Tuesday
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS September 8 8,, 2015 | 75¢
Port Angeles-Sequim-West End
Aiming for the stars
CLALLAM COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE
A truck is documented in an alleged chop shop east of Port Angeles.
POSITRON DYNAMICS
Port Angeles High School graduate and Seattle resident Dr. Ryan Weed, 31, and a team of researchers are attempting to harness the energy of positrons, also referred to as anti-electrons or antimatter.
PA graduate at work on harnessing positron energy Seattle resident joins researchers in bid for interstellar travel BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — A Port Angeles High School graduate aims to make interstellar travel a reality by making the world’s first antimatter rocket. Ryan Weed, 31, now living in Seattle, and a team of researchers are attempting to harness the energy of positrons, also referred to as anti-electrons or
antimatter — an endeavour once the realm of science fiction. If they are successful, interstellar flight may be possible within the next century, he said. “Antimatter is real,” said Weed, who graduated from Port Angeles High School in 2002 and has since lived in six countries and visited six continents. “We even use it at most hospitals to image tumors” with positron emission tomography scanners, which are known as PET scanners, he said. Weed, an Air Force pilot who flies out of Joint Base Lewis-McChord south of Tacoma, is cofounder and CEO of Positron Dynamics, a Livermore, Calif.-
based company working to develop an antimatter rocket. He has a bachelor of arts degree in physics from Wesleyan University in Middletown, Conn., a bachelors of science in engineering-applied physics from Columbia University, New York, and a doctorate from the Center of Excellence in Antimatter Matter Studies at the Australian National University. His parents are Terry and Sherry Weed of Port Angeles. He has two older brothers and one older sister, also Port Angeles High School graduates, who no longer live in Port Angeles. TURN
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‘Chop shop’ found near PA PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — A Port Angeles man has been arrested for investigation of possession of a stolen vehicle and possession of a controlled substance after deputies said they found a “chop shop” for stolen cars east of Port Angeles. Clinton L. King, 35, remained in the Clallam County jail Monday with no bond set. He also was is listed as having two pay-or-appear warrants from Clallam County and one Class B felony warrant from Benton County. “He has an extensive felony history” of being charged with unlawful possession of firearms and drugs, Clallam County Sheriff’s Deputy Paul Federline, who was one of the arresting officers, said of King. The case is being forwarded to the Clallam County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office for charging. The investigating is continuing, Pieper said. TURN
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PT Everest climber hopeful for Peace Day Whittaker to join international team BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — A veteran mountain climber believes that an upcoming 25th Anniversary commemoration of International Peace Day will encourage worldwide support for peace and protecting the environment. “People do not want war. They want peace,” said Jim Whittaker of Port Townsend. “And the people want to shout it from the rooftops that we need to support and help each other rather than fighting.” Whittaker, 86, climbed Mount Everest in 1963, winning renown
as the first American to reach the 29,029-foot summit of the world’s tallest mountain. He has spent the intervening years bringing a naturalist message to the public, using his expedition as a jumping-off point to get people interested in nature, the environment and peace.
Peace Climb On Sept. 17, he will join an international team of Mount Everest climbers from the United States, Russia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Belarus, and China to celebrate in Seattle and at Mount Rainier the 25th anniversary of
the Mount Everest International Peace Climb in 1990. At that time, the United States, China, and the Soviet Union were Cold War enemies and real war was not unthinkable so Whittaker convened a group of international climbers to work together. Despite language barriers, foul weather, equipment failures, illness, and the occasional squabble, the expedition was ultimately successful, Whittaker said. “In 1990, our team proved that tremendous heights can be reached by working together in cooperation and friendship toward CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS a common goal,” he said. “But the earth is still warming Jim Whittaker of Port Townsend will join an international team of Mount Everest climbers Sept. 17 to celebrate the and the drums of war still beat.”
25th anniversary of the Mount Everest International
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Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Prince William to film speech on China TV PRINCE WILLIAM WILL make a rare speech on Chinese television to discuss the need to curb illegal wildlife trade. Palace officials said Monday that William will record the speech in October for use on Prince CCTV1, William described as the station with the largest audience in China. William has been an advocate of protecting endangered species and
has made the issue one of his priorities. A palace statement says William is “grateful to have this opportunity to explain how people around the world must work together” to preserve wildlife. He discussed the issue with Chinese officials during his official visit to Beijing earlier this year.
Bono praises Europe U2 frontman Bono is applauding Europe’s turnabout in accepting refugees. In an interview with Turin, Italy daily La Stampa, Bono said the image of little Aylan on the beach — and pictures of German children offering their toys to Syrian refugees — “will remain in
the history of Europe.” He was quoted as saying: “We might truly be at a turning point for Bono what Europe wants to be in the 21st century.” He had particular praise for German Chancellor Angela Merkel, saying in a few short days she “has become a moral symbol for Europe.” “This week, something incredible happened, and Europe isn’t the same as it was seven days ago.” Bono was in Italy to kick off a European tour and participate in a U.N. event on ending world hunger.
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Passings By The Associated Press
JEAN DARLING, 93, who appeared in the “Our Gang” comedy films as a child and performed in the original Broadway production of “Carousel,” died Friday in Rodgau, Germany. Her death was confirmed by her friend Rene Riva, a Dutch actor and singer, who directed her in 2013 Ms. Darling in “The But- in 1927 ler’s Tale,” a short silent comedy film styled after the ones Ms. Darling starred in as a child. Known for her golden locks and a face like a kewpie doll, Ms. Darling was cast in the “Our Gang” films when she was 4, and appeared in 46 silent films and six talkies between 1927 and 1929. She continued to appear in films after the leaving the series, including as the young Jane Eyre in the 1934 adaptation of Charlotte Brontë’s novel. In 1945, she originated the role of Carrie Pipperidge in “Carousel” and appeared in more than 850 performances. She was also a vaudeville performer and acted on radio and television. She later became an author, writing a novel, “Marinda,” and two autobiographies, in addition to hundreds of short stories. Ms. Darling was one of a handful of “Our Gang” cast members still living who worked in the silent film era. She was born Dorothy Jean LeVake on Aug. 23, 1922, in Santa Monica, Calif. Her parents split a few months later because, she said in a 2009 interview with Mr. Riva, her father did not want her mother to put her in movies. Ms. Darling’s mother legally renamed her when she was 5 months old and soon began seeking jobs for
her in films. She married Reuben Bowen, known as Kajar the Magician, in 1954 and toured the world with his magic show. They separated after 19 years. He died in 1980. The couple had a son, Roy, who survives them, as do two grandsons.
________ LYNN WALKER HUNTLEY, 69, a lawyer who was deeply involved in a wide spectrum of civil rights cases and causes, including capital punishment, race relations and employment discrimination, died Aug. 30 at her home in Atlanta. The cause was cervical cancer, her husband, Walter Huntley, said. Ms. Huntley was at var- Ms. Huntley ious times an official in the Department of Justice, general counsel to the New York City Commission on Human Rights, a lawyer for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, a scholar and program director for the Ford Foundation and president of a charity that works to improve
Seen Around Peninsula snapshots
THE MV COHO ferry whistle tooting in an “offkey” fashion the past few weeks when arriving from and departing for Victoria . . . 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 360-417-3521; or email news@peninsula dailynews.com. Be sure you mention where you saw your “Seen Around.”
education for children. She was born Mary Lynn Jones on Jan. 24, 1946, in Petersburg, Va. Her father, the Rev. Lawrence N. Jones, was active in the civil rights movement in the early 1960s, when he was associated with Fisk University in Nashville. Ms. Huntley worked with the Southern Education Foundation, whose mission is to raise educational standards in the South, especially for black children and those from poor families. Ms. Huntley joined the foundation in 1995 and in 2002 became its first female president. By the time she retired in 2010, she had raised more than $44 million and doubled its endowment, the organization said. At the Justice Department in the early 1980s, she became the first black woman to head the Special Litigation Section in the Civil Rights Division.
SUNDAY’S QUESTION: Do you think the United States should take in some of the migrants presently arriving in Europe to help solve the humanitarian crisis there? Yes
30.1%
No Undecided
65.3% 4.6% Total votes cast: 754
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 finishing orders for the Aug. 28 BMX races at the Port Angeles BMX track were listed incorrectly on Page B2 of the Aug. 30 edition due to inaccurate information provided to the PDN. Please see Page B2 of today’s edition for the correct finish-
ing orders from those races.
_________ 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, contact Executive Editor Leah Leach at 360-4173530 or lleach@peninsuladailynews. com.
Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News
1940 (75 years ago) Completing another summer of shuttling across the Strait between Port Angeles and Victoria, the Black Ball ferry Olympic will finish its 1940 schedule Sunday evening. It will carry out its regular series of round trips Sunday, winding up with the last journey from Port Angeles to Victoria in the evening. Commanded this year by Capt. Colin McLennan, son of Mr. and Mrs. C.F. McLennan of Port Angeles, the Olympic has had a fairly heavy volume of business. Restrictions on travel by Canadians cut into the traffic considerably.
1965 (50 years ago) If a local [Port Angeles]
citizen happens to have 100 pounds of horse meat for sale, they will find a ready market with the advanced vanguard of the Shrine-sponsored Polack Brother’s Circus. Included in the group arriving to take up temporary quarters at the Clallam County Fairgrounds are lions, and they need nourishment. Nourishment for the animals is most often in the form of horse meat, the circus people have informed E.L. Critchfield, co-chairman for the circus, showing Sept. 11 and 12 at Civic Field.
1990 (25 years ago) Extensive tests of the extra-slippery-when-wet sections of U.S. Highway 101 along Lake Crescent
proved only one thing: The road is dangerously slick, so it will be fixed to improve traction. The dangerous sections run through Olympic National Park, and John Teichert, park assistant superintendent, said: “We’ve had a variety of people on the road with technical devices. From all these investigations, we do not have a convincing argument of what the problem is.”
Laugh Lines GOOGLE HAS ANNOUNCED that the next version of its Android phone software will be called Marshmallow. It’ll be similar to the last version but with s’more features. Seth Meyers
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS TUESDAY, Sept. 8, the 251st day of 2015. There are 114 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On Sept. 8, 1935, Sen. Huey P. Long, D-La., was shot and mortally wounded inside the Louisiana State Capitol; he died two days later. The assailant was identified as Dr. Carl Weiss, who was gunned down by Long’s bodyguards. ■ On this date: ■ In 1565, a Spanish expedition established the first permanent European settlement in North America at present-day St. Augustine, Fla. ■ In 1892, an early version of “The Pledge of Allegiance,” written by Francis Bellamy, appeared in
“The Youth’s Companion.” ■ In 1900, Galveston, Texas, was struck by a hurricane that killed an estimated 8,000 people. ■ In 1921, Margaret Gorman, 16, of Washington, D.C., was crowned the first “Miss America” in Atlantic City, N.J. ■ In 1954, the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) was founded in Manila by the United States, France, Britain, New Zealand, Australia, the Philippines, Thailand and Pakistan. ■ In 1974, President Gerald R. Ford granted a “full, free, and absolute pardon” to former President Richard Nixon covering his entire term in office. ■ In 1985, Pete Rose of the
Cincinnati Reds tied Ty Cobb’s career record for hits, singling for hit number 4,191 during a game against the Cubs in Chicago. ■ In 1994, USAir Flight 427, a Boeing 737, crashed into a ravine as it was approaching Pittsburgh International Airport, killing all 132 people on board. ■ Ten years ago: Congress hastened to provide an additional $51.8 billion for relief and recovery from Hurricane Katrina; President George W. Bush pledged to make it “easy and simple as possible” for storm victims to collect food stamps and other government benefits. ■ Five years ago: BP took some of the blame for the Gulf oil disaster in an internal report, acknowledging
among other things that it had misinterpreted a key pressure test of the well, but also assigned responsibility to its partners. ■ One year ago: The European Union shied away from slapping new economic sanctions on Russia right away over its actions in eastern Ukraine, saying the punitive measures would come into force “in the next few days” depending on how well a cease-fire agreement in eastern Ukraine held. Ray Rice was let go by the Baltimore Ravens and suspended indefinitely by the NFL after a video was released showing the running back striking his thenfiancee, Janay Palmer, in an elevator in February 2014.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, September 8, 2015 P A G E
A3 Briefly: Nation Clinton says no to apology over email usage CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa — Hillary Rodham Clinton said Monday she does not need to apologize for using a private email account and server while at the State Department because “what I did was allowed.” In an interview with The Associated Press during a Labor Day campaign swing through Iowa, the front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination also said the lingering questions about her email practices while serving as President Barack Obama’s first secretary of state have not damaged her campaign. “Not at all. It’s a distraction, certainly,” Clinton said. “But it hasn’t in any way affected the plan for our campaign, the efforts we’re making to organize here in Iowa and elsewhere in the country. And I still feel very confident about the organization and the message that my campaign is putting out.”
Dentist to return MINNEAPOLIS — The Minnesota dentist whose killing of Cecil the lion sparked a global backlash emerged for an interview in which he disputed some accounts of the hunt, expressed agitation at the animosity directed at those close to him and said he would be back at work within days. Walter Palmer, who has spent more than a month out of sight after becoming the target of protests and threats, intends to return to his suburban Minneapolis dental practice today.
In an interview Sunday evening conducted jointly by The Associated Press and the Minneapolis Star Tribune that advisers said would be the only one granted, Palmer said again that he believes he acted legally and that he was stunned to find out his hunting party had killed one of Zimbabwe’s treasured animals.
Biden urged on PITTSBURGH — Hearing chants of “run Joe, run,” Vice President Joe Biden marched in Pittsburgh’s annual Labor Day parade on Monday as speculation swirled about a potential late entry into the Democratic presidential campaign. The vice president donned a black-andgold United Steelworkers union hat and told hundreds of union members that the Biden gap between the wealthy and poor was hurting the nation. “The tax code’s not fair. It’s simply not fair,” Biden said in a city long associated with organized labor. “The wealthy aren’t paying their fair share. There used to be one America.” Biden is seriously considering a late entry into the 2016 Democratic presidential campaign. His entry could jumble a Democratic contest that has seen front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton’s lead diminish in early states against Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent who describes himself as a democratic socialist. The Associated Press
Ky. clerk appeals her jailing over licenses Emergency motion filed in federal court THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Attorneys for the Kentucky clerk who was jailed last week because of her refusal to issue marriage licenses to gay couples said Monday they have filed an emergency motion with a federal court that they hope will result in Kim Davis’ freedom. The filing seeks to have Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear accommodate Davis’ “religious conviction,” and not compel her to grant licenses to gay couples, Liberty Counsel said in a statement. “The motion requests an injunction pending appeal for an exemption from the Governor’s mandate that all county clerks issue marriage licenses,” said the statement by Liberty Counsel, which is representing Davis. The same injunction request
was denied last month by U.S. District Judge David Bunning, who jailed Davis on Thursday. Charla Bansley, communications director for Liberty Counsel, said Davis could be released from jail immediately if the motion were granted by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit ordering Beshear to issue Davis an “accommodation” — allowing her to remove her name and title from official marriage certificates issued in Rowan County. By doing that, Davis would not be sanctioning any same-sex unions and her conscience would be satisfied, they said. “If there was an accommodation, she would be released [from jail] because she would no longer be in contempt,” Bansley said. On Sunday, about 30 protesters lined the sidewalk outside Bunning’s home in Fort Thomas, Ky., carrying signs that read “Free Kim Davis.” Fort Thomas Police Lt. Casey Kilgore said the group gathered around 2 p.m., and the protest stretched on several hours. He said the group sang and waved their signs; they broke no laws and no one had been
arrested. He did not know if Bunning was home. Davis, an apostolic Christian, said gay marriage is a sin. She also said it would be a sin for her to issue a marriage license to a samesex couple because the licenses are issued under her authority. She tried in vain to have state lawmakers change the law as a legal challenge to Kentucky’s same-sex marriage ban wound its way through the federal appeals court. Davis stopped issuing all marriage licenses in June the day after the U.S. Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage nationwide. Two gay couples and two straight couples sued her. Judge Bunning ordered Davis to issue the licenses and the Supreme Court upheld his ruling. But Davis still refused to do it, saying she could not betray her conscience or her God. Thursday, Bunning ruled Davis was in contempt of court for disobeying his order and sent her to jail. Her deputy clerks then issued marriage licenses to gay couples Friday with Davis behind bars.
Briefly: World Amanda Knox conviction is attacked ROME — Italy’s top criminal court has scathingly faulted prosecutors for presenting a flawed and hastily constructed case against Amanda Knox and her former Italian boyfriend, saying Monday it threw out their convictions for the 2007 murder of her British roommate in part because there was no proof they were in the bedroom where the woman was fatally stabbed. The Court of Cassation issued its formal written explanation, as required by Italian law, for its March ruling — vindicating the pair once and for all Knox in the murder of Meredith Kercher in the apartment the two women shared while students in Perugia, Italy. It wrote there was an “absolute lack of biological traces” of Knox, an American living in Seattle, or of co-defendant Raffaele Sollecito in the room or on the victim’s body.
The path of the case took was “objectively wavering, whose oscillations are . . . the result also of stunning weakness or investigative bouts of amnesia and of blameworthy omissions of investigative activity,” the court wrote. Had the investigation not been so shaky, “in all probability” the defendants’ guilt or innocence could have been determined from the earliest stages, the panel said.
Migrants march north ROSZKE, Hungary — Hundreds of angry and frustrated asylum-seekers broke through police lines Monday near Hungary’s southern border with Serbia and began marching north toward Budapest, while Britain and France pledged to take in tens of thousands more refugees to try to ease the crisis. As European leaders debated how to share responsibility for the more than 340,000 people from the Middle East, Africa and Asia who are already seeking refuge, Germany promised to spend billions of euros in extra aid for those already there and those yet to arrive. France weighed whether increased airstrikes against Islamic State militants would help to stem the flow of migrants. The Associated Press
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
This still image from video provided Friday by KABC-TV, shows a blue whale that is tangled in fishing line, off the coast of Southern California near the Palos Verdes Peninsula.
Blue whale entangled in fishing line believed to be near Mexico THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
RANCHO PALOS VERDES, Calif. — A boat off the coast of Mexico apparently spotted the blue whale Monday that rescuers first saw several days ago entangled in hundreds of feet of fishing line near Los Angeles. A blue whale trailing line and a red buoy was seen around 10:30 a.m. about 18 miles southwest of the Coronado Islands, according to Jim Milbury, a spokesman for the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Those Islands are off Tijuana,
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Baja California, and more than 100 miles south of where the whale was last seen Friday. U.S. rescuers cannot work those waters but have been in contact with their Mexican counterparts, Milbury said. “There’s not much we can do unless the whale turns north and comes back up,” according to Milbury. He said his understanding was that Mexican rescuers from the group RABEN would need the whale to swim farther south to be able to help it. RABEN could not immediately be reached for comment Monday.
Though the whale was estimated at 80 feet long, rescuers fear the stress and strain could weaken and eventually kill it. Rescuers in Southern California have freed other kinds of whales entangled in fishing gear before, but have not tried to free a blue whale so they do not know how it would react. They have warned boaters not to try and free the whale. On Friday, rescuers off Los Angeles managed to attach a buoy to make the whale easier to spot — but it hadn’t been seen once rough seas forced rescuers to suspend their efforts.
. . . more news to start your day
West: 5 killed in crash of small plane in Colorado
West: Son of ex- 49ers CEO is killed in California
Nation: Man, 19, charged in Dallas crash that killed 4
Nation: Violence once again mars NY parade
A HELICOPTER MONDAY was bringing searchers to a remote site in the southwestern Colorado mountains where five people died in a plane crash Sunday. National Transportation Safety Board spokesman Peter Knudson said no one survived when the twin-engine Cessna 310 went down at 4:15 p.m. Sunday. The victims’ names and hometowns haven’t been released. There was no immediate word on the cause. Knudson couldn’t say whether the plane is the same Cessna 310 reported overdue on a flight from Barstow, California, to Amarillo, Texas.
A MAN WHO died when two vessels collided off Santa Catalina Island in Southern California has been identified as the son of a former CEO of the San Francisco 49ers. The 49ers confirmed Michael Harris, son of former CEO Peter Harris, died Sunday. The team says on Twitter “we join the Harris family in mourning his passing.” Authorities say one person died and three others were injured after a dinghy and a boat collided. A fifth person was reported missing. The Coast Guard suspended the search for that person Sunday evening.
DALLAS POLICE SAY a 19-yearold man has been charged with four counts of accident involving death after four women were killed when his pickup slammed into the side of their car. Senior Cpl. Monica Cordova said Monday that Jose Lule has been charged in the Saturday crash. It was unclear whether he had an attorney. Police say Lule was arrested near the accident scene after trying to flee. Three others in his truck also ran but were caught. Cordova says Lule and his three passengers will each be charged with failure to stop and render aid.
THE WEST INDIAN Day Parade, a rollicking, colorful celebration of Caribbean culture, music, style and food, rolled through New York City’s streets Monday but, once again, was marred by predawn violence that left one man dead and an aide to Gov. Andrew Cuomo in critical condition. Cuomo identified his wounded staffer as Carey Gabay, a first deputy general counsel at the Empire State Development Corporation. Gabay was walking with his brother near the Brooklyn parade route at 3:40 a.m. when he was caught in the crossfire between two gangs, according to police officials.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2015
Doc: Depression top cause of absences BY JAMES CASEY PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — You say an employee called in sick this morning? Dr. Josh Jones may know why. Jones, medical director for Peninsula Behavioral Health since 2010, says the No. 1 reason workers take a sick day isn’t a minor illness or injury. It’s depression, and yes, it is a physical ailment, Jones said. Depression is rooted in someone’s body’s inability to produce the chemicals he or she needs to function normally, he told about 20 members of the Port Angeles Business Association on Aug. 25. The deficiency produces feelings of sadness to the point of not reacting to happy stimuli and other symptoms that persist for two weeks or longer. Why should his audience of business people care? Lost productivity is the “quiet reason,” Jones said. “It’s not the thing police get called about.”
“A lot of people may not say, ‘I’m taking a sick day for depression,’ ” Jones said. B u t Jones that’s minor compared to the disruption if depression deepens to the point of suicide, he said, calling that one of the “noisy reasons” that include people misbehaving in public or becoming addicted to alcohol or illicit drugs — and supporting their addiction by committing crimes. Unlike ailments that can be diagnosed with lab tests and treated with common medicines, behavioral illnesses are harder to uncover and medicate, although depression can be treated effectively with psychotherapy and drugs. “Our science hasn’t caught up with the rest of the medical profession,” Jones said. That, however, is on the verge of major change. The Affordable Care Act, no matter what one thinks
of its politics, Jones said, is creating parity among primary care, behavioral health and chemical dependency. That puts Peninsula Behavioral Health staff into Olympic Medical Physicians’ primary care clinics in Port Angeles. The agency also will be a full partner in Family Medicine of Port Angeles when it becomes a federal community health clinic, he said.
Early treatment is important for both kinds of ailments, he said. “One of the biggest issues is that they don’t come to the attention of clinicians sometimes until it’s too late,” he said. “This [early intervention] is a very effective way to treat depression, and it also improves physical health.” Evidence also has led to the coordination of mental health care with substanceCooperative care abuse therapy. The two once were treated one before the That means that if a doc- other but now are blended tor or other provider sus- to address what are called pects that a patient has a “co-occurring disorders.” behavioral issue, the provider can summon a mental Treatment in jails health clinician immediThat treatment is makately to examine the person, then confer to craft a ing its way into such insticooperative treatment, tutions as the Clallam County jail, where interJones said. A primary provider might vention “can break the cycle say, “I’m going to treat their of offense, jail and reoffdiabetes right now, and then ense,” Jones said. Still, it’s far to go before I’m going to step out of the room and have this behav- treatment is seamless ioral specialist come in and among primary care, behavtalk to them, and then we’re ioral therapy and treatment going to work together,” of substance abuse. Jones, 39, a native of Jones said.
Signs of depression; ways to treat it PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Unlike ordinary times of feeling blue, which usually last a couple of days, episodes of major depression, sometimes called clinical depression, can linger for weeks — or much longer. Symptoms include persistent sadness, apathy, inattention, fatigue, despair and proneness to accidents or errors. Happiness becomes a rare or wholly absent emotion. Other signs: ■ Persistent anxious or “empty” feelings. ■ Feelings of guilt, worthlessness, or helplessness. ■ Irritability, restlessness. ■ Loss of interest in activities or hobbies once pleasurable, including sex. ■ Difficulty concentrat-
ing, remembering details and making decisions. ■ Insomnia, early morning wakefulness or excessive sleeping. ■ Overeating or appetite loss. ■ Aches or pains, headaches, cramps or digestive problems that do not ease even with treatment. ■ Thoughts of suicide, suicide attempts. The average age of onset is 32 years, although depression has been diagnosed in children as young as 3 years old, and more than 3 percent of teenagers experience seriously debilitating depressive disorders. In elders, it can lead people to stop caring for themselves, with lifethreatening consequences. Nearly 7 percent of adults in the U.S. experience a depressive disorder, with women 70 percent likelier to exhibit it than
men, although men, especially elders, show a higher risk of suicide. Variants include postpartum depression among new mothers and seasonal affective disorder (SAD), with onset during winter months, when there is less natural light. Depression also may follow traumatic events, including loss of loved ones. Cognitive behavioral therapy can be effective in reframing negative thought patterns. A number of prescription medications can restore chemical imbalances in the brain. Dr. Josh Jones, medical director of Peninsula Behavioral Health, said socalled talk therapy helps transfer thoughts from the side of the brain that feels emotions to the analytical side that can deal with them. Electroconvulsive ther-
apy, far shorter and subtler than the old so-called “shock therapy,” also may relieve depression when other therapies are ineffective, he said. And people with depression can fight the disability — by making themselves moving targets. “You have to push yourself,” he said. “You’re not going to want to get up and exercise. You’re going to have to push yourself. “You have to, have to, have to.” Resources describing depression and its treatments abound online. One is the National Institutes of Mental Health at http://tinyurl.com/ depression-pdn. — Source: National Institutes of Mental Health, HelpGuide.org
White Salmon and a graduate of the University of Washington School of Medicine, is the sole full-time psychiatrist at Peninsula Behavioral Health. However, he has about 100 nurse practitioners, social workers and therapists to help, he said. The expanded emergency department at Olympic Medical Center will include two rooms for patients having behavioral crises, and Peninsula Behavioral Health is having success with the six-bed Respite Center it opened earlier this year, Jones said. There, patients who pose no danger to themselves or others can stay voluntarily for a few days, consult counselors, “remove themselves from the conditions that may have caused the crisis, have their medications readjusted and then return to their productive lives,” Jones said. Yet comprehensive treatment centers still are lacking for people addicted to opiates, whether they be heroin or oxycodone. “I think that’s a real
shame, Jones said. “I think that’s a public issue we need to figure out.”
Success like CIA’s To casual observers, progress seems halting against behavioral disorders, Jones said. Victories, he said, “are kind of invisible. “A colleague says mental health is like the CIA: Successes are many but hidden, whereas failures are few but noticed. We struggle to succeed in getting people access to care.” But Peninsula Behavioral Health is making progress, he said, despite individuals who act out on the street and seem to resist attempts to help them. “The vast majority of people with behavioral health issues are like us,” Jones said. “They’ve got a brain disease. We’re doing our best to help them.”
_______ Reporter James Casey can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5074, or at jcasey@peninsula dailynews.com.
Busing homeless is an urban legend PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Dr. Josh Jones heard it in New York state. He heard it in Vermont. He even heard it when stationed in Iraq. In each place, he heard that mentally ill people were being bused into the community because it offers better treatment. It’s as false in the Northwest as it was in the Mideast, Jones, medical director of Peninsula Behavioral Health, told about 20 people at the Port Angeles Business Association meeting in Joshua’s Restaurant, 113 DelGuzzi Drive, on Aug. 25. “It’s not true,” he said. “There’s no evidence to suggest that’s actually happening.” Factual conditions that account for people who act out their behavioral disorders include homelessness, poverty and the fact that any urban area “is a kind of magnet for strangeness. “We don’t have better
resources or more resources than the [Puget Sound] urban areas,” Jones said. “We have a homeless problem, but every place has a homeless problem as well.”
Clientele up Partly because of expanded coverage under the Affordable Care Act, Peninsula Behavioral Health already has seen more than 4,000 clients this year — exceeding its total for all of 2014. The agency is the only clinic in East Clallam County that cannot close its doors to anyone ever, Jones said. A client in crisis will receive immediate care, Jones said. For lessemergent, ongoing treatment, a screening intake may take seven days, with therapy beginning a week after that. The agency also offers “walk-in Wednesdays,” Jones said. “We kind of take all comers,” he said.
Briefly: State Teachers to decide on next move WASHINGTON STATE PATROL
The bicycles of two cyclists injured in a collision with a pickup truck on U.S. Highway 101 west of Port Angeles on Monday.
Bicyclist in serious condition after struck by pickup PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
ous condition at Harbor- band were struck by a view Medical Center in pickup on U.S. Highway 101 PORT ANGELES — A Seattle on Monday after- that morning. Jeanie Chellino, 54, and bicyclist was listed in seri- noon after she and her husher husband, Domenic Chellino, were riding bicycles in the westbound lane of Highway 101 about 13 miles west of Port Angeles at 11:43 a.m., when they were both struck by a 1985 Toyota pickup driven by McKenzie, 28, of • For New Computer Anthony Port Angeles according to Set-up or Tune-up Trooper Russ Winger, State Patrol spokesman. • Home or Business McKenzie was driving Location erratically and did not stop immediately after drifting • I Come to You — off the road and striking No Hauling both cyclists simultane• Reasonable Rates ously, Winger said. McKenzie was later
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forced off the road by another vehicle whose driver observed the wreck. He was taken to the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office where he was slated to undergo assessment for intoxication, Winger said. Both bicyclists were taken to Olympic Medical Center in Port Angeles where Dominic Chellino was treated and discharged for minor scratches, Winger said. Jeanie Chellino’s injuries were more serious which prompted the transfer to Harborview. The couple, who live in Chenoa, Ill., were on their way to Sol Duc Hot Springs.
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PASCO — Striking Pasco teachers are considering their next move after a judge last week ordered them to return to school on Tuesday. The Pasco Association of Educators, whose 1,160 teachers walked off the job last week, was scheduled to meet Monday night to decide whether to return to work after the holiday weekend. Franklin County Judge Alex Ekstrom on Friday granted a preliminary injunction requested by the Pasco School District to force an end to that strike. The Pasco School District said Monday morning it had not received confirmation that the teachers would comply with the order. It said it will make a determination in the evening about classes when there is indication of the teachers’ plan. Both sides continued contract negotiation over the weekend. Classes were scheduled to begin Sept. 1 in the district of 17,000 students in southeast Washington.
Jewell visits fires OMAK — U.S. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell was in Washington state Monday to get a firsthand account of a wildfire that has torched about 320 square miles in north-central Washington. Jewell met with fire managers and leaders with the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation before setting off to tour the fire lines of the North Star blaze. That fire burning north of Coulee Dam is about 37 percent contained. In a telephone interview, Jewell said tribal leaders told her how devastating the fire is, particularly because they rely on forest products. Jewell said there weren’t enough resources until recently to fight that blaze because too many fires burning across the West have strained resources. She said she wanted to thank firefighters and see what’s happening on the ground so she can make a case to Congress to change how the government pays for fighting wildfires. The Obama administration wants it to treat some fires as federal disasters. The Associated Press
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(C) — TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2015
Rocket: 13 men Shelton prison to offer nature to be recognized videos in solitary confinement CONTINUED FROM A1 Weed is one of 13 fellows scheduled to be recognized for his work in antimatter propulsion at the WIRED2015 Innovation Fellowships held Oct. 15-16 in London, England. He was nominated by a former Innovation fellow. “It’s truly an honor and I’m looking forward to presenting our concepts and meeting some amazing people,” Weed said. While there, he will “speak about why we need a game changing technology in space propulsion and how we can get to the stars,” he said.
Big dreams
Harnessing antimatter
In high school Weed “was interested in figuring out [how] things worked, [and] doing science things that I thought were interesting and cool,” he said. “For example, a friend and I built a railgun [an electrically powered electromagnetic projectile launcher] in my garage from equipment we bought on eBay. “Now the Navy is using railguns on their destroyers. Maybe it’s a coincidence that the things I think are cool just happen to be scientifically important,” he said. Weed hopes someday to be accepted into NASA’s astronaut candidate program. “I will apply in the next round, but they only ask for applicants once every four to five years,” he said and it might be a year or two until the next round. Weed wants to become an astronaut because he is “an explorer at heart. “I’ve always been attracted to strange and far-off places and activities that push the limits of human capability,” he said.
Positron Dynamics
pulsion is feasible and we are attempting to demonstrate” a working model “in the next few years,” Weed said. “We are aiming for an inspace demonstration, working with our spacecraft design partner Mason Peck at Cornell University, within three years. “This tech could scale to allow us to reach our nearest star system, Alpha Centauri, within a human lifetime,” Weed said. After the first demonstration, “we expect the first customers to be Department of Defense followed by low earth orbit small satellite manufacturers,” Weed said.
Antimatter is the most potent fuel known to man, according to NASA. While tons of chemical fuel are needed to propel a human mission to Mars, just tenths of milligrams of antimatter will suffice. A milligram is about one-thousandth the weight of a piece of M&M candy. Antimatter is sometimes called the “mirror image” of normal matter because while it looks just like ordinary matter, some properties are reversed, according to NASA. For example, normal electrons — particles that carry electric current in everything from cell phones to plasma TVs — have a negative electric charge. Anti-electrons have a positive charge, so scientists dubbed them positrons. “When antimatter meets matter, both annihilate in a flash of energy,” wrote Bill Steigerwald of the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center on the NASA website, www.nasa. gov/. “This complete conversion to energy is what makes antimatter so powerful,” he added. “Even the nuclear reactions that power atomic bombs come in a distant second, with only about three percent of their mass converted to energy.” One of the obstacles Positron Dynamics is working to overcome is that high-energy gamma rays can create radioactivity, which can make materials like steel and aluminum brittle after long exposure. Special alloys can withstand the onslaught of gamma rays, Weed said. “In addition, we are working with a company that has developed novel gamma ray shielding tech that utilizes a flexible Tungsten foam material to efficiently block gamma rays,” he added. For more information about Positron Dynamics, visit www. positrondynamics.com.
Positron Dynamics, founded in 2011, consists of five employees including a staff scientist and a semiconductor fabrication expert. The company conducts experiments in a former nuclear fallout shelter in Livermore. The experiments focus on ways to harness the energy of positrons to produce a propulsion unit capable of thrusting a rocket to extremely high speeds. The engine envisioned by Positron Dynamics would have the potential of reaching “10 percent the speed of light, which is 20,000 miles per second,” Weed said. That is the equivalent of 72 million miles per hour. To put that into perspec________ tive, the now retired space shuttle was capable of a top Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor speed of about 18,000 miles Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360per hour, according to NASA. 681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@ “We believe antimatter pro- peninsuladailynews.com.
is that by offering a regular visual dose of nature, inmates will be calmer, guards will deal with fewer SHELTON — For dozens of outbursts or violent interactions, maximum custody prisoners at and overall safety in the unit will Washington Corrections Center, 23 increase. hours each day is spent alone in a small cell, with an hour to walk or Blue Room run, also alone, in a recreation The so-called “Blue Room” is room with high concrete walls and a metal-grated roof that offers a based on a program of the same name in an Oregon prison that has view of the sky. In the coming weeks, these pris- seen some early success with prisoners — which include the most oners in its solitary confinement dangerous and unruly of the over- wing. Officials at Washington Correcall prison population — will have the option of using the hour outside tions Center have installed a proof their cells to watch sunsets, jector in one of the recreation rooms mountains and underwater sea- and are working out the final scapes through a program that details before making it available brings the outdoors inside, via to inmates in their intensive manvideo, projected on a blank recre- agement unit. Starting a few weeks ago, in a ation room wall. The hope of corrections officials room painted blue and decorated
with plants, prison officials starting showing the videos to prisoners with intellectual disabilities who are part of a special unit at the prison. The prison, about 30 miles northwest of Olympia, is the first in the state to set up the videos, though others have expressed interest, including Washington State Penitentiary at Walla Walla. “If there’s something that shows promise and is going to make it a better work environment for our staff and for offenders, that’s something we need to take seriously,” said Steve Sinclair, the state Department of Corrections’ assistant secretary over prisons. The blue room is the latest endeavor from the state Department of Corrections’ partnership with the Sustainability in Prisons Project at Evergreen State College in Olympia.
BY RACHEL LA CORTE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chop: Suspect fled on foot CONTINUED FROM A1 the shop, Federline said, although he noticed “buckets of automobile King fled on foot upon the parts and metal everywhere” in the arrival of the deputies on Saturday, barn. A chop shop is a place where but he was arrested at the barn early Sunday morning without stolen automobiles are taken apart incident, said Sgt. Randy Pieper of so that the parts can be sold. Clallam County Sheriff ’s the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office Detective Shaun Minks and Fedin a news release. He was found to be in possession erline received a tip from a passof a small quantity of suspected erby at about 4:15 p.m. Saturday about a Toyota pickup being methamphetamine, Pieper said. King was recently convicted in sanded down, apparently to be rejury trial as a felon in possession of painted, in a barn behind 13 a (stolen) firearm in the Clallam Roundtree Road off Monroe Road County Superior Court and was east of Port Angeles. “The person called and said he out awaiting sentencing, Pieper saw a pickup inside a barn being said. Federline said the property was worked on,” Federline said. “He thought it was suspicious well known to police as a site where because the truck had no license people with outstanding warrants congregated, and for drug activity. plates.” Minks and Federline reportedly found several people and vehicles ‘Buckets of parts’ in the barn. There was no evidence as to how They received permission from many vehicles had passed through the property owner to check the
property for stolen vehicles and found that the 1988 Toyota pickup truck had been reported stolen from the Port Angeles area. They said they found a dismantled 1996 Honda Accord that had been reported stolen from the Sequim area. The parts were piled in the barn. A search warrant was obtained from the Clallam County Superior Court. In addition to King, four people who were transients or otherwise resided at the residence were found to have outstanding local warrants for their arrests, deputies said. Those arrested were Cory Stokes, 30; Rhiannon Mackey, 24; and Donald Christiansen, 34 — all in custody as of Monday, and Brian Mackey, 46, who was no longer in custody Monday, and who had several outstanding warrants, Federline said. The pick-up was returned to its owner.
Peace: Anniversary of ’90 climb CONTINUED FROM A1 Whittaker said the “saber rattling” between nations is counterproductive and opposite to what most people of the world want. “That people from China, Russia and others who were once our enemies are participating in this shows that we all want to work together to save this magical planet,” Whittaker said. The team will gather in Seattle and travel together to Mount Rainier National Park, where they met in 1989 to train for the 1990 expedition. An official ceremony is planned at the mountain on Sept. 21, which is United Nations International Day of Peace, followed by an anniversary celebration dinner in Paradise Lodge. Whittaker has invited President Barack Obama to attend, saying the president wants to attend but could not commit at this time.
17 at The Mountaineers Program Center, 7700 Sand Point Way, Seattle. Tickets are $20 for adults and $10 for students and children, and may be purchased in advance at The Mountaineers’ Seattle location or online at http://tinyurl.com/ PDN-peaceclimbanni. Advance purchase is encouraged, as seating is limited. All proceeds benefit The Mountaineers conservation and youth programs. The second will be at 8:30 p.m. Sept. 20 in the lobby of Paradise Lodge in Mount Rainier National Park. Admission is free to this evening, with seating on a first-come, Public events first-served basis. For more information, see www. Two public events are scheduled, Both will include slide shows mountaineers.org or call 206-521by the team and a screening of 6000. ________ “Three Flags Over Everest,” a film about the 1990 climb narrated by Jefferson County Editor Charlie Bermant actor Robert Redford. can be reached at 360-385-2335 or The first will be at 7 p.m. Sept. cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com. The Peace Climb Celebration and Reunion is sponsored locally by REI and The Mountaineers, and by several international companies such as Vanke, BGI, Yongjin, Toread, Kingdee, Swarovski and Breitling, with additional funding provided by the Port of Seattle and private foundations, according to a news release. The Washington State China Relations Council is also supporting the effort, as is Russian Consul General Andrey Yushmanov. Whittaker said he is inspired by the younger generation “because they are committed to creating a safe and clean world.”
Quilcene community to discuss 101 hazards during meeting Thursday BY CHARLIE BERMANT
of a mile long, she said.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Identify problem
State grant The impetus for the meeting is to take advantage of a June 2012
“No one thinks this project will be without its challenges, but there is also no question about the safety hazards along this section of Highway 101,” Herzog said. “Quilcene citizens need and deserve the safety improvements promised by
the Quilcene Complete Streets project and further delay is dangerous and unacceptable.”
________ Jefferson County Editor Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360385-2335 or cbermant@peninsula dailynews.com.
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Herzog said the purpose of the meeting is to identify and describe the problem through citizen comments more than to discuss possible solutions. “We want to hear what people think about the traffic problems in downtown Quilcene,” Herzog said. “Developing ways to fix it is the job of engineers who are the experts,” she said. “They are the ones who can determine the best and most efficient way to get this done.” One hazard occurs in front of the Peninsula Food Store at 294682 Highway 101, she said. There, southbound motorists often attempt U-turns to head north. As a demonstration Herzog created a staged video of the hazard, viewable at http://tinyurl.com/PDNUTurn.
develop a design. This will include a design charette, a process where different possiblities are presented to the public for input. Herzog said she’d like to get the process started sooner rather than later since inflation in the construction industry has eroded the buying power of the grant by more than $90,000 and that the funding is now worth only 89 percent of its original value.
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QUILCENE — Residents of Quilcene hope to develop a strategy to encourage motorists traveling through this small south Jefferson County town on U.S. Highway 101 to slow down and observe the speed limits. “There are a lot of hazards on this stretch of road,” said Linda Herzog, an organizer of a community meeting to discuss the topic. “People traveling through town have a disregard for slower cars and people walking along the side of the road, so we need to get the ball rolling in order to create a way to make this safer,” she said. The meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the Quilcene Community Center, 294952 Highway 101. Herzog said concern centers on a 1.2-mile stretch of the highway that is designated as a 35-mile-per-hour zone. The entire commercial district of Quilcene, an unincorporated village that stretches along Highway 101, is about three-fourths
$884,165 grant from the state Department of Transportation. The money is designated for the Quilcene Complete Streets project. The idea is that streets are not complete until they provide for the safe mobility of motor vehicles, bikes and pedestrians, Herzog said. Herzog hopes the meeting will help to start the project’s development phase, for which $26,800 of the grant is earmarked to
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, September 8, 2015 PAGE
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West End ready for beach cleanup PEOPLE ALL AROUND the planet are going to their countries’ beaches Sept. 19 to participate in the 30th annual International Coastal Cleanup, sponsored by the Ocean Conservancy. “It’s neat to think that WEST END there are peoNEIGHBOR ple, say over in Japan, out cleaning the Zorina beaches as we Barker are,” said Nancy Messmer of Sekiu. She will be out at Lake Ozette, checking people in for their assigned sections of beach. The cleanup is the counterpart to the effort every April that removes tons of marine debris and trash from beaches worldwide, including those along the Olympic Peninsula’s Pacific coast and Strait of Juan de Fuca. “Now we are cleaning up after all of the summer activity,” Messmer said. Out in Forks, volunteers participating in this cleanup work will be thanked during an eve-
This group cleaned beaches south of Sand Point, by Lake Ozette, during last April’s coastal cleanup. ning of food and entertainment. West End groups have joined Messmer and the Clallam BaySekiu Lions Club in assembling a salmon feed and poetry reading at Forks’ Tillicum Park from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sept. 19. The groups include Washington Clean Coast Alliance, the city of Forks and the North Pacific Marine Resources Committee. “This looks to be a really fun
event, and I really hope people come out and enjoy the creativity after helping out with this fall’s international beach cleanup,” said Rod Fleck, Forks city attorney and planner. The evening’s focus will be the poetry reading, which begins about 6 p.m. Folks have volunteered to read poems — either their own or others — that have a nature theme.
Peninsula Voices His upbringing consisted of plopping him The Associated Press down out of the way before article “Death Penalty Trial” the family TV to watch in the Sept. 4-5 edition of whatever, and, while the Peninsula Daily News finally escaping to school shows a bewildered looking was a welcome relief, there Dylann Roof possibly facing was no parent interest or the death penalty. love, perhaps save for an [Roof is accused of the occasional spanking if June 17 church shooting in home or school proved Charleston, S.C., that left untenable. nine dead.] Could Dylann have After several items turned out differently? about his shooting several Here, let me suggest a church members, I know Bill Of Rights for Children little of his family history. with a further suggestion My guess is that he was that “right to life” [propounwanted, though not nents] shift emphasis from aborted; that his parent(s) preventing abortion to allowed him into a family advocating for the right of marked by dissension and every child to be born into a loving and supporting avoidance.
Different lives
home. Should this come to pass, I would hope parents would share interests with their children and perhaps find opportunities to share experiences. Imagine? When I was 6, my dad (yes, a school superintendent) arranged for my brother Lew and I to visit the locomotive cab of a train stopped at a local station. We all attended Sunday school and sat together in church. And our mother read to us from interesting books. Perhaps our background was exceptional. Today, Lew and I are retired.
OUR
The only requirement is that the verses be family-friendly. Attendees are invited to sing, play music, tell a story or read a poem. “We are getting high on poems,” Messmer said, adding that in anticipation of the event, she has poetry books spread about her home and practices reading several a day. After participating in the cleanup, John Hunter of Forks plans to read a Walt Whitman poem about the stars — and then his personal rebuttal. “We are usually so logical about the environment, to get poetic about it has a nice contrast to the tension,” Hunter said. Roy Morris of Sekiu will cook the salmon, most of it coho and all donated. It will be served at 4 p.m. Accompanying the fish entree will be baked potatoes, beets, beans and greens from the Cowan Heritage Ranch on HokoOzette Road west of Sekiu. Lions Club members are making a cabbage slaw, and other donors have offered fresh melon, corn, lemonade, coffee and tea. Poetry books will be on the tables at Tillicum Park for people to peruse while they eat.
All are invited to give impromptu readings after dinner. People will be allowed from five to 15 minutes for each reading until everyone gets to share. Then the rotation may begin again. Messmer said the hope is that next year, poetry readers will want to participate in the cleanup, and those who participated will want to read poetry. Thus, everyone is welcome, whether they have cleaned the coast or not. To sign up for beach cleaning, individuals are asked to register at www.coastsavers.org. This ensures that the cleanup crews are evenly spread along the coast. To make a donation or otherwise contribute to the salmon feed, including offers to read, contact Morris at 360-963-2442 or able@olypen.com.
________ 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 zorinabarker81@ gmail.com, or phone her at 360327-3702. West End Neighbor appears every other Tuesday.
READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND EMAIL
He was a physician, and I was an audiovisual director. We remain active in our church and in our communities. Suggestion to right to life [proponents]: From preventing abortion, move to promoting life. Milton I. Patrie, Sequim
Trump critic Living in a fact-free environment, given to bullying and with a ready answer that veers away from any subject of moment, I am not convinced that anyone can successfully debate Donald
Trump. If you come with a statement, he will call it stupid, bloviate, promise that he has the solution but does not want to tell you. Or on China or [the Islamic State group] or whatever the subject might be, he will surprise them and they will really be afraid, so afraid. I have watched the “Reps” [Republicans] try and fail at it. Try calling Trump an empty suit, and he will say that he has given you money, and a lot, and by doing so he owns a part of you — and that he beat you at golf, and by the way
your game stinks. I cannot imagine a meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel or any of that crowd. I would pay, however, to be in the room when he greets either the pope or Queen Elizabeth. Much better than George W. Bush’s Merkel back rub. Could one on stage with Trump just count the mind-numbing occurrences of terrible, great, tremendous and the other limited terms from his vocabulary, and ask him to express a coherent thought without using one of those terms? Molly Robertson, Sequim
Pope Francis to visit U.S. for first time BY LAURIE GOODSTEIN DURING HIS FIRST private meeting with Pope Francis in the Vatican two years ago, Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan said, the pope took out an atlas with a map of the United States and asked Cardinal Dolan, the archbishop of New York, to point out the various regions and cities and talk about how they differed. Francis seemed to recognize that he had some homework to do: When he travels this month to Washington, New York and Philadelphia, the visit will be his first to the United States. Both of his most recent predecessors, Benedict XVI and John Paul II, traveled to the United States before rising to the papacy. Other Catholic prelates from around the world have come for fundraisers, speaking engagements or global Catholic events, like World Youth Day in Denver in 1993. But Francis, a former archbishop of Buenos Aires, had steered clear of the United States, which has the world’s fourth-largest Roman Catholic population. Something of a homebody, preferring to hang out with the poor than the rich and powerful, he has waited until 78 to visit the economic giant that likes to think of itself as the center of everything. “He’s a little nervous about coming,” Cardinal Dolan said at an interfaith event in New York in May.
“Not that he lacks any confidence in the reception of friendship that he knows he’ll get, but he readily admits he has never been to the United States.” Those who have known Francis, both before and after he became pope, say the reasons for his absence have everything to do with his distinctive identity.
Critical of U.S. dominance He is a Latin American critical of the United States’ economic and political hegemony, a Jesuit of Italian ancestry who looks more to Europe than to North America, a Spanish speaker who is not all that comfortable speaking English, and a pastor who disdains “airport bishops” — his term for prelates who spend more time jetting around the globe than serving in their dioceses. He is not opposed to all America represents. But he is troubled by privileged people and nations that consume more than their share and turn their backs on the vulnerable. The message he will probably deliver when he comes, they say, is that the United States has been blessed with great gifts, but that from those to whom much is given, much is expected. “I think what he criticizes in the U.S. is the absolute freedom and autonomy of the market,” said the Rev. Juan Carlos Scannone, a professor emeritus of philosophy at Colegio Máximo, a prominent
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“I’ve seen this among Latin American Jesuits who have similar approaches. “And it’s often rather difficult for the North American Jesuits to completely accept their perspective on things, because we come from such a different angle.”
15th country visit The United States will be the 15th country Francis has visited in his more than two years as pope. His travel priorities have been a demonstration of his motto: “Go to the peripheries” to encounter those who are marginalized. His first official trip outside Rome was to Lampedusa, a SicilTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS ian island where he greeted migrants who had survived their Pope Francis greets people during an audience with parish groups promoting evangelization in the Paul VI hall exodus from Africa. Since then, he has traveled to Brazil; to Israel, Jordan and the occupied Palestinian territories to Jesuit college near Buenos Aires. and agribusinesses that chew up He taught the young Jorge natural resources, as the military urge them toward peace; to the Philippines, South Korea and Sri Mario Bergoglio, who would power that propped up dictators Lanka; and, most recently, to become Francis, as a seminarian during the Cold War and as the and became a friend. neighbor that tries to close its bor- Bolivia, Ecuador and Paraguay. “We should admire the U.S.’s der to migrants fleeing hunger On his way to the United democracy and the well-being of and violence. States, he will spend four days in its people, but what Bergoglio The Rev. Richard Ryscavage, a Cuba, again prioritizing the would criticize is the consumerJesuit who is the director of the periphery over the center on a ism: that everything is geared Center for Faith and Public Life at socialist island that has just toward consumerism.” Fairfield University and has met begun to revive relations with the Francis has long been troubled Francis twice, said Francis’ views United States — in part because by what some Argentines of his should be seen “in the context of of Francis’ intervention. generation call “savage capitalmany Latin Americans who see ________ ism.” the United States as really a probThey see the United States as lem, not actually a positive force Laurie Goodstein is a reporter the home of mining companies in the world. for The New York Times.
NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, managing editor; 360-417-3531 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com ■ LEE HORTON, sports editor; 360-417-3525; lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com ■ DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ, features editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5062 durbanidelapaz@peninsuladailynews.com ■ General news information: 360-417-3527 From Jefferson County and West End, 800-826-7714, ext. 5250 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com News fax: 360-417-3521 ■ Sequim office: 147 W. Washington St., 98382; 360-681-2390 CHRIS MCDANIEL, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way, 98368; 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com
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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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2015
Sharing skills event set in PA
Researcher: Biotoxins on rise PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — The Third Annual Skill Share Fair is planned from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 19 at the Port Angeles Library. The fair at the library at 2210 S. Peabody St., is a free community expo for learning and teaching practical, handy skills to help foster a more resilient and sustainable community. It is hosted by the North Olympic Library System, which oversees public libraries in Port Angeles, Sequim, Forks and Clallam Bay. The fair will open with a series of classes covering such topics as vegetable fermentation, beekeeping, sewing, drawing and gardening. From noon until 3 p.m., visitors can visit booths featuring experts from local businesses and organizations. Topics will range from bicycle maintenance and food preservation to home-brewing and woodworking. Participants who visit five booths will be eligible to enter a raffle drawing for useful do-ityourself prizes donated by The Country Woodwright, Airport Garden Center and Hartnagel Building Supply. The fair is offered free to the public through the support of the Port Angeles Friends of the Library. For more information, see “events” at www.nols.org, call the library at 360-417-8500, or send an e-mail to Library Manager Noah Glaude at nglaude@nols.org.
Kindergarten Express to return to library Sept. 15
PORT TOWNSEND — A researcher will talk Wednesday about climate conditions that favor marine biotoxins and a recent increase in recreational shellfish harvesting closures. Adi Hanein, a Washington Sea Grant Marc Hershman Marine Policy Fellow at the state Department of Health, will pres-
ent a free public talk on shellfish biotoxins at the Jefferson County Public Health Department, 615 Sheridan St., at 1 p.m. Wednesday. Hanein is working with the shellfish biotoxin monitoring program studying natural toxins that cause paralytic, amnesic and diarrhetic shellfish poisoning. Her talk will focus on recent
PORT ANGELES — Kindergarten Express, a weekly program designed for 4-to-5-year-olds, will resume at the Port Angeles Library at 10:15 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 15. The program at the library at 2210 S. Peabody St., is free. The storytime series will feature picture books, finger plays, music, science projects, and crafts designed to help prepare preschoolers for kindergarten. “More and more is expected of kindergarteners,” said Jennifer Knight, youth services librarian. “Kindergarten Express is a celebration of picture books specifically designed to reinforce skills preschoolers are learning at home, school, or daycare.” She said the program also gives parents and caregivers ideas about how to creatively work with the children in their lives. After each session, parents and caregivers will have an opportunity to visit and swap information about parenting resources in the community. Parents and caregivers who attend three sessions will also receive a free book to take home. The program will continue at the same time every Tuesday through Nov. 24, and then resume Jan. 5 to continue until May 10. Storytime programs are supported by the Port Angeles Friends of the Library. For more information about storytimes and other programs for youth, visit the library website at www.nols.org, call 360-417-8500, ext. 7705 or send an email to youth@nols.org.
Hanein will tell how climate conditions are becoming more favorable for dinoflagellates, which are the plankton type that creates biotoxins. New species of toxin-producing plankton have been detected as well, the release said. Before harvesting shellfish, phone the Department of Health Biotoxin Hotline at 1-800-5625632.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A fin whale surfaces last Tuesday in Puget Sound near Minor Island. Michael Harris, of Puget Sound Express Whale Watching, says fin whale, used to be common in the area, but commercial hunting off Vancouver Island decimated the local population.
Fin whale makes appearance THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
trends observed in Washington state, with a spotlight on Jefferson County. Biotoxins have impacted more than 90 percent of Washington waterbodies, causing shellfish harvest closures of from 14 to 200 days, according to a news release. Closure days are happening earlier and biotoxins are present longer, the release said.
SEATTLE — For the first time in many years, the second largest animal in the world — the fin whale — was spotted near Minor Island in north Puget Sound. Whale watchers saw the animal on Thursday, KING-TV reproted.
Michael Harris of Puget Sound Express Whale Watching said fin whale used to be common in the area, but commercial hunting off Vancouver Island decimated the local population. Marine biology professor Jonathan Stern said fin whales have a very distinctive exhalation.
That’s how they knew it wasn’t a minke or humpback whale. The fin whale appeared to be a juvenile. Adults can reach 85 feet and 75 tons, and live as long as 90 years. They are listed as an endangered species.
Season’s last Lunch in the Garden is Friday PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — The season’s last Lunch in the Garden will be from noon to 1 p.m. Friday. Master Gardeners will discuss vegetable gardening during a free walk though the Fifth Street Community Garden at 328 E. Fifth St. “Although summer is winding down, many vegetable gardens are at their peak of productivity and still demand attention,” Master Gardeners said in a news release. “To make that work easier, home gardeners can get timely advice from local experts about vegetable gardening.” The Lunch in the Garden educational series is sponsored by WSU Clallam County Master Gardeners. Since May, Master Gardeners have led a monthly walk through the community garden to show home gardeners what needs to be done in vegetable gardens each month and what problems are likely to appear. This month, veteran Master Gardeners Bob Cain, Laurel Moulton, Audreen Williams and Jeanette Stehr-Green will talk
about season extenders, saving seeds, preserving herbs and putting the garden to bed. Because it is the last walk of the 2015 series, the gardeners also will cover several wintertime gardening activities such as protecting strawberries from the cold and pruning blueberries. Cain joined Master Gardeners in 2009 and was Clallam County Master Gardener Foundation president from 2011-2013. Moulton has been a Master Gardener since 2006 and coordinated the WSU Master Gardener Program in Clallam County from 2012-2014. Williams joined Master Gardeners in 2012 and was the 2014 Clallam County Veteran Master Gardener of the Year co-recipient. Jeanette Stehr-Green has been a Master Gardener since 2003 and was the 2012 Clallam County Veteran Master Gardener of the Year. “Together these Master Gardeners have more than 100 years of vegetable and berry gardening experience,” the news release said. The Fifth Street Community Garden is located just off Pea-
From left, veteran Master Gardeners Laurel Moulton, Audreen Williams, Bob Cain and Jeanette Stehr-Green will lead a one-hour walk through the Fifth Street Community Garden, 328 E. Fifth St., Port Angeles, at noon on Friday. body Street, right across from City Hall. The garden, which includes more than 50 plots of 9 feet by 12 feet, was developed on city prop-
erty in 2011 to connect people to the earth and their community through growing food. For more information about the program, call 360-417-2279.
Demonstrators chant anti-police slogans PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
OLYMPIA — Demonstrators marching through downtown Olympia chanted antipolice slogans, broke windows and took a bat to a truck before dispersing. The Olympian reported that the demonstrators walked the streets on Saturday night chanting “Nazis out of Oly” and other slogans. Many in the crowd wore black and covered their faces with bandanas. A few carried bats.
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They passed out fliers saying they were there to counter a Nazi gathering that had been called for Saturday night in Olympia. They carried an anti-police banner. Some lit fireworks; others knocked over trash cans. When a white truck drove through the crowd, one of the demonstrators hit it with a bat. They also smashed the glass door at City Hall.
PORT ANGELES — The Shelter Providers Network of Clallam County will meet at a new time in Room 160 of the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 E. Fourth St., from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 16.
The meeting time has been adjusted to make it easier for people from outlying areas to attend, according to a news release. The Shelter Providers coordinate homelessness response services and discuss actions to prevent and end homelessness in Clallam County. The September agenda includes updates on services, housing and funding. The group also will dis-
cuss plans for the twocounty Regional Forum on Ending Homelessness, to be held Nov. 18 at the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribal Center in Blyn. The public is welcome. Sign-in begins at 9:45 a.m. For more information, phone Network Coordinator Martha Ireland at 360452-4737 or email shelter providersnetwork@gmail. com. Peninsula Daily News
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, September 8, 2015 SECTION
CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, BUSINESS, WEATHER In this section
B
Port Townsend rolls with block party 3 things learned from the first week
Prep Football
including a 25-yarder, while also completing 4 of 9 passes for 60 yards. BY LEE HORTON It was the senior’s first game as the AND MICHAEL CARMAN starting quarterback after switching PENINSULA DAILY NEWS from fullback and leading the Redhawks Don’t tell David Sua that he didn’t do in rushing last season and being named Olympic League 1A Offensive MVP. anything in Port Townsend’s 49-0 win “He didn’t need to [do a lot], and he over Port Angeles. “Hey, I had a 20-something-yard run,” was actually kind of bummed out,’’ runhe said after Friday’s game. “I did some- ning back Wesley Wheeler said. “I told him [during the game], ‘Man, thing.” Sua did gain 34 yards on three runs, I’ve only gotten the ball three times.’ He
goes, ‘You got like 60 yards on those plays. I’ve only gotten the ball once for like 4 yards.’” When just about every handoff is gaining chunks of yards, the quarterback becomes merely the middle man between the center and the ball carrier. Wheeler ran for 147 yards, Detrius Kelsall picked up 61 yards and scored touchdowns on three of his five carries (to go along with an interception he returned for a score), Ezra Easley gained 66 yards on the ground and Kyle Blankenship ran for 41 yards. In all, Port Townsend racked up 365 yards on 38 runs, an average of 9.6
yards per carry. Those numbers highlight, obviously, the talent in Port Townsend’s backfield. But here is the key to the offense’s big day: those runners had some big holes to run through, thanks to the offensive line. And then the blocking by receivers, such as Carson Marx and Jacob Ralls, and the other running backs turned big plays into bigger plays. While Sua was talking to a reporter after Friday’s game, offensive lineman Lucas Foster made sure Sua remembered how big the holes were. TURN
TO
FOOTBALL/B2
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
After a week of speculation, former Buffalo Bills running back Fred Jackson has signed with the Seahawks.
Jackson won’t be another Michael IT CAN BE difficult to know what’s going on inside the brain of Pete Carroll, a busy place where thoughts race around, bounce off the walls and, occasionally, collide into each other. But Carroll’s mind was an John easy read SunMcGrath day when the Seattle Seahawks traded running back Christine Michael to the Dallas Cowboys for what amounted to a trinket obtained at a state fair. Michael became expendable because the team was close to officially announcing the acquisition of Bills veteran running back Fred Jackson — the announcement finally game Monday — which brings us back to Carroll’s thought process. “What NFL player,” Carroll had to be wondering, “is the 180-degree opposite of Christine Michael?” That would be Jackson. Consider the tale-of-the-tape contrasts of his athletic career compared to Michael’s. ■ High school: Michael, rated a five-star recruit and the No. 3 running back in the U.S., won the 2009 Walter Payton Trophy as the top high school athlete in America. Jackson was a no-star prospect — he didn’t start as either a junior or senior at Lamar High in Fort Worth — and was not among the 13 players on his team to receive a college scholarship offer. ■ College: Before he was dismissed from the football program, Michael achieved early stardom at Texas A&M, where he was named the Big 12 Conference’s freshman of the year in 2009. Jackson enrolled at Coe College in Iowa, an NCAA Div. III school that does not award scholarships. He earned All-America honors on the field and excelled off of it, graduating with a degree in sociology. TURN
TO
MCGRATH/B3
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch, right, talks with head coach Pete Carroll, center, and middle linebacker Bobby Wagner, left, before their preseason game against the Oakland Raiders last week.
‘It’s literally all positive’ than the arc of the pass, and — after one of the most spectacular losses in Super Bowl history — despair is defeated by New Agestyle platitudes urging players to be mindful and seek “highquality moments.” He soon A research psychologist from found that outside the National Football the soft League who observed the team touch did in May said, “You can’t figure not stop out if you’re in yoga class or a there. First Game pro team’s conference room.” He had Graham, like many new arrived on a Today arrivals, was taken aback, too. team in vs. Rams This is a league, after all, which curs- at St. Louis that in recent years has detering is Time: 10 a.m. mined that one team was operf r o w n e d On TV: Ch. 13 ating a bounty system that upon, a forrewarded players for hurting mer competopponents and in which several itive surfer members of another team turned “human optimization harassed a teammate so much specialist” enlightens players in that he left the sport. the “arc of the journey” rather “Football has an old-school
Seahawks play football with a New Age twist BY KEN BELSON THE NEW YORK TIMES
RENTON — Jimmy Graham, an all-star tight end, quickly learned things were different with the Seattle Seahawks after he arrived this spring from the New Orleans Saints in an offseason trade. After he dropped a pass during practice, Seahawks Coach Pete Carroll came bounding over to him — not with a torrent of invective, as might happen on other football fields, but with fatherly counsel not to worry and just to focus more.
ALSO . . . ■ Seahawks going forward without Chancellor/B3
mentality: We’re going to grind you into the ground, we’re going to make men out of boys, and when you do something bad, we’re going to demean you,” Graham said. “But here, they feel like you guys are already men and we’re going to treat you like men. It’s literally all positive reinforcement.” That philosophy will be put to the test this season as never before as Seattle tries not only to get back to the Super Bowl but to rise from one of the most deflating losses in the game’s history. TURN
TO
HAWKS/B3
Huskies moving on with freshman QB BY TIM BOOTH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Washington quarterback Jake Browning (3) looks for a receiver during the first half against Boise State.
SEATTLE — Chris Petersen jumped on the question before it was even finished, happy to put the hoopla around his return to Boise State firmly in the past. “Glad it’s done,” Petersen said Monday as Washington prepared for its home opener against Sacramento State. With the return to the blue turf out of the way, Petersen and the Huskies can move forward from the 16-13 loss to the 23rdranked Broncos focused squarely on improving an offense that for the foreseeable future will be under the control of freshman quarterback Jake Browning. After a week of speculation, Browning took the first snap under center last Friday against Boise State, becoming the first true freshman to start at quarterback in Washington’s history and Petersen’s coaching career. His results were mixed. He finished 20 of 34 passing but for only 150 yards, an average of 4.3 yards per attempt.
He threw one interception and failed to get Wa s h i n g ton’s offense into the end Next Game zone. B u t Saturday despite the vs. Sacramento St. struggles and lack of at Seattle big plays, Time: 11 a.m. B r o w n i n g On TV: Pac-12 had the Huskies on the cusp of a late comeback driving into field goal range in the closing moments only to see Cameron Van Winkle’s 46-yard attempt that would have forced overtime miss wide right by just inches. After the game, Browning was angry and unwilling to take any positives from his debut performance. Petersen said that falls in line with what he’s seen from Browning since he arrived on campus in January. TURN
TO
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2015
Today’s Today Boys Tennis: Chimacum/Port Townsend at Kingston, 4 p.m.; Sequim at Olympic, 4 p.m. Girls Soccer: Chimacum at Olympic JV, 5 p.m.; Crosspoint at Port Angeles, 6:45 p.m. Volleyball: Forks at Chimacum, 6:15 p.m.
Wednesday Girls Soccer: North Kitsap at Port Townsend, 6:45 p.m. Volleyball: Clallam Bay and Neah Bay at Crescent, North Olympic League Jamboree, 4 p.m.; Quilcene at Port Townsend, 6 p.m.; Thomas Jefferson at Sequim, 6:15 p.m.; North Mason at Chimacum, 6:30 p.m. Men’s Soccer: Bellevue at Peninsula College, 5:30 p.m. Women’s Soccer: Bellevue at Peninsula College, 3:30 p.m.
Thursday Football: Bellevue Christian at Port Townsend, 7 p.m. Boys Tennis: Port Angeles at North Kitsap, 4 p.m.; North Mason at Sequim, 4 p.m. Cross Country: Port Angeles at Olympic Jamboree, 3:30 p.m.; Forks at Gordy Roberton Invitational Jamboree, at Tenino, 4 p.m. Girls Soccer: Sequim at Chimacum, 4 p.m.; Port Townsend at Port Angeles, 6:45 p.m. Girls Swimming: Port Townsend at North Kitsap, 3 p.m.; Port Angeles at Bremerton, 3 p.m.; Klahowya at Sequim, 3 p.m. Volleyball: Neah Bay at Quilcene, 6 p.m.; Port Angeles at Black Hills, 7 p.m.
Area Sports BMX Racing Port Angeles BMX Track Single Races SUNDAY 46-50 Cruiser 1. Lawrence Moroles 2. Scott Gulisao 3. “Curious George” Williams 4. Robert “Faceplant” Williams 8 Novice 1. Benjamin Clemens 2. Dominic Price 3. Anthony Jones 10 Intermediate 1. Landon “L Factor” Price 2. Jesse “LL Cool J” Vail 3. Jack Clemens 6 and Under Local Open 1. Benjamin Clemens 2. Dominic Price 3. Makaylie “Kaylie-Bug” Albin 9-10 Local Open 1. Landon “L Factor” Price 2. Jack Clemens 3. Anthony Jones 4. Jesse “LL Cool J” Vail FRIDAY, AUG. 28 (reprinted) 26-30 Cruiser 1. “Curious George” Williams 2. Stephon Jasicki 3. Robert “Faceplant” Williams 9 Intermediate 1. Landon “L Factor” Price 2. Stephon Jasicki 3. Jesse “LL Cool J” Vail 4. Dominic Price 13 and Under Pitbike Open 1. Jesse “LL Cool J” Vail
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2. Dominic Price 3. Makaylie “Kaylie-Bug” Albin
Preps Football THE ASSOCIATED PRESS POLL HOW FARED Class 4A 1. Camas (1-0) beat Chiawana 35-14. 2. Lake Stevens (1-0) beat Meadowdale 49-21. 3. Gig Harbor (1-0) beat Peninsula 40-14. 4. Gonzaga Prep (1-0) beat Richland 13-10. (tie) Chiawana (0-1) lost to Camas 35-14. 6. Union (1-0) beat Federal Way 46-35. 7. Bothell (0-1) lost to Eastlake 22-19. 8. Graham-Kapowsin (1-0) beat Kentlake 35-14. 9. Skyline (1-0) beat Issaquah 31-28. 10. Federal Way (0-1) lost to Union 46-35. Others receiving 6 or more points: None. Class 3A 1. Eastside Catholic (1-0) beat Oceanside, Calif., 49-13. 2. Bellevue (0-0) idle. 3. O’Dea (1-0) beat Vancouver College, B.C., 31-14. 4. Auburn Mountain View (1-0) beat Foss 47-13. (tie) Marysville-Pilchuck (1-0) beat Kamiak 21-20. 6. Peninsula (0-1) lost to Gig Harbor 40-14. 7. Kamiakin (0-1) lost to Ferndale 35-34, OT. 8. Lincoln (1-0) beat Roosevelt, Ore., 54-7. 9. Mt. Spokane (1-0) beat West Valley (Yakima) 38-28. 10. Lakes (1-0) beat Clover Park 77-0. Others receiving 6 or more points: 11, Meadowdale (0-1) lost to Lake Stevens 49-21, Wilson, Woodrow lost to Olympic 21-0. Class 2A 1. Sedro-Woolley (1-0) beat Mount Baker 20-7. 2. Tumwater (1-0) beat Capital 42-9. 3. Lynden (0-1) lost to King’s 21-14. 4. Hockinson (1-0) beat LaCenter 28-0. 5. Prosser (1-0) beat Emerald Ridge 40-10. 6. Ellensburg (1-0) beat Kennewick 27-0. 7. North Kitsap (1-0) beat Bainbridge 28-0. 8. Squalicum (1-0) beat Bellingham 41-14. 9. Clarkston (1-0) beat Moscow, Idaho, 48-20. 10. W. F. West (1-0) beat Kingston 14-3. Others receiving 6 or more points: Woodland (0-1) lost to Kalama 20-14, 11, Burlington-Edison (1-0) beat Mount Vernon 45-7. Class 1A 1. Cascade Christian (1-0) beat Sehome 14-0. 2. Royal (1-0) beat Ephrata 45-0. 3. Colville (0-1) lost to Cheney 28-0. 4. Zillah (1-0) beat River View 57-8. 5. Freeman (1-0) beat Timberlake, Idaho, 34-7. 6. Eatonville (0-1) lost to Orting 21-20. 7. King’s (1-0) beat Lynden 21-14. 8. Mount Baker (0-1) lost to Sedro-Woolley 20-7. 9. Charles Wright Academy (0-1) lost to Tenino 27-13. 10. LaCenter (0-1) lost to Hockinson 28-0. Others receiving 6 or more points: Connell (1-0) beat Othello 37-7, Montesano (0-1) lost to Balck Hills 56-32, Lakeside (Nine Mile Falls) 1-0) beat Kellogg, Idaho 46-0, Cascade (Leavenworth) (0-1) lost to Quincy 15-9. Class 2B 1. Napavine (1-0) beat Mossyrock 49-14. 2. Okanogan (1-0) beat Cashmere 28-14.
3. Lind-Ritzville/Sprague (1-0) beat Davenport 46-14. 4. North Beach (1-0) beat Ilwaco 38-7. 5. Toledo (1-0) beat Morton/White Pass 30-7. 6. Colfax (1-0) beat Liberty (Spangle) 28-21. 7. Pe Ell/Willapa Valley (1-0) beat Winlock 50-0. 8. Raymond (1-0) beat Life Christian Academy 26-25. 9. Reardan (1-0) beat Kettle Falls 27-0. (tie) Brewster (1-0) beat Chelan 38-34. Others receiving 6 or more points: Adna (1-0) beat Onalaska 21-8, Life Christian Academy (0-1) lost to Raymond 26-25, WaitsburgPrescott (1-0) beat McLoughlin, Ore., 45-7. Class 1B 1. Liberty Christian (1-0) beat Almira/CouleeHartline 66-42. 2. Neah Bay (1-0) beat Northwest Christian (Colbert) 44-36. 3. Lummi (1-0) beat Taholah 40-12. 4. Republic (1-0) beat Entiat 56-44. 5. Touchet (0-0) idle. Others receiving 6 or more points: Cusick (1-1) beat Yakima Tribal 62-6, Naselle (1-0) beat Chief Leschi 40-0, Garfield-Palouse (0-1) lost to Wallace, Idaho, 26-8.
Football NFL Schedule Thursday’s Game Pittsburgh at New England, 5:30 p.m. Sunday Green Bay at Chicago, 10 a.m. Kansas City at Houston, 10 a.m. Seattle at St. Louis, 10 a.m. Cleveland at N.Y. Jets, 10 a.m. Indianapolis at Buffalo, 10 a.m. Miami at Washington, 10 a.m. Carolina at Jacksonville, 10 a.m. New Orleans at Arizona, 1:05 p.m. Detroit at San Diego, 1:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Oakland, 1:25 p.m. Baltimore at Denver, 1:25 p.m. Tennessee at Tampa Bay, 1:25 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Monday Philadelphia at Atlanta, 4:10 p.m. Minnesota at San Francisco, 7:20 p.m. Thursday, Sep. 17 Denver at Kansas City, 5:25 p.m. Sunday, Sep. 20 Tampa Bay at New Orleans, 10 a.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 10 a.m. Arizona at Chicago, 10 a.m. Houston at Carolina, 10 a.m. San Francisco at Pittsburgh, 10 a.m. New England at Buffalo, 10 a.m. San Diego at Cincinnati, 10 a.m. Tennessee at Cleveland, 10 a.m. Atlanta at N.Y. Giants, 10 a.m. St. Louis at Washington, 10 a.m. Baltimore at Oakland, 1:05 p.m. Miami at Jacksonville, 1:05 p.m. Dallas at Philadelphia, 1:25 p.m. Seattle at Green Bay, 5:30 p.m. Monday, Sep. 21 N.Y. Jets at Indianapolis, 5:30 p.m.
Baseball American League Toronto New York
East Division W L Pct GB 78 58 .574 — 76 59 .563 1½
Today
Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”
Tampa Bay Baltimore Boston
67 69 65 71 64 72 Central Division W L Kansas City 82 54 Minnesota 70 66 Cleveland 66 69 Chicago 65 70 Detroit 62 74 West Division W L Houston 75 62 Texas 71 64 Los Angeles 69 67 Seattle 66 71 Oakland 58 79
.493 .478 .471
11 13 14
Pct GB .603 — .515 12 .489 15½ .481 16½ .456 20 Pct GB .547 — .526 3 .507 5½ .482 9 .423 17
Sunday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 6, Tampa Bay 4 Toronto 10, Baltimore 4 Cleveland 4, Detroit 0 Boston 6, Philadelphia 2 Chicago White Sox 7, Kansas City 5 Houston 8, Minnesota 5 L.A. Angels 7, Texas 0 Seattle 3, Oakland 2 Monday’s Games Baltimore at N.Y. Yankees, late. Tampa Bay at Detroit, late. Toronto at Boston, late. Cleveland at Chicago White Sox, late. Houston at Oakland, late. Texas at Seattle, late. Minnesota at Kansas City, late. L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, late. Tuesday’s Games Baltimore (Gausman 2-6) at N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 11-6), 4:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (E.Ramirez 10-5) at Detroit (Boyd 1-5), 4:08 p.m. Toronto (Dickey 10-10) at Boston (Owens 2-2), 4:10 p.m. Cleveland (Carrasco 12-9) at Chicago White Sox (Rodon 6-6), 5:10 p.m. Minnesota (Gibson 9-9) at Kansas City (Volquez 12-7), 5:10 p.m. Houston (Kazmir 7-9) at Oakland (S.Gray 12-7), 7:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 12-6) at L.A. Angels (Heaney 6-2), 7:05 p.m. Texas (Hamels 2-1) at Seattle (T.Walker 10-7), 7:10 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Baltimore at N.Y. Yankees, 4:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at Detroit, 4:08 p.m. Toronto at Boston, 4:10 p.m. Cleveland at Chicago White Sox, 5:10 p.m. Minnesota at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m. Houston at Oakland, 7:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m. Texas at Seattle, 7:10 p.m.
National League East Division W L New York 75 61 Washington 71 65 Miami 57 80 Atlanta 54 83 Philadelphia 53 84 Central Division W L St. Louis 87 49 Pittsburgh 81 54 Chicago 78 57
Pct .551 .522 .416 .394 .387
GB — 4 18½ 21½ 22½
Pct GB .640 — .600 5½ .578 8½
9 a.m. (26) ESPN Tennis ITF, U.S. Open, Men’s and Women’s, Quarterfinals (Live) 11:30 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Soccer UEFA, Switzerland vs. England, Euro 2016, Qualifier (Live) 11:30 a.m. (306) FS1 Soccer UEFA, F.Y.R. Macedonia vs. Spain, Euro 2016, Qualifier (Live) 4 p.m. (26) ESPN Tennis ITF, U.S. Open, Men’s and Women’s, Quarterfinals (Live) 5:15 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Soccer FIFA, Brazil vs. United States, International Friendly (Live) 6 p.m. (306) FS1 Boxing Premier Champions, Austin Trout vs. Joey Hernandez (Live) 7 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners (Live) 7:30 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Soccer FIFA, Argentina vs. Mexico, International Friendly (Live) Milwaukee Cincinnati
60 76 56 79 West Division W L Los Angeles 78 58 San Francisco 71 66 Arizona 65 72 San Diego 65 72 Colorado 56 80
.441 27 .415 30½ Pct .574 .518 .474 .474 .412
GB — 7½ 13½ 13½ 22
Sunday’s Games Cincinnati 6, Milwaukee 3 Miami 4, N.Y. Mets 3 Washington 8, Atlanta 4 Boston 6, Philadelphia 2 Chicago Cubs 6, Arizona 4 L.A. Dodgers 5, San Diego 1 San Francisco 7, Colorado 4 Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 1 Monday’s Games N.Y. Mets at Washington, late. Milwaukee at Miami, late. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, late. Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, late Colorado at San Diego, late. San Francisco at Arizona, late. Atlanta at Philadelphia, late. L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, late. Tuesday’s Games Atlanta (Undecided) at Philadelphia (Nola 5-2), 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Harvey 12-7) at Washington (Zimmermann 12-8), 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Jungmann 9-5) at Miami (Conley 3-1), 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Liriano 9-7) at Cincinnati (R.Iglesias 3-6), 4:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Hammel 7-6) at St. Louis (Wacha 15-4), 5:15 p.m. San Francisco (Vogelsong 9-11) at Arizona (Ch.Anderson 6-5), 6:40 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 12-6) at L.A. Angels (Heaney 6-2), 7:05 p.m. Colorado (J.Gray 0-0) at San Diego (Rea 2-2), 7:10 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 10:45 a.m. Atlanta at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee at Miami, 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. Colorado at San Diego, 6:10 p.m. San Francisco at Arizona, 6:40 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m.
Football: Sequim has added deep pass attack CONTINUED FROM B1 tle easier after some solid play by two quarterbacks in Friday’s 43-6 win against Chimacum. “You could drive my truck Senior quarterback Nick through it,” Foster said. Faunce showed off an impressive And all that blocking helped Sua’s tenure as QB1 get off to an deep ball on a couple of occasions. On the game’s opening posseseasy start. sion, he rolled out to his right “Yes, because I have wonderand found a diving Ethan Richful teammates,” he said. “They mond for a 39-yard gain on thirdwork hard all the time, and and-9, putting Sequim in the red they’re always trucking people, zone and setting up a touchdown. blocking hard for each other.” Later, Faunce sent another With the offense running on well-thrown ball deep over the all cylinders this early in the seamiddle to a wide-open Richmond, son and a defense that held Port but the ball bounced off RichAngeles to one first down in the mond’s chest at the goal line. If game, the Redhawks are again a caught, the play would have been contender, and probably the a touchdown. favorite, to claim their second “That’s one of those things consecutive Olympic League 1A that’s definitely a strength for crown. him,” Sequim coach Erik Wiker Here are two other things said. “He has a lot of things that learned last week in North he can bring, but his arm and Olympic Peninsula high school touch is definitely one of them. football: “And that stretches the field. ■ Sequim can chuck it. That means the next team we Sequim’s biggest question play says, ‘Hey we have to make mark coming into the season was sure we get deep.’ So that how to replace graduated quarstretches the running game, terback Miguel Moroles, last which is nice.” year’s All-Peninsula Offensive Faunce and Riley Cowan are MVP. splitting duties under center so far this season. The Wolves can breathe a lit-
Cowan also was impressive, completing three straight passes on one drive and showing good touch on an accurate 23-yard touchdown pass to fellow freshman Kyler Rollness. “Both of our quarterbacks have pretty strong arms,” Wiker said. The deep ball gives Sequim another weapon to stretch opposing defenses. “We have jet sweeps with [Gavin] Velarde, we have some power running behind some linemen, and if we take it vertical down field a few times and they are sketchy about that, we’re going wide, we’re going in the middle and we’re going deep, and it makes it tough to play defense against,” Wiker said. “Last year we could spread teams sideways and up the middle but not too deep, so it made it a little tougher because teams could compact their formations. “[The deep pass] changes it and makes teams have to defend more of the whole field.” ■ Neah Bay is still good. If this is how Neah Bay plays with more players on the field and a limited playbook, watch
out 8-man football. The two-time defending Class 1B champions beat Northwest Christian of Colbert 44-36 on Saturday. Usually, teams will spend a lot of time in the offseason preparing for their Week 1 opponent. But Neah Bay couldn’t do that with the Crusaders for a couple reasons. First, the Red Devils play 8-man football, so preparing for weeks for their only 11-man game doesn’t make much sense. Second, their second game is against Lummi (this Friday in Bellingham). It might not be a league game (that happens Oct. 16), but beating the Blackhawks is always important for Neah Bay, and also facing them is an important measuring stick. So the Red Devils need to make sure they are prepared for Lummi. But that meant their playbook Saturday was limited. “It was real, real basic,” head coach Tony McCaulley said. “And playing a team as good as [Northwest Christian], I think
that it hurt us a little bit.” Despite that, Neah Bay managed to rack up 444 yards of total offense, including 312 on the ground. Junior Cole Svec gained 264 of those rushing yards. So it’s hard not to wonder what the Red Devils will be able to do in the wide-open spaces of 8-man football. By the way, since claiming its first-ever state championship in 2011 with a 36-28 win over Almira-Coulee-Hartline, Neah Bay has been in only two closer games than what Northwest Christian provided: a 34-28 loss to Liberty Christian in the 2012 championship game and the 26-20 win over Lummi in last year’s state semifinals. Neah Bay’s winning streak is now at 27 games, dating back to the loss to Liberty Christian.
________ “Three things learned in high school football last week” appears each week during the football season in the PDN. Sports Editor Lee Horton can be reached at 360-417-3525 or at lhorton@ peninsuladailynews.com. Sports reporter Michael Carman can be contacted at 360-452-2345, ext. 5250 or at mcarman@peninsualdailynews.com.
Azarenka and Wawrinka return to U.S. Open quarterfinals BY RACHEL COHEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — Victoria Azarenka and Stan Wawrinka, both two-time Grand Slam champions, make trips to the U.S. Open quarterfinals an annual affair. Their experience showed Monday against American opponents who don’t know how it feels to go that far at a major. Azarenka, whose ranking is down to 20th after two injury-
plagued seasons, is starting to look like the player who took Serena Williams to three sets in the final at Flushing Meadows in 2012 and ’13. On Monday, she won 6-3, 6-4 over 46th-ranked American Varvara Lepchenko, who had reached her first U.S. Open round of 16. “My game was not really a problem. It was just being able to find your rhythm and find the way to apply that game on the
certain moments in the tough situations,” Azarenka said. “So I think that was more of — I wouldn’t say mental, but just more of a consistency.” Wawrinka had a few more tense moments against another American who has never been past the fourth round at a major. Donald Young had come from behind in his three previous matches, twice rallying from down two sets, but Wawrinka’s power and poise never gave him
much of a chance to do it again no matter how loud the Arthur Ashe Stadium crowd roared. The fifth-seeded Wawrinka won 6-4, 1-6, 6-3, 6-4, taking control in the final two sets behind his bigger serve. Young, currently ranked 68th, had upset Wawrinka in five sets in the second round of the 2011 U.S. Open. Wawrinka is a different player now, though, winning the 2014 Australian Open and this year’s
French Open. His signature backhand deserted him at times Monday and he smashed a racket after getting broken for the first time in the second set. But he faced just two break points in the final two sets, both coming when he was already up 5-1 in the third. “I start the third set really right again,” Wawrinka said. “I was physically there trying to play again more aggressive the way I start the match.”
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2015
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Hawks: Surfer helps facilitate Carroll’s vision CONTINUED FROM B1 Zen tradition, he helps players focus on the present by With the Seahawks blocking out distractions, poised to win in the closing including doubts that can seconds, an intercepted impede their ability to pass at the goal line sailed make split-second decisions into football’s Hall of Fame in games. “In these high-stakes of flubs and handed a 28-24 victory to the New England environments, there isn’t the luxury to pick and Patriots. “I couldn’t be more choose the right variables,” excited for the challenge of said Gervais, who has winning and coming back formed a consulting busiagain and going again,” ness with Carroll called Carroll told reporters dur- Win Forever. “So it’s a deep focus on ing training camp, still the right things and then answering for the loss. “How hard could it be? having the mental, physical and emotional skills to We’re going to find out.” The road back, he added, adjust or dictate.” rests on “our beliefs, and we’re going to bring them to Open minds the front and see if they can Soft-spoken and deliberstand the test, and if we do, ate, Gervais said that he we’ll be stronger and had been able to get his tougher than ever.” message across because Tough may not come Carroll had built a team immediately to mind with that valued keeping an his unorthodox approach. open mind, not just followAlthough psychologists ing orders, borrowing some and consultants are not principles from yoga but new in professional sports, incorporating a range of Seattle has so integrated New Age and unconventheir work that more than a tional thinking. half-dozen teams have “It’s not, ‘I have the called to ask about the answers and you don’t,’” he team’s approach. said. “It’s a learning-based Michael Gervais, an avid organization that is hungry surfer and a trained psy- to figure out the challenges chologist, is in some ways of expressing human potenthe key facilitator of Car- tial.” roll’s vision. The world outside the He calls himself a perfor- locker room is focused on mance strategy consultant, championships won and focusing on helping tal- lost. But Gervais said he ented people make the most reminded players that they of their skills. were not defined by a single Rather than set up office event, even a Super Bowl hours, he speaks to players loss. on the field, in the weight “I feel badly for those room and elsewhere to people who measure sucaddress issues in the cess by one point in time,” moment. he said. “But if it’s a process Taking a page from the and journey and life engage-
Williams said. “You don’t have to worry about people hounding you.”
‘Be yourself’
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll warms up with his team before their game at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo., last month. ment, you have a choice to be successful in the arc of growing.” Carroll has long been known to take a different path, dating to his days as a head coach with the Jets and Patriots and at the University of Southern California. In his five years leading the Seahawks, he has made a mark not just by winning games but by reshaping the role of NFL coach. Carroll, 63, has embraced diversity, encouraged free expression, promoted selfdiscovery and remained relentlessly positive. He shoots hoops with his players and brings in eclectic guests to prompt them to consider other points of view. Graham said that when he first arrived at Seahawks camp, Carroll had asked him not about his off-season
workouts but about his pilot’s license and had invited Graham to fly his seaplane to the team’s practice facility on Lake Washington, anathema in a league filled with riskaverse lawyers. To rally his team, Carroll said, he and his staff remain “supportive and nurturing,” as they sought to do after the Super Bowl loss. “We have a philosophy and we believe in it, and because circumstances and issues arise, winning championships and maybe not winning championships, that doesn’t affect what we believe in and work for,” Carroll said after a recent practice. “Hopefully the philosophy helps guide you through those times.” Of course, it may help that the Seahawks still have powerhouse talent
going into the new season, which they start Sunday at St. Louis — so much talent that several prognosticators are predicting their return to the championship game. The team re-signed Russell Wilson, one of the highest-rated quarterbacks, as well as running back Marshawn Lynch and linebacker Bobby Wagner, and acquired Graham and cornerback Cary Williams. Those players and other new ones revel in a freedom from endless hectoring from the sideline and top-down coaching in favor of more strategic guidance and encouragement to speak their minds about plays and what is not working. “We create a positive attitude and a positive upbeat attitude from everybody, and that’s rare, and it makes football fun and makes your job easier,”
Cornerback Richard Sherman, one of the more outspoken Seahawks, said, “It’s simple here: Be yourself, play hard, and you’ll be fine.” “That’s the kind of coach Pete is,” he added. “Not a lot of coaches are willing to take that risk, because it’s a risk to let your players be that open, be that free.” Carroll’s management style has attracted notice even outside of football. In 2013, Carroll heard a speech by Angela Duckworth, a research psychologist at the University of Pennsylvania who determined that differing levels of grit in the face of unfavorable odds explained why some talented people succeeded while similarly talented people failed. “Most of these cases, it’s about hanging in there when other people don’t or won’t,” said Duckworth, who was intrigued enough by Carroll’s approach that she flew to Seattle in May to observe the Seahawks. She came away impressed not only with Carroll’s yoga-session exhortations but with his ability to make that philosophy sink in across the organization. Still, in the end, it’s all about a football game, primarily being ready for the next one. To make the point, signs over doors at the training field read simply, “I’m in.”
Hawks moving on without Chancellor McGrath: New BY GREGG BELL MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE
RENTON — More than ever, Pete Carroll sounds like he and the Seattle Seahawks are moving on past Kam Chancellor’s ongoing holdout. The coach said on his weekly radio show with 710 ESPN in Seattle on Monday morning that Saturday’s trade of a fifth-round draft choice to Kansas City for fourth-year veteran Kelcie McCray was to “solidify” the strong safety position for Sunday’s opener at St. Louis as Chancellor’s holdout entered its 39th day Monday with no end in sight. Carroll said “there is not much small talk” between him and his team leader beyond each side knowing where it stands. The team doesn’t want to set a precedent of adding more money now to Chancellor’s contract that has three years still remaining on it.
The oft-injured and thumping Chancellor, not sure how many more seasons his body can withstand playing, wants all the money he can get now after seeing the team add $1.5 million in guarantees for Marshawn Lynch last preseason (when Lynch’s deal had one more left on it). “This is an important week to see where he is,” in his holdout, Carroll said — a subtle nod to the fact there is still time for Chancellor to report and play this weekend against the Rams. Not that the Seahawks expect him to do that. If he doesn’t, he will forfeit his first of 17 weekly game checks, which for him come at $267,647 each. “Yeah, we’d love to have everybody,” Carroll said of missing Chancellor’s leadership on the field and in the locker room. “But we’re going to be strong anyway.” The coach confirmed Seattle has signed free-
“Yeah, we’d love to have everybody. But we’re going to be strong anyway.” SEAHAWKS COACH PETE CARROLL On playing without Kam Chancellor agent running back Fred viding there in Chancellor’s Jackson. absence before Saturday’s trade. Jackson’s role As for Seattle’s other star safety, Carroll said Carroll said Jackson’s value is going to be in the Earl Thomas has been quipassing game as a blocker etly going about his busiand receiver out of the ness recovering from Februbackfield, and that he ary shoulder surgery and already has the 34-year-old returning to practice. “But he’ll speak loudly pal of Lynch’s diving into when he gets on the field Seattle’s passing playbook here, I think. It’s going to be in particular. McCray was stuck exciting to see him play this behind a glut of good safe- week,” Carroll said. The Seahawks are ties in Kansas City. Carroll said it took a healthy heading into the fifth-round pick to pry him regular season. Carroll said the only conaway because the Chiefs liked him so much, and that cerning injuries on the curMcCray will instantly rent 53-man roster are become “a core special- third tight end Cooper teams guy” in addition to Helfet with a knee and providing more experience reserve linebacker and speat strong safety than 2014 cial-teams guy Mike Morrookie Dion Bailey was pro- gan’s hamstring.
Huskies: Run game sputtered CONTINUED FROM B1 22 carries, just the 11th time since 1996 the Hus“His demeanor is always kies have been held to fewer kind of the same to me, and than 30 net yards rushing. that’s one of the things we Dwayne Washington, like,” Petersen said. who closed the 2014 regular “If he does something season with three straight pretty good it seems the 100-yard rushing games, same. He’s pretty analyti- was held to 14 yards on just cal, pretty clinical. I think eight carries. he’s really competitive.” Some of the run game Petersen’s offensive frus- struggles were due to Boise tration from the loss cen- State’s experienced defentered on a running game sive front and Washington’s that never got started and youth on the offensive line. the inability to throw down- But Petersen expected betfield. Washington was lim- ter production to help his ited to 29 yards rushing on young quarterback.
“It certainly was very concerning, probably the number one thing on offense,” Petersen said. “And it was a little thing here and a little thing there that made it look bad. “We’re going to have to get our run game better for us to progress.” Browning was cautious in his first start not to make many risky throws, leading to a number of underneath routes and short passes. The Huskies longest completion was a 19-yard pass to Washington out of
the backfield, and the longest throw to a wide receiver was Dante Pettis’ 17-yard reception on the Huskies final drive. “A little of it was trying to get something going, trying to get a little rhythm, trying get a first down and stay on the field,” Petersen said. “The first half was very, very poor. We had the ball 20 some plays so it was very hard to get anything going, but another thing that we don’t like and we’ve got to be able to take some chances.”
Rickie Fowler rallies to win Deutsche Bank THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NORTON, Mass. — Rickie Fowler delivered all the right shots Monday at the Deutsche Bank Championship, and then he delivered some champagne. He stood near the wood railing overlooking a dozen rows of reporters, hoisting an empty bottle in one hand and a microphone in
the other. “Let’s finish off the year right,” Fowler said. He certainly showed he is capable after a tense duel with Henrik Stenson at the TPC Boston. Trailing by three shots early on the back nine, Fowler rolled in a 40-foot putt on the 14th hole to pull within one and then seized control when Stenson hit a
towering tee shot that came down short and into the water for double bogey on the par-3 16th. That combination sent Fowler to another big win. He closed with a 3-under 68 for a one-shot victory that assured him of a spot in the top five at the Tour Championship and a clear shot at the $10 million bonus in the FedEx Cup.
Fowler won The Players Championship in a threehole playoff in May. He won the Scottish Open with three birdies on the last four holes. “Being in those positions before, I definitely felt very calm out there,” he said. “I knew what I was trying to do. Knew what I had to do. And was very much ready to do it.”
running back CONTINUED FROM B1 time career rushing leaders either regressed at 30 or, in the case of Jim Brown, ■ Professional: already decided to retire. Despite his problems with All but a handful of them the A&M coaching staff, didn’t play beyond their Michael was selected by 33rd birthday. the Seahawks in the secBut there are excepond round of the 2013 tions. Marcus Allen enjoyed draft. He was signed to a four- four quality seasons with year, $3.3 million contract, the Chiefs after he turned 33. Washington’s John Rigwith more than $1 million gins scored a league-leadguaranteed. ing 24 touchdowns at 34 The undrafted Jackson and went on to co-lead the was cut by several NFL league again, with 14, teams before finding work when he was 35. with the Sioux City BanThe late Hall of Fame dits of various indoor footrunning back John Henry ball leagues. Johnson ran for 1,048 He was paid $200 a yards in 1964 and repreweek (plus $50 per win). sented the Steelers in the Jackson eventually got a Pro Bowl. He also was 35. tryout with the Bills, As for Jackson, he figthanks to then-general ures to serve as a role manager Marv Levy, a Coe player for the Seahawks. College alum. But what a role: Aside NFL accomplishments: from giving his close friend Michael has carried 52 Marshawn Lynch a times for 254 yards and breather every three or caught one pass for 12 four possessions, he’s an yards. He has never scored eager and proficient a touchdown. blocker, a reliable target as a receiver out of the backJackson has carried 1,279 times for 5,646 yards field, and a locker-room leader. and caught 322 passes for “He always does the 2,640 yards. He has scored right things,” Jackson’s ex37 touchdowns. Bills teammate, defensive ■ Miscellaneous: tackle Kyle Williams, told Michael, 24, is more the Buffalo News last year. regarded for his potential “He’s always in the right than any tangible accomplace. He practices hard. plishment. He leads by example. He News of his trade to speaks when things need Dallas produced shrugged to be different.” shoulders while a million Fred Jackson didn’t Seahawks fans said somestart in high school, wasn’t thing to the effect of, “Oh, recruited to play in college, well.” and had next to no chance Jackson, 34, was elected of hooking on in the NFL, a team captain for the past much less surviving and four seasons, and the news then thriving for eight seathat one of the most sons. If anybody is capable beloved pro athletes in Buf- of bucking the decades-long falo history was a salarypattern of running backs cap casualty last week unable to carry on into angered Bills fans frustheir mid-30s, he is. trated by a 15-year playoff The most startling condrought. trast between Michael and Running backs preparJackson? Michael was a ing for their age 34 season member of two Super Bowl don’t often inspire such teams. He owns a worldemotion, for the simple rea- championship ring. Jackson’s next playoff son 34-year-old running backs are rare. The percep- game will be his first. tion they generally hit a ________ wall at 30 is not based on a John McGrath is a sports colconvenient round number. umnist for The News Tribune. He It’s a fact. can be contacted at john. Most of the league’s all- mcgrath@thenewstribune.com.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, September 8, 2015 PAGE
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Melting ice fails to open Arctic oil drilling bonanza Infrastructure, remote locales challenge plans BY STEVEN LEE MYERS CLIFFORD KRAUSS
AND
THE NEW YORK TIMES
TERIBERKA, Russia — The warming Arctic should already have transformed this impoverished fishing village on the coast of the Barents Sea. The Kremlin spent billions in the last decade in hopes of turning it into a northern hub of its global energy powerhouse, Gazprom. It was once the most ambitious project planned in the Arctic Ocean, but now there is little to show for it aside from a shuttered headquarters and an enormous gravel road carved out of the windblown coastline like a scar. “There are plans,” said Viktor A. Turchaninov, the village’s mayor, “but the facts — the realities of life — suggest the opposite.” The dream of an Arctic Klondike, made possible by the rapid warming of once-icebound waters, has been at the core of Russia’s national ambitions and those of the world’s biggest energy companies for more than a decade.
Alaska exploration But even as Royal Dutch Shell began drilling an exploratory well this summer off the north coast of Alaska, Russia’s experiences here have become a cautionary tale, one that illustrates the challenges facing those imagining that a changing Arctic will produce oil and gas riches. Tectonic shifts in the global energy economy, fierce opposition from environmentalists who oppose tampering with the ecologically fragile waters, and formidable logistical obstacles have tempered enthusiasm that only a few years ago seemed boundless. After years of planning and delays,
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Protesters in Portland, Ore., tried to block a private Finnish icebreaker contracted by Shell, the Fennica, from returning to Alaska in July. Shell’s drilling project in the stormy waters of the Chukchi Sea is now being watched by the industry, officials, residents and critics as a makeor-break test of the viability of production in the Arctic. “From an economic point of view, I’m not sure going offshore Arctic is very rational,” said Patrick Pouyanné, chief executive and president of Total, the French oil company, which once also planned to drill off Alaska’s northern coast. Shell has already spent $7 billion and this summer has faced tribulations like those that marred an illfated exploration three years ago, including dogged protests, harsh weather and an accident in July that gouged a hole in one of its ships after it struck an uncharted shoal in the Aleutian Islands. Only seven years ago, Shell and other companies — ConocoPhillips, Statoil of Norway, Repsol of Spain and Eni of Italy — together paid $2.7 billion for leases for the fields off Alaska. The price of oil at the time climbed to nearly $150 a barrel, and the accel-
erated reduction of ice that once choked the Arctic Ocean seemed to make exploration easier. Then the market changed. The world today is awash in oil and natural gas, largely because of the shale revolution in the United States and the advent of hydraulic fracturing, which has so increased production that the United States has slashed imports.
Maximum production Saudi Arabia and other states around the Persian Gulf are producing at maximum levels, and if the nuclear agreement with Iran gets final approval and economic sanctions are lifted, Iran’s reserves could soon flood the market. In the last year alone, the price of oil has plummeted to less than $50 a barrel. Across the Arctic, from Russia to Norway to Canada, offshore projects have already proved disappointing. After drilling eight exploratory wells off Greenland in 2011 and 2012, Cairn Energy, a Scottish company, abandoned them.
Study finds vitamin C matches some good effects of exercise PENINSULA DAILY NEWS NEWS SERVICES
ATLANTA — Overweight and obese people who take a high-dose of supplementary vitamin C daily may get some of the cardiovascular benefits of exercise without the exercise, new research has found. In a small trial that recruited sedentary adults who were overweight or obese, study participants who took 500 milligrams of vitamin C daily saw equal improvement in blood-vessel tone — a key measure of cardiovascular health — as did those who took up a three-month regimen of brisk walking five to seven times a week, investigators at the University of Colorado at Boulder reported. The results were presented in Atlanta last week at the American Physiological Society’s annual meeting. But they have not been published in a peer-reviewed journal and so are considered preliminary. The study’s small size —
15 subjects got the walking treatment, while 20 took the vitamin C supplements — may also limit the uptake of its findings by public-health officials, who have struggled, with limited success, to get sedentary Americans off the couch. Some 4 in 10 American adults are thought to be entirely sedentary. But the study’s invasive measures of “endothelial function” — blood vessels’ ability to contract and dilate as needed — suggested that the benefits of modest aerobic exercise and of vitamin C were substantial. At the start of the trial, all study subjects were sedentary and overweight or obese, and all showed levels of vascular tone that were impaired. In a pattern typical for overweight and obese adults who don’t get much exercise, their blood vessels did not respond to experimental conditions with the strength and suppleness seen in normal, healthy adults. Their poor vascular tone
sets off a cascade of harmful effects, including inflammation and changes in the blood that favor the formation of clots. As a result, these subjects were at increased risk of developing high blood pressure and having heart attacks and strokes. The average ingoing body mass index (BMI) of exercisers was 29.3 and for the vitamin C group, 31.3 (a BMI between 25 and 29.9 is considered overweight, and obesity is diagnosed at a BMI of 30). During the study’s threemonth duration, neither group lost weight. Both three months of moderate-intensity exercise and three months of vitamin C supplements drove subjects’ vascular tone back into healthy territory. But the vitamin C did so without the burning of shoe leather or the exertion of walking. The study’s lead author, Caitlin Dow, said the findings were particularly important for people who
cannot exercise because of injury or physical limitations. “This is not ‘the exercise pill,’ ” said Dow, a postdoctoral fellow at Colorado who conducts research on nutrition and vascular biology. Dow emphasized that engaging in regular physical activity appears to have broader effects — lowering “bad” cholesterol, improving metabolic function and boosting mood and cognitive function — than does vitamin C. A moderate supplemental intake of vitamin C is between 30 and 180 mg a day, so 500 mg a day is a relatively high dose. But the tolerable upper limit for adults of vitamin C is 2,000 mg. Because it is a water-soluble vitamin, any vitamin C that is not used is excreted in urine. The most common complaints with high doses of vitamin C are diarrhea, nausea, abdominal cramps and other gastrointestinal disturbances.
$ Briefly . . . President pushes paid sick leave BOSTON — Courting unions on Labor Day, President Barack Obama denounced Republicans for a “constant attack on working Americans” and said he was using his executive power to force federal contractors to give paid sick leave to their employees. Obama was met with resounding applause at a major union rally and breakfast in Boston on Monday when he said he had signed the executive order aboard Air Force One as he flew in to mark Labor Day. He said Republicans who claim the mantle of middle-class protectors are talking big, but they “have to walk the walk.” Obama said opponents of his economic policies “won’t let facts or evidence get in their way.” “You just wait, you look up at the sky and prosperity will come raining down on us from the top of whatever high-rise in New York City,” he said sarcastically. “But that’s not how the economy works.” He added that the GOP’s mindset has been “wrecking the economy for a long, long time.” The Labor Day gesture to workers’ groups came as Obama works to smooth over tensions with the labor movement over his trade agenda. Major unions are opposing Obama’s push for sweeping new trade deals with Asia and Europe, with some threatening to work against Democrats who voted to support those talks in Congress. Unions have warned that the deals could lead to the widespread job elimination. Obama has signed a law providing money to retrain workers if their jobs get shipped overseas. Under the executive order, employees working on federal contracts gain the right to a minimum of one hour of paid leave for every 30 hours they work. Stretched out over 12 months, that’s up to seven days per year. The order will allow employees to use the leave to care for sick relatives as well, and will affect contracts starting in 2017 — just as Obama leaves office.
Drywall lawsuit NEW ORLEANS — More than a year after suing the Cabinet agency that oversees China’s biggest state-owned companies, lawyers for people who said their homes were ruined by drywall made in China are still trying to get the lawsuit served on the StateOwned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission. And six other defendants — sued, like the Cabinet agency, as parents of the company that made the drywall — said
MARKETS CLOSED ■ U.S. markets were closed for the Labor Day holiday Monday.
they’re shielded because they’re Chinese government agencies. U.S. District Judge Eldon Fallon is considering damages for as many as 4,000 homeowners who said sulfur emissions from drywall made by Taishan Gypsum Co. Ltd. ruined their homes and belongings. Damages could be well over $1 billion, said attorneys for plaintiffs in Virginia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas. Earlier this year, Taishan paid seven Virginia homeowners and their attorneys $2.7 million plus about $500,000 interest. Fallon heard arguments earlier this year about whether those figures, with modifications for costs in different areas, can form the basis for awards in a class action lawsuit. The judge scheduled arguments Dec. 8 about whether China New Building Materials Group and five related companies should be dropped from the suit.
Farmers protest BRUSSELS — Thousands of farmers protested outside European Union headquarters on Monday to demand more aid and higher prices for their milk and pig meat. The European Commission responded with a support plan worth $560 million. In a tense standoff, farmers from across the 28-nation EU pelted police with eggs and sprayed them with hay before they were drenched in return by a water cannon. In a building close by, European Commission Vice President Jyrki Katainen announced the support plan, which seeks to immediately ease the debt load of farmers, many of whom are selling milk below production prices. The market has become oversupplied since a system of quotas was reformed this year and some markets were closed off.
Pilots strike BERLIN — A union representing Lufthansa pilots has called a one-day strike at the German airline’s long-distance and cargo operations today — the latest in a string of walkouts. The Vereinigung Cockpit union has hit various Lufthansa units with more than a dozen shortterm walkouts over recent months. The dispute centers on the airline’s plans to cut transition payments for pilots wanting to retire early, which the union wants to see maintained. The union announced the latest strike Monday, saying that previous talks made no progress. The Associated Press
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Fun ’n’ Advice
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Dilbert
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Classic Doonesbury (1985)
Frank & Ernest
Garfield
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DEAR ABBY: I am 44, and my husband of 20 years is 48. On a recent second honeymoon trip to Sweden, I became pregnant. We already have two beautiful, intelligent daughters, 17 and 14. One started university this fall, while the other’s a high school sophomore. My problem is not so much the high-risk pregnancy but rather that both of my girls strongly oppose the idea of us keeping the baby. Not only were they not thrilled when I broke the news to them, but they also cried. My younger daughter is now giving me the cold shoulder. She doesn’t like change and thinks having a sibling will disrupt our life. My older girl said she is glad she will be at the university so she won’t have to have anything to do with the baby. I am deeply hurt by their reactions. I need help to talk to them. Please give me some advice. Expecting in Canada
by Lynn Johnston
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by G.B. Trudeau
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by Bob and Tom Thaves
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If she doesn’t want to do someVan Buren thing, her excuse is, “I’m an old lady. I can’t do it.” It’s annoying. She doesn’t come visit or call to check on us. She makes us feel like our family has to do everything for her — while she claims she’s “independent.” This has been an issue for a while, and I’m sick of it. I suggested she do her grocery shopping online and have it delivered to her house. Once again, she gave the same excuse. I think she needs a man so I can have my husband back. What do you think? Over It in Philadelphia
Abigail
Dear Over It: From the tone of your last remark, it’s clear you and your mother-in-law aren’t close and probably never were. Philadelphia has a very large transit system. Surely there is alternate transportation for her — buses, taxis, Uber and Lyft come to mind. If she was so traumatized by the accident that she’s afraid to get behind the wheel again, she may need a therapist to overcome it. Whatever the reason, this won’t stop until you and your husband quit enabling her. Give her a list of what’s available and “suggest” she use it the next time she calls wanting a ride. If she needs groceries, offer to order them online for her yourself if she isn’t computer-literate. And your husband should also offer to help her find a new car.
Dear Abby: My mother-in-law was in a car accident a few months ago, and her car was totaled. Since then, my husband takes her food shopping and wherever else she has to go. She has made no effort to buy a new car. She’s content with calling him for her every need. She wasn’t injured and she isn’t disabled. by Brian Basset
ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
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by Hank Ketcham
Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, the late Pauline Phillips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.
cash or valuables out in the open. Kindness and generosity will lead to loss. Put your skills to work in a progressive fashion and you will advance. 3 stars
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Use old ideas and skills in an interesting manner. TAURUS (April 20-May Take on less responsibility 20): Look at the big picture, and make sure that whatever but don’t exceed your budget. you do, you do it superbly. A You’ll face opposition if you sudden change in financial, try to make physical changes. legal or health matters will Focus on getting along with lead to an important decision. the people you live with. 4 stars Compromise and taking care of your responsibilities will LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): ease tension. 4 stars Don’t let minor setbacks put you at a disadvantage. Set GEMINI (May 21-June reasonable goals and don’t 20): Don’t take on too much or indulge in something that worry about what anyone else thinks. Stay on track and will make you look or feel avoid any emotional disputes. bad. Put more into home, Only offer help to those you family and affection toward know will reciprocate. 2 stars the people you enjoy being with most. A change of locaSCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. tion will do you good. 4 stars 21): Business trips will give CANCER (June 21-July you reason to celebrate. A positive change at home and 22): Uncertainty will take over if you allow someone to to your reputation is within put you in a vulnerable posi- reach. A proposal you cannot tion. Don’t put up with pushy turn down is heading your way. Prepare to negotiate behavior. Take a course or and get what you want in research something that writing. 5 stars interests you. Avoid anyone who is trying to bait you into SAGITTARIUS (Nov. a disagreement. 3 stars 22-Dec. 21): Precision, coupled with facts and figures, LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): will be the only way to operMoney matters will take an unusual twist. Don’t leave ate today. Know exactly what
by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer
Dennis the Menace
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The Last Word in Astrology ❘ ARIES (March 21-April 19): You will gain more by being nice than by being stern. Keep in mind that not everyone is as quick as you are. Patience will be required if you want help. Discuss your plans with your partner or business associate. 2 stars
Rose is Rose
DEAR ABBY
Dear Expecting: Far more important than how your immature and self-centered daughters feel about your pregnancy is how you and your husband feel about it. Teenagers don’t like to consider their parents as sexual beings, which may be part of the reason for their reaction. Not knowing your girls, I’m not sure what they need to hear other than you love them and hope at some point they will become mature enough to accept the situation. But do not allow them to put you on the defensive. You don’t owe them an apology. As a matter of fact, they owe you and their father one.
by Jim Davis
Red and Rover
B5
Daughters oppose surprise pregnancy
by Scott Adams
For Better or For Worse
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2015
Pickles
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by Brian Crane
The Family Circus
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by Eugenia Last
you will get before you make any offers. Risky joint ventures are best avoided. Invest in yourself. 3 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Don’t overanalyze. Focus on what you know and do well and make deals that are precise and non-negotiable. A partnership can bring you good fortune if it’s set up fairly. Don’t make any impulsive decisions or travel to unsafe territory. 3 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Make love, romance and social activities a priority. Share your thoughts and flesh out how others feel about you and your plans. A personal change can be made, but hold off if you are thinking about a vocational move. 3 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Take action with confidence and the outcome will be stellar. Use your unique qualities to draw reactions and responses from those you want to interact with. You will be pleasantly surprised by the input and offers you receive. 5 stars
by Bil and Jeff Keane
Classified
B6 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2015
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3020 Found FOUND: Gold ring, Seq u i m S a fe w ay, e a r l y March. Call to identify. 775-4558 lv., message F O U N D : Yo u n g t o r t i e shell cat, on Woodcock, Sunday after noon. Please contact Betsy at 808-3653.
3023 Lost FOUND: Cat, off white, with collar, Obrien Rd. 9/1. (360)457-9719 LOST: Black lab. Area of Four Seasons Ranch. S h e i s 1 3 , bl i n d a n d deaf. (360) 775-5154 LOST: Blue point Siamese cat, S Bayview Ave, PA Sept 1, blue eyes. (360)207-9028 LOST: Ring, Black Hills Gold band, Sequim Safeway area. 9/1. (360)683-2422
4026 Employment General
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Bingo Sales Clerk Customer Service Officer, FT Swing Shift • Deli/Espresso Cashier/Attendant • Grocer y Cashier FT (Graveyard Shift) • IT System Administrator III • Line Cook PT Napolis • Napolis Cashier/Attenant • Porter PT • Prep Cook (Main Kitchen) Part Time • P T To t e m R e wards Representative • Snack Bar Attendant For more information and to apply online, please visit our website at www.7cedars resort.com. Native American preference for qualified candidates. 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 tsipe@peninsuladailynews.com. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE. A/R COORDINATOR Motivated individual to perform all functions of A/R. Degree preferred but not required. Can do attitude a MUST! Drug Free Workplace. Email hr@sunsetdoitbest.com for complete job description CAR SALES/customer service, part time, valid drivers license. Apply at 2840 E. Hwy 101, Port Angeles. WA
CASE MANAGER 40 hrs/wk, located in the Sequim Infor mation & Assistance office. Provides case mgt to seniors & adults with disabilities. Good communication & computer skills a must. Bachelor’s d e gr e e b e h av i o ra l o r health science and 2 yrs paid social service exp. or BA and 4 yrs exp., WDL, auto ins. required. $17.18/hr, full benefit pkg, Contact Information & Assistance, 800-8010050 for job descrip. & applic. packet. Open until filled, preference given to appl. rec’d by 4:00 pm 09/14/15. I&A is an EOE. CONCRETE FINISHER For m setter, min. 3+ yrs. exper. 477-9991 COOK: Experience desired. Full-time, benefits, pay doe, to join our team at the Fifth Avenue Retirement Center. Pleasant work environment , must be flexible to work all shifts, including weekend shifts. Must be able to interact comfortable with our residents and guests. Apply at Sherwood Assisted Living, 5 5 0 W. H e n d r i c k s o n Road, Sequim.
VET TECH: Licensed or experienced (Full-time). M u s t b e ava i l . we e k ends. Get application at Angeles Clinic For Animals, 160 Del Guzzi Dr., P.A. Employment Opportunities Nursing: • RN-PACU • RN, Emergency • RN, Clinics • RN, Clinical Informatics • RN, Home Health • RN, Cancer Center Non-Nursing: • Physical Therapist • Medical Assistant • Housekeeper • Laundry Helper • Arrythmia Tech. • ERT • Dietician For more information on these and other openings and to apply, visit: www.olympic medical.org. Fo r t Wo r d e n P u bl i c Development Authority. Housekeeper Openings - We have full time and part time p o s i t i o n s o p e n . We are looking for: Strong attention to detail Able to follow written and verbal directions Ability to lift 25 lbs and go up and down stairs. Must be able to spend the majority of the day walking, bending and kneeling. Housekeeping or cleaning experience a plus. Interested candidates please contact: JDeCianne@for tworden.org
COOK: Victoria Place Assisted Living is seeking an assistant cook for 30 hrs./week. Applicant must be a team player who enjoys working with seniors. Competitive p ay, m e d i c a l , d e n t a l , 401K and paid vacation. Apply on line at http://careers.enlivant.com/ or in person at 491 S Discovery Rd, Port Townsend. F / T, l i c e n s e d H e a l t h (360)379-8223 Care Aid in P.A. at Concerned Citizens. Contact Nyomi at (360)452-2386 LINE COOKS: Experienced, competitive wages. Full time or part time. Apply in person at Black Bear Diner in Sequim.
HOUSEKEEPER: Long term with experience. Position open now. (360)472-0169 QUILEUTE TRIBAL SCHOOL Quileute Culture Coordinator: Will coordinate Quileute culture activities throughout the school year and recommend the temporary employment of Elders, Trib a l M e m b e r s, a n d / o r appropriate individuals to teach and or lead cultural activities for the students and staff. Pay: DOQ/E. Quileute Language Teacher: Is responsible for teaching Quileute Language to K-12 students, and monitoring / reporting student progress. Pay: DOQ/E. Jobs Open Until Filled Fo r m o r e i n fo r m a t i o n please contact Mark Jacobson @ 360-374-5609 or MARK.JACOBSON@QUILEUTENATION.ORG PERSONAL REQUIREMENTS: Applicants must be able to adhere to pre-employment and random UA’s and personal Washington State and Tribal background checks.
LUBE TECH Par t-time, valid WSDL required. Apply at 110 Golf Course, P.A. Substitute / On Call Carrier for Peninsula Daily News route in Forks and LaPush Looking for individuals interested in a Substitute Motor Route in For ks and LaPush. Interested parties must be 18 yrs. o f a g e , h ave a va l i d Washington State Drivers License and proof of insurance. Early morning delivery Monday through F r i d a y a n d S u n d a y. Please call D’Ann at (360)374-2099 Support Staff To wor k with adults w i t h d eve l o p m e n t a l disabilities, no experie n c e n e c e s s a r y, $ 1 0 . 5 0 h r. A p p l y i n person at 1020 Caroline St. M-F 8-4 p.m. T h e Po r t A n g e l e s Boys & Girls Club is hiring for multiple positions including; Kitchen, Games Room, Membership Services, and Education Coordinators. Please apply in person.
1020 Talus, Sequim 1961 sf, 2Br., 2ba. Den w/fireplace. Like new, upgrades++, light, bright, mt. view. Soak tub, all appliances, lots of closets, wall bed. $299,900 WANTED: Seeking a re(360)232-4223 liable person to clean a s m a l l Po r t Tow n s e n d 2 MASTER SUITES home. (360)379-3664 2,700+ sf., on one level with open floor plan and 4080 Employment TWO Master Suites with full baths. Huge bonus Wanted room could fill multiple uses. Two 2-car garages Alterations and Sew- on nicely landscaped 1 ing. Alterations, mend- acres. Mountain Views. ing, hemming and MLS#291666/832732 some heavyweight $424,950 s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o Heidi Hansen you from me. Call lic# 98429 (360)531-2353 ask for Windermere B.B. Real Estate Sequim East B L AG D O N ’ S C O N (360) 477-5322 STRUCTION LLC: Residential and commercial A MUST SEE HOME! r e m o d e l i n g l i c e n s e d Distinctive Water View bonded and insured li- Craftsman offers custom c e n s e # interior with details like: B L A G D C L 8 5 5 L 4 like chef ’s kitchen with (360)460-4566 or email embossed tin ceiling that hmblagdon@yahoo.com reflects the light from the Dungeness Lighthouse, Handyman with Truck. 2 beautiful brick fireplacProperty maintenance, es, antique chandeliers, gutter cleaning, moss h i s / h e r s m a s t e r b a t h removal, dump runs, suite, lighted copula, furniture moving, de- F U L L c o v e r e d f r o n t b r i s h a u l i n g , m i n o r porch overlooking Strait h o m e r e p a i r s , of Juan De Fuca, h o u s e / RV p r e s s u r e Dungeness Lighthouse, washing. Call for esti- Mt. Baker, local far ml a n d s , l u s h l ave n d e r mate. fields and it’s own eng(360)461-9755 lish garden. There’s also Housekeeping, caregiv- a private back deck with ing, waitressing, nanny. hot tub too! r e f e r e n c e s u p o n r e - MLS#290843 $668K Deborah Norman quest. (360)912-4002 or Brokers Group jotterstetter44 Real Estate @gmail.com Professionals (360)461-6059
Landscape maintenance, trimming and pruning, Pressure washing and debr is hauling. Light tractor work and lawn or field mowing. FREE QUOTES. Tom - 360460-7766. License: bizybbl868ma Credit Cards Accepted L A W N A N D YA R D MAINTENENCE: Trimming, weeding, hauling, pruning, mowing. Reasonable rates. (360)6837702 Perfection Housekeeping: Has client openings. 681-5349 After 6 p.m. WILL SHOP OR RUN ERRANDS in Sequim area. All inquiries most welcome! Hourly rate. Leave a message with contact number. 360775-7603 Young Couple Early 60’s available for seasonal cleanup, weeding, trimming, mulching & moss removal. We specialize in complete garden restorations. Excellent references. 457-1213 Chip & Sunny’s Garden Tr a n s f o r m a t i o n s . L i c e n s e # C C CHIPSSG850LB.
GARAGE SALE ADS Call for details. 360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714
BAYVIEW ESTATES PARK Enjoy beautiful sunrises and sunsets from this tidy 2 br., 2 ba., 1,248 sf. home. New carpet in living/dining room. Features cozy wood stove in living room, separate utility room with built-in desk and outdoor shed for storage. 84 Bayview Park Lane # 5, PA Call Brooke for an easy showing. MLS#291766 $37,500 Brooke Nelson UPTOWN REALTY (360)417-2812
TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507 VISIT: WWW.PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM OR E-MAIL: CLASSIFIED@PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM DEADLINES: Noon the weekday before publication. ADDRESS/HOURS: 305 West First Street/P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays CORRECTIONS AND CANCELLATIONS: Corrections--the newspaper accepts responsibility for errors only on the first day of publication. Please read your ad carefully and report any errors promptly. Cancellations--Please keep your cancellation number. Billing adjustments cannot be made without it.
5000900
Employment 3010 Announcements 4026 General
4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 105 Homes for Sale General General General Clallam County
105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County BEST OF SUNLAND Premier 3 bd, 2.5 ba, 2578 sf, Complete living space over garage, b u t l e r ’s p a n t r y, c a fé patio, high quality workm a n s h i p, m a n i c u r e d landscaping, hot tub. MLS#837402/291735 $499,500 Tyler Conkle lic# 112797 (360)670-5978 WINDERMERE SUNLAND CALLING ALL CAR BUFFS! This gorgeous home has 3 br., 3 ba., and den / office. Spectacular mountain VIEW, plus 7 garages! Fully landscaped with spr inklers; water feature! MLS#291158/801531 $575,000 Barb Butcher John L. Scott Real Estate 360-683-4131 CHERRY HILL Beautifully refinished original hardwood floors, recently updated kitchen, 3 br., 2 ba., on oversized lot with nice garden area and hot tub. Home is conveniently located near schools, parks, and library and bus lines. This is a must see. MLS#291750/838244 $239,950 Mark Macedo (360)477-9244 TOWN & COUNTRY
BEAUTIFUL CONDO Overlooking the 9th fairway and green at Penins u l a G o l f C l u b. O p e n floor plan with views from the kitchen, dining room, living room and master bedroom. Each unit has one covered par king space with a storage unit attached. MLS#290554 $239,000 Quint Boe (360)457-0456 IMPROVED PRICE! WINDERMERE Custom home on the PORT ANGELES third fairway of the golf course with a gate openBEAUTIFUL WESTing up to the third fairSIDE HOME way. The home features Totally renovated home stainless steel appliancin great neighborhood! es, custom stone fireBeautiful kitchen com- p l a c e, wo o d f l o o r i n g , plete with granite, SS and granite countertops appliances, walk- in pan- which creates a great tr y and new cabinets. Northwest flare. What a This 3br. 1.5 bath home great way to blend golf has a fully fenced back- with living! With a short y a r d a n d 2 8 x 2 6 d e - walk up the green, you t a c h e d g a r a g e . N e w can view the Strait of roof, siding, electric and Juan de Fuca and Port plumbing! Angeles harbor. MLS#281717 $234,900 MLS#291814 $350,000 Britney Martin Janet Stevenson UPTOWN REALTY Landmark (360)808-1252 360.452.1326
CLASSY SEQUIM CONDO Views of Olympics and local park, lovely patio w i t h w a t e r fa l l , l a r g e space for entertaining, Maple cabinetry and SS appliances, water filtration system, 3 br., 2 ba., spacious master suite, built in ‘11 with 1,649 sf. $350,000 Diann Dickey John L. Scott Real Estate 360-477-3907 FSBO: 2 houses and shop on 1.5 acres. House 1 is 3Br, 2ba, 2200 sf. House 2 is 2Br 1 1/2 ba. on creek, 1200 sf. 3500 sf. of shop with work rooms. Great for home business and rentals. $399,000. (360)452-7743 MOUNTAIN AND OCEAN VIEWS! Updated home on 1.15 fenced acres. Remodeled in 2014 this home offers a large main level master suite with additional master suite and 2 guest rooms upstairs. Farm style kitchen with lots of storage. 3 car attached garage and large deck for entertaining MLS#290971 498K Deborah Norman Brokers Group Real Estate Professionals (360)461-6059 PRIVATE SETTING Cute 3 br, 2 ba home where you can hear Solmar creek while sitting on the back deck. G a r d e n e r ’s p a r a d i s e with fruit trees, greenhouse and potting shed. Well taken care of and some recent updates. RV Hook up and Dump. Fire pit. MLS#291685/833845 $189,900 Tennette & Will Possinger lic# 117240 & 119828 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360) 683-4844
Peninsula Classified 360-452-8435
MOUNTAIN VIEWS Recently updated 2,144 sf., home on 1.3 acres with easy access to Hwy 101. Features include fresh paint inside and out, new roof and gutters, furnace, front and rear decks. Fresh laminate flooring in kitchen and dining areas, upgraded baths. Fireplaces in living and rec rooms, l a r g e p a n t r y, l a u n d r y room with plenty of storage, large garage with workshop or storage area. Agnew Irrigation water. Great location for a home business. MLS#291719 $255,000 Tom Blore 360-683-7814 PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE
NEW ON THE MARKET! This 5br 3ba home has fantastic mountain views and is close to the Discovery trail, golfing and all the amenities of Sequim. The 2 larger bedrooms have their own bathrooms, the other 3 share a full bathroom. There is an attached 2 car garage and also a detached large garage. Place to park your RV with water and power. The back yard is fully fenced with a sprinkler system. Both garages offer heat. MLS#291749 $349,900 Mike Fuller Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim 360-683-3900
OPEN FLOOR PLAN Newer 3 bd., 2 ba., 1,810 sf; covered deck, wa r m c o l o r s, va u l t e d ceilings, propane fireplace, walk-in pantry in kitchen, cabinets with pull-outs, oversized garage, 4 raised garden beds. MLS#837928/291741 $295,000 Deb Kahle lic# 47224 (360)918-3199 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
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, even backward. Find them and CIRCLE THEIR LETTERS ONLY. DO NOT CIRCLE THE WORD. The leftover letters spell the Wonderword. BILLIE HOLIDAY Solution: 11 letters
L A D Y D A Y U G E O J A Z Z
PRICED JUST RIGHT Rambler, large garage / shop, oversized lot, 3 br., 1.5 ba., fireplace, fenced back yard, 1,312 sf., plus 200+ sf., bonus room. Recent paint and flooring. MLS#291771 $159,900 Ania Pendergrass 360-461-3973 Remax Evergreen
SOL DUC RIVER FRONT Tudor style home on 1 acre with 3 bd., 2.5 ba., loft + den/office and oversized 2 car garage with over 100’ of river fronta g e. Pe r fe c t r i ve r g e t away or full time home with vaulted wood ceilings, brick fireplace with insert and tons of storage. Includes extra parcel with shop, large carport and garden shed. MLS#291804 $297,000 Harriet Reyenga (360)457-0456 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
A N E G N H A I R L T G E L L R A O A R A F R F S M E A E N N C H E R E C K A L R G R A E S O L R Y ګ N ګ O D O A H I ګ U W O M N S ګ L A G Y J E R S I M E L
A C U T N T B T D H Y N M R L
R I R E I U S O S U N D A Y O
T A T E M E B I L L I E T S W
S H L B L U E S D O V E N I F
9/8
Album, All of Me, Artie, Artist, Billie, Blues, Body, Clarence, Count Basie, Dove, Eastside, Eleanora, Eva, Fagan, Fine, Fruit, Gloomy, Hair, Jazz, Jerrys, Jimmy Monroe, Joe Guy, Kenneth, Lady Day, Lester, Louis McKay, Love, Martha, Mellow, Mister, My Man, Orchestra, Philadelphia, Play, Sarah, Shaw, Solitude, Soul, Strange, Sunday, Vocals, Young Yesterday’s Answer: Battlefield
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
WITAA ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
35 __ Romeo: sports car 36 Superiors of cpls. 37 “Heavens to Betsy!” 40 Snooping (around) 41 Jazz band instrument 46 Foam-topped coffeehouse drinks 48 Not impossible 50 Intoxicating, as wine 605 Apartments Clallam County
505 Rental Houses Clallam County
417-2810
HOUSES/APT IN PORT ANGELES
Properties by
Inc.
The VACANCY FACTOR is at a HISTORICAL LOW
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES
52 Any Everly Brothers tune, now 53 Curtain call cry 54 Red Sea country 55 Pindar, notably 56 Did pool laps 57 “It can’t be!” 58 “Minnesota” pool legend 59 Place in order 61 Gave the onceover 63 Rowboat mover 1163 Commercial Momma Rentals TWO OFFICES IN DOWNTOWN SEQUIM GAZETTE BUILDING FOR SUB-LEASE 448-sq-ft for $500 mo., 240-sq-ft for $350 mo. Perfect for accountant or other professional. S h a r e d c o n fe r e n c e room, restroom, wired for high-speed Internet. Contact John Brewer, publisher, (360)417-3500 WORKSHOP: Heated, 900 sf, with outdoor lean two. garage doors, lots of storage, bathroom, kitchenette and shower. Happy Valley Area Sequim. references, $1500. (360)683-7506
are in A 1BD/1BA ...$625/M A 2BD/1BA ...$700/M H 2BD/1BA ...$825/M 1170 Getaways Vaction Rentals D 3BD/1BA ...$800/M Two weeks in Paradise H 3BD/1BA ...$850/M in Maui at the Kuleana P.A.: APT: Large 2 br, H 2BD/1.5BA $850/M near library, water. sew- R e s o r t . N o v e m b e r 6th-13th and 13th-20th. garbage included. no Take one or both weeks. H 2/1 LK DAWN $850/M er smoking no pets, good 100.00 per night. Call $750. 360-775-8119 for more H 3/1.5 VIEW $1100/M references. (360)461-3415 details. H 2/2 FURNISHED $1200/M Rooms to Rent 6005 Antiques & H 4BD/2BA.... $1300/M 683Roomshares Collectibles H 3BD/2.5 BA CC&R’S $1800/M
DEMAND!
452-1326
COMPLETE LIST @
1111 Caroline St. Port Angeles
PRIVATE ROOM Available for senior lady 24/7 loving care (360)461-9804
Upstairs 2 large rooms, with foyer, private deck, beautiful grounds, view, small fridge, microwave, full bath. Happy Valley area Sequim, no pets, Inc. r e fe r e n c e s. $ 8 0 0 , i n cludes utilities. (360)683-7506
The VACANCY FACTOR is at a HISTORICAL LOW
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES are in
DEMAND!
452-1326
P.A.: 3 Br., 2 bath cute cottage. Claw foot tub, real hardwood floors, English garden setting, $925. 457-2068. SEQUIM: 1Br Waterfront. Cottage, $875. See tour at www.sequimrentalhomes.com
1163 Commercial Rentals Properties by
Inc.
The VACANCY FACTOR is at a HISTORICAL LOW
Armani, “The Falconer” (2435/3000), hand signed Armani, Armani “Skywatch” (732/3000) hand signed by Frabisio Tani, Armani “Nocturne” (554/1500) hand signed by Fabrisio Tani. All sold out middle to late 90’s. All have certificates of authenticity and org., boxes. All in pristine cond. Mill Creek collection “Brotherhood”, “Eyes of the Tiger”, “ C i r c l e o f L i fe ” . A l l have org., boxes excel., cond. Circa mid to late 90’s. Swarovski collection all retired with several annual pieces from mid to late 90’s, orig., boxes excel., cond. Kitty Critters, interesting collection. Shown by a p p o i n t m e n t o n l y. Dealer inquiries okay. Sequim (916)768-1233 cell
6042 Exercise Equipment
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES
RECUMBENT BIKE: Burley, 2 wheels, 24 sp. comfortable. $325/obo. (360)683-7144
DEMAND!
PLACE YOUR AD ONLINE With our new Classified Wizard you can see your ad before it prints! www.peninsula dailynews.com
are in
452-1326
9/8/15
NOYELL
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
GUYGM
LOTS: 2 Big, beautiful building lots, 8th and Evans. or 8th and M. $26,900/ea. 457-4004.
Properties by
Y A L P H I L A D E L P H I A
RISEMY Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Answer here: Yesterday’s
❘
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: ADOPT CLING INFECT BONNET Answer: Trying to eat outside with a thunderstorm approaching was — NO PICNIC
by Mell Lazarus
6050 Firearms & Ammunition GUNS: Sig P232 Two Tone .380. As new, has never been carried or fired. Includes 4 mags, soft and hard cases and factory paperwork. $750. cash. FTF amt my LGS in Sequim and I pay the fee. Dick (206)499-7151 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
6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
RUN A FREE AD FOR ITEMS PRICED $200 AND UNDER • 2 ads per household per week • Run as space permits • Private parties only Mondays &Tuesdays • 4 lines, 2 days • No firewood or lumber • No pets or livestock • No Garage Sales
Deadline: Friday at 4 p.m. Ad 1
WOOD STOVE: Jotul, certified clean burn, 26” wood. $1,400/obo. (360)928-3483
6080 Home Furnishings
Ad 2
Armoire style chest. Henredon chest in excellent condition. Dark walnut with brass hardware. $575/obo. (360)460-8883 BED: CA. King, Tempurpedic Cloud Supreme, with brass head and foot board. $1,200/obo. (360)582-0484 DINING SET: 60”x40” plus one leaf at 18” with 4 upholstered oak chairs on swivel base with casters. Table seats 8 people. Great buy at $475. (360)670-6421 Jasper Secretary: 1970’s excellent condition,. $800. Bookcase: knotty pine, 5 shelves, beautiful, 7’H x 4’W x 15”D. $350. (360)808-0388. S O FA : L e a t h e r, d a r k b u r g u n d y c o l o r, 6 . 5 ’ long, very good condition. $375. 360-4177526 late afternoon or evenings.
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Get home delivery. Call 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 www.peninsuladailynews.com
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
3A574499
PRIVATE SETTING 6 br., home sits on 2.7 beautiful acres and is accompanied by a 2,322 sf., detached garage, beautiful pond, irrigation water, RV parking, garden spaces, back patio with hot tub, outbuildings for storage. Very modern kitchen. Daylight basement is completely finished with a total of 3bed/1-bath on lower level. MLS#291537/825389 $399,000 Jake Tjernell (360)460-6250 VIEW! VIEWS! VIEWS! TOWN & COUNTRY Sweeping Views of the Straits, Harbor and S T R A I T V I E W F O R Canada, 3 br., 3 ba., SALE BY OWNER! Is- 2,060 sf., quiet dead end land Vista Way 2 br., 2 street, 2 car attached ba., 14 X 66, ‘77 Fleet- garage with workbench, wo o d M o b i l e o n 4 / 1 0 new interior paint, bedacre. Storage shed, room and bathroom newer carpet, vinyl, up- floors, kitchen upgrades: d a t e s . Pa r t i a l w a t e r granite counters, appliview, large front yard, ances and flooring. forest out back. $89,000. MLS#291530 $339,000 (360)417-6867 Team Thomsen UPTOWN REALTY (360)808-0979 YOUR PATHWAY TO HEAVEN ON EARTH 6.44 acres with a rustic 308 For Sale cabin, high end yurt, RV Lots & Acreage pad, septic and much more. Owner will be there to great you. Come LOT: Lg, Eagle Mtn., t o u r t h i s ex c e p t i o n a l utilities, will carry contract. $70,000. 683-2455 property. MLS#291214 $289,000 GARAGE SALE ADS Team Powell Call for details. UPTOWN REALTY 360-452-8435 (360)775-5826 1-800-826-7714
A R T I S T E C V O C A L S T
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
591400911
SWEET LITTLE BUNGALOW Located on a dead end street in PA. Some updating. 2 br, 1 ba. Large open kitchen - living room floor plan. MABR has sliding door to deck (great BBQ area). Large b a ck ya r d w i t h p a r t i a l mountain view. Single car garage/shop opens to the alley. MLS#291578/837717 $125,000 Cathy Reed lic# 4553 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360) 460-1800
S O L I T U D E E O N R E N E
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
308 For Sale Lots & Acreage
(360)
C O U N T B A S I E L A V L R
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
P.A.: 2.48 acres, with 14 x 70 mobile, covered decks front and back, newly painted inside and out lots of upgrades inside, county maintained t o t h e d r i ve w ay. D r y Creek water. $130K. (360)775-9996
RARE NO BANK BEACHFRONT Level property with outstanding views of the San Juan Islands and Mt. Baker. Community boat launch and airstrip. Power in the street, water to proper ty. Septic design done. Fishing, crabbing and clamming right out your front door. MLS#291374/811682 $299,950 Carol Dana lic# 109151 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360) 461-9014
Monday’s Puzzle Solved
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
OPEN HOUSE: Sat. 9-2 p.m., 420 South Oak St. Great location, in lower Cherr y Hill, walk to downtown and restaurants, on bus line, close to Safeway, adjacent to City Park, fenced back yard with garden space, low maintenance, small space living, 2 br., 1 ba., cottage, 648 sf., stove, r e f r i g e ra t o r a n d w / d , laminate floors, 2 storage sheds, has been used as a vacation rental. www.vrbo.com/590100 $130,000. (360)808-2677
9/8/15
DOWN 1 Suffix with land or sea 2 Insertion mark 3 Sports venue 4 Early Yucatán settler 5 Bird on a Froot Loops box 6 “Jeopardy!” contestant 7 Windy City station, on Amtrak skeds 8 Little boys 9 Split second 10 Rub the wrong way 11 Slight advantage 12 Gets in one’s sights, with “at” 13 Cola request from a calorie watcher 18 Blood bank quantity 19 Chinese appetizer 24 Speaker’s stand 26 Suffix with nogood 28 Cattle poker 30 In those days 31 Old King or Nat King 32 Test the weight of 33 Marquee name 34 Button on a deli scale
105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Clallam County Clallam County
E O R N O M Y M M I J S A I E
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By Fred Piscop
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
ACROSS 1 Ponzi scheme, e.g. 5 Diplomat’s specialty 9 Tire pattern 14 Word of amore 15 Worker protection org. 16 Wheel spokes, geometrically 17 “Am I supposed to take this seriously?” 20 Catholic sacrament of confession and forgiveness 21 Least healthy 22 LAX posting 23 British peer 25 “Alice” diner owner 26 Cloistered sister 27 Four-song discs, briefly 29 Cut with acid 33 Post-spill carpet spot 36 Clean vigorously 38 Weed chopper 39 “Oops, thought you wouldn’t hear that” 42 Pound sound 43 Lugged 44 Bill’s attorney general 45 __ estate 47 Estonia or Ukr., once 48 Ten, in Toulouse 49 Tuna in a sushi bar 51 Shortest-shadows time 53 “Liquor not provided” letters 56 Starts to melt 60 Aged at the brewery 62 Nursery rhyme plum finder’s boast 64 Started the pot 65 Shipping option 66 Nights of anticipatory revelry 67 Like poorly drained rock gardens 68 Family map 69 Word of admonition
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2015 B7
Classified
B8 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
D •I •R •E •C •T •O •R •Y
PAINTING
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Peninsula Since 1988
Exterior Painting
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Larry’s Home Maintenance
ANTHONY’S TREE SERVICE
FOX PAINTING
I Fix Driveways,
We go that extra mile for your tree needs • Tree Removal • Tree Trimming • View Enhancement
Grounds Maintenance Specialist • Mowing • Trimming • Pruning • Tractor Work • Landscaping • Spring Sprinkler Fire Up • Fall Cleanup and Pruning Larry Muckley
(360) 683-7655 (360) 670-9274
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No Job Too Small
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Lic#603401251
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Lyle Lyster, Jr
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S. Eunice St. APPLIANCE 914 Port Angeles SERVICE INC. 457-9875
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• Site Prep • Utilities • Septic Systems • Roads/Driveways 471080142
360-681-0132
CONSTRUCTION, INC.
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FALL/WINTER EDITION 2014 - 2015
NORTH OLYMPIC PENINSULA GUIDE PORT TOWNSEND/JEFFERSON COUNTY | SEQUIM/DUNGENESS VALLEY PORT ANGELES | FORKS/WEST END | NORTH/WEST COAST | VICTORIA
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9820 Motorhomes SOUTHWIND: ‘00, 36’, V10, 2 slides, 6K Onan, W/D, tow pkg., levelers, kingdome, with dishes, utensils, cookware, linens, towels, and more. $29,500. (360)683-4522
A I R C O M P R E S S O R : CHINA CABINET: Glass Husky, 2 gal., with 3 front, 40” X 72”, 3 disltools and access., kit, play shelves. $199. new. $25.(240)310-2297 (360)379-0650
GLASSWARE: Fostoria American, lot - 49 pieces. Excellent conditon. $150. (360)452-8264
PARTS: For GM 10 bolt rear end Camero, Firebird, mid 80’s, not posi $40.00 (360)683-2455
A RT: T i m Q u i n n ’s CIDER PRESS: $100 “Friends of the Field”, (360)683-9783 and “First Crab Fest. CIGARETTE MACHINE: $200. (360)461-7365 Premier Supermatic, cigBABY SWING: Excel- arette making, wor ks. lent condition, batter- $20. (360)797-1106 powered. $40. Electric. CLOTHES: Girls size 6, $90. (360)385-7773 31 pieces in all. $10. for BAG: Golf/travel, excel- all. 477-9962 lent condtion, canvassC O F F E E TA B L E : nylon. $30. Large, many drawers,off (360)681-4916 w h i t e w i t h wo o d t o p. BED: Rollaway, good $150. (360)681-0948 condition. $65. COFFEE TABLE: Oak, (360)928-3863 54” X 24” X 15”. $25. BIBLE: New, “Lucado (360)775-0855 Life Lessons study bible, COLLECTOR: Illinois paid $50. asking $25. first Pheasant stamp (360)457-6343 print, framed. $200 firm. BIKE: Specialized, med. (360)461-7365 frame, red, with lights COMMODE: Por table, lock and car rack. $150. 14” X 14, use camping (360)808-2892 etc. $30. 452-8760 BLOCKS: (31) concrete, wedge, 12” X 4” X 7”. CRAB POTS: commercial sized. $75. $20 all. (360)452-2118 (949)241-0371 BOBBLEHEAD: Jamie CREDENZA: Forest Moyer ‘15 Mariners Hall green, marble top, hallof Fame, new. $20. way. $125. 681-0948 (360)457-5790
GOLF: Balls, 100, used. PHOTO ART: “Olympic $25. (360)457-2856 Sunrise,” by Mark Doty, nice frame, large. $20. GOLF BALLS: 5 dozen, (360)681-7579 new in box, Titleist, Maxfli, Srixon. $75 for all. PILATES: Machine, (360)490-0385 Stamina Premier XP, excellent conditon. $150. GOLF: Clubs, used. $1 (360)457-1526 each. (360)457-2856 P I N G P O N G : Ta b l e , GOLF: Graphite shafts, with net, paddles, balls, new, True Temper. $5. fair condition. $40. (360)681-3339 (360)683-9882 p.m. GRAIN GRINDER: NorP R O J E C TO R : S l i d e , pro grain grinder, new in Kodak, with 3 carousels, box, great deal! $20. and stack loader. $65. (360)457-9631 (360)477-1716 GRAIN GRINDER: Norpro grain grinder, new in RECIEVER: Pioneer milti channl VSX-D814. 300 box, great deal! $20. watts, audio/video. $25. (360)457-9631 (360)457-9631 GREENHOUSE: 12 x 7 SCOOTER: Pride Mox 7. $60. (360)681-3339 bility, good batter ies. H A L L O W E E N : C o s - $200. (360)452-2118 tume, white, summer, s h o r e p a t r o l , s m a l l . SCREEN: 3 folding pan$135. (360)379-4134 el hand forged, fireplace screen. $55. 452-8770 HOSE: Water, 3/4”, 72’, commercial duty. $20. S E W I N G M AC H I N E : (360)681-4768 Singer Vibrating Shuttle 28K, carr ying case. H U M I D I F I E R : Q u i ck - $200. (360)582-1292 DISTILLER: Water, Wa- stream Honeywell. $15 BOBBLEHEAD: Ken o.b.o. (360)452-6842 terwise. $100. Griffey Jr., ‘13 Mariners SMOKER (360)461-0940 Hall of Fame, new. $50. New, Braunfels off set. IPHONE: Apple, iphone (360)457-5790 $50. (360)683-9783 D O L L S : C o l l e c t i b l e , 5, Verizon, accessories, B O B B L E H E A D S : ( 3 ) must see to appreciate. excellent condition. SOIL SIFTER: Standing, $165. (360)457-5002 O’Ber to, Ichiro, Dave $20 - $30. large screen. $35. (360)379-2902 Niehaus. $55. 452-6842 (360)582-1292 JUICER: Omega VRT 350, excellent shape. STOVEPIPE: (2) Stain$150. (360)461-0321 less steel, 4’ sections, 8” LADDERS: 20 ft and 24 double wall. $100. (360)461-0321 ft, extension. $70 and $90. (949)241-0371 TABLE: Oak dining with LAMPS: Brass, end ta- (2) inserts and (4) swivel ble, matching, 17”w x chairs, very good condi12” h with 20” shades. tion. $95. 582-0216 B O O T S : L a C r o s s e FAN: Floor model. $15. $120. (360)670-3310 wa d e r s, s i ze 1 0 , l i ke (360)683-2400 TA B L E S : ( 2 ) M i d new. $15. 683-7994 FAN: Industrial, 6’ ped- LASER LEVEL: Bosch size,100 yrs. old, one BOOT TRAY: for wet, estal stand, heavy duty. P r o f e s s i o n a l , B M 3 . oak, one black walnut. $35 ea. (360)565-6045 $200. (360)460-2260 muddy shoes. $4. $50. (360)417-3507 (509)366-4353 TELEPHONE TABLE: LOUNGE CHAIR: Patio, F I L E B OX E S : M a g a B O W L S : M o t h e r o f zine, cardboard, 20+. folding, adjustable, re- with padded seat, brown clining, white with blue. blue upholstery. $25. pearl, mahogany, salad $.50 ea. (360)681-4768 (360)457-6431 $20. (360)681-4916 server, (2) inlaid. $195. FILE CABINET: 4 draw(360)670-3310 er, metal, letter size. MASSAGE TABLE: Ex- TENT CHAIR: Camocellent condition. $200. BREAD MAKER: flauge, blind for hunting. $65. (360)457-5002 (360)461-3311 Breadman Ultimate, $30. (949)241-0371 F O U N TA I N : C o p p e r, new. $75. Walter Massey design, MASSAGE TABLE: Ex- TRUCK CANOPY: Alu(360)775-0855 cellent condition. $200. 30”, with pump. $200. minum, 88” x 62” $75. (360)461-0940 CADDY: Golf bag cart. (360)683-0146 (360)683-2236. $25. (949)232-3392 FRAMES: Photo, vari- MATTRESS PAD: King T V : C o l o r, 2 7 ” , f l a t size, magnetic. $100. C A N N I N G J A R S : ous sizes. $1 - $5. screen, stereo, built in (360)461-3311 Quarts $4 dozen, pints (360)379-2902 DVD and VHS. $50. $3 dozen. 928-3863 (360)452-9685 FREE: (3) Braided oval M I C R O W A V E : G . E . CAULK SHOES: Buffalo rugs, 6’ X 10’, 3’ X 4’, counter top, oven, 24” X TYPEWRITER TAPES: 18” X 13.5”. $75. light weight, 12” tops, and 2’ X 3’. 457-8330 For Oliveti Panasonic, 3 (360)683-2400 size 6.5. $100. ea. $30. (360)379-4134 FREE: 50 Gallon water (360)457-4993 heater, good wor king MISC: (2) Dinner tables, VACUUM: Hoover, upvintage. $40 ea. Coffee C E DA R C H E S T . 4 ’ W. cond. (360)681-2747 right, Windtunnel, very tabel, oak. $20. 22” high, 20.5” deep. powerful. $25. (360)452-9685 Roomy! $150. great ce- FREE: Hide-a-bed, full. (360)681-7579 (360)460-5847 dar smell (360)417-8083 MODEM: Motorola, CHAIRS: Kitchen, (4) FREE: Mantle clock and wireless cable modem, VACUUM: Rainbow SE D 4 v a c u u m c l e a n e r. all parts, old, wood, you new. $100. 775-0895 matching, light oak. $40. $200. (949)232-3392 fix. (360)683-7994 (360)417-3507 PARTS: For Firebird TA. C H E S T : 3 D r a w e r s , FRIDGE: Danby, dorm e l e c t r o n i c d a s h a n d WA D E R S : N e o p r e n e, Fish America Pro gear. white, pine, solid, 36” X size. $85. some small parts. $200. $40. (949)241-0371 31”. $50. 457-6431 (907)378-1864 (360) 683-2455 BOOK: “The Road to DRILL: Cordless set, Ta r a , t h e m a k i n g o f Makita Brushless. Exel. G o n e w i t h t h e W i n d . cond. $200. 460-2260 $20. (360)477-1716 E N T E R TA I N M E N T : BOOK: Vegitarian, “The Center, wood, 6’ high by Farm,” cook book. $5. 5’ wide. $65. (360)457-6343 (360)582-0599
CHEST: 4 Drawer, 36” X G O L F B A L L S : O v e r P L AY P E N : L i ke n ew, WEED BURNER: Propane, no tank. $35. 24” X 16”, wood, good 300, all in good shape. dark blue $50.obo. (509)366-4353 cond. $20. 452-8760 $60. (360)490-0385 (360)477-9962
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S D A E E E R E F FR
E E R F
For items $200 and under
6100 Misc. Merchandise
6140 Wanted & Trades
7045 Tack, Feed & 9820 Motorhomes Supplies
GARAGE / SHOP DOORS: New remodel plans changed, sell at cost call for sizes and $ install also avail. (360)732-4626
CONE PICKERS NEEDE D : Fo r D o u g l a s F i r, Grand Fir, Silver Fir and Cedar cones. Open noon to 6. Call for info. (360)-461-0951 or (360)461-5414.
GMC: 26’ Motorhome. Horse Trailer: 2 horse 1976. $16,500. straight load, Thorough(360)683-8530 bred height. Tandem axle, new tires. $1,300. MOTORHOME: ‘96 30ft. (360)928-5027 Southwind Stor m. 51k miles. Custom interior, Roadmaster towing sys9820 Motorhomes tem, Banks Power Pack and other extras. Very nice cond. $18,500. (360)681-7824
MISC: 1985 Honda TRX 1 2 5 - l i k e n e w. $ 7 0 0 . Commercial wood shaper, $300. Commercial doweling machine, $350. Double dust collector, never used, $750. Delta Cutt-Off saw, $125. (360)681-6293
WA N T E D : I t e m s f o r Haunted House Navel Elks Lodge Char ities. (360)457-3355 or Toni at (360)504-2987
WANTED: Single/Twin bed in good condition with mattress and box MISC: Ridged 8000 watt spring. (360)683-2958 generator, electric start. $1,000/obo. 45 gal. pork 7030 Horses rind or crab pot propane cooker. $3,000 /obo. 20 gal. kettle corn or crab Q H M a r e : fo r l e a s e , pot cooker, with stand. needs experienced rider. $500/obo. 2 theater type Within riding distance of p o p c o r n m a c h i n e s . trails. Call for more de$200/ea. or obo., new tails. (360)928-5027. cases of beer bottles. 12 22 oz. case, 24 12 oz. case. $10 per 7035 General Pets case.(360)477-6188 WANTED: Small house to rent or rent-to-own AND/OR artificial plants. (360)477-7944
6125 Tools SHOPSMITH: Model 510 with extras. Ver y good condition. $1200. (360)457-3554 TOOLS: General Contractor hand tools, Makita 1500 demo hammer, Makita 3851 demo hammer Ridgid compressor, 300 ft., air hose, Porter C a bl e H o l e H o g w i t h new drills, Dewalt rotary hammer with masonr y bits, Drills (Dewalt, Senco, Makita). Jet 15” Drill mill with 1/4” - 3/8” and 1/2” collets - some tooling, many other tools. Shown by appointment only. Sequim. cell (916)768-1233.
MOTORHOME: Damon ‘95 Intruder. 34’, Cummins Diesel, 2 air conditioners, satellite dish, rebuilt generator, all new f i l t e r s a n d n ew t i r e s $19,000/obo. 37’ Diesel pusher 300 (360)683-8142 Cummins 6 Speed Allison Trans. 6500 Watt MOTORHOME: Dodge Gen, 2 Slides, levelers ‘76 Class C. 26’, new Awnings, day & night tires, low miles, nonshades corin counters, 2 smoker, in PA. $2,500 each AC TVs Heaters, firm. (360)460-7442. tow Package,excellent cond. Call for more det a i l s $ 3 9 , 0 0 0 . O B O. (360)582-6434 or (928)210-6767
COME GET ME, I need a lap. Cat, neutered, 7yr. old verying loving and caring. Purrs and drools. Best Friends pet care. (360)452-7387. Labradoodle puppies: Ready 3rd week of September. Dewormed. Vet check. Vaccinations. 4 females and 5 males. Chocolate color. Raised in house. VERY CUTE! $1,000/each. Penny (360)670 5728
CHEVY: Motorhome, “89 Class C 23’ 41K. New tires, electrical convertor, high output alternator. Captain’s chairs and s o fa . L a r g e f r i g a n d freezer. Lots of storage. Outstanding condition. PUPPY: Siberian Husky, $9,750/OBO (360)797-1622 1/8 redwolf. 7 mo. old, male, pure white, very friendly, loving nature. T H O R : ‘ 1 1 Fr e e d o m Elite 31R. 10k miles, ex. $100. (360)316-1511 cond. Good Sam ext. warranty until 75k miles PLACE YOUR or 1/2019. RV Navigator, AD ONLINE back up camera, tailgatWith our new er Dish Network TV, SuClassified Wizard p e r s l i d e a n d DV D you can see your ad before it prints! player, tow car trailer inc. $56,000. www.peninsula dailynews.com (360)808-7337
WINNEBAGO ‘02, BRAVE, 33’,. Class A, Model 32V, Ford V10 gas engine with 2 slides, Onan Generator, rear camera, tow package, l eve l e r s. S l e e p s t wo, dinner for 4, party for six, 42.8K miles, $29,800. (407)435-8157 NO TEXTING
WINNEBAGO: ‘87 Chieftain, 27’, 37,250 orig. miles, low hours on generator, nicely equipped kitchen, includes TV and microwave. New ver y comfortable queen mattress, lots of extras. $10,500. (360)461-3088
9832 Tents & Travel Trailers
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
9180 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles Classics & Collect. Others Others
FIBERFORM: ‘78, 24’ F O R D : 1 9 5 2 P i c k u p, Cuddy Cabin, 228 Mer- Mustang front, 302, C4, cruiser I/O, ‘07 Mercury 9” Ford rearend. $7,500. 9.9hp, electronics, 460-8610 d o w n r i g g e r s . $11,000/obo 797-0013 FREE: 28’ Fiber Form Sedan Cruiser w/trailer. No engine. 775-8792 KAYAKS: 2 Eddy Line, 17.5’ and 14’. $1,200 ea. (360)504-2783 NEW: Briggs and Stratton shr imp and c ra b p u l l e r, 3 . 5 h p. $600. (360)452-2705
CARGO TRAILER: 2012 Wells Cargo VFr o n t 6 x 1 4 C a r g o Tra i l e r. L o a d e d a n d ex c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n , must see. Less than 7000 miles. More Info at http://bit.ly/1hzVZj5 $4,999. Call Rik (360)460-2472.
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2015 B9
FORD: ‘62 Thunderbird. Landau 116K mi. powder blue, white vinyl, new int., clean engine and trunk. $18,500. (360)385-5694
OFFSHORE Sailboat wanted. 27’-37’ ft. Up to $30K (360)775-7146 PEDDLE Boat: on trailer, like new, $2,000/obo. (360)452-8607
PORTA-BOTE: 10’, excellent condition, stable, SEAT: ‘69, 600D. Made 2010 Suzuki 2.5hp mo- in Spain, Everything reFLEETWOOD: ‘00, 26’, tor, 4 cycle, less than 20 done. $9,000/obo. hrs. $1,100 for both. Slideout. $6.900. (360)379-0593 (360)452-3729 (360)452-6677 STUDEBAKER: GT PARK MODEL: Custom H aw k , 1 9 6 2 , $ 6 , 2 0 0 . built ‘05 Nor’wester, 12’ Call for details. wide park model. Porch, (360)452-3488 deck, metal awning, heat V O L K S WA G O N : ‘ 7 8 pump/ac, many extras. Beetle convertable. Fuel $42,500. (360)732-4120 injection, yellow in color. TENT TRAILER: ‘08 $9000. (360)681-2244 R o c k w o o d Fr e e d o m . SAILBOAT: ‘04 WWP19 Sleeps 8, tip out, stove, 5hp mtr, trailer, new ra- VW: ‘85 Cabriolet, congas/elec. fridge, furnace, dio and stereo. Ready to vertable., Red, new tires / b a t t e r y, 5 s p. toilet with shower, king sail, garaged. $6,200. $1,900/obo and queen beds with hermhalbach@wave(360)683-7144 heated mattresses. Outcable.com or side gas bbq and show(360)504-2226 VW: Karmann Ghia, er. Great cond. $6,495. ‘74. $4,500. (360)452-6304 (360)457-7184 TRAILER: ‘89, 25’ Hi-Lo Voyager, completely re9292 Automobiles conditioned, new tires, Others AC, customized hitch. $4,750. (360)683-3407. BUICK: Lucerne CXL Sedan - 3.8L Series III TRAILER: ‘99 Sierra, 2 5 ’ , n e e d s T L C . SEARAY, ‘88 Sundanc- V6, Automatic, 17” Alloy $6,000/obo. 417-0803. er, boathoused in PA, W h e e l s, G o o d T i r e s, Traction Control, Key800 engine hr., $21,000. less Entry, Power WinUTILITY TRAILER: 16’, (541)840-1122 dows, Door Locks, and ramps, tandem axle, current license. $2,250. S I LV E R S T R E A K : 1 7 ’ Mirrors, Power Leather (360)460-0515 H a r d t o p, a l u m i n u m . Seats, Cruise Control, Brand new, 4 hrs. on Tilt, Air Conditioning, 115 hp, plus 9.9 Yama- Dual Zone Climate Con9802 5th Wheels h a , f u l l y e q u i p p e d . trol, CD Stereo, Information Center, OnStar, $40,000. Dual Front and Side Air(360)683-8668 5TH WHEEL: 2000, Forbags. Only 45,000 est Ranger, 24’, 6 berth, Miles! Only 2 previous slide out, A/C. $6500. owners! Clean Carfax! (360)797-1458 Like new condition inside and out! Always reliable 3.8L V6 Engine! ALPENLITE: ‘93 5th $12,995 wheel, 24’. New hot Vin# water heater, fridge, 1G4HD57228U119230 stove, toilet, twin matGRAY MOTORS tresses (2), shocks. SKI BOAT: ‘73 Kona. 457-4901 R o o f r e s e a l e d , i n - 18’ classic jet ski boat. graymotors.com cludes 5th wheel tail- 500 c.i. olds. engine. gate and 5th wheel B e r k l e y p u m p . To o B U I C K : R e a t t a ‘ 9 0 , much to mention, needs Conv, mint cond 106km, hitch. $7,000. upholstry. $2500. (360)452-2705 $7000. Pics. (360)681(209)768-1878 6388. jimfromsequim Forest River: Lite, ‘00, @olympus.net 21’ clean, 8’ slide, sleeps 6, everything in excellent 9817 Motorcycles CADILLAC: ‘89 Coupe condition. $7,000. Deville, 2 door, only 2 (360)452-2148 HARLEY DAVIDSON: owners, tan, very good cond. New tires. $2,500. ROCKWOOD, ‘10, 5th ‘ 0 4 L o w R i d e r. 3 7 0 0 (360)796-0588 or wheel, 26’, many extras, miles, loaded, $8,500. 912-3937. (360)460-6780 b e l o w b o o k va l u e @ $23,000. (360)457-5696. CHEVROLET: ‘08, 4 H A R L E Y DAV I D S O N : CYL, 5 SPD, cold air inT E R RY: ‘ 9 6 , 2 6 ’ 5 t h ‘06, XL1200 Spor tster. take, power steer ing, $5,900. (360)452-6677 Wheel. $4,500/obo. power brakes, (360)640-0111 H A R L E Y DAV I D S O N AM/FM/CD, front and ‘93, Wide glide, black side airbags, only 76K $4,995 9808 Campers & with chrome. $10,500 ml. Dave Barnier /obo. (360)477-3670. Canopies Auto Sales *We Finance In House* Harley Wide Glide: ‘93 CAMPER: ‘88 Conasto- w e l l m a i n t a i n e d L o w 452-6599 ga cab-over. Self con- miles, custom paint exdavebarnier.com t a i n e d , g r e a t s h a p e . tras. $6,800 TEXT 3602946 Hwy 101 E., P.A. $2,000. 683-8781 300-7587 DODGE: ‘73, Dart, good CAMPER: Outdoorscondition, runs well, HD: ‘81 XLS Sportster. man, bed, refrigerator, bench seat, 88K ml. 1,000 cc, 9K. $2,500. stove. $1,500. $5,000. (360)797-1179. (360)683-5449 (360)912-2441 H O N D A : ‘ 8 4 S a b r e , DODGE: ‘97 Ram 2500 L A N C E : ‘ 8 6 , 1 1 ’ w i t h 1100cc. runs excellent. Club Cab SLT Laramie truck, Ford F250, ‘02. $1,100. (360)775-6075 4X4 Longbed - 5.9L $11,000. (360)683-9015 12V Cummins TurboDiesel, 4” Exhaust, AuHONDA: ‘98 VFR 800. tomatic, Alloy Wheels, Red, fuel injected V-4, N e w T i r e s , B r u s h 100+hp, 23K mi., G u a r d , R u n n i n g c l e a n , fa s t , ex t r a s . Boards, Canopy, Tool$4,500. (360)385-5694 box, Tow Package, Privacy Glass, Power WinK AWA S A K I : ‘ 0 6 N o - dows, Door Locks, and mad. Very clean. Lots of Mirrors, Cruise Control, TRUCK CAMPER: ‘08 extras. $6,000 obo. Tilt, Air Conditioning, Northstar TC650 pop-up Mike at (360)477-2562 P i o n e e r C D S t e r e o, slide in truck camper. D r i ve r s A i r b a g . O n l y This camper is in EX- YAMAHA: ‘04, WR450F, 130,000 Original Miles! CELLENT/like new con- well taken care of , has Carfax Cer tified One dition. Asking $13,500 all the extras, street le- O w n e r w i t h n o a c c i O B O, s e r i o u s bu ye r s gal. $3,500. dents! Excellent condi(360)683-8183 only please. I can be tion inside and out! This reached @ is the nicest 12 Valve (253)861-6862 9180 Automobiles Cummins available! $15,995 Classics & Collect. Vin# 9829 RV Spaces/ 3B7KF23DXVG775989 Storage GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 RV/BOAT Storage: Covgraymotors.com ered. (360)681-7300 FORD: ‘01 Crown Victoria, LX, 113K ml., origi9050 Marine nal owner. $3,900. Miscellaneous (360)461-5661 BOAT: 10’ Spor t Cat, ‘97, Fiberglass, electric trolling motor, oars, battery and charger, load ramp. $650. (360)681-4766 1930 Model A: In exceptional condition, newBOAT: 12’ Aluminum, l y r e b u i l t e n g i n e . with 5hp motor, on trail- $19,000. Call Jim. er, $1,500. (360)301-4581 (360)683-9015 BOAT: 16’ Fiberglass ‘78 Larson, 40 horse Mercur y motor, Eagle Depth finder, with Trailer. $1600. (360)928-5027 BOAT: ‘65 Pacific Mariner, 14’, 50hp, fully re- B M W : ‘ 0 7 Z 4 3 . 0 S I s t o r e d , w i t h t r a i l e r. R o a d s t e r. 4 7 K m i l e s, w e l l m a i n t a i n e d , l i ke $1,500 obo. 417-8250 new. $17,999. B OAT: ‘ 7 4 L i g h t n i n g (360)477-4573 sailboat, 19’. On trailer. CHEVY: ‘49 Truck 3/4 $1000 obo. 460-6231 ton, complete rebuilt, BOAT: ‘88 Invader, 16’, piper red, great condi1 6 5 H P M e r c r u i s e r, tion, 235 cu 6 cylinder, open bow, low hours. engine with low miles, $2,900. (360)452-5419. 12 volt system, long bed with oak, $14,000. B O AT : S e a r a y, 1 8 ’ , (360)461-6076 135hp Mercury. $8,000 obo. (360)457-3743 or C H E V Y : ‘ 5 7 B e l a i r, 2 (360)460-0862 door, hardtop project. Fresh 327 / Muncie 4 B OAT T R A I L E R : ‘ 9 9 , sp., 12 bolt, 4:11 posi 20’ Heavy duty, custom. rear - complete and sol$1,500. (360)775-6075 id. $9,500. (360)452-9041 DURA: ‘86 , 14’ Aluminum ‘81 15 hp Johnson, FORD: 1929 Model A electric motor, new bat- Roadster, full fendered, t e r y, 5 g a l l o n t a n k . a l l m u s t a n g r u n n i n g $2,000. (360)640-1220. gear. $16,500. 460-8610
H O N DA : ‘ 0 9 A c c o r d EX-L Sedan, 3.5L iVTEC DSC V6, Factory Dual Exhaust, Automatic, Alloy Wheels, Sunr o o f, Key l e s s E n t r y, Power Windows, Door Locks, and Mirrors, Power Heated Leather Seats, Cruise Control, Tilt, Air Conditioning, Dual Zone Climate Control, Information Center, 6 CD Changer with Aux Input, Dual Front, Side, and Rear Airbags. Only 24K ml. $17,995 VIN# 1HGCP36879A027678 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com
V W: ‘ 1 3 J e t t a T D I , 4 door, diesel, sunroof, GPS, 75K miles. $24,000. (320)232-5436
VW: ‘86 Cabriolet, conver tible. Wolfberg Edition, all leather interior, new top. Call for details. $4,000. (360)477-3725.
9434 Pickup Trucks Others
FORD: ‘86 F250, 4x4, 4 speed, with canopy, 6.9 D i e s e l , 8 , 0 0 0 l b wa r n winch, 16’ custom aluminum wheels, exel. tires. Clean interior. $6,500 obo (206)795-5943 after 4:30pm weekdays.
HONDA CIVIC: ‘04 Hy- FORD: ‘95 F150. New brid, one owner, excel., engine has 12K miles on it. $5,500. cond., $6500. 683-7593 (360)457-3503 HYUNDAI: ‘92 Sonata, FORD: ‘97 Diesel 4WD l o w m i l e s , 5 s p. d e - Power stroke with bedpendable. $1,250. liner, canopy, new tires, (360)775-8251 transmission overhauled JAGUAR: ‘83, 350 Che- $6,800. (360)461-3232 vy engine and transmis- TOYOTA: ‘91, 4x4 pick sion, many new par ts. up, ext. cab, 4 cylinder, $1,500/obo. (360)452- 209K ml. $3000./obo 4156 or (360)681-7478. (360)452-3176 KIA: ‘05 Sedona, 66K ml., Silver/Green, $3,800. (360)912-1847 or (575)763-3449.
9556 SUVs Others
MAZDA: ‘01 Miata. Silver w/beige leather interior. 53K mi. $8,000. (360)808-7858
CHEVY: ‘99 Suburban, 4 W D, V 8 , s e a t s 8 . $3,200. (360)808-2061
MERCURY: ‘94 Sable. Runs fine, good tires, dependable, (I bought a newer car) $1000. (360)457-7012
C H E V Y : ‘ 9 9 , Ta h o e , 4x4, 4 dr. all factory options. $3,500. (360)4524156 or (361)461-7478.
J E E P : ‘ 0 5 , W ra n g l e r, hard top, 6 sp. manual, 43K ml. $16,000. NISSAN: ‘11 Leaf, SV (360)457-9402 Hatchback, Never buy gas again, or oil changes, with the all electric leaf! AC electric motor, auto, AC, tilt, cruise, pwr windows, locks and mirrors, AM/FM/CD/MP3, elec trac and stability ctrl, 8 airbags, 4 whl abs, keyless and push button alloys, only 54k 1 owner miles! balance of factory warranty! $8,995 Dave Barnier NISSAN: ‘03 Murano SL Auto Sales *We Finance In House* AWD. 146K miles. Runs G r e a t . Ju s t d e t a i l e d . 452-6599 Service record available davebarnier.com Has floor mats plus car2946 Hwy 101 E., P.A. go area divider and covPONTIAC: ‘06, G6 GTP er roof rack and trailer 2DR, v6, 6 spd, AC, tilt, hitch. $7,000. cruise, power windows, Call 360 477-2619 for locks, mirrors and seat, more info. AM/FM/CD stacker, 4 wheel abs, elec trac control, power moonroof,on- 9730 Vans & Minivans Others ly 59K ml. $8,995 CHRYSLER: ‘98 MiniDave Barnier van, great shape, clean. Auto Sales *We Finance In House* $3400. (360)477-2562 452-6599 DODGE: ‘88 Caravan, davebarnier.com runs good, would make 2946 Hwy 101 E., P.A. a g o o d d e l i ve r y va n . SUBARU: ‘03 Outback $1,000. (360)460-6381 wagon AWD, 2.5L 4 cyl, auto, AC, tilt, cr uise, 9935 General power windows, locks, Legals mirrors and seat, AM/FM/CD, roof rack, Eliza Rivas, pursuant to keyless, alloys and more! 1 owner with new Quileute Law and Order timing belt, tensioners, Code, section 18.03(b), c ra n k a n d c a m s e a l s you are hereby notified and new brakes all the that a confidential and mandatory court appearway around! ance in a civil matter in $6,995 which you are named as Dave Barnier a party has been schedAuto Sales *We Finance In House* uled for September 8th, 2015 at 2:45pm at the 452-6599 Quileute Tribal Court in davebarnier.com La Push, Washington. 2946 Hwy 101 E., P.A. Pub: August 20, 21, 23, TOYOTA: ‘14 Prius C. 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 30, 1200 miles, like new, 31, September 1, 2, 3, 4, with warranty. $17,900. 6, 7, 8, 2015 (360)683-2787 Legal No.652317
9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County
Case No.: 15-4-00265-1 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS (RCW 11.40.030) In the Superior Court of the State of Washington in and for the County of Clallam in Re the Estate of Penny Carlene Huether, Deceased. The personal representative named below has been appointed as personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any 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 lawyer at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(i)(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 o t h e r w i s e p r ov i d e d i n R C W 1 1 . 4 0 . 0 5 1 a n d 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date of first publication: September 1, 2015 Eric S. Huether, Personal Representative Lawyer for Est: Robert N. Tulloch, #9436 FORD: ‘70, 500, 4dr.,3 GREENAWAY, GAY & TULLOCH speed stick, 302, new 829 East Eighth St., Suite A ex h a u s t , n ew t i r e s / Port Angeles, WA 98362 wheels. $2,650/obo (360) 452-3323 (360)452-4156 or PUB: September 1, 8, 15, 2015 Legal No: 654129 (360)681-7478 SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR FORD: ‘91 Thunderbird CLALLAM COUNTY Sport. High output 5 liter In re the Estate of Greta Ann Doutre Cook, DeV- 8 , Au t o m a t i c, r u n s ceased. good. $995. 460-0783 NO. 14-4-00114-2 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 FORD: ‘92 Thunderbird. The Administrator named below has been appointLow mileage. $2,000. (360)461-2809 or 461- ed as Administrator of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the 0533 time the claim would be barred by any otherwise HONDA: ‘08 Ridgeline applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in RTS 4X4 - 3.5L VTEC the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by servV 6 , Au t o m a t i c, A l l oy ing on or mailing to the Administrator or the AdminW h e e l s, G o o d T i r e s, istrator’s attorney at the address stated below a Rear Sliding Window, copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim Keyless Entry, Privacy with the court in which the probate proceedings Glass, Power Windows, were commenced. The claim must be presented Door Locks, Mirrors, within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Adminisa n d D r i v e r s S e a t , trator served or mailed the notice to the creditor as Cruise Control, Tilt, Air provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four Conditioning, Automatic months after the date of first publication of the noClimate Control, 6 CD tice. If the claim is not presented within this time Stereo, XM Radio, Dual frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherFront, Side, and Rear wise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. S i d e A i r b a g s. C l e a n This bar is effective as to claims against both the C a r fa x ! O n l y 1 1 , 0 0 0 decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. September 1, 2015 Original Miles! Just like Date of First Publication: the day it rolled of the Administrator: factory floor! You won’t David Doutre f i n d a n i c e r H o n d a Attorney for Administrator: Stephen C. Moriarty, WSBA #18810 Ridgeline! Address for mailing or service: $20,995 PLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM Vin# 2HJYK164X8H507147 403 S. Peabody, GRAY MOTORS Port Angeles, WA 98362 457-4901 (360) 457-3327 graymotors.com Court of Probate Proceedings: Clallam County Superior Court www.peninsula Probate Cause Number: 14-4-00114-2 dailynews.com Pub. September 1, 8, 15, 2015. Legal No. 654013
B10
WeatherWatch
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2015 Neah Bay 64/55
g Bellingham 67/54
➡
Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 67/52
Port Angeles 66/53
Sequim Olympics 69/52 Snow level: 10,500 feet Port Ludlow 70/51
Forks 70/53
➡
Aberdeen 71/54
Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 61 48 0.00 15.93 Forks 69 49 0.00 46.04 Seattle 62 53 0.17 20.67 Sequim 62 49 0.00 8.90 Hoquiam 67 51 0.45 24.25 Victoria 61 51 1.00 16.45 Port Townsend 64 48 **0.00 9.80
Last
New
First
Forecast highs for Tuesday, Sept. 8
Sunny
Low 53 Fog hovers low over peninsula
THURSDAY
72/52 Time for sunglasses
68/53 Mostly sunny
Marine Conditions
FRIDAY
Billings 46° | 77°
San Francisco 59° | 85°
Minneapolis 62° | 78°
Denver 54° | 82°
Chicago 74° | 81°
Washington D.C. 70° | 94°
Los Angeles 70° | 89°
Atlanta 68° | 85°
El Paso 71° | 97° Houston 76° | 89°
Full
Fronts
CANADA
Seattle 55° | 75° Olympia 51° | 75°
Spokane 45° | 72°
Tacoma 54° | 74° Yakima 46° | 77°
Astoria 51° | 71°
ORE.
TODAY
LaPush Port Angeles Port Townsend Dungeness Bay*
Oct 4
Sep 12
Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise tomorrow Moonset today
© 2015 Wunderground.com
Hi 87 88 94 58 83 85 84 98 84 71 89 77 74 82 94 84
Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo
TOMORROW
Lo 66 63 66 51 61 70 58 72 60 44 69 43 48 66 77 68
7:41 p.m. 6:42 a.m. 3:13 a.m. 5:16 p.m.
Prc
Otlk Clr PCldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Clr PCldy Clr PCldy Clr Cldy Clr Clr PCldy PCldy
THURSDAY
High Tide Ht 10:23 a.m. 6.5’ 9:55 p.m. 7.6’
Low Tide Ht 3:53 a.m. 0.3’ 3:59 p.m. 2.9’
High Tide Ht 11:13 a.m. 6.8’ 10:51 p.m. 7.7’
Low Tide Ht 4:48 a.m. 0.2’ 4:57 p.m. 2.4’
High Tide Ht 11:54 a.m. 7.0’ 11:39 p.m. 7.8’
Low Tide 5:34 a.m. 5:45 p.m.
Ht 0.0’ 2.0’
1:42 p.m. 6.5’ 11:48 p.m. 5.6’
6:02 a.m. 0.5’ 7:16 p.m. 4.6’
2:22 p.m. 6.6’
6:56 a.m. 0.5’ 8:00 p.m. 4.2’
12:54 a.m. 5.6’ 2:55 p.m. 6.6’
7:41 a.m. 8:33 p.m.
0.7’ 3.8’
12:12 a.m. 7.0’ 3:19 p.m. 8.0’
7:15 a.m. 0.5’ 8:29 p.m. 5.1’
1:25 a.m. 6.9’ 3:59 p.m. 8.1’
8:09 a.m. 0.6’ 9:13 p.m. 4.7’
2:31 a.m. 6.9’ 4:32 p.m. 8.1’
8:54 a.m. 9:46 p.m.
0.8’ 4.2’
2:25 p.m. 7.2’ 7:51 p.m. 4.6’
6:37 a.m. 0.5’ 3:05 p.m. 7.3’
12:31 a.m. 6.2’ 8:35 p.m. 4.2’
7:31 a.m. 0.5’
1:37 a.m. 6.2’ 3:38 p.m. 7.3’
8:16 a.m. 9:08 p.m.
0.7’ 3.8’
*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
Warm Stationary
Pressure Low
High
Sep 21 Sep 27
Nation/World
Victoria 54° | 67°
Ocean: W wind 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 1 or 2 ft. W swell 5 ft at 15 seconds. Chance of rain in the morning. NW wind to 10 kt in the evening becoming light. Wind waves 1 ft or less. W swell 5 ft at 15 seconds.
Tides
70/51 Cooler, but still fair weather
Washington TODAY
Strait of Juan de Fuca: E wind 10 kt becoming W. Wind waves 1 ft. Chance of rain in the morning. W wind 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 1 or 2 ft. in the evening
New York 72° | 93°
Detroit 71° | 87°
Miami 78° | 89°
SATURDAY
73/53 Warm enough for shorts?
Cloudy
TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:
Cartography C artogra t phy h by y Keith Keith ith h Thorpe Th Th horp / © Peninsula Daily News
WEDNESDAY
Pt. Cloudy
Seattle 55° | 75°
Cold
TUESDAY
The Lower 48
National forecast Nation TODAY
Almanac
Brinnon 69/55
OUTDOOR BURN BAN IN EFFECT PENINSULA-WIDE
Yesterday
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
-10s
Burlington, Vt. 90 Casper 77 Charleston, S.C. 84 Charleston, W.Va. 90 Charlotte, N.C. 88 Cheyenne 81 Chicago 92 Cincinnati 91 Cleveland 88 Columbia, S.C. 89 Columbus, Ohio 88 Concord, N.H. 87 Dallas-Ft Worth 100 Dayton 91 Denver 87 Des Moines 94 Detroit 89 Duluth 81 El Paso 100 Evansville 94 Fairbanks 66 Fargo 79 Flagstaff 72 Grand Rapids 89 Great Falls 64 Greensboro, N.C. 85 Hartford Spgfld 88 Helena 68 Honolulu 89 Houston 96 Indianapolis 92 Jackson, Miss. 98 Jacksonville 87 Juneau 56 Kansas City 95 Key West 92 Las Vegas 97 Little Rock 98
-0s
0s
10s
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
70s
80s 90s 100s 110s
Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press
72 PCldy Los Angeles 50 PCldy Louisville 72 .12 Cldy Lubbock 63 PCldy Memphis 69 Cldy Miami Beach 53 PCldy Midland-Odessa 76 Rain Milwaukee 65 .02 PCldy Mpls-St Paul 70 .15 PCldy Nashville 72 .36 Cldy New Orleans 67 PCldy New York City 55 Clr Norfolk, Va. 79 Cldy North Platte 69 PCldy Oklahoma City 57 Cldy Omaha 72 1.08 Cldy Orlando 70 Cldy Pendleton 60 .25 Clr Philadelphia 73 Cldy Phoenix 69 PCldy Pittsburgh 45 PCldy Portland, Maine 49 .18 Cldy Portland, Ore. 48 .02 Cldy Providence 74 Cldy Raleigh-Durham 42 PCldy Rapid City 70 Cldy Reno 61 Clr Richmond 46 Cldy Sacramento 80 Cldy St Louis 77 PCldy St Petersburg 69 PCldy Salt Lake City 70 PCldy San Antonio 73 Rain San Diego 50 .19 Rain San Francisco 72 .07 Rain San Juan, P.R. 81 PCldy Santa Fe 82 PCldy St Ste Marie 73 PCldy Shreveport
90 94 95 94 91 97 90 83 92 93 87 79 87 98 98 91 69 88 104 88 82 60 80 81 74 80 85 91 96 92 72 98 82 85 92 84 87 98
69 71 72 76 76 73 75 67 69 77 70 70 56 73 73 75 45 69 87 67 60 53 60 72 48 51 69 55 77 77 52 78 73 58 79 56 70 72
.31 .51
.04 .01 .02 .01
.07
.69
.62
Clr PCldy PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Rain PCldy PCldy PCldy Clr PCldy Cldy PCldy Rain Rain Clr Clr Cldy PCldy Clr PCldy Clr Cldy PCldy Clr PCldy Clr PCldy Rain Clr PCldy Clr Clr PCldy PCldy Rain PCldy
à 108 in Death Valley, Calif. Ä 19 in West Yellowstone, Mont.
GLOSSARY of abbreviations used on this page: Clr clear, sunny; PCldy partly cloudy; Cldy cloudy; Sh showers; Ts thunderstorms; Prc precipitation; Otlk outlook; M data missing; Ht tidal height; YTD year to date; kt knots; ft or ’ feet
Sioux Falls 84 Syracuse 91 Tampa 91 Topeka 96 Tucson 97 Tulsa 96 Washington, D.C. 87 Wichita 100 Wilkes-Barre 88 Wilmington, Del. 85
53 69 75 77 75 78 69 76 62 64
PCldy PCldy .06 Rain .12 Cldy Cldy PCldy Clr PCldy Clr Clr
_______ Hi Lo Auckland 59 52 Beijing 75 63 Berlin 67 45 Brussels 65 50 Cairo 100 76 Calgary 63 41 Guadalajara 81 62 Hong Kong 86 79 Jerusalem 91 72 Johannesburg 75 51 Kabul 84 50 London 64 52 Mexico City 75 57 Montreal 82 70 Moscow 58 48 New Delhi 98 80 Paris 68 51 Rio de Janeiro 86 70 Rome 80 58 San Jose, CRica 80 67 Sydney 65 53 Tokyo 77 73 Toronto 82 70 Vancouver 66 55
Otlk Clr Cldy Sh Sh Clr Cldy Ts Ts Clr Ts Clr Clr Ts Ts Clr Hazy Clr PCldy Clr Ts Clr Rain Ts Rain
Briefly . . . mances will take place Dec. 4-6. The chorus is again directed by Gary McRoberts, who is accompanied by pianist Kayla Dyment. Although the chorus sings only sacred music, it has no religious affiliation and is presented in cooperation with the SequimDungeness Valley Chamber of Commerce. For more information or to preregister, pick up a registration form at Bauer Interior Designs, 119 N. Sequim Ave.; phone 360-477-9361; or email gail@gailsumpter. com. Also visit www.facebook. com/SequimCommunity ChristmasChorus or come to the first rehearsal.
Workshops focus on food preservation
HIGH-FIVES
CLALLAM BAY — Kindergarten storytimes for children ages 4 to 6 will resume at the Clallam Bay Library, 16990 state Highway 112, at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 15. This free program will occur at 1:30 p.m. every third Tuesday through May 17. Storytimes feature rhymes, music, crafts, dancing and books for young children. For more information about storytimes and other programs for youth, visit www.nols.org or contact youth services librarian Pam Force at 360-963-2414 or youth@nols.org. Peninsula Daily News
More than independent senior living . . . FOR STUDENTS
Franklin Elementary School teachers, staff and Port Angeles School District administration members high-fived Franklin students as they arrived to the building Sept. 3. From left, new kindergarten teacher Robert Stevenson high-fives fourth-grader Niklas Hogenson. School started Sept. 3 at all schools in the Port Angeles School District for all students except kindergarteners. and other events and activities, phone the library at 360-963-2414, email ClallamBay@nols.org or visit www.nols.org and select “Events.”
Christmas Chorus SEQUIM — The Sequim Community Christmas Chorus group recently presented a check in the amount of $350 to the Shipley Center for its fund to assist seniors with
membership dues. These funds were raised by the chorus’s Christmas season performances last year. A check in the amount of $400 was previously presented to Sequim Community Aid. The chorus is open to singers of all levels of expe-
rience, and participation requires no fees or auditions. Rehearsals begin Tuesday, Sept. 15, at 6:30 p.m. (6 p.m. registration) at the Sequim Seventh-day Adventist Church, 30 Sanford Lane. Rehearsals will continue Tuesday nights, and perfor-
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CLALLAM BAY — This fall, the basics of canning, jamming, fermenting and more will be taught at the Clallam Bay Library, 16990 state Highway 112. Led by local experts, “Food for Thought” workshops are free, hands-on opportunities for participants to learn various food preservation techniques and practices. Workshops, all taking place from 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m., will be held on the following Mondays: ■ Sept. 14: Introduction to canning fruits, vegetables, jams and jellies with Sudie Parker. ■ Sept. 21: Smoking and canning meat and fish with Parker. ■ Sept. 28: Jane Hielman of Sunsets West Co-op on gluten-free baking and alternative grains. ■ Oct. 5: Parker on fermenting. Learn how to make sauerkraut, pickles and other fermented items, including soda pop. Parker has taught food preservation for more than 16 years as a 4-H leader and Master Food Preserver from the Washington State University Extension Program. Hielman is co-manager of Sunsets West Co-op in Clallam Bay. She has a background in food allergies and special diets, and she hails from Australia. “Food for Thought” workshops are free and open to the public, and preregistration is not required. To learn more about this
Library storytimes
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