683-6880 t e r e d , l eve l ; p owe r & (360)918-3199 phone to property, comWINDERMERE munity water share is SUNLAND paid, horses allowed, close to Dungeness Unbeatable Price! Recreation Area & WildDon’t miss this affordable life refuge. r ustic retreat in Joyce MLS#857981/291953 close to hiking, camping, $130,000 & fishing! Situated on Tyler Conkle lic# nearly an acre of land, 112797 this 2 bed/1 bath double 1-800-359-8823 wide manufactured home (360) 683-6880 is far enough away from (360)670-5978 the hustle and bustle of WINDERMERE city life to enjoy the calmSUNLAND ing sounds of nature, like the trickle of the seasonal creek that runs through the backyard! This home i s h e a t e d by a p e l l e t stove. It features a 704 sqft detached garage, a covered front porch, & patio. Level yard w/ treed SEQUIM HOME FSBO - p e r i m e t e r & p l e n t y o f SUNLAND. 106 Victoria room for a garden! Court, Sequim. 1,919 sf., MLS#300385 $68,500 cul-de-sac. 2-3 br. / 2 Kelly Johnson ba., (bonus room with (360) 477-5876 built-in desk / shelves) WINDERMERE master bedroom with PORT ANGELES large walk-in closet / built-ins. 2nd bedroom VIEW VISTA PARK with bath. Sunroom, c e n t ra l va c . , l a u n d r y A 2004 single wide in a r o o m , s k y l i g h t s, f i r e - friendly 55+ park. 2BR, place, oversized 2-car 2BA, 858 Sq ft for just $27,900 MLS#300189 garage, new roof. OutTeam Powell door gated storage. COLDWELL BANKER $269,000. UPTOWN REALTY (360)681-5346 or (360) 775-5826 (360)775-5391

Ans:

4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Momma Wanted Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County

3400 sqft. Custom Home Beautiful home with hardwood flooring on the main level. Kitchen w/granite counter tops, induction cook top, regular & convection oven. Open living area w/20 ft. Get Bizy Boys Lawn ceiling & propane fire& Yard Care for Lawn, place. Master br. w/jetl o t & f i e l d m o w i n g . ted tub, walk in shower, L a n d s c a p e m a i n t e - d o u bl e s i n k s, gra n i t e nance, trimming, prun- c o u n t e r & t i l e d f l o o r. ing, Pressure washing, Sunroom w/tiled floor & h a u l i n g & Tr a c t o r propane stove. MLS#292069 $450,000 work. Call Tom today Tom Blore 460-7766 Lic# bi360-683-4116 zybbl868ma PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE H OW M AY I H E L P ? Many tools, many skills, 4 Seasons Ranch! general handyman, hauling, home and property, Lovely 2169 sq. ft., 2 fruit tree care, shopping, bed, 2.5 bath home with triple views - mountain, pruning, etc. water & golf course (360)477-3376 plus dining room view of year round spring! WonImmaculate auto derful 2 faced propane detailing fireplace separates din(360)461-8912 ing & living rooms. Den/office on upper level and unfinished bonus r o o m i n l o w e r l ev e l . Ranch amenities include, clubhouse with swimming pool, bar n, golf course & beach access. Close to Discovery Trail. MLS#300341 $345,000 I SEW 4U: *Hemming, Jean Irvine *Alterations, *Zippers COLDWELL BANKER Replaced, *Other SewUPTOWN REALTY ing Projects, Don’t wait! (360)417-2797 Call Today! Patti Kuth (360)460-5601 417-5576 isew4u77@gmail.com EXCLUSIVE & I’m Sew Happy! EXQUISITE! 3 BD, 2 BA, 3147 SF LAWN MOWING: Ser- Bell Hill Home, Wood vices, call Dan or Jana F l o o r s, 2 F i r e p l a c e s, Roening. (360)775-7951 Large Kitchen, Custom Built Dining, Office & LiLAWN MOWING Slots open for mainte- b r a r y, M a s t e r S u i t e nance mowing and edg- w/Huge Walk-In Closet i n g l a r g e a n d s m a l l & Hot Tub, Extensive Rock Terraces, Stone lawns. (360)461-0794 Garden Shed • Upper Mark’s Yard and Lawn Level Deck Offers Panoramic Views Mowing, references. MLS#900812/300253 (360)452-3076 $450,000 Seamless Gutters! Mike Schmidt Call A1 NW Gutters to460-0331 Lic#15329 day at 360-460-0353 for Irene Schmidt your free estimate. 460-4040 Lic#15328 a1nwguttersllc 1-800-359-8823 @gmail.com (360) 683-6880 WINDERMERE VEGETARIAN CHEF! SUNLAND Do you want to eat healthier, feel better and Location Creates lose weight? Tr y chef Quality of Life Michael’s tasty, inexpen- 4 Seasons Ranch with sive entrees! For more all its amenities and this info call (360)775-8215. lovely 4 bed/3 bath modWEED PULLING: Yard e r n h o m e w i t h k i t c h w o r k a n d h a u l i n g . en/bath upgrades, nearly 1 acre lot, back deck, $20/hr. (360) 477-1493 gas fireplace, 3-car garYoung Couple Early 60’s age, cathedral ceilings, available for seasonal mtn view. Walk on the cleanup, weeding, trim- beach, play golf, fish in ming, mulching & moss the creek, take a dip in removal. We specialize the pool, walk on the in complete garden res- Discovery Trail and nevtorations. Excellent ref- er need to leave 4 Seasons Ranch. erences. 457-1213 Chip & Sunny’s Garden MLS#300400 $349,000 Tr a n s f o r m a t i o n s . L i Ania Pendergrass c e n s e # C C Remax Evergreen CHIPSSG850LB. (360)461-3973

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ACROSS 1 Wife of 25-Down 5 Flipping burgers, e.g. 10 Victorious shout 14 Sylvester’s speech problem 15 Now, in Nuevo León 16 Nixed, at NASA 17 Corrosive stuff 18 Be homesick (for) 19 Country legend Tennessee Ernie __ 20 Gradually exhaust 22 Helpful staffers 23 Amiss 24 Nag 26 Embarrassing slip-ups 29 Bottom-line red ink 32 “That’s all she __” 33 Bear shelter 35 Infamous vampire, familiarly 36 One’s self 37 Salon task 40 Korean carmaker 41 Like Lady Godiva on horseback 43 Author __ Stanley Gardner 44 Upright 46 Darkest lunar phase 48 Some school uniform parts 49 Salon task 50 Part of a progression 51 Corned beef solution 53 Ogden Nash specialty, and a hint to this puzzle’s circles 57 Count for something 58 Cooper of shock rock 60 Pre-euro Italian money 61 Sign of the future 62 German thanks 63 One of seven for Julia LouisDreyfus 64 Skin growth 65 Ice cream helping 66 “Slammin’” slugger Sammy

TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2016 B7


Classified

B8 TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2016

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 6080 Home Furnishings

9802 5th Wheels

M AT T R E S S : Q u e e n , 5 t h W h e e l : ‘ 0 2 A r t i c New in plastic, set only Fox, 30’, Excellent con$150 call (360)912-1312 dition. $18,000. (360)374-5534

6100 Misc. Merchandise

MISC: CA King bed, with frame and linens, three yrs old, $500. Pride Victor y 4 wheel mobility scooter, new batteries. $350. (360)452-2118

5TH WHEEL HITCH: B O OT S : L a d i e s , h i p Reese, 15K, articulating, boots, size 5, like new. w i t h m o u n t i n g r a i l s . Caddis. $10. $200. (360)928-3692 (360)457-9037

C O L O R P R I N T E R : FREEZER: Sears, 23 S a m s u n g C L P - 6 0 0 N , cubic foot, chest freezer. extras, great condition. $20. (360)452-3535 $150. (360)582-0107 G E N E R AT O R : N e w , A I R C O M P R E S S O R : BOX FRAME: for Full C O M P U T E R D E S K : Honeywell, for camping, with inverter, 900 watts. Sears, 2 cycle, 2 hp, 20 size bed, like new. $30. Nice, compact. $25. (360)452-8430 $150. (360)797-1918 gallon tank, 220V. $65. (360)640-2155 (360)385-1017 BREW POT: Stainless C O O K TO P : N u Wave G O L F C L U B S : 7 , 8 , 9 ART: Framed original, steel, electric, 5 gallon. Precision, with skillet, irons; 4,5 hybrids; 3,9 local artist “Kenmore Air $150. (360)681-3757 and bag, new in box. w o o d s . $ 5 a n d $ 1 0 each. (360)457-5790 to Port Angeles.” $200/ $75. (360)683-7435 BRITISH DVD’S: Doc firm. (360)461-7365 Martin series, 1-4. $20. CRAB POTS: (2) with GUITAR AMP: Pevey (360)808-6275 A RT: O w l p a i n t i n g , 150 foot rope, bait box. backstage. $65. (360)457-4383 mother and baby, 22” x BRITISH DVD’S: Foyle’s $50 each. 15”. $10. (360)797-1179 (949)232-3392 War, series 1-5. $40. HITCH: 5th Wheel. (360)808-6275 ART: Thomas Kinkade DOLL: French, with cru- $100. (360)631-9211 print, Beacon of Hope, CANNER: Presto, pres- cifix, provincial dress, ICE CHEST: 29x17x13. with mat and frame. $20. sure canner, new. $40. mint condition. $10. $10. (360)457-7567 (360)681-7579 (360)797-1179 (360)808-7486 JACKET: Leather, new, BARB WIRE: 2 large, 2 CAROUSELS: (2) Doll FILING CABINET: (2) 3 2XL. $50. smal style rolls, plus box carousels, for 6” to 8” drawer, black, metal, 18” (360)457-9037 of hangers. $100. wide, good condition. dolls. $50 each. (360)808-1054 $35 ea. (360)808-8840 J I G S AW P U Z Z L E : (360)683-2269 Springbok, The Herring BED TOPPER: Full size, C H A I R S : ( 2 ) R o c k - FIREPLACE INSERT: Net, by Winslow Homer. Senson Loft, memor y ing/Swivel, good shape. Antique, electric. $100. $25/obo. (360)452-6842 with gel, still in box. $96. (360)385-1017 each one $75/obo. (360)452-6636 JUDO SUIT: Woman’s (360)457-5143 FLOOR MATS: Weather size 10-12, black. $35. B E N C H : Pa r k b e n c h . CHINA: Mieto Briarcliffe, Te c h , f r o n t . F i t s ‘ 1 6 (360)452-9106 (1930’s) entire 88 piece Subaru Outback $95. $59. (360)775-8005 JUICE EXTRACTOR set. $200. (360) 460-8092 Braun 4290, ex. cond. BIBLES: (2) Late 1800’s (360)457-8241 $25. (360)582-9700 FOLDING BIKE: Dahon, and 1901. $15 each. CLOCK: Haid Westmin- 26”, 21 speed, with tote (360)457-8241 s t e r, c h i m e, key ; n o t bag and accessor ies. JUICER: Jack LaLane, excellent condition, powB I K E : S p e c i a l i z e d . working, looks new. $45. $200. (360)683-0033 er juicer. $45. 531-0735 Lightly used. Set up for (360)452-6882 F R E E : ( 2 ) S k y l i g h t s, tall person. $150. KURT COBAIN: JourC O I N - O P M AY TA G : used, 2’x8”. (360)683-1065 nals, Riverhead books, Dryer. $200. (360)452-9146 2002, 294 pages. $25. (360)808-6251 BLENDER: New, Ninja (360)452-6842 F R E E : ( 2 ) S k y l i g h t s, professional processor C O I N - O P M AY TA G : used, 2’x8”. mixer. $75. LADDER: 12’ 6” AluFront loader, washer. (360)452-9146 (949)241-0371 minimum, multiple posi$200. (360)808-6251 BOAT MOTOR: 2.5 hp, FREE: 37 years HotRod tion, type 2 rating. $70. COLLECTION: (8) East(949)232-3392 Nissan, good conditon. Magazine, ‘79 - present; e r c a n d y c o n t a i n e r s, $200. (360)452-2118 slip cases. LADDER: Aluminum, 8 Sees, Godiva. $20 all. 360-796-0480 foot, step. $50. (360)683-9295 B O O K : J i m my C o m e (360)809-0697 Lately, first edition, near COLOR PRINTER: HP F R E E : A l a s k a m a g a fine/very good. $120. LAMP: Brass colored o f f i c e j e t p r o L 7 5 9 0 . zines, 2012 to 2015. (360)683-1345 (360)477-1716 bedroom lamp, and cables, manual. $50. shade. $10. (360)928-0164 BOOKS: Harr y Potter, FREE: Hospital bed, 3 (360)928-3447 h a r d c o ve r, # 1 - 7 s e t . COLOR PRINTER: HP motor, almost new, will $69. (360)775-8005 LIONEL TRAINS: Pre Photosmart 8150 power- deliver and install. (360)683-0676 war, cars# 32 and 33. supply, cables, manual. BOOTS: Camel, suede $30. (360)928-0164 $200. (360)683-5421 FREE: Kenmore, Energy size 8, flat sole, brand new. $20. FISH TANK: 30” x 12” x Star, dehumidifier. NUTRI NINJA: 3 months (360)461-7322 (360)504-2160 12”. $35. (360)808-8840 old, $55. (360)457-5143

E E F R E Eand Tuesdays A D SS R F Monday

LIONEL TRAINS: Pre Q U I LT E R S : Ya r d a g e, War, cars# 529, 653, fat quar ters, fiber fill. 654, and 655. $190. $50. (360)452-5814 (360)683-5421 REFRIG/FREEZER: RV LYE: for cleaning, open- s t y l e , 1 1 0 / 1 2 v o l t , ing drains, soapmaking. p o r t a b l e , c o s t $ 7 0 0 . $5.50 a pound up to 10 $200. (360)797-1918 lbs. (360)582-0723 RIMS: VW, with tires, MAILBOX: Large lock- (3), hubcaps, for Golf or ing, never used, was Jetta. $50. (360)452-9685 $80, asking $40. (360)461-7322 ROCKER: Swivel, MATTRESS TOPPER: matching foot stool, arm Queen Memor y Foam protectors, light blue. To p p e r, 3 ” t h i ck . $ 9 0 $40. (360)582-0723 firm. (360)460-2112 ROLLING PINS: (6) MIRRORS: (5) All framed, various styles and sizes. $20 each. (360)452-9685

STEEL BOX: H.D., 16” x48”x15 1/2” deep. $125. (360)809-0697 STEREO: Vintage AM/ FM, turntable, 8 track, cassette, speakers, manual. $135. 477-1716 TABLE/CHAIRS: Light oak. $75. (360)670-3310 TABLE: Small, trestle with drawer, cute. $50. (360)670-3310

$10. (360)683-7149

TREADMILL: Impressive array of features, too much to list. $100. (360)681-2311

ROTISSERIE Showtime. plus accessories, good condition. $25 (360)582-9700

TRIMMER: String line, straight shaft, Echo Tr i m m e r, S R M 2 2 5 . $100. (360)681-3757

MISC: 13” Lenovo Yoga Laptop Lightly Used if at ROT I S S E R I E : S h o w all $200. (360)460-8092 time, with all accessories. $40. (360)531-0735 MISC: (6) wooden handel satirons. $125. RV PARTS: doors, win(360)683-7149 dows, steps, water tanks, A/C. $5. to $100. MISC: File cabinet. $15. (360)460-5210 5 ” T V a m / f m , i n b ox . SCANNER RADIO: Uni$15, 9” color TV. $25. den 855XLT. $40. (360)683-2269 (360)683-0033 MISC: Handmade Myrtle wook drum table, $60 S C O O T E R : M o b i l e , and desk, $110. Craft- electric, seat red, conm a t i c t w i n b e d , e x . trols. $180. (360)631-9211 shape, $800. (360)581-2166 SCREEN: ApproximateMISC: Wood bar stools. ly 3 ft x 5 ft, 3 panels, $40 set. Sofa table. $10. Colonial scene. $35. (360)681-7579 Runner rug, mauve. $10. (360)452-6702 S E W I N G M AC H I N E : NIGHT STAND/CHEST: Treadle style, made by Serpentine front, 2 draw- Unique, new belt. $75. (360)683-2644 ers, 25”w, 27”h. $35. (360)457-6431 SOFA, dark green crush

RENTALS IN DEMAND OUR SERVICES INCLUDE:

PROPERTY EVALUATION INTERNET MARKETING QUALIFIED TENANTS 311 For Sale Manufactured Homes RENT COLLECTION PROPERTY MAINTENANCE INSPECTIONS AUTOMATIC 4 M A N U FA C T U R E D HOMES FOR SALE. LoBANK DEPOSITS cated at the Lake Pleasant Mobile Home and EASY ONLINE RV Park in Beaver. OfSTATEMENT ACCESS fering newer 3,2 and 1 bedroom Manufactured VISIT US AT homes available with recent upgrades. Single PORTANGELESRENTALS.COM and double wides OR available. All in excellent condition and move in 1111 CAROLINE ST. ready. Own for as low as PORT ANGELES $675/m. Pr ices range from $29,950 to $ 4 6 , 9 5 0 . F i n a n c i n g P.A.: East side 2 br., a v a i l a b l e O A C C a l l fresh paint, new carpets, (360) 808-7120 vinyl windows, garage and huge yard. No pets. SEQ: 2Br. and 1Ba. Will $ 7 7 5 / m o. $ 1 0 0 0 d e p. and references. be painted and reroofed. (360)808-4476 $39,000. (360)775-6433

Inc.

The

VACANCY FACTOR

is at a HISTORICAL LOW

Properties by

Inc.

The

VACANCY FACTOR

is at a HISTORICAL LOW

1163 Commercial 6045 Farm Fencing & Equipment Rentals

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

417-2810

Properties by

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

(360)

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

WATERVIEW HOME Water & Mountain View home on one acre in desirable Sequim neighborhood offers main level living, 2 elevated view decks, granite counters, gas fireplace, beautiful landscaping featuring a waterfall, pond and low maintenance turf. MLS#291853 $400,000 Deborah Norman Brokers Group Real Estate Professionals (360)460.9961

605 Apartments Clallam County

Properties by

Inc.

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VACANCY FACTOR

WANTED: Riding lawnmowers, working or not. Will pickup for free. Kenny (360)775-9779

VAC U U M : ( S h o p ) Craftsman, 6 gal, 3 hp. $25. (360)683-7435

WANTED: Sawdust for animal bedding. Call (360)417-7685

VA S E : 1 9 6 0 ’s G r e e n swedish controlled bubble, vase ala Nylund. $200. (360)461-7365

WANTED: Wells Cargo type trailer with a back door that makes a ramp. 2 0 0 8 S u z u k i V- S t r o m Under $1,000. 650. Pr ime condition. (360)452-1519 11,800 miles. Original owner. Service records. 6135 Yard & Ju s t s e r v i c e d . N e e d s nothing. Many extras, inGarden cluding: center stand LAWNMOWER: Crafts- a n d g e l s e a t . $ 5 , 4 0 0 man 2014, 42”, 17.5 hp, OBO. Scott at (360)461-7051. auto trans., like new. $900/obo(360)509-4894 HONDA: ‘04, VTX 1800 MISC: DR Power Trim- CC road bike, 9,535 mil. mer. 8.75 HP, self-pro- s p e e d o m e t e r 1 5 0 . pelled, battery / manual $5,500. (360)797-3328. star t, used 4 Hr. New 1 2 ” B e ave r B l a d e fo r brush unused, tune up kit with plug, belts, oil, filter and 70’ blue cord. S p a r e m ow - b a l l , l i ke brand new. $1,100. (360)457-2943

WALKER: Rollator, very nice. $4. (949)241-0371

is at a HISTORICAL LOW

452-1326 452-1326 452-1326

PA: Harbor view, 2Br., W/D, no pets, no smoking. $1500. 460-5639 SEQ: 3 br., 2 bath, 1 acre 1,750 sf., W/S incl. $1,200. (360)774-6004. WA N T E D : 3 b r. , home, in Sequim, Port Angeles, or Port Townsend, available 4/1/16. N e e d e d fo r 1 y e a r minimum. (843)838-1491 or (843)694-1155

NEED EXTRA CASH! Sell your Treasures! 360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714 www.peninsula dailynews.com PENINSULA CLASSIFIED

REMINGTON: Left handed, model 300 Winmag, Leupold 3x9 scope, extra clip, case. Excellent cond. $675. cell (206)498-8008 WE BUY FIREARMS CASH ON THE SPOT ~~~ ANY & ALL ~~~ TO P $ $ $ PA I D I N CLUDING ESTATES AND OR ENTIRE COLLECTIONS Call (360)477-9659

SAILING DINGHY: 8’. Can be rowed. $1,000. (360)452-2118

9817 Motorcycles

RIDING LAWNMOWERS $400 to $700. Call Kenny (360)775-9779

RIDING MOWER: Model HONDA: ‘87 Aspencade, LTX 1000, 42”. V-Twin loaded with extras. 60K 2 1 . 5 h p. G r e a t c o n d . , miles. With gear. $3,750. (360)582-3065. Serviced annually. $600. (360)457-5374 HONDA: CRF250R, ‘09, excellent condition, 8183 Garage Sales r a m p s a n d e x t r a s . PA - East $3,500. (208)704-8886

WANTED: Quality items in good condition for gar9030 Aviation age sale June 10-11. 6065 Food & Proceeds benefit WAG, Farmer’s Market local dog rescue. Ac- Quarter interest in 1967 cepting kitchen, house- Piper Cherokee, hanEGGS: Farm fresh eggs hold items, linens furnigered in PA. $8,500. from Easter Egg layers, t u r e , g a r d e n / o u t d o o r (360)460-6606. free range. $4.25 per furniture etc. Call to ardozen. (360)417-7685. range pick up (360)6839180 Automobiles 0932

MISC: Tonutti 3pt hay rake, $1,500. Tonutti rot a r y m o w e r. $ 4 , 0 0 0 . Round bailer 40-100lb bails. $7,000. Crescent w o r k s 1 4 ’ t a bl e s aw. 6075 Heavy $200. Chicken plucker. $300. 1946 Ford Tractor. Equipment $750. 1942 Ford Tractor $300. Large capacity refrigerators $95 each. 6 D U M P T R U C K : ‘ 8 5 , burner Wolf gas stove. Mack cab over, 5yd double cylinder with loading $1,500. (360)477-1706 ramps. $5000/obo or trade (253)348-1755.

6050 Firearms & Ammunition

B OAT S a l e / M a r i n e S wa p. A p r i l 9 , 2 0 1 6 . Boats, kayaks, dinghies, marine gear, outboard engines. Register your vessel or reserve your booth for the show! Call Port Ludlow Marina for details. (360)437-0513.

VACUUM: Kenmore, upright, lite weight, with attachments. $25. (360)457-7567

5A246724

105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses 505 Rental Houses Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County

B OAT : 1 2 ’ A l u m i n u m with trailer. $795. (360)461-4189 VIOLIN: Red, 3/4 size, with music and accessoBOAT: 72’ Gregor, 12 ft ries, excellent condition. aluminum, 15 hp, out$500. (619)322-4310 board motor, ez loader trailer, launching package. $2,000/obo. 6125 Tools (360)681-3820

6140 Wanted & Trades

Bring your ads to: Peninsula Daily News 305 West 1st St., PA

NO PHONE CALLS

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

VACUUM: Bissell, power force. $25. (360)452-8430

or FAX to: (360)417-3507 Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com

• No Pets, Livestock, Garage Sales or Firewood

6105 Musical Instruments

WOLFPUP: 2014 Toyhauler RV, 17’ $9,999. (360)461-4189

UNIFORMS: (7) Womans’s size 10-12, khaki. $75 all. (360)452-9106

TV: 25”, with converter. $35. (360)640-2155

D A For items E $200 and under S E D A E FR E E R E F R F

• 2 Ads Per Week • 3 Lines • Private Party Only

W H E E L C H A I R : I nva care Pronto M51 power chair with sure step, like new. $2,500/obo. (360)681-0655.

GLASSTITE Camper shell for Ford long bed pickup truck. Red color, front slider and rear side tilt windows. $300. Call (360) 457-8288

TOOLS: Drum Sander, 12” Grizzly, $290, with stand $340. Dewalt Scroll Saw 20”, $300, with stand $340. Vise, 9” wood vise, never used. $40. Planer, 12” Grizzly, extra blades, $160, with stand $200. (360)457-7450

velvet. good condition WALKER: With seat and PISTONS: 350 Chevy, brakes, like new. $50. $100. (360)302-0369 .030 over, with rods and (360)683-6097 rings. $50. SOFA: Reclines. $120 (360)460-5210 W E E D E AT E R : Tw o obo. (360)640-2921 Green weed eaters PORTABOAT: 12 foot, S O M B R E R O S : ( 2 ) B C 3 1 0 0 a n d X R 5 0 older but works great. Adult. $18. Childs. $8. $5.00 ea (360)683-2455 $200. (360)477-0187 (360)683-9295 WEIGHTS: Barbell style. PRINTER: HP Deskjet, S TA N D M I X E R : S u n - $20. (360)683-1345 brand new. Windows 7 beam, with bowl, bread or Windows 10. $50/obo. and whisk attachements. WEIGHT SET: New in (360)928-3447 box $100.(360)302-0369 $50. (360)808-7486

M ail to: Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 Port Angeles, WA 98362

MISC: Firewood, madrona and alder, 1 1/2 cord, $300. Equalizer spor t A/P truck tires (2), 31x10.50 R15 LT, $75 ea. Several guitars from $400-800 ea. (360)504-2407

9808 Campers & Canopies

6080 Home Furnishings

Classics & Collect.

7030 Horses

AU S T I N : ‘ 6 7 H e a l ey, parts car or project car. $3,500. (360)928-9774 WA N T E D : H o r s e b a ck or 461-7252. riding lessons from a private party. Your horse, CHEV: ‘83 El Camino, your tack. local stock vehicle, (360)452-6812 champagne bronze. $3900 firm. 775-4431

7035 General Pets

FURNITURE: Oak bedroom set, queen size, good condition. $500/obo (360)670-9674 FURNITURE: Roll top desk. $800. Computer desk. $100/obo. (360)452-6508 message

FORD: ‘60 F-100 BBW. All original survivor, runs strong, rusty. Many exFREE: 2 dogs, females, t r a s a n d n e w p a r t s . basset hound and corgi $2,000. chinook mix, owner died, (360)681-2382 spayed, shots, chipped. (360) 928-3015 or FORD: ‘62 F150 Step(360) 461-5105 side. Excellent project vehicle. $900. (360)912-2727 7045 Tack, Feed &

Supplies

MATTRESS SET Queen sized, double pillow top mattress and b ox s p r i n g i n p e r fe c t condition. $100. (360)460-2113

SADDLES: 17” Bob Marshall treeless sport saddle, reins, memory pad. $900. 16” Simco 6040 Electronics saddle, $200. 15” Aus6055 Firewood, tralian stock saddle with Fuel & Stoves MISC: Bunk Bed on top, pad. $800. Pack saddle, TV: Panasonic 42” plaspad, fiberglass panniers. ma screen. $200. FIREWOOD: $179 deliv- desk and bookshelves $300. (360)457-4288 (360)683-3967 ered Sequim-P.A. True below. $300. Large cac o r d . 3 c o r d s p e c i a l pacity refrigerators $95. each. Wolf 6 burner gas $499. (360)582-7910 PLACE YOUR 9820 Motorhomes stove. $1,500 www.portangelesfi re AD ONLINE (360)477-1706 wood.com With our new 2 0 0 0 ROA D T R E K : Classified Wizard MISC: Handmade Myrtle Model 200, 20’ Class B, you can see your 6065 Food & wook drum table, $60 9 5 K m i l e s o n C h ev y ad before it prints! and desk, $110. Craft- C h a s i s . S o l a r r e a d y. Farmer’s Market www.peninsula m a t i c t w i n b e d , e x . $20,000. (360)457-1597 dailynews.com HALIBUT: Fresh, whole shape, $800. (360)581-2166 only. (360)963-2021 MOTORHOMES: Looking for clean low miles ‘07 and newer, 25’ to 35’ motor homes. Contact Joel at Price Ford. (360)457-3333

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

9292 Automobiles Others

ACURA: TL ‘06 excellent condition, one owner, clean car fax, (timing belt, pulley and water pump replaced) new battery. $12,000. (360)928-5500 or (360)808-9800 PACE AREO: ‘89, 34’, needs works, new tires, CHEVY: ‘02 Monte Carlo refrigerator, new seal on SS Coupe 3.8l v6, auto, r o o f , g e n e r a t o r . alloys, good tires, tinted $5,000/obo. windows, keyless, power (253)380-8303 windows, locks, mirrors

and seats, heated leather seats, cruise, tilt, AC, dual zone climate control, CD stereo, onstar, dual front and drivers side airbags. Only 90k TOYOTA DOLPHIN: ‘84 ml! VIN# C l a s s C, 9 2 K m i l e s , good condition, clean. 2G1WX15K029179745 $4,995 $6800. (360)681-4300 Gray Motors 457-4901 9832 Tents & graymotors.com RV: ‘87 Chevy Sprinter, 22’ Class C, , 49K ml, generator, clean, well maintained. $6,800. (360)582-9179

43MOVEUP

With lots of new property listings available in print and online every week, The Peninsula Daily News To advertise a listing call 360.452.2345 Real Estate section makes it easy to find exactly what you’re looking for in a home. Pick up your copy today, or online at peninsuladailynews.com to take the first step!

Travel Trailers

TRAILER: ‘96 18’ Aljo. Sleeps 4, no leaks, new tires, top and awning. $6,700. (360)477-6719.

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


Classified

Peninsula Daily News 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9434 Pickup Trucks Others Others Others HONDA: ‘05 Civic LX Sedan, 1.7L 4 Cylinder, auto, good tires, keyless, power windows, locks and mirrors! Cruise, tilt AC, C D s t e r e o, d u a l front airbags. VIN# JHMES16585S004364 $5,995 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com

VW: ‘86 Wolfberg, Cabriolet, excellent condion. $6,000. (360)477-3725. VW: ‘99 Beetle. 185K ml., manual transmission, sunroof, heated leather seats, well maintained and regular oil changes, excellent condition, second owner has owned it for 16 years. $3,500. (360)775-5790.

DODGE: ‘00 Dakota, 2 wheel drive, short bed, a l l p o w e r, t o w p k g . $6600. (360)582-9769 FORD: ‘72 F250. $2000. (360)452-4336. MITSUBISHI: ‘05 Eclipse GTS, Loaded, maint. records, new tires, brakes, V-6 auto, after market exhaust, premium sound, sun roof, black leather interior, excellent condition. 135K ml, $5,500. (360)457-1766

FORD: ‘97, F-250, 4x4, canopy, spray in bed liner, new battery, alternator, tires. Many extras $6,250 (360)504-2478

TOYOTA: ‘05 Matrix XR Wagon, 1.8L VVT-I4 cylinder, 5 speed manual, alloys, alar m, keyless entr y, power windows, locks & mirrors, 120v ac outlet, cruise, tilt, AC, CD stereo, dual front airbags, only 69K miles! VIN# 2T1KR32E55C431441 $8,995 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com

FORD: F250, ‘95, XLT, extra cab. Banks air, bed liner, canopy, tow package, low miles. $5,000/obo. (360)461-9119

FORD: F150, ‘94, XLT, 4x4, r uns good, good tires, excellent shape, no rust. $3,300. (360)683-8084

TOYOTA : ‘ 0 7 C a r o l l a CE, 119K miles, good cond., CD player, $7000 obo. (805)636-5562

9556 SUVs Others

VW: ‘71 Super beetle, FORD: F350, ‘95, Crew needs work, new uphol- Cab, 4x4, 7.3 Powerstery, tires and wheels. stroke. $7,700/obo. (425)344-6654 $600 worth of new accessories. $1,500. (360)374-2500

KIA: ‘05 Rio Sedan: 1.6L m i - t e c h 4 c y l i n d e r, 5 speed manual, new tires, CD, stereo, dual front airbags. only 84k ml! VIN# KNADC125756402235 9434 Pickup Trucks $3,995 Others Gray Motors 457-4901 CHEVY: ‘98 Silverado, graymotors.com 4wd, new engine. MAZDA: ‘90 Miata, con- $5,500. ver tible, red. 120K ml. reymaxine5@gmail.com or excellent condition, (360)457-9070 $4,500 (360)670-9674

TOYOTA: ‘05 Scion XA. 65K miles, new tires and rims, tinted, 32mpg. $7,800. (360)912-2727

9556 SUVs Others

NISSAN: ‘85 4x4, Z24 4 c y l , 5 s p, m a t c h i n g canopy, new tires, runs great!. 203k, new head at 200k. VERY low VIN (ends in 000008!) third a d u l t o w n e r, a l l n o n smokers. Very straight body. $4,250. (360)477-1716

Tuesday, March 22, 2016 B9

9730 Vans & Minivans 9931 Legal Notices Others Clallam County

NISSAN: ‘10 Murano, 48K mi. Excellent cond. $15,500. (360)681-4803

9556 SUVs Others

JEEP: ‘07 Rubicon, 35” Baja claws, Ripp supercharger with intercooler and larger fuel injectors, h e a d e r s a n d f u l l ex haust, Diablo tuned for 91 octane, front and rear lockers, 4” long arm susCHEVY: ‘92 S10 Blaz- pension, XRC front and e r 4 X 4 . 4 . 3 Vo r t e c rear bumpers, XRC rock 1 3 0 k m i l e s . O i l rails, XRC 8000 pound changed ever y 3000 winch, hard top, soft top miles. Lots of power with clear and tinted winoptions.This is a non dows, C02 tank, Handysmoking vehicle and man jack, CB radio, 6 ve r y c l e a n . $ 3 , 2 5 0 speed manual transmisOBO Contact Vickie at sion, 4 flood HID lights, (360) 775-1662 ARB front and rear differential covers, 55,800 CHEVY: ‘98 Suburban, miles. $19,995. 4 W D. 8 s e a t s , g o o d wattswilliam36 cond., $4,000. @gmail.com (360)683-7711 (360)457-4945

9730 Vans & Minivans Others DODGE: ‘02 Grand Caravan, 200K miles, good cond., $1500 obo. (360)808-2898 DODGE: ‘03 Grand Caravan. Good condition. $2,400/obo. FORD: ‘06 E450 14’ Box (360)460-6780 Truck. ALL RECORDS, PLYMOTH ‘91 Voyager, W E L L M A I N T ’ D, 7 6 K with lift, CD player new miles, Good tires, Serb r a k e s , r u n s g r e a t . vice done Feb 7.TITLE IN HAND! Asking $2,000/negotiable. $20,000 Willing to nego(360)670-2428 tiate.(202)257-6469

ADD A PHOTO TO YOUR AD FOR ONLY $10! www.peninsula dailynews.com

9931 Legal Notices Clallam County

9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County NO. 16 4 00101 7 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM CHEVY: Suburban, ‘09, X LT 1 5 0 0 , 5 . 3 L V 8 , In the Matter of the Estate of: 4 W D, 6 5 K m l . , S l a t e ROBERT TURNER GREGORY Deceased Gray with color match wheels, seats 8, cloth in- The Personal Representative named below has terior, molded floor mats, been appointed as personal representative of this g r e a t c o n d i t i o n , n o estate. Any person having a claim against the des m o k i n g o r p e t s . cedent must, before the time the claim would be $25,000. (360)477-8832. barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided JEEP: ‘11 Wrangler Ru- in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the bicon. 9500 miles, as personal representative, or the personal represennew, never off road, au- tative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy to, A.C., nav., hard top, of the claim and filing the original of the claim with power windows, steering the court. The claim must be presented within the and locks. Always gar- later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as aged. $28,500 provided under RCW 11.40.020(3); or (2) four (360)681-0151 months after the date of first publication of the noKIA: ‘09 Spor tage LX, tice. If the claim is not presented within this time 4d utility, great condition, frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherpower locks, windows, wise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. V6, front wheel drive and This bar is effective as to claims against both the much more. Below book decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. at $5,000. Available April Date of First Publication: March 22, 2016 2016. (253)246-9002. Personal Representative: Steven E. Gregory Attorney for Personal Representative: Moving can’t take Kenneth J. Wolfley JEEP: CJ5, ‘80, beauti- Address for Mailing or Service: ful condition, Red, soft 713 E 1st St. t o p , d i a m o n d p l a t e . Port Angeles, WA 98362 $8,500 (360)670-9674. Pub: March 22, 29, April 5, 2016 Legal No. 689367 JEEP: Grand Cherokee Laredo, ‘11, 4x4, 29K ml. lots of extras, clean, $27,500. (360)452-8116.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Peninsula Housing Authority The PHA has drafted its FY 2017 Annual Plan. In accordance with US Dept. of Housing & Urban Development regulations, a Public Hearing on this matter will be held at the PHA office, 2603 S. Francis Street, Port Angeles, Washington, on the 12th day of April, 2016 at 9:00 a.m. The revised Annual Plan is available for the public to review at the PHA office 9am to 4pm Monday thru Thursday or on our website at www.peninsulapha.org Pub: March 22, 29, 2016 Legal No. 689410

NO. 16-4-0063-1 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF: Dorothy A. Hellman, Deceased. The Personal Representative named below has been appointed as Personal Representative of this estate. Any persons having a claim against the Decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Personal Representative or the Personal Representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the 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 as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the Notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the Decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. Date of first publication: March 8, 2016 Personal Representative: Terry W. Hellman Attorney for Personal Representative: Curtis G. Johnson, WSBA #8675 Address for Mailing or Service: Law Office of Curtis G. Johnson, P.S. 230 E. 5th Street Port Angeles, WA 98362 (360) 452-3895 Pub: March 8, 15, 22, 2016 Legal No. 686682

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9934 Jefferson County Legals

9934 Jefferson County Legals

Request for Qualifications (RFQ) for Professional Consultant Services – Capital Improvement Projects Owner Port Townsend School District Submittal Time / Date March 28, 5:00 P.M. (electronically, via email only) Submit To Kirk Robinson, Project Manager The Robinson Company Telephone: (206) 391- 0938 Email: bkrobinson@robinson-co. com

Port Townsend School District is requesting qualifications for professional consultant services from interested firms for various Capital Improvement Projects within the school district. Projects include, but are not limited to: 1.Replacement of Grant Street Elementary School including full site development and building abatement and demolition. 2.Minor modernization work at the existing high school.

Interested firms with recent experience in the following disciplines are requested to submit qualifications, separately or together:

• Land Surveying • Geotechnical Investigation • Hazardous Material Consulting • Constructability Review • Value Engineering • Testing & Inspections • Commissioning • Traffic Engineering • Services include those which fall under RCW 39.80 – Contracts for Architectural and Engineering Services. In order to be considered, interested firms shall submit their qualifications including the following:

• • • • • •

Cover Letter, Firm background and qualifications, Experience with public school districts, A minimum of four (4) public school references with names and phone numbers of references, Resumes of key individuals providing service, including project specific information, Availability to commence work immediately.

The qualifications package shall be submitted via email by PDF electronic format only and shall be limited to fifteen (15) 8.5” x 11” pages including the cover letter. Faxed or mailed copies may not be accepted.

All questions shall be directed to Kirk Robinson at The Robinson Company via email (bkrobinson@robinson-co.com).

Port Townsend School District will review all applicant submittals and select the most qualified firm with which to negotiate a mutually agreeable fee for the anticipated scope of work based on project requirements.

This is not a request for proposal. Following the evaluation of the submittals the school district will select the most highly qualified firm(s) for the services required and ask for fee proposals. Pub: March 22, 2016 Legal No. 689159

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B10

WeatherBusiness

TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2016 Neah Bay 49/43

Bellingham 53/43 g

Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 52/43

Port Angeles 52/40

Olympics Snow level: 3,500 feet

T AF CR Y L OR AL IS SM ADV

Forks 53/42

Sequim 53/40

Port Ludlow 54/43

Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 54 41 0.09 12.34 Forks 59 46 0.53 44.27 Seattle 54 47 0.31 18.84 Sequim 58 43 0.00 4.98 Hoquiam 54 46 0.86 36.50 Victoria 52 44 0.09 14.14 Port Townsend 59 46 **0.01 7.56

Last

New

First

Forecast highs for Tuesday, March 22

Sunny

Low 40 Showery curtain falls

53/40 The rain begins once more

Billings 52° | 38°

Minneapolis 54° | 35°

San Francisco 61° | 51°

Chicago 63° | 42°

Denver 69° | 42°

Atlanta 70° | 35°

El Paso 85° | 52° Houston 74° | 50°

Fronts

52/39 51/38 51/39 Water comes Possibly showers But sunlight down on us all might pour might shine bright

Strait of Juan de Fuca: SW morning wind 5 to 15 kt becoming W 10 to 20 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. A slight chance of morning showers. Then a chance of afternoon showers. W evening wind 15 to 25 kt easing to 10 to 20 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft.

Seattle 56° | 43° Tacoma 56° | 43°

Olympia 56° | 39° Astoria 54° | 43°

ORE.

TODAY High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 12:50 a.m. 8.1’ 6:55 a.m. 1.4’ 12:52 p.m. 8.2’ 7:11 p.m. 0.6’ 9:23 a.m. 3.0’ 9:18 p.m. 1.9’

Apr 13

7:30 p.m. 7:09 a.m. 7:22 a.m. 7:00 p.m.

Nation/World

Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Spokane Atlantic City 49° | 38° Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Yakima Bismarck 55° | 34° Boise Boston Brownsville © 2016 Wunderground.com Buffalo Burlington, Vt.

Hi 41 62 57 36 46 57 41 63 42 67 56 49 70 35 68 41 37

Lo 32 39 34 30 32 37 31 32 33 51 33 25 47 28 47 24 24

Prc

.15 .33

.07 .22

Otlk PCldy Clr Clr Cldy Clr Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr Clr Cldy Cldy Snow Clr Snow Cldy

TOMORROW High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 1:20 a.m. 8.3’ 7:32 a.m. 1.1’ 1:30 p.m. 8.2’ 7:43 p.m. 0.9’

THURSDAY High Tide Ht Low Tide 1:49 a.m. 8.4’ 8:06 a.m. 2:07 p.m. 8.0’ 8:13 p.m.

Ht 0.9’ 1.2’

3:51 a.m. 6.6’ 3:58 p.m. 6.0’

9:51 a.m. 2.4’ 9:53 p.m. 2.3’

4:10 a.m. 6.6’ 10:22 a.m. 4:40 p.m. 6.1’ 10:29 p.m.

2.0’ 2.8’

Port Angeles

3:31 a.m. 6.7’ 3:15 p.m. 5.9’

Port Townsend

5:08 a.m. 8.3’ 10:36 a.m. 3.3’ 4:52 p.m. 7.3’ 10:31 p.m. 2.1’

5:28 a.m. 8.2’ 11:04 a.m. 2.7’ 5:35 p.m. 7.4’ 11:06 p.m. 2.6’

5:47 a.m. 8.2’ 11:35 a.m. 6:17 p.m. 7.5’ 11:42 p.m.

2.2’ 3.1’

Dungeness Bay*

4:14 a.m. 7.5’ 3:58 p.m. 6.6’

4:34 a.m. 7.4’ 10:26 a.m. 2.4’ 4:41 p.m. 6.7’ 10:28 p.m. 2.3’

4:53 a.m. 7.4’ 10:57 a.m. 5:23 p.m. 6.8’ 11:04 p.m.

2.0’ 2.8’

9:58 a.m. 3.0’ 9:53 p.m. 1.9’

Warm Stationary

Pressure Low

High

Mar 23

Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonset tomorrow Moonrise today

CANADA Victoria 54° | 43°

Ocean: W morning wind 10 to 20 kt becoming NW 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. W swell 10 ft at 13 seconds. A chance of showers. W evening wind 15 to 20 kt easing to 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. W swell 8 ft at 13 seconds.

LaPush

SATURDAY

Mar 31 Apr 7

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

-10s

-0s

Casper 61 Charleston, S.C. 56 Charleston, W.Va. 48 Charlotte, N.C. 47 Cheyenne 54 Chicago 44 Cincinnati 45 Cleveland 36 Columbia, S.C. 52 Columbus, Ohio 44 Concord, N.H. 42 Dallas-Ft Worth 57 Dayton 44 Denver 58 Des Moines 48 Detroit 46 Duluth 37 El Paso 66 Evansville 48 Fairbanks 37 Fargo 41 Flagstaff 65 Grand Rapids 45 Great Falls 68 Greensboro, N.C. 46 Hartford Spgfld 43 Helena 65 Honolulu 84 Houston 61 Indianapolis 47 Jackson, Miss. 55 Jacksonville 79 Juneau 52 Kansas City 49 Key West 82 Las Vegas 87 Little Rock 53 Los Angeles 72 Louisville 50

37 44 28 35 32 28 29 24 41 26 26 34 26 35 28 28 21 49 33 20 30 31 29 48 33 29 38 71 34 28 35 42 33 26 68 67 32 58 34

0s

10s

20s 30s 40s

50s 60s

70s

80s 90s 100s 110s

Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press

.04 .11

.09

.02

.07 .11

.10

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

Valley, Calif. Ä 7 in Grand Marais, Minn.

Washington D.C. 62° | 34°

Los Angeles 71° | 53°

Full

à 96 in Death

New York 56° | 34°

Detroit 58° | 33°

Miami 75° | 57°

Washington TODAY

Marine Conditions

Tides

FRIDAY

Cloudy

TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:

Cold

THURSDAY

Pt. Cloudy

Seattle 56° | 43°

Cartography by Keith Thorpe / © Peninsula Daily News

TONIGHT WEDNESDAY

The Lower 48

National forecast Nation TODAY

Almanac

Brinnon 54/43

Aberdeen 54/44

Yesterday

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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

58 51 86 60 40 43 47 63 43 46 54 51 49 82 62 43 91 37 35 55 41 42 60 67 44 68 48 77 70 65 69 66 89 58 38 57 43 41 77

41 34 66 38 29 28 35 46 32 39 28 28 28 50 39 34 66 25 26 48 29 37 26 50 36 53 33 56 55 36 60 54 74 35 26 32 30 24 50

.18

.13 .18

.05 .25 .07 .03 .19 .23 .20 .04 .04 .08 .10

.11

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

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

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

50 88 53 44 50 41 43

29 56 35 37 27 28 31

Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr PCldy .12 Clr

_______ Auckland Beijing Berlin Brussels Cairo Calgary Guadalajara Hong Kong Jerusalem Johannesburg Kabul London Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome San Jose, CRica Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver

Hi Lo Otlk 73 69 Rain/Wind 59 30 PCldy 47 37 Sh 51 37 Sh 77 53 Clr 38 23 Cldy/Snow 84 50 PCldy 74 59 Sh 61 48 PCldy 73 54 PCldy 67 36 PCldy 52 40 PCldy 75 49 PCldy 39 30 PCldy 30 22 Cldy/Snow 90 61 Hazy 54 37 PCldy 93 76 PCldy 72 51 Ts/Sh 84 69 PCldy 80 61 PCldy 63 41 PCldy 43 37 PM Sh 53 43 Sh

$ Briefly . . . Apple debuts smaller devices Ambulances donated to

Real-time stock quotations at

BY BRANDON BAILEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AND

THE WINNERS ARE

...

Coldwell Banker Uptown Realty has announced the winners of the two $100 Visa Signature gift cards that were a part of a drawing at this year’s KONP Home & Lifestyle Show in Port Angeles. Pictured from left are realtor Kathy Brown with winners Casey and Jenessa Balch. Not pictured are winners Jim and Sally Halvorsen.

New CEO, activist join drug company BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Embattled drug company Valeant Pharmaceuticals is shaking up its leadership by looking for a new CEO and adding activist investor William Ackman to its board of directors. U.S.-traded shares of the Canadian company soared

more than 12 percent in Monday morning trading. Valeant said that current CEO J. Michael Pearson will stay until his replacement has been appointed. Pearson just returned from a two-month medical leave.

CUPERTINO, Calif. — As it struggles to match the success of its big-screen iPhones, Apple is now contending that small can be beautiful, too. The giant tech company showed off downsized versions of its signature iPhone and iPad Pro tablet on Monday, hoping they’ll appeal to first-time buyers and those who have shied away from the bigger-screen models Apple has sold in recent years. At a time when overall smartphone sales are slowing, Apple touted its new four-inch iPhone SE as the “most affordable” new phone the company has offered.

Updated features While it comes with an upgraded camera, faster processor and other features, the SE has a starting price of $400, or $50 less than the older iPhone 5S that it’s replacing. By contrast, the iPhone 6S Plus, which had been Apple’s newest and biggest phone, starts at $750. The company also knocked $50 off the price of

peninsuladailynews.com

food program

its Apple Watch, showed off some new bands for the wearable gadget, and announced some software enhancements for its mobile devices and the Apple TV system. Apple’s spring product event came one day before the tech giant is set to square off with authorities in federal court over the FBI’s demand for help unlocking a mass shooter’s encrypted iPhone.

Market watch

SEQUIM — Bill Littlejohn, president of Olympic Ambulance, has donated two more ambulances to Food for the Poor, bringing the total number of ambulances donated to nine since 2006. In addition to ambulances, Olympic Ambulance has contributed a variety of other medical equipment and supplies, according to a news release The ambulances were donated March 9. Food for the Poor offers aid to those in 17 Latin American and Caribbean countries. Those interested in learning more about Food for the Poor can visit www.foodforthepoor.org.

CEO remarks The dispute has dominated headlines in recent weeks, as Apple CEO Tim Cook acknowledged in brief remarks at the opening of Monday’s event. “We did not expect to be in this position, at odds with our own government,” he said. “But we believe strongly that we have a responsibility to help you protect your data and your privacy.” Few of Monday’s announcements surprised industry experts.

Gold and silver Gold for April fell $10.10, or 0.8 percent, to settle at $1,244.20 an ounce Tuesday. May silver rose

March 21, 2016

Dow Jones industrials

21.57 17,623.87

Nasdaq composite

13.23 4,808.87

Standard & Poor’s 500

2.02 2,051.60

Russell 2000

-3.10 1,098.58

NYSE diary Advanced:

1,550

Declined:

1,529

Unchanged: Volume:

105 3.4 b

Nasdaq diary Advanced:

1,445

Declined:

1,367

Unchanged: Volume:

100 1.6 b AP

3.6 cents, or 0.2 percent, to $15.847 an ounce. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press

peninsuladailynews.com

NOTIFICATION OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT’S FINDING OF NO SIGNIFICANT ENVRIONMENTAL IMPACT The United States Department of Agriculture, Rural Development (RD) has received an application from the Makah Tribe to construct a new well in the Tsoo-Yess well field area. The replacement well will allow the Tribe to meet their water system needs during drought conditions and provide a safe drinking water source. RD has assessed the potential environmental impacts of this proposed action and

FREE VEIN SCREENING EVENT

determined that it will not significantly affect the quality of the human environment. Makah Reservation - Clallam County, WA

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Saturday, March 26th (9AM—12PM)

9

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10

BROWN DISCOLORATION

Rixon #2

18

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19

20

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Fire Hydrant

Well #1 (online) Potential Wetland

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The proposal is

Development Office 1835 Black Lake Blvd SW, Suite B

Stream A67

Olympia, WA 98512. For further information contact Debbie Harper, USDA

Call to schedule a free ultrasound and exam with our board-certified physicians for this limited time screening event:

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Rural Development, at 360-

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TFEE

New Well Location

704-7764.

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Aksel G. Nordestgaard, MD, FACS Yi Soo Robert Kim, MD, FACS

Proposed

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(360) 698-6802

A general location map of

Tsoo-yess River

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M a k a h G I S

R e f e r e n c e

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action.

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You may have venous insufficiency, a progressive medical condition.

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statement for this proposed

USDA Rural !

32N-15W

impact

available for review at:

EDEMA

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environmental

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Do You Suffer From Any of the Following?

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541 Eureka Way Sequim, WA 98382

Therefore, RD will not prepare

Rixon #3


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