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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS May 13, 2015 | 75¢

Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper

Clock ticking on oil rig’s stay STEVE MULLENSKY/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Recipients of the 2015 Heart of Service Award were awarded their medals at a luncheon Tuesday at the Northwest Maritime Center in Port Townsend. They are, from left, Ken Brink, Helen Brink, Ruth Merryman, Kim Wilcox, Paul Becker, Karen Jensen and Bonnie Story.

Contributions heralded with PT ceremony 9 honored with Heart of Service STEVE MULLENSKY/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — The power of volunteerism was celebrated Tuesday at the 10th annual Heart of Service awards, recognizing Jefferson County citizens who have made a special contribution to the community. “These are everyday people who have found ways to serve others and give back to their communities, often with very few resources and very little recognition,” said John Brewer, Peninsula Daily News editor and publisher, who moderated the ceremony. “They have made a meaningful difference in the lives of our neighbors and our communities and show us that all of us can be part of something greater than ourselves.” About 160 people attended the luncheon at the Northwest Maritime Center to pay tribute to nine honorees, two of them posthumously. The 2015 Heart of Service honorees are Paul Becker, Helen and

Ken Brink, Karen Jensen, Ruth Merryman, Bonnie Story and Kim Wilcox, as well as the late Christopher Martin, who died March 2 at the age of 44, and the late Nik Worden, who died Oct. 23, 2014 at the age of 73. “This is a great honor,” said Story, tearing up during her speech. “I have a lot of water in my eyeballs but not a lot in my mouth, so I’ll just have to work it out.” The Quilcene resident was recognized for her efforts in bringing Internet technology to charity organizations.

Nominations A blue-ribbon judging committee selected the nine award recipients from nominations made by individuals, clubs, churches, businesses and other organizations. Along with the PDN, the ceremony was sponsored by the Rotary Club of Port Townsend (noon club), the Port Townsend Sunrise Rotary Club and the East Jefferson Rotary Club. TURN

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The Shell Oil-leased drill ship Noble Discoverer crosses into Admiralty Inlet toward Everett as it passes Port Townsend on Tuesday.

Polar Pioneer headed to Seattle while Noble Discoverer passes by Peninsula PENINSULA DAILY NEWS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AND

PORT ANGELES — The Polar Pioneer has only until Sunday to remain at anchor in Port Angeles Harbor without requesting an extension from the Coast Guard. Shell Oil Co., spokeswoman Megan Baldino said Monday that the 400-foot-long Polar Pioneer oil rig will be towed by tug to Seattle in a few days, Shell Oil Co. No day for moving the rig has been announced. Anchoring in Port Angeles Harbor is free, but a time limit is imposed on how long vessels can stay in the harbor.

That is normally 10 days, but the Polar Pioneer was granted an extension to 30 days by Capt. M.W. “Joe” Raymond, captain of the port for the Puget Sound Sector. A stay of more than 30 days would also have to be approved by Raymond.

26 days at anchor As of Tuesday, Shell Oil Co., had not requested additional time in Port Angeles Harbor, said Coast Guard Chief Sara Mooers of the 13th District. As of today, the Polar Pioneer has been at anchor in Port Angeles Harbor for 26 days. The vessel is one of two drill

rigs being leased by Royal Dutch Shell, the parent company of Shell Oil Co., slated to be used this summer for exploratory drilling in the Chukchi Sea off Alaska’s northern shore.

Protesters waiting When the oil rig arrives in Seattle, protesters who don’t want Shell to drill for oil in the Arctic have said they will meet it in kayaks. Other protesters say they planned to meet the Noble Discoverer — the other drill ship slated for the Arctic — when it arrived at the Port of Everett on Tuesday. TURN

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Jefferson filing week gets tech upgrade Candidates can opt for USB drive BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — Those filing for open seats in this year’s election have a choice as to how they receive the documents necessary to manage their candidacy. After filing, candidates can receive a folder that contains the documents and disclosure forms, or they can opt to receive a USB drive that contains all of the documents in PDF format. “This is part of our going paperless,” said Betty Johnson, Jefferson County elections supervisor.

“We are providing all of the documents in electronic format, which we think will be more convenient for the candidates.” After a suggestion from Sandi Eldridge, the office ordered 50 of the drives on which 20 documents were installed, including campaign sign regulations, withdrawal forms and financial disclosure forms if needed. The cost of the drives was $194, which Johnson said represented an undetermined savings over the cost and process of assembling printed folders, which are still available for those who request them. The drives have a 128 MB

capacity, of which the documents take up only 4 MB. As of Tuesday, 10 of the 17 candidates filing in the office had opted for the electronic format, Johnson said. Filing continues from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. all week, with a drawing to determine ballot positions scheduled for 4:30 p.m. Friday. Candidates file at the Jefferson County Auditor’s Office at the county courthouse, 1820 Jefferson St. If more than two candidates file for one office, one candidate will be eliminated in the Aug. 4 primary, and the top two votegetters will advance to the Nov. 3 general election. TURN

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CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Jefferson County Elections Supervisor Betty Johnson with

FILING/A6 the new candidate filing packet: a USB drive.

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A2

UpFront

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Tundra

The Samurai of Puzzles

By Chad Carpenter

Copyright © 2015, Michael Mepham Editorial Services

www.peninsuladailynews.com This is a QR (Quick Response) code taking the user to the North Olympic Peninsula’s No. 1 website* — peninsuladailynews.com. The QR code can be scanned with a smartphone or tablet equipped with an app available for free from numerous sources. QR codes appearing in news articles or advertisements in the PDN can instantly direct the smartphone user to additional information on the web. *Source: Quantcast Inc.

PORT ANGELES main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 General information: 360-452-2345 Toll-free from Jefferson County and West End: 800-826-7714 Fax: 360-417-3521 Lobby hours: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday ■ See Commentary page for names, telephone numbers and email addresses of key executives and contact people. SEQUIM news office: 360-681-2390 147-B W. Washington St. Sequim, WA 98382 JEFFERSON COUNTY news office: 360-385-2335 1939 E. Sims Way Port Townsend, WA 98368

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Circulation customer SERVICE! To subscribe, to change your delivery address, to suspend delivery temporarily or subscription bill questions: 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 (6 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday; 7 a.m.-noon Sunday) You can also subscribe at peninsuladailynews.com, or by email: subscribe@ peninsuladailynews.com If you do not receive your newspaper by 6:30 a.m. Monday through Friday or 7:30 a.m. Sunday and holidays: 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 (6 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday; 7 a.m.noon Sunday) Subscription rates: $2.85 per week by carrier. By mail: $4.10 per week (four weeks minimum) to all states and APO boxes. Single copy prices: 75 cents daily, $1.50 Sunday Back copies: 360-452-2345 or 800-826-7714

Newsroom, sports CONTACTS! To report news: 360-417-3531, or one of our local offices: Sequim, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052; Jefferson County/Port Townsend, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550; West End/Forks, 800-826-7714, ext. 5052 Sports desk/reporting a sports score: 360-417-3525 Letters to Editor: 360-417-3527 Club news, “Seen Around” items, subjects not listed above: 360-417-3527 To purchase PDN photos: www.peninsuladailynews.com, click on “Photo Gallery.” Permission to reprint or reuse articles: 360-417-3530 To locate a recent article: 360-417-3527

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS (ISSN 1050-7000, USPS No. 438.580), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Black Press Group Ltd./Sound Publishing Inc., published each morning Sunday through Friday at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. POSTMASTER: Periodicals postage paid at Port Angeles, WA. Send address changes to Circulation Department, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Contents copyright © 2015, Peninsula Daily News MEMBER

Audit Bureau of Circulations

The Associated Press

Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

and makes one more person go get a mammogram, and if they’re sitting down right now watching this, don’t watch this TV,” she said during the interview. “Go pick your phone up FOOD NETWORK and call your doctor and TELEVISION star Sanget your rear end in there dra Lee announced Tuesand get a mammogram day that she has been diagright now.” nosed with breast cancer She said she has had a and will soon undergo a lumpectomy and will have double mastectomy. surgery this week. The popCuomo said he expects ular lifeto take some personal time style perto support Lee “as she hansonality and dles the trauma of her live-in girloperation and the pain of friend of the recovery.” New York “Sandy is young for her Gov. diagnosis, she has no famLee Andrew ily history, she is healthy Cuomo and had no symptoms or divulged the news on signals that she was in ABC’s “Good Morning danger,” Cuomo said. America” in an interview. “Sandy has bravely The 48-year-old Lee said decided to speak openly she found out she had can- about her illness in order cer late last month in a to remind women of the phone call from her doctor potentially lifesaving power just after she finished a of early detection.” photo shoot for People magLee is a cookbook azine. author, magazine publisher She said she decided to and television chef. Lee talk about her illness to and Cuomo have dated for encourage other women to several years and share a get screened. home in Westchester “If it saves one person County, N.Y.

Sandra Lee says she has breast cancer

Mansion for sale Paula Deen has put her Savannah, Ga., mansion on the market with an asking price of $12.5 million. The celebrity cook’s 5.5acre estate overlooking the Wilmington River includes a Deen main house of 14,500 square feet and two guest cottages. The house has indoor and outdoor kitchens and a poolside movie theater. There is also a barn on the property that functions as an eight-car garage and a chicken coop. Spokesman Jaret Keller said Tuesday that new ventures have kept Deen so busy that she wants “an easier and simpler life” at home on the Georgia coast. After parting ways with the Food Network in 2013, Deen launched her own online subscription network last year. She just opened a restaurant that seats nearly 300 diners in Pigeon Forge, Tenn.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL MONDAY’S QUESTION: Noted neurosurgeon and public speaker Ben Carson announced his campaign for the Republican presidential nomination last week. Does he have a chance to be elected, in your opinion? Yes

Passings

No

By The Associated Press

FRANK DIPASCALI, 58, Bernard Madoff’s former right-hand man, who once admitted he was loyal to his boss “to a terrible, terrible fault,” has died less than a month before he faced sentencing for his role in the multibillion-dollar fraud. He died Thursday of lung cancer after spending his final years cooperating with investigators. Mr. DiPascali had been due to appear June 5 in federal court in New York City’s Manhattan, where he was expected to get credit for pleading guilty and agreeing to become a key government witness against his former co-workers. At his 2009 guilty plea, Mr. DiPascali told a judge that account statements showing the firm was making trades for clients were “all fake,” something “I knew, Bernie Madoff knew and other people knew.” The five defendants were convicted of charges they repeatedly lied to hide a fraud that enriched them and cheated investors — a renunciation of Madoff’s claim when he pleaded guilty to fraud charges in March 2009 that he acted alone. Madoff, 77, is serving a 150-year sentence at a federal lockup in North Carolina.

_________ ALEXANDRE LAMFALUSSY, 86, a Belgian economist who headed the institution that became the European Central Bank and was credited as one of

28.6%

the founders of the shared euro currency, has died. The ECB said in a statement Monday that Mr. “core build- Lamfalussy in 1997 ing stones” of the shared currency were put in place under Mr. Lamfalussy’s stewardship. It called him “one of the euro’s founding fathers.” Details on when Mr. Lamfalussy died and the cause of death were not provided in the ECB statement. Mr. Lamfalussy headed the Frankfurt, Germanybased European Monetary Institute from 1994-97. The institute laid the groundwork for the creation of a supra-national central bank to manage the new currency. The institute became the European Central Bank in July 1998, under its first president, Wim Duisenberg. The euro was introduced

Laugh Lines

Undecided

64.8% 6.6%

Jan. 1, 1999, with 11 member countries. It now has Total votes cast: 745 19, after Lithuania joined in Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com January. NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those As head of the EMI, Mr. 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. Lamfalussy helped to define the bank’s monetary policy strategy and to Setting it Straight devise the technical means to implement it across mulCorrections and clarifications tiple countries. The ECB The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairsets interest rates for the ness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to countries that use the euro clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Rex Wilson at 360-4173530 or email rex.wilson@peninsuladailynews.com. currency.

Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News

1940 (75 years ago) Sentencing of Clallam County Commissioner Arnold Levy, who was found guilty April 27 of misappropriation on one count and second-degree forgery on two counts, was deferred today. The delay gives Snohomish County Superior Court Judge Ralph Bell, who presided over the venuechanged trial, time to consider a petition by Levy’s attorneys for a retrial or an arrest of judgment. If the motion for a new trial is denied, the court will proceed to sentencing and sign the judgment. That would automatically remove Levy from office. Until then, no successor on the Board of Commissioners can be appointed.

A FEW WEEKS ago, Dick Cheney says he thinks I’m the worst president of his lifetime. Which is interesting, because I think Dick Cheney is the worst president of my lifetime. President Barack 1965 (50 years ago) The 70th annual Sequim Obama at the 2015 White House Irrigation Festival opened a Correspondents Dinner four-day run today, and the

event is presided over by Queen Pamela Ward. Among the features: ■ The Grand Parade on Saturday, in which 65 units are registered. ■ The Pioneer Luncheon, at which 1965 Grand Pioneer Joe Priest will be honored. ■ A Demolition Derby with more than 30 entries. The derby cars will first appear in the Grand Parade before they are destroyed the next day. ■ A high school variety show titled “The Mad Mad Mad Tube,” featuring impressions of television personalities.

1990 (25 years ago) Criminal charges could be filed in a three-dog attack that severely injured a Clallam County woman, the Sheriff’s Office reports. Deputies are investigating the case in which the 51-year-old woman — now in stable condition follow-

ing surgery at Olympic Memorial Hospital in Port Angeles — was attacked by the dogs in unincorporated Clallam County. The animals are in the custody of the Clallam County Humane Society pending the results of the investigation. Under county ordinance, they could be destroyed.

Seen Around Peninsula snapshots

A SUNLAND COUPLE having Mother’s Day dinner at a restaurant in Sequim. After dessert, they order a beef medallion to go for their dog who, they note, is a mother, too . . . 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@ peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure you mention where you saw your “Seen Around.”

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS WEDNESDAY, May 13, the 133rd day of 2015. There are 232 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On May 13, 1940, in his first speech as British prime minister, Winston Churchill told Parliament, “I would say to the House, as I said to those who have joined this government: I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat.” On this date: ■ In 1607, English colonists arrived by ship at the site of what became the Jamestown settlement in Virginia; the colonists went ashore the next day. ■ In 1918, the first U.S. airmail stamps, featuring a picture of a

Curtiss JN-4 biplane, were issued to the public. On a few of the stamps, the biplane was inadvertently printed upside-down, making the “Inverted Jenny” collector’s items. ■ In 1958, Vice President Richard Nixon and his wife, Pat, were spat upon and their limousine battered by rocks thrown by anti-U.S. demonstrators in Caracas, Venezuela. ■ In 1973, in tennis’ first socalled “Battle of the Sexes,” Bobby Riggs defeated Margaret Court 6-2, 6-1 in Ramona, Calif. Billie Jean King soundly defeated Riggs at the Houston Astrodome in September. ■ In 1981, Pope John Paul II was shot and seriously wounded in

St. Peter’s Square by Turkish assailant Mehmet Ali Agca. ■ In 1985, a confrontation between Philadelphia authorities and the radical group MOVE ended as police dropped a bomb onto the group’s row house; 11 people died in the resulting fire that destroyed 61 homes. ■ In 1994, President Bill Clinton nominated federal appeals Judge Stephen G. Breyer to the U.S. Supreme Court to replace retiring Justice Harry A. Blackmun. ■ In 2000, explosions at a fireworks warehouse in the Netherlands killed 23 people and injured nearly 1,000 others. A suspect was found guilty of causing the blasts, but his conviction was overturned.

■ Ten years ago: The Pentagon proposed the most sweeping changes to its network of military bases in modern history, a plan that would close 33 major facilities in 22 states and reconfigure hundreds of others. ■ Five years ago: Three Pakistani men who authorities say supplied funds to would-be Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad were arrested in a series of raids in New England. ■ One year ago: A European court, in an important test of the “right to be forgotten,” ruled that Google had to amend some of its search results at the request of ordinary people when they showed links to outdated, irrelevant information.


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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Wednesday, May 13, 2015 PAGE

A4 Briefly: Nation Convict ID’d as suspect in serial killings in Conn. NEW BRITAIN, Conn. — A man who has been behind bars for a decade for killing a woman is suspected in the slayings of seven people whose bodies were found buried in the woods behind a Connecticut shopping center, a government official said Tuesday. William Devin Howell, 45, has been identified as the suspect in the serial killings that have sent a chill through this working-class Howell Hartford suburb of 73,000, the official said. The official was briefed on the investigation but was not authorized to discuss the case and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. On Monday, police announced the discovery of four more bodies last month in the woods where three partial skeletons were found in 2007. All seven victims were believed to have been killed a decade or more ago by the same person, investigators said.

daughter from a tornado as the twister chewed up the family’s mobile home in Nashville, Ark., authorities said. The home looked “like it had exploded,” said Howard County Coroner John Gray, who called the little girl’s survival “a miracle.” Rescuers who found the family believe the couple perished while desperately trying to protect their child. When search crews lifted a piece of trailer debris, they found the girl squatting between her parents’ bodies, awake and teary. The Mooneyhans were among five people killed Sunday after a line of powerful tornadoes battered several small communities in Texas and Arkansas.

Dean sues magazine

RICHMOND, Va. — A University of Virginia associate dean sued Rolling Stone magazine Tuesday for more than $7.5 million, saying a debunked and retracted account of an alleged gang rape on campus cast her as the “chief villain.” Nicole Eramo, the top administrator dealing with sexual assaults at the Charlottesville school, said the lengthy and graphic magazine piece about a student rape victim identified only as “Jackie” portrayed her as more concerned about protecting the elite university’s reputation than helping victims of sexual assault. Parents shield child “I am filing this defamation LITTLE ROCK — Melissa lawsuit to set the record and Michael Mooneyhan met as straight — and to hold the maghigh school students and quickly azine and the author of the artifell in love. The two were marcle accountable for their actions ried in 2004, even before they in a way they have refused to do graduated. themselves,” Eramo said in a More than a decade later, the statement. pair died shielding their young The Associated Press

No charges to follow fatal police shooting White officer shot biracial man in Wis. BY TODD RICHMOND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MADISON, Wis. — A white Wisconsin police officer won’t face criminal charges for fatally shooting an unarmed 19-year-old biracial man who witnesses said was acting erratically and had assaulted two people, a prosecutor announced Tuesday. Dane County District Attorney Ismael Ozanne said he won’t file charges against Madison Officer Matt Kenny in the death of Tony Robinson. Kenny shot Robinson on March 6 in an apartment house near the state Capitol building. Police said Kenny was respond-

ing to calls that Robinson was running in and out of traffic and had assaulted two people, and Kenny was attacked when he entered the apartment house. Ozanne spent some 25 minutes laying out the results of an investigation, citing three 9-1-1 callers whose accounts meshed with that from police. The callers described Robinson punching a friend, jumping in front of a car, punching one 9-1-1 caller in the face and assaulting two people on the sidewalk. One caller feared for both his safety and Robinson’s, Ozanne said.

Heard disturbance When Kenny reached the apartment building, he heard incoherent yelling, screaming, what sounded like a fist hitting something and items being thrown or breaking. Kenny thought Robinson was upstairs and might be attacking

Kenny

Robinson

someone, Ozanne said. When the officer ran in and upstairs with his weapon drawn, he announced his presence, and almost immediately was punched in the side of the head by Robinson, according to Ozanne. Kenny said he fell back on the stairs, and fearing for his life and the other person he thought was in the apartment if he had his weapon taken, Kenny fired seven shots in the span of three seconds, Ozanne said. Kenny was giving aid to Robinson when paramedics arrived, he said.

Briefly: World Kerry meets Russia’s Putin in high-level talks SOCHI, Russia — The United States and Russia emerged Tuesday from their most extensive, high-level talks in years vowing closer cooperation on Ukraine and Syria but unable to point to any breakthrough or new approach to bridge the major differences separating the two powers. The atmosphere was cordial and the tone was promising as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry held eight hours of talks with Kerry President Vladimir Putin and his foreign minister in the Black Sea resort of Sochi. Kerry’s first trip to Russia since the Ukraine crisis began coincided with the 70th anniversary of the allied defeat of Nazi Germany, and both sides hailed the virtues of U.S.-Russian engagement.

Ambassadors soon? HAVANA — Cuba and the U.S. will name ambassadors to each other’s countries after the island is removed from the U.S.

list of state sponsors of terrorism later this month, Cuban President Raul Castro said Tuesday. Castro spoke to journalists at Havana’s international airport after seeing off visiting French President Francois Hollande. The United States and Cuba have not had full diplomatic relations since 1961. Currently, they have lowerlevel missions called Interests Sections in each other’s countries, under the protection of the Swiss government. President Barack Obama in April announced his decision to remove Cuba from the terror list, which was seen a major obstacle for the opening of full embassies.

Cease-fire broken SANAA, Yemen — Yemeni security officials and witnesses said fierce fighting broke out in the southern city of Dhale about a half hour after a five-day cease-fire began Tuesday. They said Shiite rebels known as Houthis and their supporters, troops loyal to former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, attempted to storm the city, firing tanks, rockets and mortars. There were no reports of airstrikes by the Saudi-led coalition battling the rebels in the first hours after the truce took effect at 1 p.m. PDT. The Associated Press

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A car is smashed under the weight of a building that collapsed in a 7.3 earthquake in Kathmandu, Nepal, on Tuesday.

Another deadly temblor just weeks after massive disaster BY BINAJ GURUBACHARYA KATY DAIGLE

AND

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

KATHMANDU, Nepal — A new earthquake killed dozens of people Tuesday and spread more fear and misery in Nepal, which is still struggling to recover from a devastating quake nearly three weeks ago that left more than 8,000 dead. A U.S. Marine Corps helicopter carrying six Marines and two Nepalese soldiers was reported missing while delivering disaster aid in northeastern Nepal, U.S. officials said, although there have been no indications the aircraft crashed. Tuesday’s magnitude-7.3 quake, centered midway between Kathmandu and Mount Everest, struck hardest in the foothills of the Himalayas, triggering some

Quick Read

landslides, but it also shook the capital badly, sending thousands of terrified people into the streets. Nepal’s Parliament was in session when the quake hit, and frightened lawmakers ran for the exits as the building shook and the lights flickered out. At least 37 people were killed in the quake and more than 1,100 were injured, according to the Home Ministry.

Toll to rise? But that toll was expected to rise as reports began reaching Kathmandu of people in isolated Himalayan towns and villages being buried under rubble, according to the U.N.’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Tremors radiated across parts

of Asia. In neighboring India, at least 16 people were confirmed dead after rooftops or walls collapsed onto them, according to India’s Home Ministry. Chinese media reported one death in Tibet. The magnitude-7.8 earthquake that hit April 25 killed more than 8,150 and flattened entire villages, leaving hundreds of thousands homeless in the country’s worst-recorded quake since 1934. The U.S. Geological Survey said Tuesday’s earthquake was the largest aftershock to date of that destructive quake. Tuesday’s temblor was deeper, however, coming from a depth of 11.5 miles versus the earlier one at 9.3 miles. Shallow earthquakes tend to cause more damage.

. . . more news to start your day

West: Japan earthquake passes without tsunami

West: Surfer gets whale of slap after close paddle

Nation: Obama chooses Chicago for future library

Nation: Professor regrets white-students comments

A MAGNITUDE-6.8 earthquake hit off the main Japanese island of Honshu, the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park, Calif., said Tuesday afternoon. USGS originally reported the earthquake as 6.9 magnitude. The quake was centered 74 miles southeast of Morioka, Japan, at a depth of 24 miles, it said. There was no threat of a tsunami from the earthquake, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said. The epicenter was about 200 miles from Mutsu City, where a sister city delegation from Port Angeles is currently visiting. There were no reports of damage in Mutsu City.

A SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA surfer has learned the hard way not to come between a gray whale and her baby. Capt. Dennis Longaberger said his Sunset Kidd boat tour group was watching two mother whales nurse their babies Friday off the Santa Barbara coast when a surfer paddled out in the middle of them. Longaberger said one mother used her fin to smack him away from her baby. The force brought the surfer under water for roughly 30 seconds. The surfer resurfaced, grabbing his board and paddling back to the beach, where a bystander took him to the hospital, bruised but with no broken bones.

PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA will establish his presidential library on the South Side of Chicago, a part of the city where his political career began and where some of the issues that he plans to devote himself to when he leaves the White House are playing out on the streets. The Barack Obama Foundation made official Tuesday what had been widely expected, that the library will be erected on a site proposed by the University of Chicago. The location was selected over bids made by Columbia University in New York, the University of Hawaii and the University of Illinois at Chicago.

AN INCOMING BOSTON University professor who called “white college males” a “problem population” and was publicly criticized by the university’s president said Tuesday she regrets making the remarks. Black sociology professor Saida Grundy had declared on her now-private Twitter account that “white masculinity is the problem for America’s colleges.” Grundy on Tuesday said events in the United States over the past year have made “the inconvenient matter of race” an unavoidable topic, but she expressed remorse over what she had said.


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

A5

Shell: Seattle CONTINUED FROM A1 such a rig. Once there, Foss MariThe Noble Discoverer time of Seattle will prepare could be seen earlier Tues- the massive semi-submersday from Port Townsend as it ible rig for an expedition to traveled Admiralty Inlet the Arctic Ocean. Activists are protesting at toward Everett. It eventually will be sent the company’s Seattle fuel to Seattle’s Terminal 5 to transfer station, The Associmeet up with the Polar Pio- ated Press said. Protesters set up a tall neer before both travel north and be in position in June, tripod shaped structure at the gate of the Shell facility Baldino said. The Polar Pioneer is to in Seattle on Tuesday mornbe taken to Seattle despite ing. The federal Bureau of a code interpretation by Seattle Mayor Ed Murray Ocean Energy Management and a city planning agency on Monday approved the that a Port of Seattle termi- multiyear exploration plan nal is not permitted to host in the Chukchi Sea for Shell.

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

THROUGH

A TRIBAL LENS

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Makah tribal member Meredith Parker talks about her tribe and photography in and around Neah Bay during a presentation last week at the House of Learning longhouse on the Port Angeles campus of Peninsula College. A display of Parker’s photographs will be on display in the longhouse entryway through August.

Briefly . . . ■ At 6:30 p.m. today at the Port Angeles Library, 2210 S. Peabody St. ■ At 10:30 a.m. Thursday at the Forks Library, 171 S. Forks Ave. Johnson’s trip to the Peninsula is supported by the Friends of the Port Angeles, Sequim and Forks libraries. For more about him, see www.VictorJohnson.com, and for information about his concerts and other free North Olympic Library System programs, visit www. nols.org. Also, the Port Angeles Library can be reached at 360-417-8500, the Sequim branch at 360-683-1161 or

Kids’ singer to host three free concerts A trio of concerts with children’s entertainer Victor Johnson are coming up this week in Sequim, Port Angeles and Forks, and admission to all is free. Johnson specializes in country blues for kids. He’ll travel across the county quick-like, to play these dates: ■ At 10:30 a.m. today at the Sequim unit of the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula, 400 W. Fir St.

Extra patrols set through this month

PORT ANGELES — The statewide “Click It or Ticket” campaign will begin Monday and extend through May 31. The annual campaign, in which extra patrols are on the road to make sure drivers wear seat belts, will this year focus especially on proper child restraint. “Washington state law requires child passengers to She’s the recipient of the Forks branch at 360be properly restrained until 374-6402. Central Washington Univerthe motor vehicle safety belt sity’s Distinguished Profesfits properly,” said Cesi Velez, sor Teaching Award and the Shared reading project manager for the CASE/Carnegie U.S. ProfesPORT TOWNSEND — state’s Child Passenger Terry Martin, author of The sor of the Year prize, and her Safety Program. first book of poems, WishSecret Language of Women, “It also requires children and Dan Peters, co-editor of boats, won the 2000 Judges’ under the age of 13 to ride in Choice Award at Seattle’s Blue Begonia Press, will the back seat.” share a reading Thursday at Bumbershoot Book Fair. In Clallam and Jefferson Peters, an English the Northwind Arts Center, counties, the Port Angeles, instructor at Yakima Valley 701 Water St. Port Townsend and Sequim Community College, is the Admission to the 7 p.m. police departments; the Clalprogram is a suggested $3 to author of books including lam and Jefferson County The Reservoir and Down the sheriff’s offices; and the State $5 donation, with proceeds to benefit the nonprofit arts Road the Children Go. Patrol will participate in For more information on extra patrols with the supcenter. the poetry reading and other port of the Clallam County Martin, who is coming center activities visit www. from Yakima, has been a DUI Target Zero Task Force northwindarts.org. writer and educator for 35 and the Jefferson County Peninsula Daily News Traffic Safety Task Force. years.

Drivers with car seats for children or grandchildren can make appointments to have their seat installations checked at no charge. To make an appointment, call: ■ First Step Family Support Center, 323 and 325 E. Sixth St., Port Angeles, 360457-8355. ■ Forks Community Hospital, 530 Bogachiel Way, 360-374-6271, ext. 116. ■ Sequim Police Department, 609 W. Washington St., 360-683-7227. ■ East Jefferson FireRescue, 40 Seton Road, Port Townsend, 360-385-2626. For more information, visit www.washingtonCPS. com. All extra patrols are part of Target Zero, which aims to end traffic deaths and serious injuries in Washington state by 2030. For more information, visit www.targetzero.com. Additional information on the Washington Traffic Safety Commission can be found on the website, www. wtsc.wa.gov.

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PeninsulaNorthwest

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015 — (J)

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Filing: Positions

About 260 patrons pack the USO building at Fort Worden State Park in Port Townsend to support the Jefferson County branch of Olympic Peninsula YMCA.

Hats Off to Y nets $74,600 for YMCA’s Jefferson branch PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — The Jefferson County branch of the Olympic Peninsula YMCA recently hosted 260 patrons at the USO building at Fort Worden State Park for the first Hats Off to the Y fundraiser. Beth O’Neal, president of the Jefferson County YMCA board and

event coordinator, said $74,600 was raised to support YMCA programs. The sold-out crowd was served a family-style dinner by chef Arran Stark. An educational gallery highlighted the programs the YMCA runs. Included in the gallery were the after-school child care program, tutoring in Jefferson County

schools, swimming, yoga, “Fly the Y,” woodworking and summer meal programs for kids. A schematic of the proposed new facility was on display. The project is planned as a collaboration between the YMCA, Port Townsend School District, Jefferson Healthcare hospital, city of Port Townsend and Jefferson Aquatics Coalition.

Operations begin to root out underage pot sales THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE — State marijuana enforcement officials say they’re beginning undercover sting operations

to make sure legal pot stores aren’t selling to anyone younger than 21. The Liquor Control Board announced Tuesday that this month, it’s start-

ing the sting operations, using 18-to-21-year-old men and women who are employees of the state agency. The board says it wants

to make sure the stores are checking IDs and that good practice is to ask for identification from anyone who appears to be younger than 30 years old.

CONTINUED FROM A1 year term. ■ Incumbent Jefferson All of this year’s elec- Healthcare Commissioners tions are nonpartisan con- Mari Dressler and Chuck Russell each have filed for tests. another six-year term. Filing Tuesday were: ■ Keith White, who was ■ Brinnon School Board incumbents Joe Baisch, appointed to the Port Position 3, and Bill Barnet, Townsend School District Position 4, each for an addi- Position 5 earlier this year, has filed for a four-year tional term. ■ Port Ludlow Fire Dis- elected term. trict incumbent Ron Hel■ Maggie Ejde, who was monds, who filed for another appointed to the Chimacum four-year term in Position 3. School Board, is running for ■ Lowell P. McQuoid, a four-year elected term to Position 5, who filed for Position 3. another six-year term on ■ Incumbent Ron Stethe Forks Fire Commission. phens seeks another four■ Rebecca Bratsman year term in Brinnon School Meyer, who filed for the Dis- District Position 3. trict 1 position on the ■ Position 4 Quilcene Sequim School Board. School Board member Gena Although most of the Lont and Position 1’s Shona district is in Clallam Davis, both incumbents, each County, 283 registered vot- seek another four-year term. ers in the district live in ■ Quilcene School Gardiner in East Jefferson Board incumbents Gena County. Lont, Position 4, and Shona On Monday, Robin Hen- Davis, Position 1, each seek rikson and Willard Naslund another four-year term. filed to succeed Heather ■ Brinnon Water DisJeffers in that position. trict Position 3 CommisThree candidates are sioner Wayne Schlaefli vying for the director at- seeks another six-year large position. Heather term. Short, William Payne and ■ In the Quillayute ValCharles Meyer have filed ley School District, incumfor the seat now held by bent board member Bill Walter Johnson. Rohde seeks another fouryear term. Earlier filings This district straddles ■ Four seats are open Clallam County and has on the Port Townsend City 143 registered voters in Jefferson County. Council. ■ In the Queets/ClearIncumbents Bob Gray, Position 4, and Deborah water School District, Stinson, Position 3, each incumbents David Atkinfiled for a second four-year son, Position 3, and Rowland Mason, Position 4, each term Monday. Mayor David King, Posi- seek another six-year term. ■ Incumbent Rich Stapf tion 6, and Deputy Mayor Kris Nelson, Position 7, are Jr., the chairman of the East Jefferson Fire-Rescue retiring. Paul Rice filed for King’s board, seeks another sixyear term. seat Monday. ■ Clallam-Jefferson There are two hopefuls for Nelson’s seat: attorney Fire Protection District’s G. David Faber and Port of Michael Gawley seeks Port Townsend mainte- another six-year term in nance worker Travis Keena. Position 1. For a complete list of all ■ Incumbent Port of Port Townsend Position 1 candidates who have filed, Commissioner Steve Tucker go to http://tinyurl.com/ has filed for a second four- PDN-filing.

Heart: Awardees ‘are role models for all of us’ CONTINUED FROM A1 a better place by doing extraordinary things for The award recognizes the their neighbors, their com“dedication, sacrifice and munity or the environment.” accomplishments” of commuEach nominee was intronity leaders and volunteers duced and then made a short “who have made a difference speech. in Jefferson County, who “When we first moved have made our communities here, we became very involved

with animals,” said Becker, who was honored for his efforts on behalf of the Jefferson County Humane Society. “We recognized that a community without an openaccess animal shelter isn’t a community that is worth being in.”

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Ken and Helen Brink were honored for accomplishing a variety of projects for the Kiwanis and Elks clubs. “Somebody took care of me when I was a kid,” Ken Brink said. “Then someone in this community took care of my kids.

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homeowners in the Habitat for Humanity of East Jefferson County program and for founding the Working Image clothing bank, where lowincome women can acquire the clothes they need to secure a job. Wilcox was honored for her establishment of the Irondale Church Community soup kitchen, a regular Tuesday night event. “It’s been an amazing ride, and it continues to be,” Wilcox said, acknowledging the 20 volunteers who serve soup week after week. “Truly, we could not have done this without tons and tons of prayer. I am amazed and grateful for this opportunity, for this award, but truly must share it with all these wonderful people.” Martin was credited for developing the technology infrastructure for the Chimacum School District and the Jefferson County Library, as well as providing essential tech support for the Port Townsend Film Festival. Worden was a tireless volunteer with the Peninsula Trails Coalition in the continued development of the Larry Scott Memorial Trail and the Olympic Discovery Trail and insightful contributor to other nonprofits. “They are role models for all of us,” Brewer said of the award winners, “not only because they’ve aspired and dreamed, but because they’ve shown us how our local heroes’ achievements are within our own reach.”

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“Now it’s our turn to take care of those who are here now. “We are all in this together, no matter what club you belong to.” A past Heart of Service honoree, Kim Hammers, praised Jensen, who won the award this year, for developing the “Backpack for Kids” nutrition program, as well as serving as an AARP tax aide. “Food insecurity is a demon in our world,” Hammers said. “Karen has faced it with fury, tenacity and insight. “If she wasn’t feeding some of our kids, they surely would go hungry.” Merryman was honored for her work mentoring


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

A7

(J) — WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

Sequim superintendent hopefuls make rounds

Potts will visit the district today and participate in a public forum from 5:30 to 7 tonight in the Sequim High School library, 601 N. Sequim Ave. Schmidt has been the executive regional director for the Missoula County Public School District since July 2011.

She also has been the adjunct professor for curriculum and instruction at the University of Montana since August 2007. She was previously the dean of students for Big Sky High School in Missoula from July 2008 to July 2010. Schmidt will visit the Sequim School District on Thursday and participate in a public forum from 5:30 to 7 Thursday night at the library. At 5 p.m. Friday, the board will go into executive session once more to consider the district’s new superintendent. “I am not sure how long that is going to take,” Bridge said. “We are going to get some feedback from the community, and it will take a little while to digest that. “We are going to choose the one that is the best fit for the Sequim community.” The new superintendent is expected to assume the post July 1. The search for a new superintendent began in mid-March. A farewell reception for Shea is planned from 3:30 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 10, in the district boardroom at 503 N. Sequim Ave.

Fish and Wildlife’s nearshore rockfish tagging projects, according to a news release. For more information, email Karlyn Langjahr at karlyn.langjahr@noaa.gov NEAH BAY — The or visit the advisory council Olympic Coast National website at http://tinyurl. Marine Sanctuary will hold com/PDN-Sanctuary, a meeting of its advisory where a draft meeting council Friday at the agenda will be posted. Makah Marina, 1321 BayOlympic Coast National view Ave. Marine Sanctuary is The meeting from administered by the 9:50 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. is National Oceanic and open to the public. Atmospheric AdministraThere will be public tion. comment periods at 11:40 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Young musicians The agenda includes presentations on WashingPORT ANGELES — ton CoastSavers’ strategic With some 600 young musiplanning progress and this cians in the Port Angeles year’s Washington Coast School District strings proCleanup, Feiro Marine Life gram, the 39th annual AllCenter’s education partner- City String Review will be ships, Makah scientists’ divided into two shows, both ocean acidification research free to the public, this and the Department of Thursday.

The event, at Port Angeles High School’s main gymnasium, 304 E. Park Ave., will start at 6 p.m. with string musicians from Dry Creek, Hamilton and Jefferson elementary schools. Half of the string players from Stevens Middle School and Port Angeles High School also will perform. After that first 45-minute concert will come a break; then the second show will start at 7:15 p.m. In this performance, students from Franklin and Roosevelt elementary schools will play, as will the other half of the musicians from Stevens and Port Angeles High. Ron Jones, James Ray III and Sabrina Scruggs, Port Angeles School District’s music teachers, will conduct the two shows, which will wrap by around 8 p.m. Peninsula Daily News

Candidates tour school district, plan to meet public this week BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Lori Schneider and Chuck LeBer, both of Port Angeles, watch as the Holland America cruise ship ms Statendam arrives at Port of Port Angeles Terminal 1 on a port of call last year.

Cruise ship to arrive in PA this Saturday Unlike years past, ms Statendam won’t stop by Port Townsend BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — The city’s population could briefly swell by more than 1,000 people Saturday afternoon and evening when the mammoth ms Statendam cruise ship docks for 10 hours at the Port of Port Angeles’ Terminal 1. As of Tuesday, 708 passengers, with a crew of 580, were booked for the trip, Holland America Line spokesman Erik Elvejord said in an email. The stopover on the North Olympic Peninsula is part of a Fort LauderdaleVancouver, B.C.-Panama Canal trip with an option to disembark in San Diego, he said. The Statendam will leave San Diego on Wednesday and will be at sea Thursday and Friday before entering the Strait of Juan de Fuca on Friday, Erin Hoover, a spokeswoman for Holland America Line, said Monday. The vessel will dock from 1 p.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday. Unlike other years, the cruise ship will not visit Port Townsend. Instead, it will set sail Saturday night for Canada, arriving at Vancouver, B.C., at 7 a.m. Sunday.

Elvejord noted that Holland America has visited Port Townsend in the past. “We try to offer different ports each year to keep things fresh and different,” he said.

Chamber welcome

walk along the waterfront or visit the Feiro Marine Life Center, Veenema said. Holland America also is offering its passengers trips that will cost adults $95 to go to Hurricane Ridge, $100 to visit Lake Crescent and Madison Falls, and $105 to go wine-tasting at Olympic Cellars Winery, Camaraderie Cellars and Harbinger Winery, according to a trip itinerary. This will be the second consecutive year the Statendam will tie up in Port Angeles. Veenema said cruise ship visits to the city have a noticeable economic impact. “Every time a ship comes in, the feedback that we receive from the merchants downtown has always been very, very positive,” he said. “When you get essentially 800 to 1,000 people who are dropped on a few blocks of downtown, they are going to spend some money.” Port Marine Terminal Manager Mike Nimmo said Monday the port will make $9,369 in dockage fees from the Statendam’s visit, along with a $243.50 security fee for each eight-hour shift and an $8.53-per-passenger transit fee that will total $6,039 if all 708 passengers come to Port Angeles.

The Port Angeles Regional Chamber of Commerce is organizing a welcome for the Statendam and is still looking for volunteers for the late afternoon hours to answer visitors’ questions, chamber Executive Director Russ Veenema said Monday. Contact Veenema at russ@portangeles.org. The chamber’s red-jacketed Ambassadors will greet the ship. The chamber also will set up three tables with brochures on Port Angeles and Olympic National Park, and will be selling downtown shuttle tickets for $5. “We’re going to give them shuttle tickets and try to give them a nice, warm welcome,” Veenema said. The shuttle will conduct round trips of the downtown area from First Street near the pier to the Laurel ________ Street fountain to Lincoln Street and will stop by the Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb chamber-run visitor center can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. on Railroad Avenue, where 5060, or at pgottlieb@peninsuladaily cruise ship passengers can news.com.

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SEQUIM — The Sequim School Board plans to choose a superintendent Friday evening after three finalists tour the district and meet the public this week. The candidates — Sheldon Berman of Eugene, Ore.; Joe Potts of Kent; and Heather Davis Schmidt of Missoula, Mont. — were chosen Monday by the School Board after an executive session. “It took us about an hour and a half of deliberations to choose,” said John Bridge, board member. The School Board expects to choose one of the finalists for the post Friday. About 24 individuals applied to succeed Patrick Kelly Shea, who is leaving June 30 to become superintendent of the East Valley School District in Spokane Valley after serving as Sequim superintendent since March 23, 2012. The list was whittled down to five semifinalists before the top three were chosen. Each of the three is tour-

ing the district this week, being interviewed by the School Board and meeting the public in forums. Berman, who visited the district Tuesday, is the superintendent of Eugene School District 4-J. He previously served as the superintendent of Jefferson County Public Schools in Kentucky from 2007 to 2011. From 1993 to 2007, he was superintendent of Hudson Public Schools outside of Boston. Potts has been principal of Kentlake High School since autumn of 2010. Before that, he served as assistant principal at Kentwood High School in Covington north of Auburn in King County.

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PeninsulaNorthwest

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Fuel stolen from Port Angeles Food Bank BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Police are looking for a man who was seen on a surveillance video cutting a fuel line on a Port Angeles Food Bank van and taking about $100 worth of fuel. Port Angeles police received a call at about 12:30 p.m. Tuesday from the food bank at 402 S. Valley St. reporting that a video showed a man taking fuel from a food bank van at about 9 p.m. Monday, said Deputy Police Chief Brian Smith. Police are investigating the theft. “The video is already circulating around,” Smith said. The video shows the theft taking place, he added. “Our goal is to put a name to the face,” he said. He added that the car driven by the man, which appears to be a four-door Jetta, has a distinctive grille. The video, time-marked at about 9 p.m. Monday,

Police are looking for the man seen on this surveillance video at the Port Angeles Food Bank.

to the food bank delivery van and drained $100 worth of fuel. The theft also ruined the fuel line at the juncture, and the van must be repaired, said Jessica Hernandez, executive director of the food bank. “We are a nonprofit serving the community,” she said. “A loss of this type as well as the vandalism to the fuel line is a big hit to us and our ability to serve those in need in our community.” Donations to help replace the fuel and cover the cost of repairs can be sent to the Port Angeles Food Bank, P.O. Box 1885, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Anyone with information regarding the person on the video or the vehicle is asked to contact the Police Department at 360-4524545.

shows a scene just outside the food bank building in which a man who appears to be in his 30s with a goatee and widow’s peak hairline can be seen removing ________ fuel from the van. Reporter Arwyn Rice can be According to footage, the reached at 360-452-2345, ext. thief, wearing a gray Ele- 5070, or at arice@peninsuladaily ment shirt, cut the fuel line news.com.

LONNIE ARCHIBALD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

A

HELPING HAND

Patricia Scott, center, who served 10 years in the U.S. Navy, along with daughters Storm Laster, left, and Zhara Laster, all of the Port Angeles outpost, which is part of Sarge’s Place, leave the clothing tent outside the Forks Elks Lodge with donated clothing during a recent Stand Down.

Death and Memorial Notice RAYMOND PERRY HULSE March, 1930 April 22, 2015 To know him was to love him. Ray was born to Elmer and Verna Hulse in Colorado, joining his three brothers, Ralph, Elmer and Laverne, and one sister, Clara. When he was 2 years old, his family moved to Port Angeles. They had a small farm with cattle and horses on O’Brien Road. Ray attended Fairview Elementary and Roosevelt schools. He was the youngest son and stayed on the farm as his older brothers went into the service until June 1947, when he enlisted in the U.S. Navy, serving in San Diego, California; Pearl Harbor, Hawaii; and Whidbey Island. He had listed dancing as a favorite hobby on those service papers, so it is no surprise that he and his brother went to a dance at a ballroom in Seattle, Washington, where he met the beautiful girl who became the love of his life. She had moved from Missouri to Seattle to live with her brother and

Mr. Hulse his wife. Ray was discharged in April 1950, and he immediately married Norma Sue Becker in Seattle. The couple moved back to Port Angeles, and Ray started work at ITT Rayonier in June. When he retired in 1989, he had worked 28 years in chip storage, two years in filter plant and nine years as a rigger in maintenance at the pulp and paper mill. He agreed to return to work later and retired for good in November 1990. He was a member of Local 155 Association of Western Pulp & Paper Workers and made countless friends there. In the first five years of

In Memo ry Michael, h l

Death Notices

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Lemke, all of Port Angeles. Our loving family has grown, as shown here with great-grandchildren noted in parentheses. Donna’s family includes husband Gary, Tessa and Shawn Woodcook (Shelby, Cora and Paxton), Raimee and Adam Gould (Silas and Josiah), Jen’e and Randy (Zada), Melanie Lusk (Alayna), Julie and Mike Toth (Desiree), and James Hansen. Teresa’s family includes husband Dave Galyean, Ryan Ehlke (Hadley and Harper), Jesse Ehlke (Emma and Owen), Dayvanna and Tyler Francis (Victoria, Audriahna and Harlan). Debbie’s family includes husband Chris Lemke, Shane and Ruthann Lunderville (Issac, John, Paul and Amy), Lonna Gahimer (Blake, Justice, Jatesa, Tate, Tajai, Joelle and Tritten), Tera and Chad Baver (Haylee and Hattie), and Brent and Vanessa (Liam and Christopher) and Lena Lemke. Because Ray and Sue were the youngest of their siblings, their children from all across the country kept strong relationships with our parents in the last few years, and we want to acknowledge their love for him also.

April 20, 1956 April 10, 2015 Jackie Robinson, a 58-year-old resident of Sequim, passed away April 10, 2015. Jackie was born to John Scott Plant and Idabelle Wilma Cooper on April 20, 1956, in Beech Grove, Indiana. She was employed as a certified nursing assistant in the home health industry. Jackie loved Jesus and was not afraid to let everyone know. Her favorite saying

Mrs. Robinson was, “Jesus loves you.” We love you, Mom. Although we may be

separated now, I know we will be together again. Jackie is survived by her son, John Robinson; her daughters, Penny Smith and Sarah (Dustin) Marella; brothers Joe Plant, John Plant, William Plant, James Plant, Robert (Karen) Plant and Edgar (Deborah) Plant; sisters Rose (Tolbert) Ryan, Susan (Robert) Ryan and Wilma (Doug) Flagg; and her grandchildren, Janelle Smith, Benjamin Smith, Nikolas Smith, Jesse Smith and Dante Marella. She was preceded in death by her parents, brother Thomas Plant and sister Barbara Plant.

Remembering a Lifetime

Douglas Ticknor Jim Drennan

club where drivers from all over the country came to visit our scenic county) as well as the parades and car shows. Ray and Sue were also members of the Eagles and enjoyed camping trips with their club members, too. When they moved to Laurel Park Assisted Living, the staff there were given the opportunity to experience the respect, love and humor that family and friends had already received. He was in the loving care of that staff and his family as he left us for his new home in heaven. Mom and Dad had just marked 65 years of marriage. We were all so glad to be a part of the wonderful love they showed to each other and to us. Any “thinking of you” cards can be mailed to Sue Hulse, 1133 East Park Avenue, No. 201, Port Angeles, WA 98362. A memorial service will be announced when determined. Ray was preceded in death by his parents, sister Clara and brothers Ralph, Elmer and Laverne. He is survived by wife Sue Hulse and daughters Donna Hansen, Teresa Galyean and Debbie

JACKIE ROBINSON

Dec. 8, 1949 — April 23, 2015

551321644

North Olympic Peninsula Death Notices and Death and Memorial Notice obituaries appear online at www.peninsuladailynews.com

for family vacations with his family and the families of co-workers. We have so many memories of the fun times we had camping, boating on lakes, smelting at Kalaloch and other adventures. We have lifelong friends with those families he introduced to us. When Dad built the trilevel home up the hill, we daughters enjoyed helping in the building project and learned about the basics of building a house from him. We were all so proud of our beautiful new home on the hill where Mom and Dad spent the next four decades. That is where Dad started building garages and filling them with vehicles. One picture we have shows 13 vehicles that he had in the yard at one time. His passion for collector cars grew as he retired, and he bought, built, rebuilt and showed vehicles continuously. His pride and joy were the results of working on a 1940 Ford, a beautiful 1950 Ford convertible and a classy roadster 1930 Ford truck, as well as others. They joined the StraitAways Car Club and the Sequim Valley Car Club, enjoying tours (one that they planned for the car

Death and Memorial Notice

William E. Cadwallader

I miss everything about you. Love, Your Sweetie, Mary

marriage, three daughters were born to them, so he bought land across from his family’s farm and built a small house for his family. Mom’s young nephew from Missouri was the first of many nieces and nephews on both sides of the family to come and live with them, including Jimmy, David and Brenda Lamb, and Tammy and Greg Hulse. They were so generous in sharing their loving home that Ray built an addition to the small house and in 1967 built another home up the hill from the first one to accommodate all of us. He also secured a mobile home for his aging parents to live next to us on the property until they passed. We daughters learned how to be loving grandparents and parents by the examples of our own grandparents and parents. Ray also built a home next to the first one where we daughters as older children and many other renters lived until it was sold in his retirement years. Along with working a full-time job at the mill and building houses, Ray worked hard at odd jobs, including cutting pulp wood with his father and neighbors to earn extra money

Visit our Website: www.drennanford.com

■ Death and Memorial Notice obituaries chronicle a deceased’s life, either in the family’s own words or as written by the PDN staff from information provided by survivors. These notices appear at a nominal cost according to the length of the obituary. Photos and ornamental insignia are welcome.

Call 360-452-8435 Monday through Friday to arrange publication. A form is at www.peninsuladailynews. com under “Obituary Forms.” ■ Death Notices, in which summary information about the deceased appears once at no charge. Call 360-417-3527.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Wednesday, May 13, 2015 PAGE

A9

Time for strong water-quality rule BY RUSS HEPFER

issue, Inslee tied the rule to a $12 million statewide toxics reduction proposal requiring legstalled any islative approval. progress in Legislators promptly stripped updating the the most protective parts of a standards, funding bill (HB 4217) for the claiming it program, leaving us all pretty would increase much where we started: unprotheir cost of tected and still waiting. doing business. That’s too bad, because a toxA rule proics reduction program is a good posed recently Hepfer idea. But to make it truly meanby Gov. Jay ingful, it must be anchored by a Inslee would strong rule of law. have properly increased our fish Cities were one of the groups consumption rate from an embarthat Boeing and others said rassing nationwide low of 6.5 grams per day (about one bite) to would feel the pinch of new water-quality standards. They 175 grams per day, the same as claimed that higher standards Oregon’s. would make water and sewer But that improvement would have been canceled out by a ten- bills skyrocket. But in a letter to Inslee, Bellfold decrease in protection under the current cancer risk rate, from ingham Mayor Kelli Linville wrote: one in one million to one in “We believe in setting the bar 100,000. high, and then establishing realFurther complicating the

POINT OF VIEW

WE NEED A strong rule of law and we need to be smart in how it’s implemented to break the stalemate in updating our state’s outdated and weak waterquality standards. State government has wrestled for decades with updating the standards that are supposed to protect us from toxics in our water that end up in the food we eat. The more fish and shellfish we eat, the cleaner the waters must be. But Washington continues to use the same outdated and inadequate water-quality standards developed about 40 years ago. Current water-quality standards really don’t adequately protect any of us, the state admits. That’s because business and industry, led by companies such as Boeing, have successfully

Peninsula Voices are significantly louder than the older Prowlers? After reading the Navy The Navy wants us to spokesperson’s response to believe that the noisiest the May 6 letter protesting jets yet, using undisclosed the Navy’s electronic warflight paths for 260 days a fare plan [“Electronic Waryear up to 16 hours a day, fare,” Peninsula Voices], I will not affect our commuhave come to the conclunity? sion that the Navy thinks If the Navy thinks we people who live on the are “misinformed,” why Olympic Peninsula are deaf doesn’t it have a true puband stupid. lic hearing with an honest They must consider us review of its overall future deaf because the Navy plan and not the hodgeresponse claims it is not podge of proposals and “changing how we fly.” studies it has issued so far. Over the past year, Janet Marx, there has been a signifiPort Angeles cant increase in military jet traffic. Study criticized When we first moved here eight years ago, I selI’m aware of all of the dom heard a jet of any comments that were made type. Now it is not uncomin 2014 on the Pacific mon to hear three or four Northwest Electronic Warflyovers during the day and fare Range Environmental often more during the Assessment No. 42759 night. website. So if you are not hearMany of the comments ing-impaired, look forward pertained to the need for a to more jet noise 260 days full-blown environmentala year, according to the impact study (EIS). Navy’s own environmental The public is demanding assessment. that an independent EIS The Navy must consider be completed. The outdated us stupid because its pubenvironmental assessment lished response also claims used by the Navy to justify that there will be no the plan is unacceptable. change in “how much noise The noise studies are we make.” also outdated. There is subWho would fall for that stantial scientific evidence when the new Growler jets that the Navy’s claims

OUR

istic and affordable milestones to achieve our goals. “Clean water and fish that are safe to eat cannot be accomplished over night, but that does not mean that we should settle for dirtier water and unsafe fish.” The treaty tribes and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency have been clear from the start about what we want to see in updated state water-quality standards: A fish consumption rate of 175 grams per day and a cancer risk rate of one in a million. Anything else is unacceptable. The 175 grams per day fish consumption rate represents a huge compromise by the treaty tribes, whose members routinely eat far more as do Asian and Pacific Islanders and others, including local anglers who like to eat what they catch. When those who eat the most fish and shellfish are protected,

so is everyone else. EPA has been keeping a close eye on our state’s lack of progress in updating water-quality standards. The agency said it will set a strong water quality rule this summer if the state is unable or unwilling. There’s still time for Gov. Inslee to do the right thing and write a strong rule of law. He doesn’t need legislative approval for that.

________ Russ Hepfer is vice chair of the Lower Elwha Klallam tribe in Port Angeles and a spokesman on tribal natural resources management issues. This essay was developed with the assistance of Tony Meyer, communications division manager of the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission.

READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND EMAIL

Navy’s plans

about the sound levels are not accurate. A sound engineer conducted tests on Whidbey Island that disprove the Navy’s claims. The Navy admits that an average was used to get to the low decibels. It does not require a Ph.D. to know that it is not the average that cause hearing loss for humans and wildlife. It is the peaks. Pamela Ziemann, Sequim

Some questions Who becomes suspicious that things are not quite right that lead one to challenge government actions, policies or objectives? Is it when: ■ The government is loaded up with people with known anti-American, anticapitalist actions and beliefs? ■ When many highly influential positions of gov-

ernment are assigned to Muslims? ■ Is it when agreements unfavorable to us are made with countries that despise America? ■ Is it when countries that use many opportunities to infiltrate America are given new, greater opportunities to do so? ■ Is it when approval is given a country to start wars, or to allow an enemy country to build nuclear arms?

■ Is it that our leader or State Department alienate most of our allies? ■ Or for whom we might spend billions to protect and defend enemy countries while not protecting our own borders? ■ Could it be if our president was sworn in on a Quran? ■ Or who is really running our country while our leader is constantly engaged in raising contributions for elections? ■ Could it conceivably be government employees used illegally in attempts to destroy opponents of administration policies? ■ Surely it couldn’t be lies or attacks on our foreign facilities, or the IRS or FBI scandals. No, I don’t suppose that even this sampling affects many receiving government handouts or those too apathetic to know what’s being done to them as a price for their vote? Not certainly concern for these wishing the conversion of the U.S. to socialism? Nor assuredly the threat of death to nonMuslims. Paul Hanway Sequim

There’s danger on Peninsula waters IT WAS ALMOST daylight on the lower Quillayute River. We were fishing. There was a dull roar coming from beyond the horizon that indicated the surf was up. Fish like to come in on the Pat big waves. A rough sea Neal helps the fish to dodge the sharks, seals and sea lions that congregate at the mouth of the river. But it can be dangerous for fishermen. We were lucky. It was foggy, but the river was calm. We listened for the fish to roll, but then there was another sound. It was the unmistakable whine

of a Coast Guard helicopter. Coasties don’t fly around in the dark and fog just for fun. We knew something bad had happened. I thought of all the people I have known who have gone down to the sea in ships — and not come back. Many of them had no choice in the matter; they had to make a living. You can’t catch a fish . . . unless you fish. Some of them had gambled on the weather and lost. Sometimes, boats just sink. Sure enough, a Peninsula Daily News report said a fishing boat had sunk off LaPush in the night. Three crewmen were saved, but the skipper was lost. After a while, you just assume that when you hear a helicopter, something bad has happened. The first time I saw LaPush,

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS JOHN C. BREWER PUBLISHER AND EDITOR ■

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back in the early 1970s, there were two ambulances parked on the main street with drowning victims who had wrecked while fishing down to the south by the Quillayute Needles. The Quillayute River bar can be deadly. When the warning lights at the LaPush marina indicate rough bar conditions, they are not talking about the nightlife. This is dangerous water, and not just for fishing boats. A Coast Guard life boat crew was lost there while attempting a rescue. A Coast Guard helicopter crashed in the power lines. They don’t call it the Graveyard of the Pacific for nothing. I have kayaked off LaPush and Neah Bay. It is an exhilarating experience, but one you should not attempt alone or without experienced guides. One day, a kayaker showed up

in LaPush. He was paddling to Hawaii. After a couple of weeks, he washed up somewhere on the coast of British Columbia. We were very sad but not surprised. Which would describe my reaction to the recent kayak tragedy where two people drowned off Dungeness Spit. So when I read in the PDN last week about a guy paddling by Port Townsend in a kayak on his way to San Diego, all I could think was: Here we go again. While he seems to be taking every precaution, it troubled me to read about the San Diegobound adventurer’s assumption that if he gets into trouble, he can just punch a button on an electronic device and the Coasties will rescue him. This reminded me of hikers who go up into the mountains when there’s a blizzard, assuming that if there is trouble, they

NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ LEAH LEACH, managing editor/news, 360-417-3531 lleach@peninsuladailynews.com ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, news editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5064 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com ■ LEE HORTON, sports editor; 360-417-3525; lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com ■ DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ, features editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5062 durbanidelapaz@peninsuladailynews.com ■ General news information: 360-417-3527 From Jefferson County and West End, 800-826-7714, ext. 5250 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com News fax: 360-417-3521 ■ Sequim office: 147 W. Washington St., 98382; 360-681-2390 CHRIS MCDANIEL, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way, 98368; 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com

can just push another button and the rangers will rescue them. These people like to float rivers without walking them first, then wreck their boat, push another button and expect search-and-rescue to show up, just like on TV. Unfortunately, the rescuers often have to risk their own lives to save others who have chosen to ignore caution in search of Web traffic, a sponsorship deal or 15 minutes of fame. If the government is short of money, instead of increasing license fees, it should come up with a tax on being stupid. It would balance the budget in no time.

________ Pat Neal is a fishing guide and “wilderness gossip columnist” whose column appears here every Wednesday. He can be reached at 360-683-9867 or by email at patnealwildlife@gmail.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


A10

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Wednesday, May 13, 2015 SECTION

CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, BUSINESS, WEATHER In this section

B

PA’s Curtis wasting no time Riders’ new football coach already getting to work BY LEE HORTON PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Bret Curtis was hired as the new head football coach at Port Angeles High School, and then he got to work. Two days after his hiring was approved by the Port Angeles School Board, Curtis spent his Saturday watching film of the Roughriders. Saturdays are already football days for the new coach. Curtis moved to Port Angeles in 1992. Since then, he coached the Stevens Middle School football team from 2000-08 and served as an assistant at Port Angeles under former coaches Mark Greenleaf, Keith Moorman and Tom Wahl. Only recently did he have time to become the head coach. “I wanted to stay home and be a family man,” Curtis told the Peninsula Daily News in a phone interview. Curtis and his wife, Diane,

have raised three daughters. Those daughters are now ages 20-25, giving Bret Curtis more time for things such as high school football. Now that he has the time, he isn’t wasting it.

Much to do That’s partly out of necessity. Although preseason practices don’t start until Aug. 19, summer football begins early next month. There’s a lot to do before then. Curtis hopes to have a coaching staff in place within the next two weeks. He already has one assistant picked out: George Kheriaty, who will serve as the associate head coach. Curtis said he and Kheriaty go way back. While recognizing that assistant football coaches have been hard to come by in Port Angeles recently, Curtis is optimistic that he’ll be able to put together a productive staff. “Hopefully we’ll be able to land

some good-character guys that are good role models for the boys,” Curtis said. A history teacher at the high school, Curtis has already started to work the hallways. “Numbers are always going to be an issue with a coach,” Curtis said. “I’m starting to do some recruiting, touching base with a lot of boys, see what their plans are.” Curtis has followed Port Angeles football over the years, so he already has some idea of what the personnel will be next season. “I’ve seen them, watched them play,” he said. “We’ve got some athletes coming back, got some linemen boys as well. “A pretty good core.” Among the top orders of business this summer will be familiarizing the players with the new staff and the new schemes. Curtis doesn’t want to give away too much, but offensively his plan is for the Riders to operate in a pro set after employing the Wing-T the past three seasons under Wahl. “We’re going to try to be balanced,” Curtis said.

DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Bret Curtis was hired as head coach of the Port Angeles TURN TO CURTIS/B3 High School football team last week.

Northwest Cup back at Dry Hill

Area pros miss out on Open

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Nathan Contente, of Reno, Nev., races around the last sharp curve at the Dry Hill course during a Northwest Cup race in April 2014.

M’s turn to veterans to revive bullpen BY JOHN MCGRATH

Two birdies

MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

His day started roughly, with three bogies and a quadruple-bogey on the 413-yard par-4 third hole. After the tough start, Shea did bounce back for two straight birdies, but two double-bogies on par-3 holes on the back nine weighed down his round. Cheng-Tsung Pan, a senior at the University of Washington, shot a 5-under par 67 and took medalist honors. The other qualifiers included Cameron Peck, who finished at 3-under par 69. Peck, grew up in Olympia and won the 2008 U.S. Junior Amateur and the Washington State Amateur in 2013. TURN

TO

CARMAN/B3

PORT ANGELES — The second and final round of the 2015 Northwest Cup downhill mountain bike series at Dry Hill is this weekend. “It won’t be as giant as the last one, but still around 400 racers coming to town,” race organizer Scott Tucker said. Last month, the Northwest Cup brought Dry Hill its biggest race ever, with 600 racers from across the country as well as some from Europe, Canada Australia. Tucker said that unlike last month, there won’t be a spectator shuttle “But with less people, there should be parking available, while it will be tight,” Tucker said. “Sunday will be the best day for spectators.” Sunday’s racing begins at 9:30 a.m. There will be seeding runs for Sunday’s finals on Saturday beginning at 4:30 p.m. Dry Hill is 3 miles west of Haggen’s on U.S. Highway 101. For more information visit www.nwcup.com.

SEATTLE — A professional pitcher for 18 seasons, Seattle Mariners reliever Joe Beimel has a plan for every contingency. When manager Lloyd McClendon called on Beimel for a rare game-finishing appearance Saturday against the Oakland A’s, Beimel knew what to do after throwing the final pitch of his team’s 7-2 victory. Beimel made a quick pivot to face the outfield and executed a precise re-creation of the imaginary arrow launch Fernando Rodney performs after saves. Absent such an opportunity, the closer wasn’t needed on Fernando Rodney Bobblehead Night.

“I always told him that if I had a chance to come in and finish a game, I was Next Game going to do it,” said Today Beimel, who vs. Padres recorded the at Safeco Field most recent Time: 7 p.m. of his four On TV: ROOT career saves in 2009. “ H e laughed and told me, ‘Go ahead.’ Turned out it was the perfect THE ASSOCIATED PRESS opportunity, because it was his Seattle Mariners relief pitcher Joe Beimel, right, shares bobblehead night.”

congratulations with catcher Mike Zunino after closing

TURN

TO

M’S/B3 out a win over the Oakland Athletics last week.

Play Discovery Bay

THE BEGINNING OF qualification for June’s U.S. Open at Chambers Way didn’t quite work out the way Sequim golf professionals Bill Shea and Tyler Sweet hoped. The pair were among 120 ama- Michael teur and profesCarman sional players competing in local qualifying for just seven slots at the next level of the U.S. Open qualification process, the sectional stage. Sweet, the head pro and general manager at SunLand Golf & Country Club, finished tied for 86th place, shooting a round of 10-over-par 82 at the Home Course in DuPont. His round included two doublebogeys and a quadruple-bogey on the 432-yard par-4 to wrap his front nine at 10-over. Sweet rallied nicely to save some pride, playing the 3,647-yard back nine at even par. Shea fared about the same, finishing tied for 88th after firing a round of 11-over-par 83.

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B2

SportsRecreation

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Scoreboard

SPORTS ON TV Today

Calendar

SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY

Today Softball: Chimacum at Quilcene, 3:45 p.m.; Forks at Port Townsend, 4 p.m.; Port Angeles at Kingston, 4 p.m. Baseball: Port Angeles vs. White River, District 2/3 tournament, loser out, at Franklin Pierce High School (Tacoma), 2:30 p.m.

Thursday Softball: Bremerton at Port Angeles, at Dry Creek Elementary, 3:45 p.m. (time and location changed); Kingston at Sequim, 4 p.m. Baseball: Quilcene/Evergreen Lutheran winner vs. Oakville/Lopez winner, 1B Quad-District tournament. Track and Field: Clallam Bay, Neah Bay and Crescent at North Olympic League Sub-Districts, at Crescent, 3:30 p.m. Boys Soccer: District 2/3 Tournament: Port Angeles vs. Foster, loser out, at Franklin Pierce Stadium (Tacoma), 5 p.m.; Sequim/White River winner vs. Franklin Pierce, loser out/winner to state, at Fife Stadium, 7 p.m.

Friday Track and Field: Forks at Evergreen League Championships, at Hoquiam, 3:30 p.m.

Area Sports Softball Port Angeles Parks and Recreation Standings Women’s Division W L Chix & Stix 4 0 Law Office of Alan Millet 4 0 Shirley’s Cafe 2 1 Elwha River Casino/Elwha Bravettes 1 1 Lincoln Street Coffee Pot 1 3 Harbinger Winery 1 3 California Horizon 1 3 Airport Garden Center 0 4 Men’s Gold Division W L Seven Cedars Casino 3 0 Angeles Plumbing 2 0 Rain Seafood 3 1 Stamper Chiropractic 3 1 Elwha Braves 2 2 The Moose Lodge Bulls 1 3 Own Up Landscaping 0 3 Smuggler’s Landing 0 4 Men’s Silver Division W L Evergreen Collision 4 0 Ace Michael’s Inc. 3 1 America’s Elite 2 2 D-12/Elwha River Casino 2 2 Coburn’s Cafe 1 2 U.S. Coast Guard 1 2 Basic Ballers 1 3

Basketball Port Angeles Parks and Recreation Women’s League Monday Warehouse 52, Salon Bella Cara 40 Leading scorers: SBC: Justine Wagner 11, Nikki Julmist 10. W: Madison Pilster 15, Cherish Moss 4. 7 Cedars Casino 76, Elwha River Casino 54 Leading scorers: 7CC: Bracey Ulin 20, Ashley Payne 19. ERC: Nylene Charles 11, Sara Moore 10.

Baseball American League West Division W L Houston 20 12 Los Angeles 15 17 Seattle 14 17 Texas 14 18 Oakland 12 22 East Division W L New York 21 12 Tampa Bay 17 16 Toronto 16 17 Boston 15 17 Baltimore 14 16 Central Division W L Kansas City 20 12 Detroit 19 13 Minnesota 18 14

Pct GB .625 — .469 5 .452 5½ .438 6 .353 9 Pct GB .636 — .515 4 .485 5 .469 5½ .467 5½ Pct GB .625 — .594 1 .563 2

DRIVING

A

MUSTANG

Friday: Golden State at Memphis, 6:30 p.m. x-Sunday: Memphis at Golden State, TBD

OUT OF TOWN

Outgoing Sequim School District Superintendent Kelly Shea won a 2015 Ford Mustang donated by Price Ford Lincoln after hitting a hole-in-one on the 145yard par-3 eighth hole last Friday during the Boys & Girls Club benefit tournament at Cedars at Dungeness Golf Course in Sequim. Chicago Cleveland

12 11

17 .414 6½ 19 .367 8

Monday’s Games Baltimore 5, Toronto 2 N.Y. Yankees 11, Tampa Bay 5 Milwaukee 10, Chicago White Sox 7 Texas 8, Kansas City 2 Boston 5, Oakland 4, 11 innings Tuesday’s Games St. Louis at Cleveland, late. Toronto at Baltimore, late. Minnesota at Detroit, late. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, late. Kansas City at Texas, late. Chicago White Sox at Milwaukee, late. San Francisco at Houston, late. Boston at Oakland, late. Colorado at L.A. Angels, late. San Diego at Seattle, late. Today’s Games Boston (Miley 1-4) at Oakland (Gray 4-0), 12:35 p.m. St. Louis (Lackey 2-1) at Cleveland (Kluber 0-5), 3:10 p.m. Toronto (Aa.Sanchez 3-2) at Baltimore (Mi. Gonzalez 3-2), 4:05 p.m. Minnesota (Nolasco 2-1) at Detroit (Lobstein 3-2), 4:08 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Warren 2-1) at Tampa Bay (Karns 2-1), 4:10 p.m. Kansas City (Ventura 2-2) at Texas (Gallardo 2-5), 5:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Quintana 1-3) at Milwaukee (Nelson 1-3), 5:10 p.m. San Francisco (T.Hudson 1-3) at Houston (Oberholtzer 0-0), 5:10 p.m. Colorado (Lyles 2-3) at L.A. Angels (Santiago 2-2), 7:05 p.m. San Diego (Shields 4-0) at Seattle (T.Walker 1-3), 7:10 p.m. Thursday’s Games St. Louis at Cleveland, 9:10 a.m. Minnesota at Detroit, 10:08 a.m. Kansas City at Texas, 11:05 a.m. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m. Toronto at Houston, 5:10 p.m. Boston at Seattle, 7:10 p.m.

National League Los Angeles San Diego

West Division W L Pct GB 21 10 .677 — 17 16 .515 5

San Francisco Arizona Colorado

16 16 14 17 11 17 East Division W L New York 20 12 Washington 18 15 Atlanta 15 17 Miami 15 18 Philadelphia 11 22 Central Division W L St. Louis 22 9 Chicago 16 15 Pittsburgh 16 16 Cincinnati 15 17 Milwaukee 12 21

11:30 a.m. (306) FS1 Soccer UEFA, Juventus vs. Real Madrid, Champions League, Semifinal, Leg 2 (Live) 2 p.m. (304) NBCSN Cycling UCI, Tour of California, Stage 4, Pismo Beach - Avila Beach (Live) 4 p.m. (306) FS1 Golf USGA, U.S. Amateur, Four-Ball Final Round (Live) 4:30 p.m. (2) CBUT (304) NBCSN Hockey NHL, Washington Capitals at New York Rangers, Stanley Cup Playoffs, Game 7 (Live) 5 p.m. (26) ESPN Baseball MLB, New York Mets at Chicago Cubs (Live) 5 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Soccer MLS, Orlando City SC at D.C. United (Live) 5 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA, Washington Wizards at Atlanta Hawks, Playoffs, Game 5 (Live) 7 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, San Diego Padres at Seattle Mariners (Live) 7:30 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA, Memphis Grizzlies at Golden State Warriors, Playoffs, Game 5 (Live)

.500 5½ .452 7 .393 8½ Pct .625 .545 .469 .455 .333

GB — 2½ 5 5½ 9½

Pct GB .710 — .516 6 .500 6½ .469 7½ .364 11

Monday’s Games Pittsburgh 4, Philadelphia 3 Atlanta 2, Cincinnati 1 Milwaukee 10, Chicago White Sox 7 Chicago Cubs 4, N.Y. Mets 3 Washington 11, Arizona 1 L.A. Dodgers 5, Miami 3 Tuesday’s Games St. Louis at Cleveland, late. Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, late. Atlanta at Cincinnati, late. N.Y. Mets at Chicago Cubs, late. Chicago White Sox at Milwaukee, late. San Francisco at Houston, late. Washington at Arizona, late. Colorado at L.A. Angels, late. Miami at L.A. Dodgers, late. San Diego at Seattle, late. Today’s Games Washington (G.Gonzalez 3-2) at Arizona (Hellickson 1-3), 12:40 p.m. St. Louis (Lackey 2-1) at Cleveland (Kluber 0-5), 3:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Liriano 1-2) at Philadelphia (Hamels 2-3), 4:05 p.m. Atlanta (Stults 1-3) at Cincinnati (R.Iglesias 0-0), 4:10 p.m. Miami (Cosart 1-3) at L.A. Dodgers (Frias 3-0), 4:50 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Harvey 5-1) at Chicago Cubs (Hammel 3-1), 5:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Quintana 1-3) at Milwaukee (Nelson 1-3), 5:10 p.m. San Francisco (T.Hudson 1-3) at Houston (Oberholtzer 0-0), 5:10 p.m. Colorado (Lyles 2-3) at L.A. Angels (Santiago 2-2), 7:05 p.m.

San Diego (Shields 4-0) at Seattle (T.Walker 1-3), 7:10 p.m. Thursday’s Games St. Louis at Cleveland, 9:10 a.m. Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 10:05 a.m. N.Y. Mets at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m. San Francisco at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. Colorado at L.A. Dodgers, 7:10 p.m. Washington at San Diego, 7:10 p.m.

Basketball NBA Playoff Glance CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE Chicago 2, Cleveland 2 Monday, May 4: Chicago 99, Cleveland 92 Wednesday, May 6: Cleveland 106, Chicago 91 Friday, May 8: Chicago 99, Cleveland 96 Sunday: Cleveland 86, Chicago 84 Tuesday: Chicago at Cleveland, late. Thursday: Cleveland at Chicago, 5 p.m. x-Sunday: Chicago at Cleveland, TBD Washington 2, Atlanta 2 Sunday, May 3: Washington 104, Atlanta 98 Tuesday, May 5: Atlanta 106, Washington 90 Saturday, May 9: Washington 103, Atlanta 101 Monday: Atlanta 106, Washington 101 Today: Washington at Atlanta, 5 p.m. Friday: Atlanta at Washington, 4 p.m. x-Monday: Washington at Atlanta, 5 p.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE L.A. Clippers 3, Houston 1 Monday, May 4: L.A. Clippers 117, Houston 101 Wednesday, May 6: Houston 115, L.A. Clippers 109 Friday, May 8: L.A. Clippers 124, Houston 99 Sunday: L.A. Clippers 128, Houston 95 Tuesday: L.A. Clippers at Houston, late. x-Thursday: Houston at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m. x-Sunday: L.A. Clippers at Houston, TBD Memphis 2, Golden State 2 Sunday, May 3: Golden State 101, Memphis 86 Tuesday, May 5: Memphis 97, Golden State 90 Saturday, May 9: Memphis 99, Golden State 89 Monday: Golden State 101, Memphis 84 Today: Memphis at Golden State, 7:30 p.m.

Hockey NHL Playoff Glance SECOND ROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE Washington 3, N.Y. Rangers 3 Thursday, April 30: Washington 2, N.Y. Rangers 1 Saturday, May 2: N.Y. Rangers 3, Washington 2 Monday, May 4: Washington 1, N.Y. Rangers 0 Wednesday, May 6: Washington 2, N.Y. Rangers 1 Friday, May 8: N.Y. Rangers 2, Washington 1, OT Sunday: N.Y. Rangers 4, Washington 3 Today: Washington at N.Y. Rangers, 4:30 p.m. Tampa Bay 3, Montreal 2 Friday, May 1: Tampa Bay 2, Montreal 1, 2OT Sunday, May 3: Tampa Bay 6, Montreal 2 Wednesday, May 6: Tampa Bay 2, Montreal 1 Thursday, May 7: Montreal 6, Tampa Bay 2 Saturday, May 9: Montreal 2, Tampa Bay 1 Tuesday: Montreal at Tampa Bay, late. x-Thursday: Tampa Bay at Montreal, 4:30 p.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE Chicago 4, Minnesota 0 Friday, May 1: Chicago 4, Minnesota 3 Sunday, May 3: Chicago 4, Minnesota 1 Tuesday, May 5: Chicago 1, Minnesota 0 Thursday, May 7: Chicago 4, Minnesota 3 Anaheim 4, Calgary 1 Thursday, April 30: Anaheim 6, Calgary 1 Sunday, May 3: Anaheim 3, Calgary 0 Tuesday, May 5: Calgary 4, Anaheim 3, OT Friday, May 8: Anaheim 4, Calgary 2 Sunday, May 10: Anaheim 3, Calgary 2, OT

Transaction BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Placed INF Ryan Flaherty on the 15-day DL. Recalled INF Rey Navarro from Norfolk (IL). HOUSTON ASTROS — Optioned RHP Asher Wojciechowski to Fresno (PCL). Reinstated RHP Luke Gregorson from the family medical emergency list. KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Optioned RHP Yohan Pino to Omaha (PCL). Recalled RHP Aaron Brooks from Omaha. LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Selected the contract of INF Marc Krauss from Salt Lake (PCL). Designated RHP Ryan Mattheus for assignment. MINNESOTA TWINS — Placed OF Shane Robinson on the family emergency list. Recalled OF Aaron Hicks from Rochester (IL).

Curtis: Riders will ‘stick with fundamentals’ CONTINUED FROM B1 Community College and two more years at Western Washington “I know every coach says that: University. He was a linebacker in high we want to pass and run. “What we want to do more school, but moved to the defensive than anything is limit mistakes, line and even played a little bit of handle the ball well and execute. offensive line in college. That experience on both sides That’ really what we want to do. “We’re going to stick with the of the ball could be handy for a fundamentals. I know it’s cliche, coach. “I think so, yeah,” Curtis said. but we want to block and tackle.” Curtis, a graduate of Orcas “I don’t want to say it’s a different Island High School, played two mindset, necessarily. It’s more of a years of football at Yakima Valley reaction thing on defense, instead

specific assignments.” Curtis, however, hopes the Riders’ offensive mentality can become as aggressive as it is on defense. He also wants everyone associated with the program to feel valued. “I think we can put together a good program. We want to do right by boys and parents and be as fair as humanly possible, and want them have a good experience,” Curtis said.

“We want to make sure everybody feels valued, from the players down to managers. “Everybody plays a role.” Curtis also plans to work with the Future Riders, Port Angeles’ youth football program, including holding a camp with them this summer. “The [Future] Riders program has been a real solid program,” Curtis said. “We want to work with those coaches as much as possible. It

would be nice if we ran somewhat of the same scheme, but I’m not going to require it of anybody. “The ultimate goal for the younger boys in third, fourth and fifth grade, is that they have the ultimate goal of being a Roughrider at Port Angeles High School, and for that to be the pinnacle of their career.”

________ Sports Editor Lee Horton can be reached at 360-417-3525 or at lhorton@ peninsuladailynews.com.

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SportsRecreation

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

B3

Carman: Tourney raise money for Hospice There was a four-way tie for third place with a Also qualifying are ama- score of 83. The three teams were: Alice Myers, teurs Spencer Tibbits of Vancouver; Spencer Weiss, Dorene Berard and Linda Collet; Judy Nordyke, a freshman on the WashNancy Harlan and Mary ington golf team; and Ahren Young, a sophomore Kubas-Meyer; Ruth Lowe, Cecil Black and Pat Beltz; at Seattle University. and Dana Burback, MarIn a seven-man playoff sha Carr and Barbara Slafor the final two available goske. spots, James Lepp of Captain Cheryl Coulter Abbotsford, B.C., birdied introduced the 2015 executhe first playoff hole, and Kyle Cornett of Mill Creek tive board: assistant captain Nonie Dunphy; secrebirdied the third playoff tary Dorene Berard; treahole. surer Ruth Lowe; Judy Lepp, a professional, Flanders, rules; handicap was the 2005 NCAA indichair Barbara Evans; and vidual champion while past captain Judy Nordyke. playing for the Huskies. “Other committee and Cornett is a sophomore tournament chairs also on the Seattle University were introduced and progolf team. fusely thanked for their contributions of time and SunLand tourney talent that are so imporSunLand’s Nancy Hartant to smooth operation of lan checked in with a the organization,” Harlan report on the SunLand said. Women’s Golf Association. Myers, Lowe and Berard The sun shone brightly were recognized and on the first tournament of thanked for their hard the year, a three-person work to put together the scramble chaired by M.J. association’s yearbook. Anderson. “It is a grueling job to It was followed by a lun- get all the information cheon and the spring genorganized, entered into the eral meeting. computer and prepared for The team of Cheryl printing,” Harlan said. Coulter, Jan Prout and “They were each given a Effie Bentley claimed first box of candy for their place with the score of 75. work.” Placing second was the In preparation for a team of Bobbie Piety, BarBeat the Pro event in July, bara Evans and Nonie three names were ranDunphy after shooting a domly drawn to play in the foursome with Tyler Sweet. 78. CONTINUED FROM B1

based nonprofit. The 16th annual Louella Gebhardt Memorial Golf Tournament was held last Saturday at the home of the event since its inception, Grandview Golf Course in Custer, north of Bellingham. To date, more than $30,000 has been donated to Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County from the tournament. “I am so proud of Dave for all that he has done in his mother’s memory,” said Dave’s father, Port Angeles resident Gary Gebhardt.

Anniversary deal

Former Port Angeles resident Dave Gebhardt, left, organizer of the Louella Gebhardt Memorial Golf Tournament, was surprised at last Saturday’s event by an in-person thank you from Volunteer Hospice office service manager Lyn Gilbert and vice president David Gilbert. Six more names were drawn as alternates. Sweet’s playing partners for that event will be finalized just before the event. All players that day will use their handicap score to compete against Sweet’s gross score. “This is always a fun event and members look forward to participating,” Harlan said. In June there will be a mixer with the SunLand Nine Hole Ladies Group, followed by a social session and lunch.

This is a new event, but one that could likely be added to the annual schedule. Participation was encouraged in the Teams of the Olympic Peninsula team series of monthly events, where teams of eight from a variety of golf clubs on the Peninsula compete against each other for the season. The season-ending event will be held Oct. 5 at SunLand, where all members, not just participants, are invited to play.

Tourney for Hospice Former Port Angeles resident Dave Gebhardt wanted a way to say thank you for the care his mother Louella Gebhardt received before her death from Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County. Soon after she passed, Gebhardt organized what has grown into a yearly Mother’s Day weekend tradition, a 30-team four-person scramble golf tournament with proceeds benefitting the Port Angeles-

Port Ludlow Golf Club is celebrating its 40th anniversary this month with $40 green fees (including cart) available every day this month. The course also has two demo days on the schedule. Port Ludlow will host representatives from Ping, Cleveland and Callaway from noon to 4 p.m. Wednesday. Callaway, Titleist and Nike will be on hand for another demo day from noon to 4 p.m. Wednesday, June 3. The course will offer a free hot coffee and $4 beers to those attending the demo days.

________ Golf columnist Michael Carman can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5152 or pdngolf@gmail.com.

M’s: Bullpen is regaining form Area trio honored CONTINUED FROM B1 “It was a fun thing to do while giving a little credit to him.” Against Oakland on Saturday, Beimel was the fifth reliever of a bullpen that worked four low-stress innings. After a rocky first month, the Mariners’ middle men seemed to have regained the form that established them as among baseball’s best in 2014. That the revival began with the promotions of Beimel and 31-year old right-hander Mark Lowe last week from Tacoma is not a coincidence. Each has appeared three times, allowing a combined three hits without a run. “Beimel and Lowe have stabilized things, given us a bit more of a veteran presence,” McClendon said Sunday. “They’ve pitched well, to boot. That helps.” Beimel and Lowe essentially replaced Dominic Leone and Yoervis Medina, sent to the Rainiers to work on improving the location of their breaking pitches.

“The only reason we made changes in the first place is that guys were elevating balls up in the zone, and opponents were taking advantage,” McClendon said. “It helps that our starters are going deeper into games. The early struggles had everything to do with our starters, not the bullpen itself. “The bullpen was overexposed and stressed. All in all, things are starting to even out. “You’re starting to see the bullpen as it was last year.” Beimel was a staple of that bullpen, making 56 appearances, generally in the role of a LOOGY (lefty one-out guy). During a 21-game stretch between May 2 and July 10, he did not allow a run, and never allowed more than two runs in a game for the entire season. For somebody who hadn’t pitched in the majors since 2011, it was a breakout year. But when talks over a contract extension

stalled, Beimel ended up signing a one-year deal with Texas — only to be cut in March. “I had a lot of weird things happen in the innings I was pitching during spring training, and I wasn’t sharp,” he said. “I was using spring training to get ready for the season. I’ve been around long enough to know what I need to do, but the results weren’t there. That’s the way it goes sometimes. “I gave up a few runs and they wanted to see a little more than what I was doing, and they definitely have that right. “As soon as I got released, I contacted my agent and basically told him this is where I wanted to be. He did what he could to get me back here and it ended up working out. “I wouldn’t say I’m surprised to be back with the Mariners, but I definitely took the long way to get back here.” As did Lowe, the former Seattle prospect who was called up in 2006 and pitched five seasons with

the Mariners before he was sent to the Rangers, along with starter Cliff Lee, in a 2010 trade-deadline deal. Tours with the Angels, Nationals and Indians followed, but Mariners general manager Jack Zduriencik remembered Lowe as a hard-throwing reliever beset by some hard-luck injuries. Lowe signed a minorleague deal with Seattle in December, and after showing lights-out stuff in Tacoma — 11 strikeouts and no walks over nine innings — he rejoined the Mariners to help buoy a struggling bullpen. “If everybody pitches the way they should and the way they are expected to — as a bullpen and as a team — we should be fine,” Beimel said. “You’re gonna hit rough patches and if you let those get out of control and snowball, it makes for a long season. “But we have enough talent and enough guys in here to figure out what’s wrong and get back on track.”

the disabled list since April 24, retroactive to April 21, with the injury. He was 0-1 with a 6.61 ERA in three starts before going on the DL.

tle Seahawks have signed linebacker Tyrell Adams and fullback Brandon Cottom following rookie minicamp last weekend. Seattle announced the signings Tuesday. To clear roster spots, the Seahawks terminated the

by Olympic League PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

POULSBO — Area athletes and a coach were honored after last week’s Olympic League track and field championships at North Kitsap High School. Sequim junior Oscar Herrera was chosen at the Class 2A boys Track Athlete of the Meet after winning the 110- and 300-meter hurdles at Saturday’s meet. Port Angeles freshman Gracie Long was picked as the 2A girls Running Event Athlete of the Meet after winning the 1,600- and 3,200-meter runs. She also placed sixth and earned three points for the Roughriders in the high jump. Sequim coach Brad Moore was picked as the 2A boys Male Coach of the Year. The Wolves placed second in the regular season and at the league meet. Also at Saturday’s championships, Sequim’s girls

4x200-meter relay team of Waverly Shreffler, Gretchen Happe, Sadie Woods and Heidi Vereide set a new record with a time of 1 minute, 48.26 seconds. They beat the 2007 mark of 1:48.54 set by Anna LaBeaume, Chase O’Neil, Alexandra Sele and Megan Zumbuhl.

Olympic League JV championships BELFAIR — Port Angeles sophomore Hayden Wickham placed first in the shot put at the Olympic League JV championships at North Mason. Wickham recorded a personal-best 38 feet in the shot put Monday to win by nearly 6 feet. On the girls side, Roughriders freshman Lainnie Lyamba won the 100-meter dash, placed second in the long jump and ran with the winning 4x100-meter relay and the second-place 4x200 relay teams.

Sports Briefly . . . McClendon said Tuesday that Iwakuma would be kept from throwing for 10 to 14 days depending on how he is feeling. Iwakuma threw last Friday and was hoping to SEATTLE — Seattle feel no discomfort but Mariners starter Hisashi instead felt tightness in the Iwakuma will be shut muscle. down for up to two weeks The latest setback likely in his recovery from a right means Iwakuma won’t be latissimus muscle injury ready to rejoin the rotation after experiencing tightness during a throwing ses- until mid-to-late June, barring any more delays. sion. Iwakuma has been on Seattle manager Lloyd

Iwakuma shut down for 2 weeks

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back at Purdue, but at 6-foot-2 and 266 pounds fits the role of a fullback in the NFL. Adams played collegiately at Division II West Georgia and led his team in tackles the last two seasons. The Associated Press

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veteran contract of offensive lineman C.J. Davis and waived offensive guard Nate Isles. Davis was not on an NFL roster last season, while Isles spent the year on Seattle’s practice squad. Cottom was a running


B4

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

Dilbert

Classic Doonesbury (1982)

Frank & Ernest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Dinner promises good food, times

by Scott Adams

For Better or For Worse

Garfield

Fun ’n’ Advice

DEAR ABBY: We have enjoyed an international dinner club with three other couples for many years. Besides an international theme, we occasionally have other theme dinners. The host couple chooses the country and is responsible for the main course. Another couple brings an associated entree, the third couple brings dessert and the fourth couple provides the wine. We rotate responsibilities so we host only once every four months. We have become close friends over many memorable meals together, sharing pregnancy announcements, child rearing, graduations, weddings and anniversaries. I think a “Dear Abby” dinner would be fun to host, and I’d love to plan a meal around your cookbooks. Would you please advise how this avid reader might get copies? Chef Mike in Canada

by Lynn Johnston

by G.B. Trudeau

DEAR ABBY soups to salads, appetizers, main Van Buren courses and desserts. The recipes can also be used for holiday celebrations and other special occasions. To order, send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $14 (U.S. funds) to Dear Abby — Cookbooklet Set, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. My mother used many of these recipes for dinner parties, and so have I. I particularly recommend the pecan pie recipe — which has been printed in this column before because it has taken prizes at county fairs. It was given to Mama by the chef at the now-demolished Phoenix Hotel in Lexington, Ky., and people rave about it.

Abigail

Dear Chef Mike: I know a Dear Abby dinner party would be enjoyable because readers have written to tell me they’ve hosted one, and it made for an interesting and fun evening. The recipes are traditional, easy to read, simple to prepare and delicious. As I mentioned to a reader from Little Rock, Ark., who inquired about the booklet, one hostess described decorating her place cards with appliqued hearts and tiny flowers. She created a centerpiece by making a “bouquet” of envelopes addressed to Dear Abby. Another woman copied questions from past columns, printed them out and made them into a party game, instructing her guests to supply the answers. She said that after a few glasses of wine, some of the answers they came up with were hilarious but not suitable for printing in a family newspaper. My cookbooklet set contains more than 100 tasty recipes ranging from

by Bob and Tom Thaves

by Jim Davis

Dear Abby: Folks always tell me that gals like to be wooed, but when I holler “woo” at them, they give me dirty looks. What’s up with that? Abby Fan from Twitter Dear Fan: Decades ago, “gals” would have been flattered. But since the women’s movement, many females would regard your attempt to be friendly as a form of sexual harassment rather than a compliment. Instead of “hollering,” try saying hello, and you may get better results.

________ Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, the late Pauline Phillips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.

The Last Word in Astrology ❘

Red and Rover

Rose is Rose

by Brian Basset

by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer

ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

Dennis the Menace

by Hank Ketcham

Pickles

by Brian Crane

by Eugenia Last

ARIES (March 21-April 19): You will make an interesting business contact if you network. Don’t make personal changes impulsively or you will have regrets. Focus on expanding your skills, knowledge and expertise, not on changing your appearance. Observe what others are doing. 3 stars

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Working alongside others will bring good results. Discuss your expectations and concerns and you will end up in a leadership position. You will meet new and exciting people if you participate in an industry event or fundraiser. 3 stars

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Don’t be mesmerized by someone who is very different from you. Socialize with people who are of the same mindset and you will avoid wasting time that should be spent on developing plans and profitable ideas. 2 stars

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. TAURUS (April 20-May 22): Expect the unexpected. Patience will lead 20): Secrets must not be shared. If you divulge to a better position. Look something about someone for the positive in any situaelse, it will make you look tion you face and you will bad. Taking on too much find a way to maneuver will be your downfall. Focus your way to success. Say on what you can accomlittle and do a lot. Romance plish. Realistic expectations will improve your personal will help you succeed. life. 3 stars 4 stars

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Observation will be necessary, and impulses will lead to poor decisions. Try not to reveal your motives until you have secured your position. A partnership with someone unique will turn out to be a prosperous and winning combination. 4 stars

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You’ll face opposition and an untimely surprise if you haven’t prepared to accept what someone around you does for a living. Talks will lead to emotional setbacks that may not be reversible. Honesty and diplomacy are necessary. 2 stars

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Make up your mind to participate. Being indecisive will not help you get ahead. Step up your game and share your ideas. Don’t let insecurity stand between you and advancement. Embrace change and present what you have to offer. 3 stars

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Don’t let anyone stop you from following your creative direction. Work alone and don’t worry about what others do or say. A lastminute change can be to your advantage if you don’t make a fuss. Acceptance will make your life easier. 5 stars

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Go with the flow. Don’t be daunted by what others do. You don’t have to keep up with anyone. Follow your heart and enjoy the company of someone you love. Do your own thing and you will find the happiness you are searching for. 5 stars

The Family Circus

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Put your energy to good use. Make positive changes at home and discuss plans with someone you love to help your relationship flourish. Working as a team player will result in a healthy atmosphere at home and at work. 3 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Listen carefully before you give in to someone trying to push or pressure you. Don’t be tempted to spend on a gimmick that promises the impossible. Stick close to home and to people you can trust. Romance is highlighted. 3 stars

by Bil and Jeff Keane


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Wednesday, May 13, 2015 PAGE

B5

Verizon purchases AOL in $4.4 billion video bet Move targets mobile platform for shows, ads BY MAE ANDERSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — After selling millions of Americans their mobile phones, Verizon now wants to capture their eyeballs, too. As its phone business slows down, the nation’s largest wireless carrier is making a $4.4 billion bet that it can find growth in mobile video and advertising by buying AOL, one of the Internet’s oldest brands, which has been through its own share of transformations since introducing much of America to the online world nearly a generation ago. The acquisition is the latest effort by a wireless company to tap into some of the money shifting to streaming video and mobile devices.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

People on Tuesday walk out of the New York office building in which AOL headquarters is located. would buy satellite TV provider DirecTV for $48.5 billion so it could offer bundles of TV, Internet and phone services — just like cable companies. In many cases, the Internet component would be through wireless rather than fixed-wire broadband. With the AOL acquisition, Verizon will gain access to advanced advertising technology, including the “One by AOL” platform that lets customers buy ads across platforms, including video, online and TV. AOL reported a 7 percent boost in revenue during its first quarter, mainly on strong global advertising sales. “AOL’s focus on unifying the advertising experience across display, video, mobile and TV makes it an attractive asset because advertisers are looking for better ways to reach their audience across screens,” said Lauren Fisher, analyst at eMarketer. “Coupled with Verizon’s existing

No longer just a utility Ken Doctor, a media analyst for consulting company Outsell, said Verizon is becoming less of a utility that merely provides access to online services and more of a player in the digital arena as it sees growth in the likes of Apple, Google and Facebook. “They’re trying to move into that league of players getting money from digital, both from consumers and advertisers,” Doctor said. For consumers, the deal could mean more advertising — and ad targeting — from Verizon. That might mean more personalized ads in online videos and AOL content that appears on Verizon handsets and in marketing messages to customers. AT&T has taken a different tack. Last year, the company said it

mobile (and streaming video) presence, the companies’ combined ad offerings mean massive cross-screen reach with much richer audience data.” Verizon also gains control over significant AOL content, including the Huffington Post and TechCrunch.

Fourth largest online entity The former America Online is the nation’s fourth-largest online property with about 200 million monthly consumers of its premium brands, according to its website. And AOL is the third-largest desktop video company in the U.S. by users, accounting for about 35.4 of total unique viewers of online video via desktop computer in February 2015, according to IBIS World. AOL’s own shows include a reality series of half-hour episodes called “Connected” and a two-minute daily satirical sports analysis show called “2 Point Lead.”

$ Briefly . . . Gas prices still look low for summer NEW YORK — Drivers who have seen a steady rise in the price of gasoline can relax: They will almost certainly be paying far less for gas this summer than they have in at least six years. “It’s a cheap, cheap, cheap year,” said Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at the Oil Price Information Service. The Energy Department said Tuesday that it expects the price of gasoline to average $2.55 between April and September, which would be the lowest since 2009. Over the course of the year, a typical U.S. household could save $675 in gasoline prices compared to last year. The coming summer of cheap gas was set up by a collapse in oil prices that began last June at $107 a barrel and ended in midMarch at $43. That took gasoline prices down to $2.03 a gallon, a level the nation hadn’t seen since it was deep in recession in March of 2009.

Trade agenda WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats dealt President Barack Obama a stinging setback on trade Tuesday, blocking efforts to begin a fullblown debate on a top priority of his second term. The president’s supporters said they will try again, and Obama summoned key Democrats to the White House to discuss possible strategies.

Real-time stock quotations at peninsuladailynews.com

Market watch May 12, 2015

-36.94

Dow Jones industrials

18,068.23

Nasdaq composite

4,976.19

Standard & Poor’s 500

2,099.12

Russell 2000

-17.38 -6.21

-2.70 1,233.13

NYSE diary Advanced:

1,405

Declined:

1,705

Unchanged: Volume:

102 3.1 b

Nasdaq diary Advanced:

1,184

Declined:

1,547

Unchanged: Volume:

148 1.7 b

AP

One possibility was to drop a contentious issue dealing with countries that manipulate their currency, but it was unclear whether that would resolve the impasse. What was clear was that Obama suffered a rebuke from his party, led by some who served with him in the Senate. Only one Senate Democrat, Tom Carper of Delaware, voted for a GOPcrafted motion to start considering Obama’s request for “fast track” trade authority.

Gold and silver Gold for June delivery rose $9.40, or 0.8 percent, to settle at $1,192.40 an ounce Tuesday. July silver added 21.2 cents, or 1.3 percent, to $16.526 an ounce. The Associated Press

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pot and bags, spouted bu cke t s, hy gr o m e t e r, bubblers, brushes, funnel, glass car boy, 15# malt, bottle capper, cork setter, 60+ brown latch b o t t l e s, r e c i p e b o o k . $350. (360)460-2796. Text or leave message.

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D E N TA L H Y G E N I S T: needed 1 Thursday per month in Port Townsend WA. Opportunity for expansion in the future. Please fax resume to (360)385-1277, or email to info@cunningtondental.com.

G A R AG E S A L E : Fr i Sat.-Sun., 8:30-4 p.m., 7 0 9 W. F i r. S e q u i m . Clothes, furniture, kitchen items, kids items, collector toys and comics, books, movies, appliances. Let’s make a deal, everything must go.

BOAT: Searay, 18’, fun family boat. $6,500. F L O O R I N G : M o h aw k ( 3 6 0 ) 4 5 7 - 3 7 4 3 o r Laminate. Brand new, (360)460-0862 beautiful oak colored, still in boxes. 380sq. ft. P O O D L E S : S t a n d a r d Selling for $2. a sq. ft., Parti. 4 females, 1 male, must sell as lot. (360)477-5111 $1,000-1,200. (360)670-9674

GARAGE Sale: Thurs.S a t . , 9 - 3 p. m . , 5 7 2 Washington Harbor Rd. and in Baywood Village. Secretar y desk, silver plated tea service, roll away bed, poloriod camers, carousels, RV hitches, and much misc.

BENEFIT YARD SALE Fri.-Sat. 9-3 p.m., 33 Peterson Rd. R corner Lewis Rd side. All proceeds benifit a non profit Service Dog Training for Veterans. Kayak, furniture, colectables, glass BEER GEAR: Steeping ware much more.

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PUPPIES: Border Collie p u p s, r e d a n d w h i t e, black and white, tri color. F i r s t s h o t s. $ 2 5 0 . t o $400 each. (360)7324358 (360)865-7497.

CLASSIFIEDS

IMMEDIATE OPENING for CARRIER ROUTE Port Angeles Area. Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Interested parties must be 18 yrs of age, have valid Washington State Driver’s License, proof of in- MAZDA: ‘99 Miata, Cussurance, and reliable ve- tom leather seats, excelh i c l e . E a r l y m o r n i n g lent condition. $7,300. delivery Monday-Friday (360)461-0929 and Sunday. Apply in person 305 W 1st St, or send resume to CHECK OUT OUR tsipe@peninsuladailyNEW CLASSIFIED news.com. NO PHONE WIZARD AT CALLS PLEASE. www.peninsula dailynews.com

Program Specialist 4 Chemical Dependency Pe r m a n e n t p o s i t i o n available now at Clallam Bay Corrections Center Salary: $3819-$5010 mo Plus Benefits. Apply online: www.careers.wa.gov. For further information please call Laura at (360)963-3208 EOE

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VW BEETLE: 1969 Conver tible. Must sell this 1969 VW Conver tible with a lots of spare parts, manuals and specialty VW tools. This is a restorable car, and none of the legendary charm of VW’s has been lost with this rig. The e n g i n e s t i l l r u n s, a l though the car hasn’t b e e n d r i ve n i n t h r e e years. Title clean and c l e a r ! N o t ra d e s j u s t cash. If you are interested, I can provide LOTS more details and pictures. $2,500. Please call (605)224-4334.


Classified

B6 WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

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. CRONUTS Solution: 6 letters

N G C R O O R E M O E T A D A T N O T U N N I B I U O O C T N D G U R O ‫ګ‬ G U E T ‫ ګ‬ E Y S R ‫ ګ‬ U E Z E G T A V A A L O R W G L © 2015 Universal Uclick

By Gail Grabowski and Bruce Venzke

Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

GILCO ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

44 Stone monument 45 UFO fliers, purportedly 47 Career officer 48 Forensic investigator’s molecule 51 Convertible, in slang 52 Adviser who was a regular “Oprah” guest 55 Enervates

5000900

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.

Employment 4026 Employment 3010 Announcements 4026 General General Accounting Clerk ACTIVITY DIRECTOR Position open at Ruddell Part-Time at Discovery Auto Mall. Responsible V i ew S e n i o r L i v i n g for Accounts Payable, C o m m u n i t y. I f y o u Accounts Receivable, would like to be concontract administration sidered for this posiand bank deposits. We tion, apply online at seek a motivated em- www.gres.com under ployee with strong atten- the Careers link. 3020 Found tion to detail, computer experience and at least F O U N D : i P O D To u c h 2 years of experience in w i t h c a s e . Fo u n d b y an office setting. WorkMonroe Rd. PA Police: ing knowledge of ac(360)417-4915 counting and bookkeeping principles required. Correctional Officer 1 Send resume to: Perm/On-call 3023 Lost office@ruddellauto.com Positions available now at Clallam Bay CorrecLOST WALLET: Purple, Active dental office look- tions Center and Olymi n g f o r e x p e r i e n c e d pic Corrections Center green and brown Vera Bradley wallet. Between chairside assistant to Pay s t a r t s a t $ 2 , 9 5 7 Safeway East and Old dentist and hygienists. monthly, Plus full beneM-Th. 8–5. Please sub- fits. Closes 6/7/2015. Oly Hwy. (360)461-3556 mit resume to pjhilfer- Apply on-line: ty@gmail.com or PJ @ www.careers.wa.gov. 4026 Employment PO Box 1116 Sequim For further information 98382. please call Laura at General (360)963-3208 EOE. DRIVING ROUTES CNA: Ideally available Clean driving record, liftC N A s : E ve n i n g / n i g h t for all shifts, including weekends. Apply in per- ing involved. Apply in s h i f t , h i r e o n b o n u s, person: Olympic Springs star ting at $12 per hr. son at 253 Business Park Loop Apply in person at 202 Park View Villas, th Carlsborg, WA 98324. Birdsong Ln., P.A. 8 & G Streets, P.A.

ADVERTISING ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE The Peninsula Daily News and Sequim Gazette have a rare oppor tunity position in outside sales with an existing territory working in a team environment. Opening for a well organized, creative professional with the ability to develop strong customer relationships. Manage an existing account base as well as developing new clients to meet ever changing marketing needs. Solid presentation skills and the a b i l i t y t o wo r k i n a team environment a must. Competitive compensation package including full benefits and 401K plan. Submit cover letter and resume to: Steve Perry Advertising Director Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 Port Angeles, WA 98362 sperry@peninsuladaily news.com

CAREGIVERS NEEDED $100 hire on bonus, $11.81 hr., benefits. No experience. Free training. Caregivers Home Care. 457-1644, 6837377, 379-6659 CARPET CLEANER Looking for hardworking individual to come join our team, will train the right person. Wage DOE and commission opportunity, background check required. Contact Jeff at EcoClean Carpert Cleaning (360)477-0541

Employment Opportunities CS Tech Center Core - OR

Medical, dental and vision benefits are available for qualifying caregivers. Principals only. M/F/D/V. Multi-lingual abilities are a plus. To apply, please visit our website at www.rescare.com and select Careers. For assistance call 360-683-2497

R M T T E N D E R Q R T R W E

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I T I L T H G I L A U C R S P

N E P L L Y C H E E G E Y A A

G A N A C H E A T S A E Y G R

M O S S O L B Y R R E H C E G

5/13

5/13/15

56 Feature of some paneling 57 In a laid-back manner 59 Words of dismay 60 Straightened up 62 Wedding rental 63 Combat group 64 LAPD ranks 66 Puts one’s initials on 67 Pampering, for short

WEALYE

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

Ans. here:

Yesterday’s

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: PERCH LEMUR CAMERA BOTANY Answer: After discovering fraud at the aerospace company, they would need to — LAUNCH A PROBE

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General General General General

E-MAIL:

but not required • Bilingual a plus but not required • Valid Certification License (if applicable) • Pass background check

E B R G P O Z N I O Y O C E S

Ansel, Bakery, Butter, Chef, Cherry Blossom, Cinnamon, Coconut, Craze, Creation, Croissant, Culinary, Dessert, Dominique, Donut, Egg, Fig, Flaky, Flavors, Flour, Foodies, Fry, Ganache, Garnished, Glaze, Good, Grapeseed Oil, Hybrid, Layers, Light, Lime, Love, Lychee, Maple, Pear, Recipe, Ring, Sage, Salt, Sugar, Sweet, Tea, Tender, Treat, Water, Yeast Yesterday’s Answer: Misbehaving

TORBO

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www.wonderword.com

C A E I O A I N I K V A H E E

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

VISIT: WWW.PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM

Full Time and Part Time In Home Caregivers and CNA’s. We are seeking a wide range of other medical and non-medical support.

I K S F R S I S A A N Y E T E

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507

ADOPTION: A Loving Financially Secure Family, Laughter, Travel, Beaches, Music awaits 1st baby. Expenses Paid 1-800-362-7842

P E S C H M S L L S B S F L D

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD:

OR

E R E E O A F F E R L T R A O

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

5 Complete collection 6 Con __: briskly, on scores 7 Iolani Palace site 8 Estracell sponge brand 9 Phishing fig. 10 Does a slow burn 11 Surfing convenience 12 Opera showstopper 13 Gets in the pool, maybe 18 Milo of the movies 19 She adopted Tigger 24 Top of a scepter, perhaps 26 Part of MoMA 27 Perturbs 28 O.K. Corral gunfighter 29 Toy (with), as an idea 30 Sitter’s challenge 31 Quiz answer 32 Maori carvings 36 Unshakable 37 Cut and run 39 “Don’t make me laugh!” 41 __ Kippur

5/13/15

A Y D D N C U L I N A R Y S I

-

DOWN 1 Apple Store array 2 Job opening 3 Prefix with goddess 4 Go to extremes

By DAVID OUELLET

-

ACROSS 1 Windows precursor 6 Hard-to-control groups 10 Forensic investigator’s item 14 Advil alternative 15 Pair on a lake 16 Place to slog through 17 “Wait, there’s more ... “ 20 Hullabaloo 21 Barry White genre 22 Dossier cover? 23 “Boy, am I dumb!” 25 Touch the ground 27 “Wait, there’s more ... “ 33 Airline with the MileagePlus frequent flier prog. 34 Ole Miss rival 35 Customs collection 38 Golf lesson subject 40 Charmin layer 42 Black & Decker rival 43 Dapper 46 Gave up for money 49 Irritated state 50 “Wait, there’s more ... “ 53 Brainy Simpson 54 Not within walking distance 55 One needing a lift 58 “__ Girl”: 2014 Affleck film 61 Battery terminal sign 65 “Wait, there’s more ... “ 68 D.C. dealers 69 Hawaiian coffee district 70 Put a cap on 71 Eye woe 72 Kiddie-lit dog 73 Stops bleeding

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Prepares, distributes and controls ster ile and nonster ile supplies, implants, instrumentation, and equipment used in Surgical Services. Experience and expertise in aseptic technique relating to decontamination and sterilization. Must be registered/certified as CS Tech. preferred. For more information and to apply online, v i s i t w w w. o l y m p i c medical.org.

DENTAL HYGENIEST Part-time. Send resume: forksfamily dental@gmail.com D E N TA L H Y G E N I S T: needed 1 Thursday per month in Port Townsend WA. Opportunity for expansion in the future. Please fax resume to (360)385-1277, or email to info@cunningtondental.com. DOG GROOMER: Experienced. Busy salon with mobile grooming van in Por t Townsend. Br ing resume to The Dog Spa, 2427 W. Sims Wy. Next to Pettown. Housekeeper Full Time Benefits available Pickup Applications at 550 W. Hendrickson Rd. Sequim Wa.

Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office: The Jefferson County Sheriff Office is currently recruiting for the position of Lateral Deputy Sheriff for the remote West End of Jefferson County located on the Pacific Coast in the town of Clearwater near Kalaloch, WA. Qualifications: Must have at least two years of law enforcement experience as a full time police officer with a recognized law enforcement agency and have been employed within the last 12 months. Must be a graduate of the Washington State Cr iminal Justice Training Commission Basic Academy, cer tified as eligible to hold a police commission in the State of Washington, or must be able to meet Washington State Equivalency requirements within six months of hire. Salary Range: $4943 to $6024 per month. Position also includes outpost premium pay and/or housing. Benefits: Medical, dental, vision, retirement, vacation, sick leave, and take home vehicle. For more information, go to t h e J e f fe r s o n C o u n t y Sheriff’s Office webpage jeffersonsheriff.org. Written test to be completed at Public Safety Testing (publicsafetytesting .com). PST physical test not required. Test score and Letter of Intent must be received on or before June 5, 2015, by Julie Shannon at Jefferson County, P.O. Box 1220, P o r t To w n s e n d , W A 98368 or email to jshannon@co.jefferson.wa.us.

NORTHWEST MARINE CENTER Seeking a 12 hr/week Assistant Registrar/Facility Rental Associate. This position is responsible for assisting with registration, facility rent a l s a n d wo r k i n g t h e front desk of the Northwest Maritime Center. Full job description can be found at http://nwmaritime.org/assistant-registrar-facilityrental-position/. Please send resume and cover letter to catherine@ nwmaritime.org. NWMC is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Position closes when filled.

Employment Opportunities • Pharmacist • Occupational Therapist • Physical Therapist • Cardiac Echosonographer • Clinic RN • RN Clinical Educator • Director, Clinical Nutrition • Social Work Case Manager For details on these positions and to apply online, visit www.olympicmedical.org.

NPIUSA in Port Angeles MULTI-CRAFT MECHANIC Responsible for general F E L L E R B U N C H E R maintenance of the op- O P E R ATO R : E x p e r i e r a t i n g e q u i p m e n t enced only. throughout the facility. (360)460-7292 May be required to perform any of the following crafts at any time: millwright, welding, pipefitting, machining, auto mechanic, painting and lubrication. Requirements: High school diploma plus journeyman level skills in one of folFull-Time lowing: millwright, pipeCertified Nursing fitter, machinist or heavy Assistant automotive equipment mechanic. Possess 2 Competitive pay & beneadditional skills (outside fits, warm, friendly enviof journeyman trade) in ronment.Tuition reimthe following: roll grind- bursement, to assist you ing, carpentry, pipefit- in meeting your goals. If t i n g , we l d i n g , o p t i c a l you want to belong to a alignment, vibration diteam we would love to agnostics, hydraulic talk to you. trouble-shooting, tig Avamere Olympic welding or machining. Rehab of Sequim 1000 S. 5th Avenue ELECTRICAL AND Sequim, WA 98382 INSTRUMENTATION MECHANIC (360) 582-3900 Responsible for the genPlease apply online at eral electrical and instruwww.avamere.com mentation maintenance or in person at facility of the operating equipment. Activities may involve exposure to live OFFICE POSITION: voltages of various lev- Pe n i n s u l a B o t t l i n g els in both the AC/DC Company is hiring for ranges along with pneu- front office position. m a t i c a n d h y d r a u l i c Salary DOE. Full time valve operations. Re- 40 plus hours a week, quirements: Successful Monday - Friday with completion of a 2-year benefits. MUST have electrical and instrumen- computer experience t a t i o n p r o g r a m . D e - and be proficient in Misirable Qualifications: crosoft Office and be a Experience with distribu- quick learner. Must be tive controls systems capable of standing for (DCS); programmable short periods of time logic controllers (PLC); and lifting up to 40 electric control systems; lbs.Bring Resume to a n d p r o c e s s c o n t r o l 311 S. Valley Street, valves and instrumenta- P o r t A n g e l e s , W A tion. 98362 Please send an updated resume to jobs@npiusa.com for each position Licensed Nurse needapplying for. Must have ed, flexible hours, with own necessar y tools. benefits. Call CherM u s t m e e t m i n i m u m rie.(360)683-3348 qualifications for consideration. NPIUSA is an AA/EEO employer and participates in E-Verify.

HIRING! Full time RN/LPN Come join our caring team in Sunny Sequim! Enjoy views of the Olympic Mountain range and benefit from the endless outdoor adventures! ·

New sub-acute unit

·

Low nurse:pt ratios

·

Competitive wages

Continue your nursing career by serving our geriatric population at our Rehabilitation and LTC SNF.

OPTHALMIC ASSISTANT: Eye clinic seeks friendly people person to assist Dr. with patient testing and cross train for other d u t i e s. E x p e r i e n c e a plus but will train the right person. Send resume to Peninsula Daily N ew s, P D N # 7 2 7 / E ye, Port Angeles, WA 98362

PAINTER: Local body shop looking for experienced painter, FT, paid on commission. Send resume to: Peninsula Daily News PDN#234/Painter Port Angeles, WA 98362

PORT ANGELES INN Is hiring for house keeping and front desk, previo u s ex p e r i e n c e p r e ferred. Send resume to 111 East Second St. Port Angeles, WA (360)452-9285

Apply online at www.teamavamere.com HOUSEKEEPERS WANTED! Part time position with advancement oppor tunities available. Looking for long term minded individuals who are looking to be part of a top hospitality team. No experience necessar y if you are a quick study. Wages DOE. Apply at: 714 Washington St. Port Townsend or call (360)385-6122 for more info. IMMEDIATE OPENING for CARRIER ROUTE Port Angeles Area. Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Interested parties must be 18 yrs of age, have valid Washington State Driver’s License, proof of insurance, and reliable vehicle. Early mor ning delivery Monday-Friday and Sunday. Apply in person 305 W 1st St, or send resume to tsipe@peninsuladailynews.com. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE. MEDICAL ASSISTANT Full time, competitive wage. Diploma from an accredited program. No p h o n e c a l l s. P i ck u p app. at Peninsula Children’s Clinic, 902 Caroline St., P.A. OFFICE ASSISTANT Full-Time, Duties: A/P, payroll, reception. preferred: accounting background, union, microsoft excel and access, accounting software. resume to: info@bruchandbruch.com by May 18th.

Program Specialist 4 Chemical Dependency Pe r m a n e n t p o s i t i o n available now at Clallam Bay Corrections Center Salary: $3819-$5010 mo Plus Benefits. Apply online: www.careers.wa.gov. For further information please call Laura at (360)963-3208 EOE

PST TECHNICIAN The Hoh Indian Tribe, a Washington State Native American community, is seeking a PST Technician. The position is based in Forks, Wa. Applicants should send a cover letter, resume, and three professional references to Hoh Indian Tribe C/O Human Resources P.O. Box 2196 Forks, WA 98331. Electronic applications can be sent to: hr@hohtribe-nsn.org For full announcement, go to: www.hohtribe-nsn.org. Opening closes 5/15/2015

The Hoh Indian Tribe, a Washington State Native American community, is seeking an Assistant Librarian – Early Literacy Coordinator. The position is based in Forks, Wa. Applicants should send a cover letter, resume, and three professional references to Hoh Indian Tribe C/O Human R e s o u r c e s P. O. B o x 2196 Forks, WA 98331. Electronic applications can be sent to hr@hohtribe-nsn.org . For full announcement, go to www.hohtribe-nsn.org. Opening Closes 5/15/2015.


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015 B7

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses Clallam County General General Wanted Clallam County Clallam County

The Quileute Tribe has a job opening for a “General Manager” they will be directly accountable for the overall supervision and day-today management of the operations and affairs of the Quileute Tribe. The general manager works directly with Council and carries out their directives. BA in public administration or business administration is preferred. Five years of progressively responsible and successful administ r a t i ve ex p e r i e n c e i n gover nment/non-profit environments including: policy development, planning, budget develo p m e n t , a n d wo r k i n g with federal, state and local agencies. Ability to be culturally sensitive. Experience in Tribal operations is required. C l o s e s Ju n e 5 , 2 0 1 5 Visit our website at www.quileutenation.org for a complete job application and job description or call (360) 3744366.

REPORTER (POULSBO, WA) The North Kitsap Herald is seeking a competent & enthusiastic FT news repor ter to cover local gover nment and community news. InDesign, page layout and photography skills preferred. We offer a competitive compensation and benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401K (currently with an employer match.) If you are interested in joining the team at the North Kitsap Herald, email us your cover letter, resume, and up to 5 samples of your work to: hr@soundpublishing.com Please be sure to note: ATTN: REPNKH in the subject line. Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the wor kplace. Check out our website to find out more about us! www.soundpublishing.com REPORTER The award-winning newspaper Jour nal of the San Juans is seeking an energetic, detailed-oriented reporter to write articles and features. Experience in photography and Adobe InDesign preferred. Applicants must be able to work in a team-oriented, deadline-driven environment, possess excellent w r i t i n g s k i l l s, h ave a knowledge of community n ew s a n d b e a bl e t o write about multiple topics. Must relocate to Friday Harbor, WA. This is a full-time position that includes excellent benefits: medical, dental, life insurance, 401k, paid vacation, sick and holidays. EOE . No calls p l e a s e. S e n d r e s u m e with cover letter, three or more non-retur nable clips in PDF or Text format and references to hr@soundpublishing.com or mail to: HR/GARJSJ Sound Publishing, Inc. 11323 Commando Rd W, Main Unit Everett, WA 98204

Great Choice for Mom! Nicely kept and maintained 2 Br., condo in S h e r wo o d V i l l a g e fo r 55+, close to all services. Master bedroom has walk-in closet and bath w i t h w a l k - i n s h o w e r. Laminate wood floors, fireplace. Fenced patio. MLS#290304/749383 $190,000 Chuck Murphy (360)808-0873 Mr. Mannys lawn and Windermere home care. We offer a Real Estate complete yard service: Sequim East trees bush trim and removal, moss removGREAT FOR al,dethatcher, flower bed ENTERTAINING picking, dump runs! All 3 Br., 2.5 ba. SunLand clean up no job too big h o m e . Fo r m a l d i n i n g or small. Also exper i- room and family room e n c e d h a n d y m e n l ow with propane fireplace. rates FREE estimates Kitchen island, desk and serving P.A. and Sequim wine rack is a cook’s dea r e a s c a l l M a n n y light. Large master and (253)737-7317. bath with soaking tub. Landscaped with autoPRIVATE HOME: Pri- matic sprinkler/drip sysva t e h o m e , p r i va t e tem. Sit on the patio and room, 35 yrs experi- be soothed by the waterence, 24 hour loving fall water feature. Enjoy all the country club care for senior lady. amenities of SunLand. (360)461-9804. MLS#290479/760002 $319,000 Roland Miller 105 Homes for Sale (360) 461-4116 Clallam County TOWN & COUNTRY Beautiful Remodeled Interior! This charming 5 Br., , 3 ba., 2,768 sf. craftsman was completely gutted and remodeled in 2014. T h e b ra n d n ew o p e n concept kitchen, dining, family room features an e a t i n g b a r, w e t b a r, wood stove and huge TV viewing area. 3 sets of d o u bl e Fr e n c h d o o r s add elegance; 1 opens to private cedar deck. Upper level has a peeka-boo view of the Straits. 1 car garage + covered carport. MLS#290207 $228,000 Sherry Grimes UPTOWN REALTY (360)417-2812 BECAUSE IT’S ALL ABOUT THAT VIEW! Dungeness Lighthouse and spit, Victoria, San Juan Islands, Mt Baker and the Juan de Fuca Strait. Level 1.14 acres, nice quiet neighborhood in area of well-kept homes. Walk to Cline Spit or take your kayak down to the Bay. MLS#290316/752363 $269,000 Cathy Reed (360)460-1800 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East COMFORT and TRANQUILITY Beautiful 3 Br., 2 ba with 1,792 sf., Vaulted ceilings, wood burning fireplace, dining area separate yet open, large kitchen w/ breakfast bar, quiet, pr ivate, fenced backyard MLS#766163/290546 $279,000 Tyler Conkle (360) 670-5978 WINDERMERE SUNLAND

ELEGANT HOME IN SUNLAND 3 Br., 2.5 ba. 3,624 sf., Plenty of storage, remodeled with quality features, top of line appliances, cherry cabinets, built-ins, heated tile floors, new roof, cozy library, large master bath, large sun filled atrium 4080 Employment overlooking golf course, Wanted golf cart garage, enjoy Sunland Amenities MLS#656643/281332 All your lawn care $365,000 needs. Mowing, edging, Team Schmidt pruning, hauling. Rea(360)460-0331 sonable rates. WINDERMERE (360)683-7702 The Quileute Tribe is acSUNLAND cepting applications for a Teacher for the Quileute Alterations and SewGreat Location and H e a d S t a r t P r o g r a m . ing. Alterations, mendView! Must have a CDA or an i n g , h e m m i n g a n d Enjoy panoramic views AA preferred and two s o m e h e a v y w e i g h t years’ experience work- s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o of the Strait from this ing for an early child- y o u f r o m m e . C a l l well maintained 4 Br., 2 hood program; also must (360)531-2353 ask for ba., 2,808 sf. home with custom architectural feah a ve a va l i d WA S T B.B. tures and upgraded apDriver’s license, first aid p l i a n c e s, i n c l u d i n g a card. DOE/Q Indian preference applies. Closes A Plus Lawn Service new chef’s gas cook top! M ay 2 2 , 2 0 1 5 Fo r a Comprehensive service Beautifully landscaped complete job descrip- including thatching and e x t e r i o r w i t h u n d e r tion/application contact edging with professional ground sprinkler system the personnel dept. at Results. Here today here includes a private cov(360)374-4366 or visit t o m o r r ow. B o o k n ow. ered patio with gazebo, our website atwww.qui- Senior Discounts. P A greenhouse, tool shed only. Local call: and secluded hot tub leutenation.org (360) 808-2146 area. Huge garage with workshop has additional Well-established dental Young Couple Early 60’s covered parking in front. office looking for experi- available for seasonal Home Warranty Protecenced Billing and Finan- cleanup, weeding, trim- tion Plan provided by cial Cordinator - M-Th. ming, mulching & moss seller! 8-5. Submit resume to removal. We specialize MLS#290702 $369,500 pjhilferty@gmail.com or in complete garden resSherry Grimes PJ @ PO Box 1116 Se- torations. Excellent refUPTOWN REALTY quim 98382 erences. 457-1213 (360)417-2786

Great Location Beautiful 1,760 sf. manufactured home in West Alder Mobile Home Park, a 55 or older park. T h e h o m e fe a t u r e s a covered entrance, kitchen with skylight, formal dining area, living area with propane stove, laundry room with utility sink, master suite with j e t t e d t u b, s e p a r a t e shower and double sinks. Heat pump, covered patio and low maintenance landscaping. MLS#290824 $69,500 Tom Blore 360-683-7814 PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE Great Opportunity! .89 level acres conveniently located close to town with lots of possibilities! Structures currently on the proper ty could be torn down to all ow fo r a mu l t i - fa m i l y dwelling, bed and breakfast, daycare and more. PUD power and water in at the road. City sewer in at the road. The possibilities are endless! MLS#290810 $50,000 Terry Neske 360-477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES Lots of Room 3 Br., 1.75 ba. rambler with over 1,700 sf. Home has family room, cozy fireplace, big kitchen and detached garage. Roll up your sleeves, grab your paint brush and tools and c o m e m a ke yo u r n ew home shine. MLS#290797 $159,900 Jennifer Holcomb (360) 460-3831 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES

Move In Ready! Well maintained 3 Br., 2 ba., 1,626 sf. rambler with open floor plan. Views of Bell Hill and Hurricane Ridge from living room. Well lit built-in desk nook. Kitchen has new cabinets with rollout shelving, glass front cabinetry, and large pant r y. K i n g s i ze m a s t e r b e d r o o m h a s wa l k - i n closet; master bath has double vanities. Locked, paved storage available for your boat or RV just 4 d o o r s a w a y. 3 7 0 America Blvd, Sequim Call Brooke for an easy showing. MLS#290718 $225,000 Brooke Nelson UPTOWN REALTY (360)417-2812 Well Maintained Newer Home Adjacent to Peninsula Golf Club - just minutes from downtown Port Angeles. Open floor plan with large windows and vaulted ceilings. Kitchen with breakfast bar and large pantry. Dining area off kitchen with sliding glass doors to patio and fenced back yard. Lots of sun exposure in the back yard makes for an abundant garden. Community storage area allows for secure storage of your boat or RV. MLS#290751 $175,000 Kelly Johnson (360) 477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES

SHERWOOD VILLAGE CONDO 2 Br., 1.5 ba. 1,302 sf. Well kept 2 story adjacent to greenbelt, enclosed patio, 2 car parking under carport, p r o ve n g o o d i n c o m e source or move in, close to all Sequim amenities. MLS#771251/290647 $100,000 Deb Kahle (360) 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND SPECTACULAR VIEWS 3 Br., 2 ba. 2,040 sf., Single level townhouse, high coffered ceilings, private patio adjacent to greenbelt, beautiful hardwood flooring, prop a n e f i r e p l a c e, gr e a t kitchen with stainless steel appliances, large s o a k i n g t u b, l a u n d r y room. MLS#767538/290590 $284,500 Terry Peterson (360) 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND Stunning and Stylish E l e g a n t 3 B r. , 3 b a . , near Peninsula College. This home has top quality from top to bottom. Yes there is a saltwater view, but this .47 acre landscaped home offers so much more and you can see it from the balcony! Split level floor plan features beautiful Koa wood flooring along with quartz counter-tops. Propane fireplace warms the home, and there is also a heat pump as well. Solid cherry cabinets line the kitchen along with a propane cook top. Downstairs is a large bonus room, full bath, utility room and also the two car attached garage MLS#290679 $379,900 Ed Sumpter Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim 360-683-3900 Waterfront Acreage Remarkable 3,724 sf., 4 B r. , 4 . 5 b a . , o n 1 . 7 9 acres lies on Sequim Bay. Two separate living s p a c e s, s h a r e d l a r g e boat dock and private beach plus an RV garage. Gorgeous Brazilian Cherry floors throughout the entr y level where you will find a formal living room, formal dining, kitchen and family/living room - all with outstanding water views. Up a few steps to the master b e d r o o m w i t h p r i va t e bath and 2 additional bedrooms plus a full guest bath. There is also a two car garage with an opener! MLS#290753 $865,000 Ed Sumpter Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim 360-683-3900

311 For Sale Manufactured Homes FSBO: MFG. 3 Br., 2 ba., in Por t Townsend. 1,333 sf., on foundation, large kitchen, 6x24 porch, 8x8 storage shed, large yard, good location, on cul de sac, close to stores and hospital. House empty or full household. $205,000. (360)385-3175

505 Rental Houses Clallam County Properties by

Inc.

417-2810

HOUSES/APT IN PORT ANGELES STUDIO..............$550/M A 1BD/1BA ........$575/M A 1BD/1BA ........$575/M H 1BD/1BA ........$575/M H 2BD/1BA ........$650/M A 2BD/2BA ........$675/M A 2BD/1.5BA .....$775/M A 2BD/1BA ........$900/M H 2BD/1BA ........$900/M H 4BD/1.75BA .$1000/M H 3BD/2BA ......$1300/M COMPLETE LIST @

1111 Caroline St. Port Angeles 605 Apartments Clallam County

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

The Hoh Indian Tribe, a Washington State Native American community, is seeking an Executive Director to manage operations and coordinate strategic planning. The position is based in Forks, Wa. Applicants should send a cover letter, resume, and three professional references to Hoh Indian Tribe C/O Human Resources P.O. Box 2196 For ks, WA 98331. Electronic applications can be sent to hr@hohtribe-nsn.org . For full announcement, g o t o w w w. h o h t r i b e nsn.org. Questions or additional information, contact Darel Maxfield 360-374-5415. Opening Closes 5/22/2015.

4040 Employment Media

Mowing Lawns, lots a n d f i e l d s . Tr i m ming,pruning of shrubs and trees. Landscape maintenance, pressure washing, light hauling and more. Free quotes. Tom 360-4607766. License: bizybbl868ma

(360)

551281329

The Hoh Indian Tribe, a Washington State Native American community, is seeking an ICW Case Worker. The position is based in Forks, Wa. Applicants should send a cover letter, resume, and three professional references to Hoh Indian Tribe C/O Human Resources P.O. Box 2196 Forks, WA 98331. Electronic applications can be sent to hr@hohtribensn.org . For full announcement, go to www.hohtribe-nsn.org. Questions or additional information, contact Darel Maxfield 360-3745415. Opening Closes 5/22/2015

The Quileute Tribe has an opening for a Prosecutor the successful person will be responsible for representing the Quileute Tribe in all criminal cases brought before the Quileute Tr ibal Cour t, and all delinquency and dependency cases brought before the Quil e u t e Ju ve n i l e C o u r t from initiation of the c a s e t h r o u g h t h e ex haustion of all appeals. B a c h e l o r ’s D e gr e e i n criminal justice field or related field desired. Have at least two years’ experience in legal field. Must successfully clear a criminal background and employment check. Visit our website at www.quileutenation.org for a complete job description and down load an application. Closes May 15, 2015 Submit a job description, cover letter and resume to larry.scroggins@quileutenation.org or call (360) 374- 4305

GEM In The City 3 Br., 2 ba. 2 car garage. Fenced backyard. Easy care landscaping. Granite counters, wood stove. Coved dining room ceiling. Call to see now! MLS#290651/772011 $315,000 Carol Dana (360)460-1800 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East

Properties by

Inc.

RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS

452-1326

EVERGREEN COURT APARTMENTS MOVE IN SPECIAL 1st MONTH FREE Located in beautiful Po r t A n g e l e s , WA . Now offering affordable one and two b e d r o o m u n i t s. I n come restrictions do apply. Call (360) 4526996 for details. 2202 W. 16th, Port Angeles.

P.A.: 1 Br., $600 mo., $300 dep., utilities incl., no pets. (360)457-6196.

665 Rental Duplex/Multiplexes SEQ: 2 Br. 1 ba. Bright, l a u n d r y, g a r a g e a n d large yard. $900. (360)774-6004

1163 Commercial Rentals

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

The Hoh Indian Tribe, a Washington State Native American community, is seeking Head Librarian. The position is based in Forks, Wa. Applicants should send a cover letter, resume, and three professional references to Hoh Indian Tribe C/O Human Resources P.O. Box 2196 For ks, WA 98331. Electronic applications can be sent to hr@hohtribe-nsn.org . For full announcement, g o t o w w w. h o h t r i b e nsn.org. Opening Closes 5/15/2015.

GOLF COURSE RD. SPECIAL! You have: great location, originality, functionality and elegance in this 3,716 sf. home. Complete remodel, beautiful décor, open concept, extremely large front room and extra family room, 3-4 beds, large deck in back. MLS#281755 $295,000 Ania Pendergrass (360)461-3973 Remax Evergreen

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

RO O F E R S WA N T E D : Driver’s license required. Tools will be supplied. (360)460-0517

Properties by

Inc.

RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS

452-1326

OFFICE FOR RENT O f f i c e i n d ow n t ow n Sequim Gazette building for sub-lease. 448-sq-foot, 2nd floor office for $500 a month. Perfect for accountant or other professional. Shared downstairs conference room, restroom. Contact John Brewer, publisher, (360)417-3500.

6025 Building Materials

6080 Home Furnishings

BAND SAWMILL: will cut your logs into custom lumber mill located on Deer Park Rd. 7’ to 20’ length. Online Newspaper Ad has picture and more infor mation. call 360-460-9226 for an appointment or questions

D E S K : O a k r o l l t o p, beautiful. $300/obo. Proceeds to charity. (360)809-0393

6135 Yard & Garden RIDING LAWNMOWERS $400 to $900. Some with bags. Call Kenny, (360)775-9779.

MISC: 2 White vinyl windows. (1) white grid 71X35 (1) plain, 46X 54. $50./ea. Sold white entry 8142 Garage Sales door, left hand, brass Sequim C A B I N E T S : C u s t o m handle and keys. $200. kitchen, solid Oak, 12 Antique drop leaf table G A R AG E S A L E : Fr i Sat.-Sun., 8:30-4 p.m., unites, upper and low- 42”. $130. (360)683-1851 7 0 9 W. F i r. S e q u i m . ers. $2,000/obo. Clothes, furniture, kitch(360)582-6308 en items, kids items, col6100 Misc. lector toys and comics, Merchandise books, movies, applianc6035 Cemetery Plots es. Let’s make a deal, EASEL: Large Man- everything must go. BURIAL SITE: In Mt. hattan Easel by RicheAngeles Memorial Park, son Company, model GARAGE SALE: Sat. Garden of Devotion. # 8 8 7 1 2 0 “ H .” U n 8-2p.m., 84 E. Quail, $1,999. (360)452-9611. boxed, brand new. Reoff Silberhorn, off Faltail price $2,100. Askcon. Quality items, C E M E T E RY P L OT: i n g j u s t $ 1 , 4 0 0 . h o u s ewa r e s, d e c o r, G a r d e n o f D evo t i o n , James, (360)582-6905 gently used clothing, $2,500. (360)477-9071 gr e a t b o o k s, s o m e MISC: Bar, 6 stools and thing for everyone, too wall mirror, $500. 11’ 6045 Farm Fencing much to mention, all aluminum boat, $375. 25 proceeds go to Mu& Equipment Cal. pistol, $250. Truck jeres de Maiz Opp’y ladder/boat rack, motor- Fdn. H a y f o r S a l e : 1 s t cycle reciever hitch carricutting from 2014, or- er, or truck canopy, $150 GARAGE Sale: Thurs.c h a r d g r a s s / a l fa l fa e a . W a s h m a c h i n e , S a t . , 9 - 3 p . m . , 5 7 2 mix. $6.00 per bale. treadmill, quad/motorcy- Washington Harbor Rd. $ 8 . 0 0 p e r b a l e h ay c l e r a m p s , $ 7 5 e a . and in Baywood Village. also available. Carls- Ammo-all items for sale Secretar y desk, silver or trade, credit cards acborg area. plated tea service, roll cepted. (360)461-4189. 360-477-1570 away bed, poloriod camMISC: Full kitchen set of ers, carousels, RV hitchI R R I G AT I O N E Q U I P - cabinets,$350. Cabinets es, and much misc. MENT. 300’/+- 3” pipe; 9 for 2 bathrooms, $75 ea. fittings including elbows, Futon, $75. Leather reTs, end plugs, line cou- clining couch, $175. Re- YARD SALE: 10th Anplers; 10 3/4” risers with c l i n i n g l e a t h e r c h a i r, nual Diamond Point Community Yard Sale. sprinkler heads, gaskets; $95. All prices are OBO. S a t . 5 / 1 6 , 8 - 2 p. m . foot valve, hand pump (360)582-1215 We have 30 houses p r i m e r, 2 ” b a l l f l o a t v a l v e . M u s t t a k e a l l . M I S C : S h r i n k w r a p participating this year, $ 4 0 0 . 3 6 0 - 4 6 0 - 2 7 9 6 . staion, $150. Grizzly 15” t r u l y s o m e t h i n g fo r planer, $400. 14” Chain- everyone! Take 101 to Leave message/text. saw, $35. Spotterscope Diamond Point Road with tripod, $50. Double and follow signs. N E W H O L L A N D sleeper sofa, $175. TRACTOR. 2008 4WD Chipper/ shredder, $150. Diesel tractor with front Assorted shop benches, 8182 Garage Sales e n d l o a d e r. M o d e l $15. (360)681-6880. PA - West T1110. Top condition, 28 hp, used only 124 PET CRATE: New Pet13th Annual hours. $12,000. co crate, used once, 48” Benevolence Fund (360)683-0745 black with premium foam Rummage Sale jeffaok@hotmail.com pad. Ex cond. $190. Fri.-Sat., May 15-16, 9-4 (360)417-6614 p.m.,Joyce Bible Church TRACTOR: ‘48 Ford 8N. Gymnasium, 50470 with 4’ brush hog. Hwy. 112, just east of 6105 Musical $2,600. (360)928-3015 Crescent School in Instruments Joyce. Furniture, 6050 Firearms & B A N J O : S a v a n n a clothes, games, toys, Ammunition # 5 V 0 6 0 , n e w, t r a v e l kitchen gadgets, hobby, size, soft case, book and bed and bath items, and much more! There are dvd for beginners. $250. hundreds of items to WE BUY FIREARMS (360)683-6642 b r ow s e a n d bu y ! Fo r CASH ON THE SPOT ~~~ ANY & ALL ~~~ Tenor Sax. Legacy Stu- more information about TO P $ $ $ PA I D I N - dent model bought new d o n a t i o n s o r t h e B e CLUDING ESTATES thru Amazon for a spare. nevolence Fund, contact A N D O R E N T I R E incl mouth piece, neck M a r y l a n T h a y e r COLLECTIONS Call strap and soft case. Se- (360)928-9561. 360-477-9659 quim, $200 price firm. MOVING SALE (360)912-4677 MULTI - FAMILY: Sat., May 16th, 8-3 p.m. 1424 6055 Firewood, 6115 Sporting W. 5 t h S t F u r n i t u r e , Fuel & Stoves home decor, antiques, Goods kid stuff and more. FIREWOOD: $179 delivPriced to sell. ered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special for $499. Credit card ac8183 Garage Sales cepted. (360)582-7910 PA - East www.portangeles firewood.com BENEFIT YARD SALE Fri.-Sat. 9-3 p.m., 33 PeFIREWOOD: 6 CORD t e rson Rd. R corner ADULT TRIKE: Comfy, SPECIAL, $899. 2 4 s p e e d , f i t s w i d e Lewis Rd side. All pro2 weeks only! h e i g h t ra n g e p e r fe c t , ceeds benifit a non profit www.portangelesfire quality trike can deliver Service Dog Training for wood.com Veterans. Kayak, furni$980. (360)554-4215 (360)582-7910 ture, colectables, glass FIREWOOD: Log truck BIKE: ‘05 Ran’s Rocket, ware much more. exc. condition, recumfull. $1500. bent bike, red. $600/obo (360)460-4294. THREE FAMILY GAR(360)681-0290 AGE SALE: Sat., May B I K E S : H i s a n d h e r s 16, 9 - 2 p.m. 4 miles 6065 Food & m o u n t a i n b i ke s. Tr e k South on Deer Park Farmer’s Market Rd then turn left onto 800 sport. $300 for both. Ripplebrook and follow (360)683-4873 BEER GEAR: Steeping t h e s i g n s. E xe r c i s e pot and bags, spouted equipment, paver and bu cke t s, hy g r o m e t e r, edging stones, Corian 6125 Tools bubblers, brushes, funcutoffs, dolls, banks, nel, glass car boy, 15# collectibles, craft supmalt, bottle capper, cork TOOLS: Delta “Model plies, small furniture, setter, 60+ brown latch 1 0 ” R a d i a l A r m S aw, new and used lamib o t t l e s, r e c i p e b o o k . great condition. $150 nate flooring and much $350. (360)460-2796. obo., Porter cable table m o r e . N O E A R LY Text or leave message. r o u t e r , $ 1 0 0 o b o . , BIRDS, PLEASE! C r a f t s m a n t a bl e s aw with table. $100 obo. 6080 Home (360)683-5090.

7035 General Pets

Furnishings

FURNITURE: King maple bedroom set, $450 o b o. 7 ’ s o fa a l m o s t new,$100 obo. Thomasville dining room set, 6 chairs, table, china cabinet. $1200. Full service china set from Japan, N o r i t a ke 5 6 9 3 , $ 5 0 0 obo. 2 coffee tables. (360)681-6825

6140 Wanted & Trades

POODLES: Standard Parti. 4 females, 1 male, $1,000-1,200. WANTED: Old tools and (360)670-9674 hand planes. Call Les at (360)385-0822 PUPPIES: Border Collie p u p s, r e d a n d w h i t e, WANTED: Riding lawnmowers, working or not. black and white, tri color. First shots. $250. to Will pickup for free. $400 each. (360)732Kenny (360)775-9779 4358 (360)865-7497.

6010 Appliances

RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS

452-1326

WASHER / DRYER Whirlpool, 2 yrs old. $700. (916)730-3801.

CENTRAL P.A.: Charming cottage. Fenced yard 6025 Building a n d g a r a g e, 2 b r. , 1 bath, new heat pump. Materials N o s m o k i n g , p e t s by per mission, refs. re- FLOORING: Mohawk quired. $950. Laminate. Brand new, (360)460-2502 beautiful oak colored, still in boxes. 380sq. ft. P.A.: 1212 W 11TH 4 Selling for $2. a sq. ft., Br., 2 bath, fenced yard. must sell as lot. $950. (360)565-8383 (360)477-5111 43OCCASION

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B8 WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 551210231 5-10

SERVICE D •I •R •E •C •T •O •R •Y

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Specializing in Decks • Patios and Porches Cedar • Composite • Tigerwood • Sunwood – Design and Construction –

TREE SERVICE

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Quality Work at Competitive Prices

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• Site Prep • Utilities • Septic Systems • Roads/Driveways

Lic. # ANTOS*938K5

Excavator - CAT - Backhoe Loader - Roller 5 & 10 yd Dump Trucks

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Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 9820 Motorhomes

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles Others Others

I N F L ATA B L E B OAT: 12’x60” self-bailing river boat, 24” tubes, Alaska series, Kenai model with rowing frame, oars, flatbed trailer. All like new. Very durable bottom, will not abrade on rocks durMOTORHOME: ‘06 Win- ing low water, por tage All Elec. NEV Neighborhood elec. Vehicle. nebago Aspect 26’. Very and drags. $3,200. (360)808-2344. 4 8 vo l t N e a r l y n ew clean inside, little sign of batteries, good tires, wear outside. Mileage is TRAILER: ‘96 Shoreup graded battery 57,000 on a Ford 450 lander, galvanized, fits charger. charge with engine. Options include 19-21’ boat, many new regular household curaluminum wheels, awnrent. Good for student, ing over slide out, trailer parts. $850/obo. (360)460-9285 can’t go over 25 mph. hitch, full body paint, rear vision camera, and TRAILER: EZ Loader F o r m o r e d e t a i l s much more. This rig is galvanized, 17’-19’, extra $3,000. (360)385-1583. easy to drive and ma- long tongue. Comes with n e u ve r i n t r a f f i c a n d free boat. $900. parking lots. Nada valuaCHEVY: ‘07 Silverado, (360)928-9436 tion $50,600. $48,000. Z71 Crew Cab, shor t (360)681-0881 box 4x4, 4.8L V8, auto, traction control, alloys, M O T O R H O M E : ‘ 8 5 9817 Motorcycles good tires, trailer brake, Class C, 3,000k mi on spray-in-bedliner, privamotor and tires. $3,000 cy glass, keyless, reobo. (360)808-1134 mote star t, pwr windows, locks and MOTORHOME: Class A, mirrors, cruise, tilt, AC, Damon ‘95 Intruder. 34’, dual zone, climate conDiesel 230 Cummins turtrol, info. center, CD boed after cool, with 6 satellite radio, onstar, speed Allison, Oshgosh duel front airbags. f ra m e, 8 0 k m i l e s, n o $19,995 s l i d e s , p l u s m o r e ! HARLEY: ‘06 Custom GRAY MOTORS Deluxe. 25K miles. $21,500/obo. 457-4901 Comes with extras: rear (360)683-8142 graymotors.com seat, windshield, sissy RV: ‘ 9 3 W i n n e b a g o. bar. New tires. Harley Class A, very good con- Custom Paint #123 of dition, 88k mi., 454 eng., 150. Immaculate condilots of storage, full bed- tion. $12,500. Call Lil room, high rise toilet, John Kartes. (360)460-5273 self leveling jacks. $18,000. (360)457-3979

9832 Tents & Travel Trailers TRAILER: 01’ Arctic Fox 26X with slide. Sleeps 6, rear bedroom. Excellent, o n e o w n e r . $12,500 452-7969 or 452-5990 T R A I L E R : ‘ 0 8 , Jay c o Bunaglo, 40’, with 36’ aluminum awning, 2 slides. $17,500. (206)595-0241

HONDA: ‘00 Valkyrie Standard model, OEM windshield, National Cruiserliner hard bags. Cruise control, Rivco center stand. 20,100 miles. Bring cash and big bike experience if you want a test ride. $5,250. (360)460-1658.

CHEVY: ‘80 Monza 2+2. V-8, 350 c.i. engine, Alu m . m a n i fo l d , H o l l ey carb., alum. radiator and trans. cooler, A.T. floor console, Posi 3:08, 5 stud axels and hubs, front and rear sway bars, disc brakes, pwr. steeri n g . N ew Au t o M e t e r gauges, paint and tires. $4,200. Located in Quilcene, WA. Call Brad (360)774-0915.

TRAILER: ‘99 Sierra, 25’, needs TLC. $7000. (360)417-0803 MOTORCYCLE: ‘04 Honda Shadow 750 TRAVEL TRAILER: ‘06 , Aero, Blue, 8K miles, Thor , Dutchmen/Rainier s h o w r o o m c o n d i t i o n . model 18/SC trailer for $3400. (360)582-9782. sale , good condition please contact us at CHEVY: Volt, ‘13, Black (360)732-4271 with premium package. Mint condition with less than 5,800 miles on it! 9802 5th Wheels Includes leather seats, navigation, ABS brakes, alloy wheels, automatic 5TH WHEEL: Alpenlite, temperature control, and ‘83, 19’ well maintained, Motorcycle. 2007 Honmuch more. Still under ever ything works. d a R e b e l m o t o r c y c l e warranty! $23,000. Call $2,700. (808)-895-5634 C M X 2 5 0 , R e d , 3 0 0 360-457-4635 miles $2,400. 9808 Campers & (360) 582-9725 FORD: ‘05 Escape, Canopies XLT, 4x4 spor t utility, MOTORCYCLE: ‘98 3.0L 6 cyl, auto, alloys, Honda, 1100 ST, Red. CAMPER/TRUCK: ‘93 roof rack, keyless, pwr (360)452-9829 Lance camper, model windows, locks, mirrors 880, very clean, 1 ownand seats, cruise, tilt er, self contained. Chevy SUZUKI: ‘12 Blvd. Cruis- AC 6 CD stereo, dual 1 ton pickup dually, good er, VL 800, immaculate, f r o n t a i r b a g s , 4 3 K condition. ext cab, 113K extras. $5,000 obo. Call miles. miles, fully furnished and for details. 452-3764 $10,995 ready to go. $7,500. GRAY MOTORS WANTED: Honda CT70 (360)457-9568 457-4901 or SL 70. (360)681-2846 graymotors.com CAMPER: Winnebago YAMAHA: ‘05 Yamaha for 3/4 ton 4x8 bed pick- Y Z 1 2 5 , r u n s g r e a t . up. Sleeps 2 adults and $1,300 (360)461-9054 4 kids. Perfect for hunting or fishing. $750 obo. 9180 Automobiles (360)681-2443

Classics & Collect.

BMW: ‘07 Z4 3.0 SI R o a d s t e r. 4 7 K m i l e s, MAZDA: ‘99 Miata, Cusw e l l m a i n t a i n e d , l i ke tom leather seats, excelnew. $20,000. lent condition. $7,300. (360)477-4573 (360)461-0929 TENT TRAILER: Coachman ‘11 Clipper 126 Spor t. Pop up, Queen bed on each end. Fr idge, stove, stereo, furnace, hot water heater, excellent condition. Ve r y l i t t l e u s e. Ta bl e with bench seats, sofa and table that folds into bed. Must see to appreciate! $6,500. Call (360)640-2574 or (360)640-0403.

9050 Marine Miscellaneous BAYLINER: ‘79 Victoria, 2 br cabin cruiser. Great cond. Newer engine and outdrive. New upholstry. $6,500 obo. (360)912-4922

SUBARU: ‘06 Impreza, 2.5l AWD wagon, 4 cyl, auto, alloys, new tires, roof rack, tinted, pwr windows, lock and mirrors, cruise tilt, AC, CD stereo, dual front airbags, 97K miles. $10,995 BUICK: ‘66 Skylark CusGRAY MOTORS tom Convertible, Custom 457-4901 paint, Ready for Sumgraymotors.com mer.$16,500. 683-3408 C H E V Y: ‘ 0 3 S S R . 8 k SUZUKI: ‘07 SX4 AWD Spor tback, all wheel original miles, $22,500. dr ive, 2.0L 4 CYL, 5 (360)640-1688 s p d . m a n u a l , a l l oy s, Chevy: ‘57, project car. good tires, roof rack, R o l l i n g s h e l l , r u s t y. keyless, pwr windows, $600. (360)452-9041. locks and mirrors, AC, Sony, CD, stereo, dual JEEP: 1945 Willys Mili- f r o n t a i r b a g s , 8 2 K t a r y. R e s t o r e d , n o t miles. show. $10,000 obo. $8,995 (360)928-3419 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

BOAT: ‘11, Grandy, 12’, rowing / sailing skiff, built by the boat school in 2011. Includes the full sailing package, with oars and trailer. Good OLDS: ‘61 F-85 2 door, shape. $4,000/obo. Alum 215 V8, auto. runs, (360)850-2234 drives. Solid body. Think “Jetsons”! Good glass. BOAT: 19’ Fiberglass, All stock except custom trailer, 140 hp motor. interior! Factory manu$2,800. 683-3577 als. Possible trade for? $3500./obo. BOAT: ‘96 Sea Doo (360)477-1716 Jet boat. $4,500. (360)452-3213 VW: ‘70, Karmann Ghia,

B OAT: G l a s s p l y 1 7 ’ , good cond., excellent fishing and crabbing setup, great running 90hp Yamaha and 15hp Evinrude elec star t, power tilt, new pot puller with pots. 4,800. (360)775-4082 BOAT: Glassply, 18’, 90 hp ENV. 15 hp. kicker, ready to fish. $4,700. (360)808-4692 BOAT: Searay, 18’, fun family boat. $6,500. (360)457-3743 or (360)460-0862

p r o j e c t , m a ny ex t ra s. $750 or trade. (360)681-2382 VW BEETLE: 1969 Conver tible. Must sell this 1 9 6 9 V W C o nve r t i bl e with a lots of spare parts, manuals and specialty VW tools. This is a restorable car, and none of the legendary charm of VW’s has been lost with this rig. The e n g i n e s t i l l r u n s, a l though the car hasn’t b e e n d r i ve n i n t h r e e years. Title clean and c l e a r ! N o t ra d e s j u s t cash. If you are interested, I can provide LOTS more details and pictures. $2,500. Please call (605)224-4334.

WHAT A DEAL Chevy: ‘70 3/4T 4x4, automatic. GMC: ‘72 1/2T 4x4 4 speed. BOTH for CHB: ‘81 34’ TriCabin $5,500. (360)452-5803 Trawler, (Por t Ludlow). Well maintained! Ready to cruise. fiberglass hull, 9292 Automobiles single Ford Lehman dieOthers sel engine, bow thruster, v berth and stern state CHEVY: ‘11 HHR. LT. rooms, 2 heads, elec- Ve r y g o o d c o n d i t i o n . tronics: radar, chart plot- 113K ml. $15,000/obo. ter, auto pilot and more, (360)640-3945 dingy with outboard, recent bottom paint and HYUNDAI: ‘09 Elantra, 4 zinks. $33,900. d o o r. 9 , 2 0 0 m i l e s, (360)301-0792 to view. $11,500. (425)985-3596

9934 Jefferson County Legals SMALL WORKS ROSTER RCW 39.04.155 provides that school districts establish a SMALL WORKS ROSTER of Qualified Contractors who wish to receive bidding information and be considered for performing work on public works projects, estimated to cost less than $300,000. Applications are now being received by the Chimacum School District No. #49, PO Box 278. 91 West Valley Rd, Chimacum, WA 98325 for contractors who wish to be placed on the District’s Small Works Roster for 2015. If you are already on the list, please use updated form for an email address or other items that have changed. In order to qualify, the following requirements must be met: 1. Registered contractor in the State of Washington. 2. Be able to provide Pay m e n t a n d Pe r fo r mance Bonds. 3. Pay Prevailing Wage Rates. 4. Comply with federal, state and local laws regarding non-discrimination and affirmative action. Interested contractors should follow link http://www.csd49.org/domain/46 for an application form. The form can be downloaded from the Maintenance Depar tment. Pub: May 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 2015 Legal No:631982

9556 SUVs Others

Momma

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015 B9

by Mell Lazarus

MERCURY: ‘95 Cougar FORD: ‘05, Expedition, XR7, 4.6 V8. AC, auto 169K ml., r uns great, t r a n . , s u n r o o f . 7 7 K with winter tires. $4,700. miles. $2500. 681-5068 (360)775-4301 SCION: ‘06, TC, 138K mi., new tires, brakes, alignmnet, sunroof. $5,800. (360)912-2727 THUNDERBIRD: ‘96, classic, runs great, reduced, 140K ml. FORD: ‘11, Explorer $2400/obo. 775-6681. Limited. 79,500 miles. xcellent Condition. 9434 Pickup Trucks E4-wheel drive, loaded w/ Others o p t i o n s : n av s y s t e m , touch screen, parking C H E V Y : ‘ 7 6 3 / 4 To n assist, remote locks and pick-up GREAT ENGINE star t, back-up camera New 454, carb, battery, $28,000. (360)797-3247. radiator, fuel pump, turbo 400, short shaft. Must FORD: ‘97 Explorer XL, t a k e e n t i r e t r u c k . 4x4, 155,043 miles, $2,000/obo. Before 6pm $2,500. (360)417-2967. (360)461-6870 JEEP: ‘01 Grand CheroCHEVY: ‘94 Half Ton, kee LTD. 153k mi., ex Z71. $3000. cond. All service papers. (360)452-4336 Black w/ bone interior. $5650 obo. (360)457CHEVY: ‘97 Chevrolet 4898 or (360)504-5633. 3500 4x4 dully, reg. cab 9’ flatbed, 6.5 liter turbo JEEP: ‘11 Grand Cherodiesel, 116K ml. Also kee. 25K miles, garaged, comes with 3’ removable immaculate. $27,000. m e t a l b e d r a c k s . (360)417-6956 or $6,000/obo. (360)775-0905 (360)640-0829 DODGE: ‘93 Cummins. JEEP: ‘84 Grand Chero2x4 with protech flatbed. kee, wrecked nose clip. 1 3 5 k m i . $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 . $800/obo 360-912-2727 (360)271-6521. J E E P : ‘ 9 7 , W ra n g l e r, FORD: ‘04 Ranger. 1 Sahara. Low mileage, owner, low mileage, 35K r e c e n t e n g i n e w o r k . miles. Exel. condition, Some r ust, r uns well. bed liner and Tonneau R e m o v a b l e t o p a n d doors. Must sell. $2900. cover. $10,000 firm. In Sequim. (360)797-1097 (303)330-4801. FORD: ‘83 Pick up. 4x4. SUZUKI: ‘87 Samurai. 2 gas tanks. 48,365 mi. 95k mi. $2,900/obo. $2500. (360)683-3967 (360)477-9580 FORD: ‘96 Ranger EX with canopy. 4 Cyl. new clutch and tires, good 9730 Vans & Minivans body. $3,500. Others (360)452-2118 FORD: ‘06 Passenger WHITE VOLVO: ‘86 230 van. V-8, 350, Runs exCummings, Single axle c e l l e n t , g o o d t i r e s . day cab. $2,700/obo. $7,500 obo. 460-2282 (360)640-0111

9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County NOTICE OF PUBLIC TIMBER SALE Depar tment of Natural Resources will auction timber to the highest bidder. Contract terms and bidding infor mation is available by calling Olympic Region at (360)374-2800 or by visiting the Olympic Region Office at Forks or Product Sales & Leasing Division, Olympia. Bidding begins at 10:00 a.m. at the Olympic Region Office, Forks, WA on June 17, 2015. TEXAS PANHANDLE, App. No. 090290, approximately 10 miles by road southwest of Sequim, WA on part(s) of Sections 7, 8, 16, 17 and 18 all in Township 29 Nor th, Range 4 West, W.M., compr ising approximately 5,098 Mbf of T i m b e r. M i n i mu m a c ceptable bid will be $1,355,000.00. This sale is Export Restricted. BLYN REPEATER, App. No. 090790, approximately 9 miles by road southeast of Sequim, WA on par t(s) of Sections 5, 7, 8, 17, 18, 19, 20 and 29 all in Township 29 North, Range 2 West, W.M., comprising approximately 8,130 Mbf of Timber. Minimum acceptable bid will be $1,765,000.00. This sale is Export Restricted. OFFICIAL NOTICE OF DATE AND PLACE FOR COMMENCING AN APPEAL: Notice is given under S E P A , R C W 43.21C.075, WAC 19711-680 of Department of Natural Resource’s action described in (4) below. 1. Any person whose property rights or interests will be affected and feels himself aggrieved by the Department action may appeal to Clallam County Superior Court within 30 days of May 5, 2015, pursuant to RCW 79.02.030. 2. Any action to set aside, enjoin, review, or otherwise challenge such action on the grounds of noncompliance with the provisions of RCW 43.21C (State E nv i r o n m e n t a l Po l i c y Act) shall be commenced on or June 4, 2015. 3 . P u r s u a n t t o WAC 197-11-680(4)(d), no appeal may be filed under RCW 43.21C more than 30 days after the date in (1) above, unless an app e a l wa s f i l e d u n d e r RCW 79.02.030 as in (1) above. 4. Description of Department Action: Approval for sale of the proposed timber sale(s), shown above. 5. Type of environmental review under SEPA: A determination of non-significance or mitigated determination of non-significance was issued for each timber sale. 6. Documents may be examined during regular business hours at the Olympic Region Office of the Department of Natural Resources and at Olympia Headquarters, Product Sales & Leasing Division, 1111 Washington St SE, Olympia, WA 98504-7016, (360) 9021340. 7. This notice filed by: Drew Rosanbalm, Assistant Region Manager, Olympic Region Office 411 Tillicum Lane, Forks, WA 98331-9271 (360)374-2800. Pub: May 13, 2015 Legal No: 631232

JANITORIAL SERVICE PROVIDER LIST P.U.D. No. 1 of Clallam county is soliciting the names of service providers who would like to be included on a Janitorial Service provider List for janitorial service needs of the District in accordance with State of Wa s h i n g t o n r e q u i r e ments. If you would like to be considered for inclusion on the list, contact Karen Abbott at 360.565.3212. You must be a licensed and registered business with the State of Washington and not be on any State or Federal debarment list to be considered. PUB: May 13, 2015 Legal No: 631529 Summary of Ordinance Adopted by the Port Angeles City Council On May 5, 2015

Ordinance No. 3534 THIS ORDINANCE of the City of Port Angeles, Washington, vacates a portion of street and alley rights of way in Port Angeles, Clallam County, Washington. This Ordinance shall be effective 5 (five) days after publication of summary, and compliance with Sections 2, 3 and 5 of the ordinance. This ordinance is not subject to referendum. The full texts of the Ordinances are available at City Hall in the City Clerk’s office, on the City’s website at www.cityofpa.us, or will be mailed upon request. Office hours are Monday through Friday 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Jennifer Veneklasen City Clerk Pub.: May 13, Legal No. 632181

2015

9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Invitation to Bid The Makah Tribe is soliciting bids to install 5,660 feet of 8” PVC water main to homes along and across the Sooes River. The Tribe requests bids from contractors experienced in performing the work described in this request. Contacts: Contract information, including project specifications and drawings may be obtained from: Rose Taylor, Executive Assistant Makah Tribe P.O. Box 115 Neah Bay, WA 98357 Phone: (360) 645-3103 Fax: (360) 645-3112 rose.taylor@makah.com Bid Closing Date: 4:00 p.m. on June 3, 2015 Pub.: May 3, 6, 10, 13, 2015 Legal No. 629788 SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR CLALLAM COUNTY In re the Estate of Henry J. Rhodes III, Deceased. NO. 15-4-00142-6 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 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 Pe r s o n a l R e p r e s e n t a t i v e o r t h e Pe r s o n a l Representative’s attorney 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(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the Decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date of First Publication: April 29, 2015 Personal Representative: Mindi Blanchard of Bridge Builders, Ltd. Attorney for Personal Representative: Simon Barnhart, WSBA #34207 Address for mailing or service: PLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM 403 S. Peabody, Port Angeles, WA 98362 (360) 457-3327 Court of Probate Proceedings: Clallam County Superior Court Probate Cause Number: 15-4-00142-6 PUB: April 29, May 6, 13, 2015 Legal No:629176 NO. 15 4 00139 6 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 THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF DOROTHY E. WILSON, 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 attorney 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(1); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claim against both the decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: May 13, 2015 Robert L. Gudgel, Personal Representative ADDRESS FOR MAILING OR SERVICE: MARY F. PFAFF-PIERCE Attorney for Personal Representative 218 East Seventh Street P.O. Box 1001 Port Angeles, Washington 98362 (360) 457-5390 Court of probate proceedings and cause number: Clallam County Superior Court, 223 E. 4th St., Port Angeles, WA 98362 Cause Number: See Above Pub: May 13, 20, 27, 2015 Legal No. 632029

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM Case No.: 14-2-01107-8 SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS OF THE CWALT, INC., ALTERNATIVE LOAN TRUST 2007-23CB MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2007-23CB , Plaintiff, vs. ESTATE OF CARL D. STANLEY; CHRISTINE KISSLER; EMERALD HIGHLANDS HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION; UNKNOWN HEIRS, SPOUSE, LEGATEES AND DEVISEES OF THE ESTATE OF CARL D. STANLEY; UNKNOWN HEIRS, SPOUSE, LEGATEES, AND DEVISEES OF THE ESTATE OF LESLIE GORDON-STANLEY; DOES 1-10 INCLUSIVE; UNKNOWN OCCUPANTS OF THE SUBJECT REAL PROPERTY; PARTIES IN POSSESSION OF THE SUBJECT REAL PROPERTY; PARTIES CLAIMING A RIGHT TO POSSESSION OF THE SUBJECT PROPERTY; AND ALSO, ALL OTHER UNKNOWN PERSONS OR PARTIES CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, ESTATE, LIEN, OR INTEREST IN THE REAL ESTATE DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT HEREIN Defendants. To: Estate of Carl D. Stanley; UNKNOWN HEIRS, SPOUSE, LEGATEES AND DEVISEES OF THE ESTATE OF CARL D. STANLEY; UNKNOWN HEIRS, SPOUSE, LEGATEES, AND DEVISEES OF THE ESTATE OF LESLIE GORDON-STANLEY; DOES 1-10 inclusive; UNKNOWN OCCUPANTS of the subject real property; PARTIES IN POSSESSION of the subject real property; PARTIES CLAIMING A RIGHT TO POSSESSION of the subject property; and also, all other unknown persons or parties claiming any right, title, estate, lien, or interest in the real estate described in the Complaint herein THE STATE OF WASHINGTON TO THE SAID DEFENDANTS: You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to wit, within sixty days after the 15 day of April, 2015, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court, and answer the complaint of the Plaintiff, BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON, F/K/A THE BANK OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE, ON BEHALF OF THE HOLDERS OF THE ALTERNATIVE LOAN TRUST 2007-23CB, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2007-23CB, and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorneys for Plaintiff, McCarthy & Holthus, LLP at the office below stated; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. The basis for the complaint is a foreclosure of the property commonly known as 20 Coral Dr, Sequim, WA 983824736, CLALLAM County, Washington as a result of a default under the terms of the note and deed of trust. DATED: April 9, 2015 McCarthy & Holthus, LLP /s/ Mary Stearns [ ] Jessica Grape, WSBA #46436 [X ] Mary Stearns, WSBA #42543 108 1st Avenue South, Ste. 300 Seattle, WA 98104 (855) 809-3977 Attorneys for Plaintiff Pub: Pub: April 15, 22, 29, May 6, 13, 20, 2015

Legal No: 626290

QUILEUTE TRIBEREQUEST FOR PROPOSALCONTRACTOR SERVICESProject: QUILEUTE TRIBE TIMBER SALE PREPARATIONClallam County LaPush, Washington Quileute Indian Reserva t i o n P r o p o s a l D u e D a t e : M ay 2 2 , 2 0 1 5 , 4:00pmGENERAL INFORMATION AND PROJECT DESCRIPTIONOn February 27, 2012 President Barack Obama signed H.R. 1162 (Quileute Tsunami and Flood Protection) legislation into law. This ceded 785 acres of federal land to the Quileute Nation, which is incorporated into the reservation as tribal trust lands. The land legislation bill allocated this “higher ground” to the tribe in order for the Quileute Nation to move the tribal school, senior center, administrative offices, and residences out of the tsunami and floodplain zone. It is the desire of the Quileute Tribe at this time to contract for services to prepare for the sale and harvest of land located in the 275 acre tract of the Southern Lands portion of the land to prepare for development of those lands. The attached figure shows the area of land to be prepared for timber sale and harvest.PROJECT LOCATIONThe Quileute Indian Reservation, located in LaPush Washington.SCOPE OF WORKThe Quileute Indian Tribe requests proposals (RFP) from qualified firms to provide the following services. In conjunction with staff from the Quileute Tribe the successful bidder will perform to Tribal and BIA standards the following duties:All aspects of timber sale preparation of a timber sale consisting of appx 270 gross acres. This includes but is not limited to:Marking boundaries including Riparian zones, wetland management zones and wildlife tree areas. Boundaries will be marked with Contractor provided paint and flagging.Traversing boundaries using GPS equipment with an accuracy level of +/- 3 meters.Locating new roads including field marking of centerlines, landings and culvert locations.Analyze logging systems. Run skyline profiles where cable yarding will cross streams to demonstrate impacts. Initiate contact and participate in consultations with USFWS and other entities regarding sensitive, threatened or endangered species.Initiating contact and coordinate activities with the Tribe, BIA and others to insure standards are met.Generate GIS maps documenting timber sale boundaries, roads, buffers and related attributes. Maps include harvest map, vicinity map and environmental map (showing buffer details etc.)Develop slash disposal plan including specifications and costs for the entire harvest unit. Prepare road contract which details all specifications for road construction. Locate gravel source and design pit development plans. Provide detailed designs including plan, profile and cross sections for all stream crossings.Prepare timber sale contract detailing all requirements for the timber sale. (BIA Form)Using a cruise provided by the Tribe, prepare a timber appraisal to BIA standards. This includes but is not limited to marketing logs to various sources and estimating costs of road construction, timber harvesting, log hauling, slash disposal etc. Prepare Draft FOR (Forest officers rep o r t ) P r e p a r e D r a f t N E PA a n d F O N S I documents.Prepare timber sale narrative documenting sale, harvest conditions, road conditions, environmental issues and buffer strategies.Prepare Timber sale advertisement. Transfer all documents and shapefiles in digital format to the Tribe. Bid should include all supplies and materials necessary to complete the job. ANTICIPATED SCHEDULEThe time of performance is expected to be between June, 2015 – December, 2015SELECTION CRITERIAThe Quileute Nation will use a two-step process for selecting a consultant. The first step will evaluate all consultants submitting their qualifications. The second step will include a face-to-face interview prior to selection. An award will be made on a competitive basis in accordance with the selection criteria as follows:1. Capacity and Capability to Perform the Services in the Scope of Work2. Technical Qualifications in Preparing EAs/BEs3. Experience Working with Tribes4. Past Performance5. Price6. InterviewThe selection criteria will be weighted equally and a decision will be made based on the best overall proposed as judged by the Nation to be most responsive to this RFP.Opening, Evaluation and ContractingProposals may be opened by the Quileute Tribal Council at any time after the submission deadline. All proposals satisfying the requirements of this Request for Proposals will be evaluated to establish which of the offerors best fulfills the needs of the Quileute Tribal Council and this project. The Quileute Tribal Council anticipates entering into a contract with this/these offeror(s) to execute the proposed work. This Request for Proposals, however, does not commit the Quileute Tribal Council to award a contract, to pay any costs incurred in the preparation of a proposal or to contract for the goods and/or services offered. [Institution] reserves the right to accept or reject any or all proposals received as a result of this request, to negotiate with all qualified offerors or to cancel this Request for Proposals, if it is in the best interests of [Institution] to do so. The decision of the Quileute Tribal Council shall be final.After the selection of a Contractor the schedule should include a period of collaboration between [Institution] and the Contractor to better define, elaborate upon and fix the Contractor’s exact and final scope of Work (the “Final Scope”) starting with the date of this Agreement and extending until May 31, 2015. In collaboration with the Quileute Tribal Council the Final Scope will be fixed no later than May 31, 2015. While the Contractor should assume work begins immediately upon notification that they have been selected, the Final Scope will be defined by editing, redlining or adding superseding documents or drawings to the Proposed Scope of Work as attached hereto. Once contracted, with respect to the Exhibit Documentation, Contractor warrants to Owner that the Scope of Work reflected therein can be completed by Contractor, in a form substantially similar to the preliminary scope, for the amount of the compensation set forth below.TERMS AND CONDITIONS1. The Quileute Tribe reserves the right to reject any and all proposals, and to waive minor irregularities in any proposal.2. The Quileute Tribe reserves the right to request clarification of information submitted, and to request additional information from any proposer.3. The Quileute Tribe reserves the right to award any contract to the next more qualified contractor, if the successful contractor does not execute a contract within fifteen (15) calendar days after the award of the proposal.4. Any proposal may be withdrawn up until the date and time set above for opening of the proposals. Any proposal not so timely withdrawn shall constitute an irrecoverable offer, for a period of forty-five (45) days to sell to the Quileute Tribe, the services described in the attached specifications, or until one or more of the proposals have been approved by the Quileute Tribe administration, whichever occurs first.5. The contract resulting from acceptance of a proposal by the Quileute Tribe shall be in a form supplied or approved by the Quileute Tribe, and shall reflect the specifications in this RFP. A copy of the contract is available for review. The Quileute Tribe reserves the right to reject any proposed agreement or contract that does not conform to the specification contained in this RFP, and which is not approved by the Quileute Tribe Attorney’s office.6. The Quileute Tribe shall not be responsible for any costs incurred by the firm in preparing, submitting or presenting its response to the RFP.7. All bid documents are public record and subject to disclosure.8. Proposals failing to comply with the requirements of this Request for Proposal may be considered non-responsive.RFPs must be submitted by mail, fax, or e-mail to one of the following addresses no later than 4:00 pm on May 22, 2015.Quileute Natural ResourcesAttn: Frank GeyerP.O. Box 187La Push, WA 98350Fax: 360-3749250frank.geyer@quileutetribe.comAny questions regarding this RFP can addressed to Frank Geyer at the e-mail address listed above. Questions received will be distributed with answers to all interested parties of record that have indicated they will be responding to the RFP. PUB: May 13, 2015 Legal No.632311


B10

WeatherWatch

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015 Neah Bay 55/46

g Bellingham 56/46

Olympic Peninsula TODAY SHOWERS Port Angeles SHOWERS Port Townsend 55/47

55/47

S ER OW SH

Sequim Olympics Snow level: 5,000 feet 56/46

Forks 60/47

Low 47 Clouds curl through night

Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 59 47 0.00 13.29 Forks 59 48 0.01 38.67 Seattle 57 51 0.01 15.90 Sequim 59 47 0.00 7.32 Hoquiam 57 51 0.02 19.33 Victoria 63 51 Trace 13.47 Port Townsend 61 44 **0.00 7.92

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

61/47 Showers, sun swirl together

60/47 Rainbows a possibility

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62/48 Clouds curtain Peninsula

62/47 Fluffy layer covers blue

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CANADA Victoria 60° | 49° Seattle 59° | 50°

Ocean: NW wind 10 to 20 kt becoming W 10 to 15 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. W swell 7 ft at 13 seconds. A chance of showers. Tonight, NW wind to 10 kt. Wind waves 1 ft. W swell 8 ft at 12 seconds.

Spokane 55° | 46°

Tacoma 59° | 50°

Olympia 59° | 48°

Yakima 55° | 46° Astoria 58° | 48°

ORE.

TODAY

© 2015 Wunderground.com

TOMORROW

11:28 a.m. 4.6’ 11:59 p.m. 7.0’

June 9

Billings 72° | 44°

San Francisco 61° | 50°

Minneapolis 67° | 40°

Denver 67° | 47°

Chicago 52° | 46°

Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise tomorrow Moonset today

Atlanta 87° | 60°

El Paso 80° | 57° Houston 82° | 74°

Miami 86° | 76°

Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo

Hi 88 75 64 57 84 89 79 77 82 63 89 61 76 80 88 82

Lo Prc Otlk 70 Cldy 52 Cldy 44 Cldy 46 Cldy 61 .13 PCldy 70 Cldy 65 PCldy 67 .51 Rain 63 Cldy 47 Cldy 71 Cldy 31 Cldy 48 Cldy 48 .02 Cldy 73 .16 Cldy 58 .50 Clr

FRIDAY Low Tide 5:07 a.m. 5:05 p.m.

Ht -0.2’ 1.1’

6:01 a.m. 2.6’ 5:15 p.m. 1.9’

1:00 p.m. 5.1’

6:45 a.m. 1.4’ 6:16 p.m. 2.6’

12:36 a.m. 7.0’ 2:14 p.m. 5.7’

7:27 a.m. 7:13 p.m.

0.4’ 3.3’

12:56 a.m. 8.5’ 1:05 p.m. 5.7’

7:14 a.m. 2.9’ 6:28 p.m. 2.1’

1:36 a.m. 8.6’ 2:37 p.m. 6.3’

7:58 a.m. 1.6’ 7:29 p.m. 2.9’

2:13 a.m. 8.7’ 3:51 p.m. 7.0’

8:40 a.m. 8:26 p.m.

0.4’ 3.7’

Dungeness Bay* 12:02 a.m. 7.7’ 12:11 p.m. 5.1’

6:36 a.m. 2.6’ 5:50 p.m. 1.9’

12:42 a.m. 7.7’ 1:43 p.m. 5.7’

7:20 a.m. 1.4’ 6:51 p.m. 2.6’

1:19 a.m. 7.8’ 2:57 p.m. 6.3’

8:02 a.m. 7:48 p.m.

0.4’ 3.3’

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

Remodel & Re-Design Furniture & Fabric

360ŀ457ŀ6759 531255682

trisa@trisa.co

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Burlington, Vt. Casper Charleston, S.C. Charleston, W.Va. Charlotte, N.C. Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbia, S.C. Columbus, Ohio Concord, N.H. Dallas-Ft Worth Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth El Paso Evansville Fairbanks Fargo Flagstaff Grand Rapids Great Falls Greensboro, N.C. Hartford Spgfld Helena Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jackson, Miss. Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Key West Las Vegas Little Rock

60 57 90 90 90 53 68 87 88 93 86 73 73 86 55 52 85 40 84 78 62 42 67 69 61 87 88 67 81 79 78 83 92 60 61 86 88 80

54 .80 Rain Los Angeles 32 PCldy Louisville 72 .12 PCldy Lubbock 66 .02 Cldy Memphis 66 Cldy Miami Beach 30 Cldy Midland-Odessa 48 .22 Cldy Milwaukee 54 .28 PCldy Mpls-St Paul 58 .85 Cldy Nashville 69 1.70 PCldy New Orleans 58 1.21 Cldy New York City 50 Rain Norfolk, Va. 58 Cldy North Platte 53 .09 Cldy Oklahoma City 37 Cldy Omaha 43 Clr Orlando 52 .48 Clr Pendleton 35 .21 Cldy Philadelphia 61 Cldy Phoenix 53 .42 Clr Pittsburgh 40 Cldy Portland, Maine 33 .27 PCldy Portland, Ore. 30 Clr Providence 49 .26 Clr Raleigh-Durham 40 Cldy Rapid City 66 PCldy Reno 69 Cldy Richmond 47 Cldy Sacramento 72 PCldy St Louis 69 .65 Cldy St Petersburg 50 .05 PCldy Salt Lake City 66 .35 Cldy San Antonio 67 PCldy San Diego 40 Clr San Francisco 41 Clr San Juan, P.R. 79 Cldy Santa Fe 71 Clr St Ste Marie 58 .15 Cldy Shreveport

Kevin Tracy

Wheat talk set Saturday at farm store DUNGENESS — Wes Cecil and Arran Stark will share the stage at Nash’s Farm Store, 4681 SequimDungeness Way, at 2 p.m. Saturday to present “The

Cecil

Stark

Story of Wheat.” According to a news release, wheat is a critical ingredient in the history of humankind. Cecil, a 16-year professor at Peninsula College’s Port Townsend Extension site, will provide insight on wheat’s influence.

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105 ½ East First Street, Suite A Port Angeles, WA 98362 (360) 452-9080

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

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

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PCldy Cldy Rain Clr PCldy Clr Cldy Clr Cldy .01 PCldy

.61 .02

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Hi Lo Otlk 65 55 Wind/Rain 82 57 Clr 63 42 PCldy 64 42 PCldy 84 64 Clr 59 34 Cldy 84 57 PCldy 89 78 PCldy 79 53 Clr 74 43 Clr 77 47 Clr 64 47 PCldy 73 57 Ts 63 42 PCldy 71 49 PCldy 97 80 Ts 72 51 Sh 75 67 PCldy 79 55 PCldy 82 67 Ts 66 55 Wind/Clr 83 65 PCldy 60 40 Wind/PCldy 57 38 Wind/PCldy

He received his doctorate in English from Indiana University. Stark, a chef, will talk about how wheat is used in various cuisines. He serves as chef and dietary director at Jefferson Healthcare. The talk at Nash’s Farm Store is free and open to the public, though donations are accepted to support “Food for Thought.”

Camp fundraiser PORT ANGELES — There will be a garage sale at 4 Seasons Ranch Neighborhood from 8 a.m. to

4 p.m. Saturday. The funds will benefit the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ youth group attending summer camps. Items being sold include Japanese decor, holiday decorations, quilting and craft books/magazines, cookbooks/magazines, kitchen and dishes, bedding, children’s clothes, baked goods, handicrafts and more. For more information, email shauntelhart@gmail. com or phone 253-4415557. Peninsula Daily News

Advance Pre-Sale Ticket Special

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for the

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Securities and advisory services offered through FSC Securities Corporation, member FINRA/SIPC. Tracy Wealth Management is not affiliated with FSC Securities Corporation or registered as a broker-dealer or investment advisor.

Warm Stationary

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

Briefly . . .

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-10s

Ga., and Eloy, Ariz. Ä 23 in Old Fort Laramie, Wyo.

Washington D.C. 72° | 59°

Los Angeles 68° | 57°

8:43 p.m. 5:36 a.m. 3:50 a.m. 3:28 p.m.

à 97 in Jesup,

New York 68° | 58°

Detroit 62° | 42°

May 17 May 25 June 2

High Tide Ht 11:11 a.m. 7.1’ 11:14 p.m. 9.1’

Commercial & Residential Com Interior & Exterior Paint Inte

Cloudy

TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:

Cold

Low Tide Ht 4:10 a.m. 0.8’ 4:11 p.m. 0.9’

Port Townsend

Low Tide Ht 3:04 a.m. 1.8’ 3:13 p.m. 0.7’

Pt. Cloudy

Fronts

High Tide Ht 10:06 a.m. 6.9’ 10:27 p.m. 8.6’

Port Angeles

High Tide Ht 8:54 a.m. 6.7’ 9:38 p.m. 8.1’

Sunny

The Lower 48

Seattle 59° | 50°

Full

Nation/World

Washington TODAY

Strait of Juan de Fuca: W wind 10 to 20 kt rising to 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft. A chance of showers. Tonight, W wind 10 to 20 kt becoming 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft.

LaPush

Forecast highs for Wednesday, May 13

Cartography by Keith Thorpe / © Peninsula Daily News

Marine Conditions

Tides

National TODAY forecast Nation

Yesterday

Almanac

Brinnon 58/47

Aberdeen 57/47

TONIGHT

Port Ludlow 56/47

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

2015 Juan de Fuca Festival Memorial Day Weekend, May 22-25

Four Day Festival Pass for only $55! Festival Pass at the Gate is $70. Get yours early!

SALE SPECIAL THROUGH THUR., MAY 21

Festival Pass also includes Admission to All Juan de Fuca After Hours Club Concerts

DAY PASSES ALSO AVAILABLE: FRI -$25 | SATURDAY OR SUNDAY -$30 | MON - $20

Check out Lineup at jffa.org, Lineup tab

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Kindergarten Registration is starting in March 902 E. Caroline • Port Angeles • 457-8578

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Are Your Children’s Immunizations Current?

Tickets on sale now at www.jffa.org or visit Port Book & News in PA or Joyful Noise in Sequim

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