The beat goes on
Thursday Increasing clouds with rain late tonight C12
Youngsters get hooked on Dixieland jazz C1
Peninsula Daily News Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper
50 cents
October 21, 2010
Body found in bay is twin sister Death probed; no foul play is suspected By Charlie Bermant Peninsula Daily News
GARDINER — A woman found dead in Discovery Bay on Tuesday was visiting her twin sister, who lives in Poulsbo, and authorities don’t yet know how she died.
Janeth Walker, 57, might have been exploring the North Olympic Peninsula before her body was found partially in the water of Discovery Bay on Tuesday afternoon, said Kitsap County Sheriff’s Deputy Scott Wilson on Wednesday. Wilson said Walker was visiting from the East Coast after having broken up with her husband. He did not know her hometown. Walker’s car was found near the boat ramp at the end of Gar-
diner Beach Road. A map of the area was in the car, Wilson said. No foul play is suspected, though the cause of death has yet to be determined, said Jefferson County Prosecuting Attorney Juelie Dalzell, who serves as county coroner. “We don’t have enough to determine the manner of death,” Dalzell said Wednesday. “We don’t know if it was an accident or suicide but are pretty sure it was not a homicide.”
Dalzell said the autopsy was A Sequim man walking his dog inconclusive and that toxicology found Walker’s fully clothed body reports would be submitted to the and reported it to the Jefferson Washington State Crime Lab. County Sheriff’s Office at 3:38 p.m. Tuesday, Detective Joe Nole Visiting sister said. She had been reported missing Walker was visiting her sister, Judy Jensen of Poulsbo, Wilson from her sister’s home at about 2:30 p.m. Monday, Wilson said. said. Bob Jensen, who answered the ________ phone at the Jensen residence, Jefferson County Reporter Charlie Bersaid in answer to questions: mant can be reached at 360-385-2335 or “I’m sorry. This isn’t a good at charlie.bermant@peninsuladailynews. com. time to talk right now.”
2.5% rise A little street music, if you please in ferry fares seen State seeking comment before Nov. 15 meeting By Charlie Bermant Peninsula Daily News
OLYMPIA — The state Transportation Commission has approved a draft agreement to raise ferry fares and is soliciting public comment before the raise will go into effect. If approved, the 2.5 percent increase will be added to all ferries in the state system Jan. 1. That includes the Port Townsend-Coupeville route, where passenger fares would increase about a nickle, to $2.70, one-way for an adult and about 20 cents for a passenger car, to $9.35. The complete fare table is on the commis- Distler sion’s website, www. wstc.wa.gov. The Black Ball Ferry Line is a private business, so the state action would not affect the MV Coho’s runs between Port Angeles and Victoria. The public comment period will extend through Nov. 15, when the seven-member commission plans a final public hearing in Seattle where testimony on the proposal will be taken. It is expected to take action after the hearing. The time and place of the Nov. 15 meeting had not been set as of Wednesday. The commission said Wednesday the proposal was developed with the state ferries division and an advisory committee of ferry riders.
First increase since ’07 State Transportation Commissioner Bob Distler of San Juan County said that no fares had been increased since 2007. “Our farebox recovery is under 65 percent, and this will help us a little bit,” he said. Distler said the increase won’t make a huge difference on the ferry system’s bottom line and that he had favored a larger increase. He said the department is sponsoring limited public comment because of the low amount of the increase. “There are people who will complain about any increase,” he said. “But this is such a small amount that we don’t think it will generate much interest.” The draft fare proposal also would phase in “tariff route equity” in the San Juan Islands, meaning that an extra 2 percent increase for the San Juan’s Inter-island fares is proposed. Turn
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Charlie Bermant/Peninsula Daily News
Gabriel Johnston, 10, left, and his brother, Elijah Johnston, 12, put together an impromptu recorder and violin concert on Water Street in Port Townsend on Wednesday afternoon. The Port Townsend boys were taking advantage of sunny skies, which are going to be short-lived after today. Heavy rain and winds are forecast by the middle of the weekend. AccuWeather five-day forecast, Page C12
State fines PT mill $18,000 Ecology action can be appealed
mill’s treatment ponds contained higher-than-allowed levels of biochemical oxygen demand and total suspended solids, the state said. By Charlie Bermant Later in the month, the mill Peninsula Daily News again discharged wastewater into Glen Cove with more bioPORT TOWNSEND — The chemical oxygen demand than state Department of Ecology permitted, Ecology said in a has levied an $18,000 fine statement. against Port Townsend Paper Corp. for wastewater discharges Mill reported violations that violated the mill’s water quality permit during May The mill reported these vio2010. lations upon discovery and on The fine was imposed Tues- its monthly report to Ecology day. and also reported exceeding its The mill — the largest pri- monthly averages for biochemivate employer in Jefferson cal oxygen demand by 907 County, with more than 200 pounds (19 percent) and 261 employees — has 30 days to pounds (3 percent) for total suspay the penalty or file an appeal pended solids. with the state Pollution Control Roger Loney, mill general Hearings Board. manager, did not respond to a For two days in early May, phone call requesting comment wastewater discharged to Wednesday. The testing of discharges is nearby Glen Cove from the
Peninsula Daily News
Port Townsend Paper Corp. faces penalties for wastewater discharge, according to the state Department of Ecology. the responsibility of the individual company, which then reports to Ecology, said Kim Schmanke, Ecology spokeswoman. “Businesses do their own testing and undertake correc-
tive measures,” Schmanke said. “They report the results to us, and we create a summary report and assess fines where necessary.” Turn
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Thursday, October 21, 2010
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www.peninsuladailynews.com ■ See box on Commentary page for names, telephone numbers and e-mail addresses of key executives and contact people.
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Peninsula Daily News (ISSN 1050-7000), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Horvitz Newspapers, published each morning Sunday through Friday by Northwest Media (Washington) L.P. 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. Member Audit Bureau of Circulations The Associated Press Contents copyright © 2010, Peninsula Daily News
Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Paltrow sings next month at CMA Awards ACTRESS GWYNETH PALTROW will be taking the stage at next month’s Country Music Association Awards in Nashville, Tenn. — as a performer. She’ll sing the title track of her new movie, “Country Strong,” and will be joined by Paltrow Vince Gill. Paltrow stars in the film with Tim McGraw, Garrett Hedlund and Leighton Meester. She plays a washed-up country singer who gets romantically involved with a rising singer-songwriter (Hedlund). They try to resurrect her career with a major tour, headed up by her husband/manager (McGraw) and featuring a beautyqueen-turned-singer (Meester.) Paltrow said she researched a lot of country music history for this role. “I sort of started at the
beginning with Hank [Williams] Sr. and Johnny Cash and really studied Dolly [Parton] and Loretta Lynn, and kind of just started at the beginning and went all the way through and found the people that I really love and who inspired me,” she told The Associated Press in a recent interview. In addition to classic country stars, Paltrow also has some current country music favorites. “I really like a lot of the young women in country right now, like Ashley Monroe and Miranda Lambert,” she said. “I had never really known very much about country music, and I now am very into it. I know a lot more about it than I did.” The film hits theaters in Los Angeles and Nashville on Dec. 22 and nationwide Jan. 7. The soundtrack will be released Tuesday, Oct. 26. Previously announced performers for the CMA Awards include Kenny Chesney, Lady Antebellum, Brad Paisley, Rascal Flatts, Reba McEntire, Taylor Swift, Carrie Underwood and Keith Urban. Zac Brown Band and Alan Jackson will perform together, and Lam-
bert and Sheryl Crow will sing a duet to honor Lynn’s 50th anniversary as a recording artist. The CMA Awards will air live from Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena on Nov. 10 on ABC.
Rihanna and Jay-Z Rihanna is now under Jay-Z’s umbrella. The Grammywinning pop singer has parted ways with manager Marc Jordan and is Rihanna now being managed by Jay-Z’s Roc Nation Management. Rihanna told The Associated Press in a statement Wednesday that she’s “so excited to take this next step in my career.” The 22-year-old is also launching a new company called Rihanna Entertainment. She said it will “merge all of her businesses, including music, film, fragrance fashion and book ventures.” Jay-Z signed Rihanna to Def Jam in 2005. She’s released four albums and plans to release her fifth CD, “Loud,” on Nov. 16.
Passings By The Associated Press
DR. MILDRED JEFFERSON, 84, a prominent, outspoken opponent of abortion and the first black woman to graduate from Harvard Medical School, died Friday at her home in Cambridge, Mass. Her death was confirmed by Anne Fox, the president of Massachusetts Citizens for Life, Dr. one of many Jefferson anti-aborin 1975 tion groups in which Dr. Jefferson played a leadership role. Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion, “gave my profession an almost unlimited license to kill,” Dr. Jefferson testified before Congress in 1981. Dr. Jefferson, a surgeon, was speaking in support of a bill, sponsored by Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., and Rep. Henry J. Hyde, R-Ill., that sought to declare that human life “shall be deemed to exist from conception.” Had it passed, it would have allowed states to pros-
ecute abortion as murder. “With the obstetrician and mother becoming the worst enemy of the child and the pediatrician becoming the assassin for the family,” Dr. Jefferson continued to testify, “the state must be enabled to protect the life of the child, born and unborn.” “She probably was the greatest orator of our movement,” Darla St. Martin, coexecutive director of the National Right to Life Committee, said Monday. “In fact, take away the probably.” In a 2003 profile in The American Feminist, an antiabortion magazine, Dr. Jefferson said, “I am at once a physician, a citizen and a woman, and I am not willing to stand aside and allow this concept of expendable human lives to turn this great land of ours into just another exclusive reservation where only the perfect, the privileged and the planned have the right to live.”
_________ JOHNNY SHEFFIELD, 79, who played the character Boy in the Tarzan movies of the 1930s and ’40s, has died.
His wife, Patty Sheffield, told the Los Angeles Times that he died Friday of a heart attack at his home in the San Diego suburb of Chula Vista. She says he fell off a ladder while pruning a palm tree four hours earlier. Mr. Sheffield beat out more than 300 other youngsters for the role of Boy in the 1939 movie “Tarzan Finds a Son!” and went on to co-star with Johnny Wiessmuller in seven more Tarzan films. He later played another jungle boy, Bomba, in a dozen movies but quit the business after the last one in 1955. Mr. Sheffield went on to earn a business degree and worked for various companies and in contracting and real estate.
Laugh Lines The folks at Google are testing a car that drives itself, without a human. And you thought it was bad when your computer crashed. Jay Leno
Peninsula Daily News PENINSULA POLL TUESDAY’S QUESTION: Are you voting for either or both of the ballot initiatives to privatize hard liquor sales in Washington?
Yes
50.4%
No
I-1100 only
I-1105 only 1.3%
Undecided
30.6% 10.1% 7.5%
Total votes cast: 914 Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.
Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications
■ The Port Angeles City Council approved the purchase of 11.86 acres of Rayonier Inc.’s former mill site in a 6-1 vote. An article on Page A6 Wednesday erroneously said the vote was 5-1. ■ The city of Port Angeles and Port of Port Angeles each allocated $650,000 to the Harbor-Works Development Authority. An article on Page A6 Wednesday incorrectly reported the “loan” amounts.
The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, contact Executive Editor Rex Wilson at 360-417-3530 or e-mail rex. wilson@peninsuladailynews.com.
Peninsula snapshots PARK RANGER AT Elwha entrance station to Olympic National Park using a large aquarium net to collect fees or passes at the ticket window because many cars don’t stop too close to the booth . . .
WANTED! “Seen Around” items. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax 360-417-3521; or e-mail news@peninsuladailynews. com.
Did You Win? State lottery results
From the pages of the Peninsula Daily News
The Olympic Predatory Shooters Club held its first meeting of the fall season at the Eagles hall in Port Angeles last night. A good-sized crowd was present, and when the president of the club arrived, he found a large chicken hawk spread across his desk. The hawk, measuring four feet from tip to tip of wings, was killed near Lairds Corner by a mem-
_________
Seen Around
Peninsula Lookback 1935 (75 years ago)
■ The Port of Port Angeles budget is half that of the Port of Grays Harbor. The percentage was incorrect in a front-page report Wednesday in the Clallam County edition on the Port Angeles port’s executive director pay.
ber of the club just before dark. The carcass remained on the desk all evening.
1960 (50 years ago) It’s a homecoming of sorts for Capt. Lynn Parker, who assumed command of the Coast Guard cutter Winona. Port Angeles was his first duty station after graduation from the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in 1939. He was an ensign
aboard the cutter Ingham. The Winona is scheduled to take a turn on Ocean Station November — halfway between Honolulu and San Francisco — for weather patrol starting this week and returning Nov. 24.
1985 (25 years ago) A public health emergency was declared in Clallam County because of concern over what to do with wastes from septic tanks.
The county Board of Health declared the emergency after the city of Port Angeles decided to prohibit septic tank pumpers from dumping into the city’s sewage treatment system. City officials say the wastes from commercial pumpers increase impurities released into Port Angeles Harbor, placing the city in jeopardy with the state Department of Ecology.
Wednesday’s Daily Game: 9-0-4 Wednesday’s Hit 5: 03-15-16-20-28 Wednesday’s Keno: 10-15-18-20-27-31-36-3739-43-44-53-55-56-57-5869-71-75-79 Wednesday’s Lotto: 09-15-23-29-30-41 Wednesday’s Match 4: 03-06-20-23 Wednesday’s Powerball: 07-17-20-39-59, Powerball: 17, Power Play: 3
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS THURSDAY, Oct. 21, the 294th day of 2010. There are 71 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On Oct. 21, 1805, a British fleet commanded by Adm. Horatio Nelson defeated a French-Spanish fleet in the Battle of Trafalgar; Nelson, however, was killed. On this date: ■ In 1797, the Navy frigate Constitution, also known as “Old Ironsides,” was christened in Boston’s harbor. ■ In 1879, Thomas Edison perfected a workable electric light at his laboratory in Menlo Park, N.J. ■ In 1917, members of the 1st
Division of the Army training in Luneville, France, became the first Americans to see action on the front lines of World War I. ■ In 1944, during World War II, U.S. troops captured the German city of Aachen. ■ In 1959, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, opened to the public in New York. ■ In 1960, Democrat John F. Kennedy and Republican Richard M. Nixon clashed in their fourth and final presidential debate in New York. ■ In 1967, the Israeli destroyer INS Eilat was sunk by Egyptian missile boats near Port
Said; 47 Israeli crew members were lost. ■ In 1970, American agronomist Norman Borlaug was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his work in developing high-yield grains that enhanced the world’s food supply. ■ In 1971, President Richard Nixon nominated Lewis F. Powell and William H. Rehnquist to the U.S. Supreme Court. ■ In 1985, former San Francisco Supervisor Dan White — who’d served five years in prison for killing Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk, a gay-rights advocate — was found dead in a garage, a suicide.
■ Ten years ago: Fifteen Arab leaders convened in Cairo for their first summit in four years; the Libyan delegation walked out in anger over signs the summit would stop short of calling for breaking ties with Israel. ■ Five years ago: The Kansas Supreme Court unanimously struck down a state law that punished underage sex more severely if it involved homosexual acts. ■ One year ago: A Northwest Airlines jetliner overshot the Minneapolis airport by more than 100 miles; the pilots later said they were distracted by talking about their schedules.
Peninsula Daily News for Thursday, October 21, 2010
Second Front Page
Page
A3
Briefly: Nation Jurist’s wife seeks apology from accuser
ing an olive branch” to Hill. In a transcript of the message provided by ABC News, which said it listened to the recording, Thomas identified herself and then said, “I just wanted to reach across the airWASHINGTON — Anita Hill waves and the years and ask is refusing to apologize for you to consider something. accusing then-Supreme Court “I would love you to consider justice nominee Clarence an apology sometime and some Thomas of sexually harassing full explanation of why you did her, in an issue that Thomas’ what you did with my husband. wife has reopened 19 years after “So give it some thought and his confirmation hearings. certainly pray about this and “I have no come to understand why you intention of did what you did. OK, have a apologizing good day,” Thomas said. because I testified truthGOP leading Dems fully about my WASHINGTON — All signs experience point to huge Republican victoand I stand by ries in two weeks, with the GOP that testinow leading Democrats on virmony,” Hill, Hill tually every measure in an now a BranAssociated Press-GfK poll of deis Univerpeople likely to vote in the first sity professor, major elections of Barack said in a stateObama’s presidency. ment released In the final survey before Tuesday night. Election Day, likely voters said Thomas’ the GOP would do a better job wife, Virginia, than Democrats on handling had left a the economy, creating jobs and voicemail mesrunning the government. sage on Hill’s Most also think the country’s phone over the Thomas headed in the wrong direction. weekend asking her to say she More than half disapprove of was sorry for the allegations that surfaced at Thomas’ confir- Obama’s job performance. And even more don’t like the Demomation hearings for a seat on cratic-controlled Congress. the high court bench in 1991. Neither party is popular. But In her statement, Hill said, “I likely voters view the GOP a bit certainly thought the call was more positively than they do the inappropriate.” She had worked for Clarence Democrats. Slightly more said they will Thomas in two federal governvote for the Republican congresment jobs prior to the time he sional candidate in their district was selected for the court by President George H.W. Bush for over the Democrat. And most think the GOP will win control the Supreme Court. Virginia Thomas, a longtime of Congress from the Democrats. conservative activist, said in a The Associated Press statement that she was “extend-
Briefly: World 25 percent of ballots thrown out in election
Wednesday outlined the largest cuts to public spending since World War II — slashing benefits and thousands of public sector jobs with an austerity plan aimed at restoring the nation’s finances. KABUL, Afghanistan — Treasury Chief George Osborne confirmed there would Afghanistan has thrown out be 81 billion pounds ($128 bilnearly a quarter of ballots cast lion) in spending cuts through in last month’s parliamentary elections because of fraud, but it 2015, which he claimed are necessary along with some tax is still far from clear whether the public will accept the results increases to wipe out a spending deficit of 109 billion pounds as fair. ($172 billion). The full preliminary results As many as 500,000 public from the Sept. 18 poll were sector jobs will be lost, about released Wednesday after multi- 18 billion pounds ($28.5 billion) ple delays as election officials axed from welfare payments struggled to weed out results and the pension age raised to 66 from polling stations that never by 2020, earlier than previously opened, along with bunches of planned. ballots all cast for one candiEven Queen Elizabeth II will date, or suspiciously split 50-50 take a hit, asked to trim the budget the government provides between two people. for her palaces and staff by After last year’s fraud14 percent. marred presidential election, the government wanted to prove to the Afghan people and interFrench protests national allies that it is not PARIS — Workers opposed mired in corruption but making to a higher retirement age strides for reform. blocked roads to airports around While findings indicate that France on Wednesday, leaving cheating was pervasive, the rul- passengers in Paris dragging ings also showed election offisuitcases on foot along an emercials were doing their job this gency breakdown lane. time around — by keeping Outside the capital, hooded fraudulent ballots out of the youths smashed store windows amid clouds of tear gas. totals. Riot police in black body “They’ve been doing a moderarmor forced striking workers ately good job at detecting the fraudulent ballots and removing away from blocked fuel depots in western France, restoring them. That’s a positive thing,” gasoline to areas where pumps said Andy Campbell, the were dry after weeks of protests Afghanistan director for the National Democratic Institute, a over the government proposal raising the age from 60 to 62. U.S.-based election-monitoring Riot officers in the Paris subgroup. urb of Nanterre and the southeastern city of Lyon sprayed Cutting back tear gas but appeared unable to LONDON — Fighting record stop the violence. debt, the British government The Associated Press
Military needs time to adjust to changes Don’t ask, tell order frozen temporarily By Julie Watson and Anne Flaherty The Associated Press
SAN DIEGO — Beyond the courtroom arguments about “disrupting the troops” and “unit cohesion” are the nitty-gritty details behind the Pentagon’s fight to go slow on allowing openly gay troops. Will straight and gay troops have to shower next to one another? Will the military have to provide benefits to gay partners, and can it afford to? And the biggest question of all: Will gays be harassed or intimidated? It comes down to changing the culture, and top brass said they need more time. The military has been long resistant and, at times, hostile to gays, and it draws much of its 2.4 million members from socially conservative parts of the country.
Issue not on battlefield “The real issues will be not what happens on the battlefield, but what happens on posts,” said David R. Segal, a sociologist at the University of Maryland who has written extensively on the military’s personnel policies and recruiting. For many troops, “they don’t mind suspecting their colleagues are gay, but they don’t want to know for sure,” he said. Gay rights advocates said the government’s efforts to overturn a federal judge’s order halting the enforcement of “don’t ask, don’t tell” are unnecessary. They contended there were no huge eruptions of violence with the integration of women and blacks, even though the military had to contend with race riots among the ranks during the Vietnam War era. Opponents of repeal pointed out that women have never been integrated into combat units. Women are still banned from many front-line units like infantry and special operations. Advocates acknowledged that
The Associated Press
Former Marine Will Rodriguez, who was forced out of the Marine Corps and has been denied re-enlistment, stands outside an armed forces recruiting office in San Diego. harassment will likely happen, just as it continues today with those groups. They said another aspect of military culture — following orders — will override any temptation to intimidate gays.
Following orders “If your commander-in-chief says this is the new law, then that’s the way we follow it and we make it work,” said David Hall, a former Air Force staff sergeant who was discharged under the 1993 Clinton-era policy. The fate of the law remained in doubt Wednesday, as a federal appeals court temporarily granted the government’s request for a freeze of U.S. District Judge Virginia Phillip’s order. The court instructed lawyers for the Log Cabin Republicans,
the gay rights group that brought the lawsuit successfully challenging the policy, to file arguments in response by Monday. The judges would then decide whether to extend the temporary stay while it considers the government’s appeal of Phillips’ ruling that the policy was unconstitutional. It was unclear what effect the temporary freeze would have on the Pentagon, which has already informed recruiters to accept openly gay recruits and has suspended discharge proceedings for gay service members. Cynthia Smith, a Pentagon spokeswoman, declined to say whether the Defense Department would roll back its guidance to military lawyers and recruiters that they must abide by last week’s injunction from Phillips.
Astronomers discover oldest galaxy — so far By Seth Borenstein The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Astronomers believe they’ve found the oldest thing they’ve ever seen in the universe: It’s a galaxy far, far away from a time long, long ago. Hidden in a Hubble Space Telescope photo released earlier this year is a small smudge of light that European astronomers now calculate is a galaxy from 13.1 billion years ago. That’s a time when the universe was very young, just shy of 600 million years old. That would make it the earliest and most distant galaxy seen so far. By now the galaxy is so ancient it probably doesn’t exist in its earlier form and has already merged into bigger neighbors, said Matthew Lehnert of the Paris
Quick Read
Observatory, lead author of the study published online Wednesday in the journal Nature. “We’re looking at the universe when it was a 20th of its current age,” said California Institute of Technology astronomy professor Richard Ellis, who wasn’t part of the discovery team. “In human terms, we’re looking at a 4-year-old boy in the life span of an adult.” While Ellis finds the basis for the study “pretty good,” there have been other claims about the age of distant space objects that have not held up to scrutiny. And some experts have questions about this one. But even the skeptics praised the study as important and interesting. The European astronomers calculated the age after 16 hours
of observations from a telescope in Chile that looked at light signatures of cooling hydrogen gas. Earlier this year, astronomers had made a general estimate of 600 million to 800 million years after the Big Bang for the most distant fuzzy points of light in the Hubble photograph, which was presented at an astronomy meeting back in January. In the new study, researchers focused on a single galaxy in their analysis of hydrogen’s light signature, further pinpointing the age. Garth Illingworth of the University of California, Santa Cruz, who was the scientist behind the Hubble image, said it provides confirmation for the age using a different method, something he called amazing “for such faint objects.”
. . . more news to start your day
West: Alaska Senate race heats up as election nears
Nation: Guinness record for longest cat broken
World: Violence continues; death toll rises in Pakistan
World: Archaeologists find 5,000-year-old door
With less than two weeks until the election, there is a heated threeway race in Alaska between Republican Joe Miller, Lisa Murkowski as a write-in candidate and Democrat Scott McAdams. Supporters see the media as unfairly targeting Miller. To them, he’s the voice an angry populace, one of the tea party movement’s brightest prospects for shaking up an out-of-control Washington. “Is any candidate perfect?” asked Jennie Bettine, whose Wasilla-based Conservative Patriots Group is backing Miller. “No. But Joe Miller is closer to what we think we need for this country.”
The world’s longest cat measures more than 4 feet, stealing the record from another Maine Coone. The Reno Gazette-Journal reported that 5-year-old Stewie was certified as the new Guinness World Record holder after measuring 481⁄2 inches from the tip of his nose to the tip of his tailbone. That’s a little more than 4 feet long. The record was previously held by another Maine Coon that measured 48 inches. Stewie’s owners, Robin Hendrickson and Erik Brandsness, said they decided to try for the record after hearing countless people say they were amazed by Stewie’s length.
The death toll from four days of violence sparked by a contentious local election in Pakistan’s largest city rose to 52 on Wednesday when at least one person was shot and killed. Security forces patrolled the southern city of Karachi to prevent fresh violence, and in many neighborhoods, businesses shut down while public transportation was scarce. “The atmosphere of terror is everywhere,” said local resident Mohammad Sadiq. “People are scared to come out of their houses.” Many of the slayings in Karachi have been linked to gangs allegedly controlled by political parties.
Archaeologists in the Swiss city of Zurich have unearthed a 5,000-year-old door that may be one of the oldest ever found in Europe. The ancient poplar wood door is “solid and elegant” with well-preserved hinges and a “remarkable” design for holding the boards together, chief archaeologist Niels Bleicher said Wednesday. Using tree rings to determine its age, Bleicher said he believes the door could have been made in the year 3,063 B.C. — around the time that construction on Britain’s world-famous Stonehenge monument began.
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PeninsulaNorthwest
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Peninsula Daily News
Hair-raising fear house to raise funds By Jeff Chew
Peninsula Daily News
SEQUIM — Rosie Von Engel admits with a giggle that she has a bit of a twisted sense of humor. That’s OK. She’s leading the ghoulish gathering of freaks, geeks, body parts and snakes at the first House of FEAR (False Evidence Appearing Real), billed as a hair-raising fundraiser to benefit Olympic Theatre Arts Center. “It’s a show for people who like to face their fears. This is for them,” said Von Engel, a costume and set designer for OTA who is quick to add this is not a show for the faint of heart or the littlest of trick-or-treaters. “This is fun. That’s the whole point.” Warning, she said, don’t bring children younger than 7. The dark haunted house
affair will be too intense and are Elena Karr, Jaye Butler, is intended to give you the Sheila Taylor and Teri Stone. willies, Von Engel said. Butler plays the Grim Conveniently located Reaper at the “Feast of Fiends.” You can find the House of Other phantasmagoric FEAR, she said, in the place scenes to be set up around that “is across from the the haunted house are funeral home in front of the “Gone-Away Graveyard,” old church,” meaning Olym- “Corpse Cafe” and the “Monpic Theatre Arts Center, 414 ster Mausoleum.” N. Sequim Ave. “Then we will make them It will scare up trouble go into the basement to expefrom 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Wednes- rience Dr. Danger’s Research day, Oct. 27, and Thursday, Room,” Von Engel said with Oct. 28; from 7 p.m. to a sly grin. 10 p.m. Friday, Oct. 29; from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, Slither, slither Oct. 30; and from 5 p.m. to “Then we will stroll them 8 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 31, which through Alchemist’s Alley is Halloween. Admission is adults 18 and upstairs to the Ghoul’s and older, $4; and ages 13-17, Gallery to experience Snakes on a Chain.” $3. Snakes on a Chain, of Children ages 7-12 will be admitted for $2 and must course, is a word play on the be accompanied by an adult. bizarre and ultra-frightening Helping Von Engel put movie “Snakes on a Plane.” the House of FEAR together Pulling out a package
containing a small rubber snake, Von Engel explained she loves to collect such items at dollar and thrift stores. They are the kind of snakes that if you put them in a bathtub of water, they grow by 600 percent. She joked that she and her help are donating the use of their bathtubs to grow enough snakes. Von Engel said the House of FEAR tour ends up in the “Transylvania Train Station.” “It’s the mini-experience of being a brave adventurer,” Von Engel said. “It’s Stanley Livingston going into the jungle. “If it goes off, we’ll be doing it every year,” Von Engel said.
________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Jeff Chew can be reached at 360-681-2391 or at jeff.chew@ peninsuladailynews.com.
Jeff Chew/Peninsula Daily News
Rosie Von Engel, sitting, costume and set designer for the Olympic Theatre Arts Center, will be dishing out the first hair-raising fundraiser to benefit the community theater at 414 N. Sequim Ave. beginning Wednesday.
Carlsborg future focus of meeting Monday Peninsula Daily News
CARLSBORG — What do visions of the future in Carlsborg look like? Artist’s renderings of ideas discussed during a Sept. 27 “visioning work-
their visions of a sustainable Carlsborg with other community members and government agencies, said Clallam County Senior Planner Carol Creasey. On Monday, a commer-
cial artist and illustrator will provide community composite renderings of the integrated visions, she said. Residents also will hear of the next steps necessary in the formation of a local utility district to collect
assessments on properties to pay for sewer facilities. Land use planning and funding will be discussed. For more information, contact Creasey at 360-4172423 or ccreasey@co. clallam.wa.us.
Dwight Slade, a standup comic who’s opened for Jay PORT ANGELES — The Leno, Jerry Seinfeld and southbound lane of Race Dave Chappelle, is the Street between Caroline and headliner; the show also feaFront streets will be closed tures other comedians to be to traffic for 12 hours today. announced. The closure, for street Showtime is 8 p.m., and work, will last from 6 a.m. to general admission is $15, 6 p.m. while VIP tickets — which include a pre-show party Standup comics with the comics, two free PORT TOWNSEND — A drinks and priority front“Comedy Cabaret” takes row seating — are $25. over the Key City Playhouse, Slade, winner of the Bos419 Washington St., tonight. ton Comedy Festival, has
appeared on HBO, Comedy Central and “The Tonight Show,” and has performed in comedy festivals around the world. The Key City Playhouse will offer snacks and beverages during the show, which is a benefit for the Key City Public Theatre company. Advance tickets are available by cash or check at Quimper Sound, 230 Taylor St., Port Townsend; by phoning 360-379-0195 with a credit card; or online at
www.keycitypublictheatre.org.
shop” for the 560-acre Carlsborg Urban Growth Area will be the focus of the Carlsborg Community Advisory Council’s next meeting Monday. The council will meet
from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Clallam County Public Utility District’s facility at 110 Idea Place, Carlsborg. The purpose of the September workshop was to allow residents to share
at City Hall, 321 E. Fifth St. The approximately $778,000 plan addresses proposed improvements for the waterfront. These include: ■ A promenade and completion of the Waterfront Trail. ■ New way-finding signs throughout the city. ■ New entryway monuments on the west and east ends of town.
Lane closure
Briefly . . . Waterfront plan update set for today PORT ANGELES — Representatives of Studio Cascade will give the City Council an update on the city of Port Angeles Waterfront and Transportation Improvement Plan today. The meeting will be at 6 p.m. in council chambers
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Dan Gase, a Port Angeles Republican, has received several endorsements in his bid to unseat Kevin Van De Wege, Sequim Democrat, for a 24th District seat in the Nov. 2 general election, Gase’s campaign said. Craig Durgan, an unsuccessful primary candidate for the seat, endorsed Gase, a fellow Republican. “I heartily endorse him for any elected office,” Durgan, who confirmed the endorsement with the Peninsula Daily News, is quoted as saying. “He will bring reason and common sense to the Legislature.” Gase, a real estate managing broker and consultant, has been endorsed by several state organizations, his campaign said Friday. Those are the Building Industry Association of Washington, the North Peninsula Builders Association, the Washington Farm Bureau, the Association of Washington Business, Washington Realtors and Human Life of Washington, a pro-life group based in Bellevue.
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PORT ANGELES — Public input on the city’s parks and recreation master plan will be received at a meeting today. The meeting will be held at 4:30 p.m. at the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center, 1203 E. Lauridsen Blvd. The master plan, updated every five years, lays out how the city of Port Angeles wants to develop its park facilities and recreation programs.
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GARDINER — The Gardiner Community Center will be filled with music, dancing and pumpkins Saturday night during an autumn harvest party. The event is open to the public, and admission is $10 including a dance lesson, or $5 without the lesson. The center, about 11 miles east of Sequim at 980 Old Gardiner Road off U.S. Highway 101, will open at 6 p.m. for a nightclub twostep lesson by dance teacher Roberto Villamarin. Dancing will then continue from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Among the highlights of the evening: a friendly Jackand-Jill, as in random partner, competition in West Coast swing, cha-cha and waltz. Villamarin also encourages partygoers to bring their carved pumpkins for a jack-o’-lantern exhibition and their favorite dishes and beverages to share in the potluck supper. For more details, e-mail wren@dancevida.net. Peninsula Daily News
PeninsulaNorthwest
Peninsula Daily News
Thursday, October 21, 2010
A5
Clallam updates its homelessness plan By Rob Ollikainen Peninsula Daily News
PORT ANGELES — Clallam County is taking its fight against homelessness to the next level. The three county commissioners on Tuesday approved an updated version of the county’s 10-year plan to end homelessness. The first version was adopted in December 2005. The goal remains to end homelessness by 2015. “It’s a very concrete, measurable and high bar,” Commissioner Mike Chapman said. Kathy Wahto, executive director of Serenity House of Clallam County, said the new plan reflects progress that has already been made, addresses a new funding environment, contains less technical language and meets certain grant deadlines. Clallam County Prevention Specialist Jill Dole said that more than 75 percent of the goals in the original plan have already been accomplished. The document guides the Clallam County Homelessness Task Force, which makes recommendations to county commissioners on the best practices for ending homelessness in Clallam County by 2015, Dole explained. “Overall, the new draft is very similar to the original document,” Dole said. “The first document was
more geared toward specific populations of homeless people, and this draft has goals and objectives that apply to all populations.” Commissioner Steve Tharinger said the plan’s focus on proactive prevention has helped the county secure funding to fight homelessness.
Point-in-time census
unemployable single adults in Clallam County before the end of the year. The plan has five goals and strategies. They are: ■ Prevent people from becoming homeless through prevention, diversion and re-entry. ■ Provide more permanent housing and supportive housing. ■ Remove barriers and link people to the appropriate services. ■ Increase leadership and civic engagement. ■ Expand data collection to reveal the nature and scope of homelessness in Clallam County. Thirty-nine percent of homeless respondents listed the inability to pay the rent or mortgage as a cause for their homelessness. The second-leading cause was alcohol or drug abuse (31 percent), followed by job loss (26 percent), end of a temporary living situation (26 percent), poor credit rating (25 percent), mental Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News illness (24 percent), family breakup (24 percent) and Water pours under a floodgate on the Glines Canyon Dam in Olympic being the victim of domestic National Park on Wednesday as the Bureau of Reclamation begins to violence or sexual assault lower the level of Lake Mills by 18 feet over the next eight days. (23 percent). Households could report more than one cause.
The new plan uses a January 2006 point-in-time count as a baseline to measure the county’s progress. The 2006 survey found 668 homeless or at-risk households and 1,055 homeless or at-risk people. Since 2006, overall homelessness has dropped by 43 percent in Clallam County, according to the new plan. Five trends are expected in the coming years. They are: ■ Homelessness will be impacted by cuts to temporary assistance and other Department of Social and Health Services programs. ■ An emphasis on employment and job training will help the homeless achieve self-reliance. ■ State and federal funding for homelessness programs is decreasing. ■ Plans are in the works to end veterans’ homeless________ ness at the state and federal level. Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be ■ Changes in state pro- reached at 360-417-3537 or at rob. gram for general assistance ollikainen@peninsuladailynews. will impact 125 to 200 com.
Transit to change service to Walmart Peninsula Daily News
PORT ANGELES — Clallam Transit’s Port Angeles to Sequim commuter — the No. 30 bus — will be rerouted to the Walmart Supercenter at 3471 E. Kolonels Way beginning Wednesday. As the new Walmart opens, the old Walmart across the highway at 3500 E. U.S. Highway 101 will close. Bus service to the old Walmart will end Tuesday. Clallam Transit will not service the parking lot of the new Walmart as it did the old retail store. New bus stops will be located on both sides of U.S.
Highway 101 at Kolonels Way. The change is expected to improve Clallam Transit’s on-time performance, Transit officials said. The grand opening of the Walmart Supercenter east of Port Angeles is set for 7:30 a.m. Wednesday.
New route Meanwhile, Clallam Transit will offer a new weekday route from Sequim to the Jamestown S’Klallam tribal campus in Blyn beginning Monday. No fares will be charged until Nov. 29. The enhanced service is funded by a one-year Fed-
eral Transit Administration grant that the tribe secured. A pending grant request would add another two years of the service. The No. 50 bus will leave Sequim Transit Center at 7:40 a.m., 10:40 a.m., 2:20 p.m. and 4:50 p.m. It will follow Washington Street to Simdars Road to U.S. Highway 101, then turn around at Old Blyn Highway. Riders can flag the No. 50 anywhere where it is safe for the bus to leave and re-enter traffic. For more information on Clallam Transit, phone 360452-4511.
Carlsborg candidate forum to host entrants from 4 races Peninsula Daily News
Keepsakes for sale Purchase a PDN photo — on T-shirts, drink mugs or just the photo itself. www.peninsuladailynews. com Click on “Photo Gallery”
State offers concessions on tunnel plan
The two construction teams are expected to file their proposals by the end of the month.
SEATTLE — Washington state is offering the two teams bidding on the Highway 99 tunnel project $230 million in concessions. The changes reflect higher estimates of the tunnel’s construction costs than the state made several months ago, The Seattle Times reported. Officials said the money can be shifted out of risk and contingency funds, so the overall tunnel budget will stay at just under $2 billion. The tunnel will replace the Alaskan Way viaduct along the downtown Seattle waterfront.
OLYMPIA — Lt. Gov. Brad Owen will lead a fiveday trade mission to Taiwan to discuss alternative energy. Owen will be joined by lawmakers and business leaders from Washington state companies that focus on renewable energy and energy efficiency. They leave Saturday. Owen and state Sen. Phil Rockefeller, D-Bainbridge Island, will speak at
the Taiwan International Green Industry Show in Taipei. The delegation also is set to meet with legislative leaders and others. Other elected officials in Owen’s delegation include Sen. Brian Hatfield, D-Raymond, and Sen. Randi Becker, R-Eatonville. Owen’s office said the elected officials and a member Owen’s staff are being hosted on the trip by the government of Taiwan and that the business leaders are traveling at their own expense. The Associated Press
OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK — Water spilled from a floodgate on the the Glines Canyon Dam Wednesday in another phase of the preparation for the dismantling of two dams on the Elwha River. The Bureau of Reclamation is lowering the level of Lake Mills by 18 feet over the next eight days. The process will accelerate erosion along the new pilot channel dug in the delta at the top of the lake
Briefly . . .
Taiwan mission
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— Glines Canyon in 1927 and the Elwha Dam in 1910. The Lake Mills drawdown is expected to last until Friday, Oct. 29. The lake will remain closed to boaters, since the water level will be too low for the boat ramp to be used. Fall and winter rains are expected to refill the reservoir. The channel was dug in late September and early October.
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Each candidate will be given five minutes to speak and will answer questions. The questions will primarily be focused on the Carlsborg Urban growth area and with infrastructure, Brasher said. For more information, contact Brasher or Butler at High Energy Metals, 360683-6390.
to flush out sediments that will eventually replenish the river ecosystem when Glines Canyon and the Lower Elwha dams are removed beginning next September. The dam removal project is the largest undertaking of its kind to date in the nation. Once it is completed in March 2014, the 70-mile river and its tributaries will be opened to salmon, which have been blocked by the dams since they were built
Peninsula Daily News
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CARLSBORG — Candidates in four races have been invited to a candidate forum to answers questions about Carlsborg tonight. The Carlsborg Business and Property Owners Association will host the forum from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at 130 Harrison Road, Suite 5. Candidates for both District 24 seats in the state House of Representatives, the Community Development Department director and one candidate for the Clallam County commissioners will be present. Incumbent Kevin Van De Wege, 35, a Democrat from Sequim who is a firefighter and paramedic, is being challenged by Republican Dan Gase, 56, a Port Angeles real estate managing broker and consultant, for Position 1 in the 24th District. Republican Jim McEntire, 60, of Sequim, one of
the three Port of Port Angeles commissioners and a retired Coast Guard captain, and Steve Tharinger, 61, also of Sequim, one of the three Clallam County commissioners, are vying to replace Rep. Lynn Kessler, D-Hoquiam, who is retiring this year from Position 2 in the legislative district. Community Development Director John Miller, 61, or Port Angeles, is defending his position from Sheila Roark Miller, 51, of Carlsborg. County commissioner Mike Doherty, a 67-year-old Democrat from Port Angeles — who is seeking reelection to his seat covering the western part of the county — also will attend. His opponent, Robin Poole, 61, a Republican from Beaver who is a UPS driver, “can’t make it,” said Dave Brasher, who is organizing the forum along with Don Butler, president of the association.
Lake Mills to be lowered by 18 feet over 8 days
A6
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Peninsula Daily News
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A7
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The Associated Press
President Barack Obama arrives at King County International Airport on Wednesday.
Obama in Seattle to boost Murray Mayor estimates city’s cost to exceed $100,000
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The Associated Press
At Port Angeles Vern Burton Community Center Located at 308 East 4th Street in Port Angeles Tickets on sale for $10 at the Port Angeles Senior Center, Park View Villas and Crestwood Convalescent Center., & at the door.
Raffle Basket & Door Prizes All Proceeds go to the Port Angeles Senior Center. For more inf information nfformation fo fo call Park View Villas aat 360-452-7222 360-452 52 5 2 72 2-7 7222
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SEATTLE — Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn estimated the cost of providing security for President Barack Obama’s visit to the Emerald City today at $100,000 to $150,000. McGinn made the estimate last week on the Seattle Channel’s “Ask the Mayor” show. A spokesman told The Seattle Times on Tuesday the city would not confirm the figure because of a policy against disclosing security costs. Obama will lead a rally for Sen. Patty Murray, D-Bothell, at the University of Washington. University spokesman Bob Roseth said the school will bill the Murray campaign about $45,000. The Times also reported that political campaigns get
week’s airspace closure: KING TV reported he got a personal call with the reminder from the FAA. Obama is traveling to five western states on a billed some of the flight four-day campaign swing, costs for the president and his longest of the season. his staff. Obama also was in Seat- Western swing tle Aug. 17 to raise money He also will be in Califor Murray. fornia and Nevada for DemThe Federal Aviation ocratic Sens. Barbara Boxer Administration is closing and Harry Reid, the Senate airspace over Seattle dur- president. ing the president’s visit. Obama also will stump for gubernatorial candiA scramble last time dates in Oregon, California and Minnesota ahead of the It hopes to avoid a repeat Nov. 2 elections. of what happened in August He has campaigned with when fighter jets scrambled each of the three senators because a small float plane — more than once in some flew into Seattle and landed cases — and is making on Lake Washington. return visits because he The jets caused a sonic needs a Democratic majorboom that alarmed many ity in the Senate to help get people. his agenda through ConFloat plane pilot Lee gress during the next two Daily of Redmond didn’t years. know about the Aug. 17 The president left WashObama visit or the related ington Wednesday and is restrictions. scheduled to return SaturBut he knows about this day night.
Briefly: State Farm product overall value down in 2009
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OLYMPIA — The value of Washington state’s farm products last year reached nearly $7.3 billion, down 8 percent from 2008, said the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Still, the USDA said, record high values of production were set for eight crops: grapes, hops, sweet corn, mint oil, dry edible beans, wrinkled seed peas, alfalfa seed and apricots. Washington Agriculture Department Director Dan Newhouse said the global recession has hurt prices overall, but the state’s high quality and diversified farm goods are still showing strong demand worldwide. The state’s top five crops are apples, milk, potatoes, wheat and cattle and calves.
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Soldiers return JOINT BASE LEWISMCCHORD — About 130 soldiers returned Wednesday to Joint Base LewisMcChord after a year in Afghanistan. Members of the 5th Battalion, 3rd Field Artillery Regiment were greeted at Soldiers Field House by family members. KOMO Radio reported they included the widows of three of the four soldiers from the unit who were killed in July by a roadside bomb.
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SPOKANE — The Spokane Police Guild has paid for 12 billboards around
Bomb threat arrest SPOKANE — Spokane police have taken a man into custody after a caller told a bank employee that he had planted bombs at five schools. Police said the schools were immediately alerted after the threat was made last Thursday, but no bombs were found. Officers said the caller demanded a large sum of money from Inland Northwest Bank be dropped off at a Spokane intersection. Detectives did so, posing as bank employees. Police said that when the drop was made, a man identified as 37-year-old Donnell Winston came out of a house to pick up the bag. He was immediately detained. Winston was booked into jail on an unrelated warrant. Police said they have asked prosecutors to charge Winston with attempted first-degree robbery and five counts of bomb threats. The Associated Press
Continued from A1 Schmanke said that the agency has stiff penalties for companies that report incorrect test results. The mill reported malfunctions when restarting production after a scheduled maintenance closure at the mill. Those were the likely source of the wastewater discharge problems, Schmanke said. After the report from the mill, Ecology issued an administrative order in August requiring the mill to increase the monitoring frequency for the two pollutants.
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Jefferson County Reporter Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360385-2335 or at charlie. bermant@peninsuladailynews.com.
Ferries Continued from A1 Other pricing changes also are expected on the San Juan Island route. The state ferries system plans a public meeting Thursday, Nov. 4, on the interisland ferry serving the San Juan Island. Presentations will be given as audiences come aboard from Friday Harbor at 11:35 a.m., from Orcas at 12:25 p.m., from Shaw at 12:40 p.m. and from Lopez at 1:05 p.m. The public can submit written comments by e-mail to transc@wstc.wa.gov or through the postal service at P.O. Box 47308, Olympia, WA 98504. Telephone comments are also accepted at 360-7057070. For more information, visit www.wstc.wa.gov/.
________
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631 Stratton rd • Port angeleS, Wa • 360-452-3005 FREE SHUTTLE AVAILABLE!
Police billboards
the city in an attempt to head off layoffs. KXLY-TV reported that the signs read “Property Crime Is Up. Police Investigations Down” and “It’s Our Community. We Stand Ready to Protect and Serve.” The city has asked the guild and other unions not to take pay increases this year and to pay more of their health costs. None of the unions have agreed to the concessions. City spokeswoman Marlene Feist said the city was hoping for economic growth, but it didn’t happen.
Mill
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Jefferson County Reporter Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360385-2335 or at charlie. bermant@peninsuladailynews.com.
A8
Thursday, October 21, 2010 — (J)
PeninsulaNorthwest
Peninsula Daily News
Forks log faller killed on the job By Paige Dickerson Peninsula Daily News
FORKS — Log faller William Tod Horton of Forks, a sports enthusiast and well-liked coach, was killed when a fallen tree pivoted around and hit him after a tree he was cutting tumbled onto it. Horton, 47, was working in the woods off the P-1600 Forest Road near the Clallam Bay prison at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, said Clallam County Sheriff ’s Chief Criminal Deputy Ron Cameron. “A machine operator who was there at the time didn’t see it happen, but saw the tree swing and knew something was wrong,” Cameron said. “There were other workers around at the time.” That worker phoned emergency responders. Hor-
ton had died by the time they arrived, Cameron said. The death is not suspicious, Cameron said. It Horton has been turned over to the Department of Labor and Industries for further investigation. Horton, an experienced tree faller, worked as an independent contractor, his sister, Kayla Hansen, said.
Memorial service A memorial service is scheduled for 3 p.m. Saturday at The Round House, 110 Business Park at the intersection of state Highway 110 and U.S. Highway 101. Funeral arrangements
“He didn’t think he was “He loved giving back to the youth in sports in our ready for it, but they only community and spent lost one game in the weeks countless hours coaching.” that I was gone.” Justus said that Horton Family man was well-liked as a coach. “He had such a great Above everything, Hanwork ethic for the girls,” sen said Horton was a famJustus said. ily man. “He worked hard but “He had an infectious smile and absolutely loved was fun at the same time, and that is something the his family,” she said. “When he smiled, his girls really respected about eyes would light up like a him.” Justus, who has known Christmas tree.” Scott Justus, a longtime Horton since the age of 13, friend and fellow coach with said that his friend’s death Horton, said the man was affects many. “He was dedicated to this always willing to step up community and very well and help. Justus originally liked. It isn’t just me and recruited Horton to help his family that will miss coach boys basketball sev- him, but the whole community will,” Justus said. eral years ago. “I just cannot say enough “I ended up with a neck injury and he ended up good things about him. He stepping up to the head will be missed. He was a coach,” Justus said. wonderful guy and a very
will be handled by Drennan & Ford Funeral Home. Horton was a lifelong North Olympic Peninsula resident, having been born in Port Angeles on June 2, 1963, and having graduated from Forks High School in 1981. Enthusiastic about sports, Horton was president of the West End Youth League, a frequent participant in softball leagues and a basketball player. He also worked on the committee to organize the Demolition Derby in Forks and loved to hunt, Hansen said. Horton was also the assistant coach of the Forks High School girls basketball team. “Tod loved what he did for a living. He loved working in the woods and was happy doing that,” Hansen said.
caring friend and family member.” Horton also frequently played in summer softball leagues in Forks, said Pat Soderlind, who is the former city event coordinator. “I could always count on Tod,” she said. “He would always participate and always help me with organizing tournaments. “There are only good things to say about him.” Horton is survived by his wife, DeAnn of Forks; three daughters, Whitney, Hailey and Kray of Forks; his sister of Forks, a brother, Brian of Elma; and his parents, Bill and Judy Horton of Ocean Shores.
__________ Reporter Paige Dickerson can be reached at 360-417-3535 or at paige.dickerson@peninsula dailynews.com.
College buddies bike from Vermont to PA By Paige Dickerson
and Stephen Hannaford, a psychology and geography major, and Matthew Casey PORT ANGELES — A said the group managed to post-college bicycling odys- get along throughout the sey across the nation to Port three-month trip. Angeles gave Matthew Casey and three friends a Before the ‘real world’ chance to converse and bond “Me and the three other one last time before enterguys have been living ing “the real world.” Casey, the son of Peter together as roommates in Casey, director of Peninsula college for the last two Community Mental Health years,” Casey said. “We have been trying to Center, had just graduated from the University of Ver- figure out what to do after mont, which he attended for college and graduation that four years after graduating didn’t involve immediately from high school in Newark, trying to get employed and going into careers. N.J. “We built up the idea of His companions were Alexander Johannesen, a trying to bike to Port Angewildlife fisheries major; les as we were getting more Seth Ross, a natural into biking.” Casey, who graduated resource planning major; with a double major in English and Asian studies with a minor in Chinese, said he and his roommates wanted some time to think about Juan Gonzales what they wanted to do in the so-called “real world” Dec. 13, 1953 — Oct. 20, 2010 Juan Gonzales died in after graduating. The trip was delayed his Forks home at 56. His obituary will be pub- slightly by a biking accident in May. Casey was riding lished later. Services: Private family down a hill and crashed his services will be held later. bike, breaking his collarDrennan-Ford Funeral bone. Surgery required six Home, Port Angeles, is in weeks of recovery, which charge of arrangements. meant the group couldn’t www.drennanford.com Peninsula Daily News
Death Notices
Death and Memorial Notice Max Michael Pfefer April 18, 1946 October 18, 2010 Max Michael Pfefer, 64, of Port Angeles passed away peacefully in his sleep of natural causes on October 18, 2010. He was born to Irving and Marion (Schwartz) Pfefer in Los Angeles, California, on April 18, 1946. He married his childhood sweetheart, Phyllis Gilda Warman, on April 28, 1968. Prior to Mr. Pfefer’s move to the North Olympic Peninsula in 2000, he lived in Los Angeles, California, and Spokane, Washington, working as an entrepreneur and businessman. He was a loving foster parent in Port Angeles from 2003-2010. He greatly enjoyed shooting, fishing and boating, and was a proud member of the NRA. Mr. Pfefer was a
member of the Peninsula Evangelical Friends Church in Port Angeles. He is survived by his wife of 42 years, Phyllis Pfefer of Port Angeles; son, Matthew Pfefer of Spokane, Washington; daughter and son-in-law, Robin and Ron McDannald of Marysville, Washington; mother, Marion Pfefer of Simi Valley, California; brother and sister-in-law, Larry and Nancy Pfefer of Northridge, California; and sister, Harriet Levenson of Simi Valley, California. Pastor Jonathan Fodge will officiate at the memorial services held Saturday, October 23, 2010, 2:30 p.m., at Peninsula Evangelical Friends Church, 1291 North Barr Road, Port Angeles. A potluck reception will follow. Memorial flowers may be sent to the church. Memorial contributions may be made to the Peninsula Evangelical Friends Church.
Remembering a Lifetime ■ 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 360-417-3556 Monday through Friday for information and assistance and to arrange publication. A convenient form to guide you is available at area mortuaries or by downloading at www.peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.” ■ Death Notices, in which summary information about the deceased, including service information and mortuary, appear once at no charge. No biographical or family information or photo is included. A form for death notices appears at www.peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.” For further information, call 360-417-3528.
Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News
Cross-country bicyclists, from left, Alex Johannesen of Cooperstown, N.Y., Matthew Casey of South Orange, N.J., Seth Ross of Cumberland, R.I., and Stephen Hannaford of Medford, Mass., pause in rural Port Angeles on Tuesday after cycling more than 3,500 miles from Burlington, Vt. leave in June after their May graduation as planned. Ultimately, they left July 9 and arrived in Port Angeles on Oct. 7. The group traveled between 3,500 and 4,000 miles, Casey said. Casey’s and Hannaford’s bikes were used after being worked on to make them
more suitable for a long trip. Ross built his bike up from scrap. “He found his bike frame lying around in some Dumpsters, and we as a household had an old tandem bike from the 1970s that fell apart, so over the course of time, he used parts from that — like the handlebars
— so his bike was all recy- had the repair kit. “That was the first time cled parts,” Casey said. it took me longer to get down a mountain than to ‘Tons of breakdown’ get up one,” Casey said. Johannesen’s was a The group stopped for several days in Chicago, at new bike. “Alex didn’t really have Badlands National Park, at any biking experience,” Yellowstone National Park and other points of interest, Casey said. “He likes to say that the Casey said. “We tried to spend some longest trip before this was time at places that were 10 miles.” The journey was one full more of interest,” he said. Now that they have of adventure. “We had tons of break- arrived at Casey’s parents’ downs the whole way,” home, the bicyclists are looking for jobs locally while Casey said. they decide how to proceed “We were coming over in their careers. the Cascades on [U.S.] “I guess at least for now, Route 2 over Stevens Pass we’re in it for the long haul in a ski area, and two of us now that we’re in the safe — Alex earlier in the trip haven of my parents’ house,” had a big bike crash outside he said. the Badlands in South The group kept up a blog Dakota and I had broke my at squalortour.wordpress. collarbone — we have a little bit of post-traumatic com throughout some of stress disorder when going their journey. “Some places were downhill. “The other two are really harder than others to get on a computer,” Casey said. speed demons.” __________ So, when Casey’s bike came up with a flat tire, he Reporter Paige Dickerson can had to ride 15 miles down be reached at 360-417-3535 or at the hill with the flat because paige.dickerson@peninsuladaily the two who were ahead news.com.
PT City Council advances plan to raise property tax revenues By Julie McCormick
For Peninsula Daily News
PORT TOWNSEND — The City Council this week gave the nod to two tax measures to increase revenue. No public comment was heard Monday before the council unanimously approved the first reading of a proposal to raise property tax revenues for next year by the state limit of 1 percent. The tax increase applies to overall revenue, not individual properties. With new construction factored in, some bills could even go
down. Second reading and final approval is scheduled for the council’s regular Nov. 1 meeting. Also scheduled for final approval Nov. 1 is an increase of the Emergency Medical Service property levy to 50 cents per $1,000 valuation. The council gave preliminary approval Monday. Voters authorized the city in April to restore the EMS levy to the original 50-cent level following a slow decline over the years as property values climbed. The council also unani-
mously approved a new ordinance regulating fences, walls, arbors and hedges on private property. The ordinance is based on International Uniform Building Code standards and includes a requirement that a permit must be obtained for any fences taller than 6 feet.
Special exception
deer freely wander the streets and gardens. A 10-foot fence is generally considered deer-proof. Fence additions for deer will require only design approval from the city. The council is expected to take up new regulation of fences, walls, arbors and hedges on city rights of way adjoining private property later this year.
A special exception is ________ available for height additions to existing fences to Julie McCormick is a freelance deter deer incursion, a com- writer and photographer living in mon problem in Port Port Townsend. Contact her at Townsend where resident juliemccormick10@gmail.com.
Death and Memorial Notice Wilma B. Johnston May 2, 1916 October 17, 2010 Wilma B. Johnston died peacefully on October 17, 2010, at Olympic Medical Center. She was born in Burns, Oregon, to Rudolph John and Barbara May Rogstad. She was preceded in death by her six siblings: Annie Waugh, Nellie Holden, Dorothy Baum, Julia Carter, Marcine Hutchinson and Rudolph “Bud” Rogstad. She graduated from Ashton High School, University of Idaho and St. Mark’s School of Nursing in Salt Lake City. She married Milton E. Johnston in 1941. Their union produced four children: George W. Johnston, Richard J. Johnston (Mary Jo), Leslieann Luboff (Richard), and Barbara E. Fraker (Robert). She has four grandchildren, four great-grandchil-
Wilma B. Johnston dren and numerous nieces and nephews throughout the Western states. She was always proud of her family and their accomplishments. In her career as a registered nurse, she worked at St. Mark’s Hospital, Salt Lake City, and Wyoming General Hospital. In Port Angeles, she worked at Davidson Hay, Port Angeles General Hospital (YMCA building) and Olympic Memorial
Hospital, and was Dr. Arthur Wendel’s first office nurse. She then worked at Sequoia Medical Center in Redwood City, California. Returning to Washington, she completed her nursing career at Virginia Mason and Swedish Hospitals in Seattle. Health reasons brought her back to Port Angeles to be closer to family. Throughout her life, Wilma continued to keep up with advances in medicine. Her club affiliations were: American Nurses Association, American Legion Auxiliary, Lady Elks/Eagles, Sons of Norway, Port Angeles Dance Club, Port Angeles Senior Center and the Retired Nurses Group. She also was a member of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church. Wilma loved nature — camping with parents and family in Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks, road trips to Hurricane Ridge, Ruby Beach
and “The Lakes.” She also enjoyed numerous trips to visit Leslieann in Alaska. Her ceramic projects always included flowers. She was always busy before work, canning produce/fruit for the winter, baking and sewing for her children. Her zest for life was shown in her brightly colored clothes, sparkly jewelry and her colorful language and phrases. She was one of a kind! Music filled her life. She took her girls to the Port Angeles Symphony, played her records and enjoyed any and all Barbershop shows and Afterglows that she could attend. Services to be held at noon on Monday, October 25, 2010, at Drennan-Ford Funeral Home, 260 Monroe Road, Port Angeles, with viewing at 11 a.m. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County, 540 East Eighth Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362.
Peninsula Daily News for Thursday, October 21, 2010
Commentary
Page
A9
Here’s where U.S. can cut spending In the last two years, spending by the current Congress has increased 21.4 percent, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The question thrown in the Cal face of tea party Thomas activists and other conservative Republicans when they talk of cutting spending is this: “Where would you cut?” It’s a loaded question, of course, and those who ask it follow it up with vitriolic assertions that any cuts will mean that children will go hungry, the elderly will be evicted from nursing homes and the federal government will be forced to close, meaning no more Social Security checks. This is precisely the approach taken in 1995 when the Clinton administration set a trap for the new Republican congressional majority and shut down the government, sending Republicans into a hasty retreat, from which
they and their proposed spending cuts never fully recovered. Everyone knows Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid must be reformed, but Democrats want to maintain control, so they won’t do what is necessary to fix these massive entitlement programs. So, where to cut? The presumed new Republican majority can begin by paring down noncontroversial spending that the public will understand and then, after proving the programs aren’t necessary or could be better run by the private sector, move on to more expensive programs. Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., ranking member on the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, has made a start. In a letter to me, Rep. Mica encloses a report by his committee’s minority staff with the clever title, “Sitting on Our Assets: The Federal Government’s Misuse of Taxpayer-Owned Assets.” Misuse is a word most Americans understand and don’t like. The report identifies “hundreds of billions of dollars in potential savings” through “improved management” of what the federal government owns.
“If implemented,” says Rep. Mica, “the opportunities . . . have the potential to save up to approximately $250 billion.” AdmitMica tedly, that’s not much when the latest deficit projection is $1.294 trillion, but we must start somewhere. The problem is — and always has been — that once government programs and agencies are created, they quickly become sacrosanct and virtually impossible to destroy. As Ronald Reagan said: “Government programs, once launched, never disappear. . . . A government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we’ll ever see on this earth!” So it doesn’t matter that the Department of Education doesn’t educate or that the Department of Energy doesn’t produce energy. It’s government and, thus, by definition good in the minds of the Washington establishment. There are quite a number of
Peninsula Voices Not property taxes In response to Peninsula Daily News reporter Paul Gottlieb’s fine article concerning Port of Port Angeles Executive Director Jeff Robb’s pay increase of 5 percent [“(Port) Commissioners Defend Executive’s Raise,” Oct. 20 PDN], I ask the author and readers to consider these additional facts, which were not mentioned, but are important nonetheless: Port employees’ salaries, including Mr. Robb’s, are paid through operating revenues, not taxpayer levies collected from property taxes. These operating revenues are earned from income the port collects from its customers via port-owned property rents, marina rents and dock use, and all airport activities. Port operating expenses
including salaries are earned from this income stream. Property tax levies collected from the taxpayers of Clallam County can only be allocated to purchase property, build and maintain industrial buildings and structures (dock, wharves and runways) and infrastructure. From these public owned assets, it is Mr. Robb’s responsibility as director to make them produce income and create the jobs that benefit all of Clallam County. We taxpayers should be thankful to have such a man in charge of our publicly owned assets and managing in a professional style that are producing income revenues in this time of government deficits and mismanagement. Eric Foth, Port Angeles
solid proposals for spending cuts and efficiencies in the minority staff report. These include “Amtrak’s squandering the potential development of high-speed rail in the Northeast Corridor; the Federal Aviation Administration’s management of air traffic control facilities; utilizing innovative financing alternatives, including welldefined private sector participation, for infrastructure projects.” (Why should the money come only from government?) There is much more — the entire report is available at http://tinyurl.com/2avochp. Additionally, a new House (and possibly Senate) majority ought to embarrass Democrats by exposing the number of government programs that no longer work (or never achieved their objectives) and then ask for a referendum from the public as to whether they want the money they earn to continue to go for such things. Republicans could also ask the private sector to submit proposals for projects it could do less expensively and more efficiently than government. People who elect not to partici-
Our readers’ letters, faxes
EDITOR’S NOTE — Foth is the campaign manager for Jim McEntire, a Republican and a Port of Port Angeles commissioner who is running for 24th Legislative District, Position 2, against Steve Tharinger, a Democrat and one of the three Clallam County commissioners. We appreciate Foth’s points. An explanation of the port’s financial structure should have been included in the Oct. 20 story.
________ Cal Thomas is a Fox TV network commentator and syndicated newspaper columnist. His column appears on this page every Thursday. He can be reached at tmseditors@tribune.com or by U.S. mail to Tribune Media Services, 2225 Kenmore Ave., Suite 114, Buffalo, NY 14207.
and e-mail representative. The MAD platform is simple: We’re madder than hell and we’re not going to take it anymore! Care to join me? Verlane S. Mullins, Sequim
Mating season
What, me worry? The third-party option would be great, but the unintended (or was it?) consequence of the “top two” ruling precludes any party except “Dems” or “Repubs” from appearing on the ballot. Both parties have unlimited funds for their candidates’ campaigns, as
pate in government programs might be given a tax break. A new emphasis on healthy living (thank you Michelle Obama for emphasizing how overweight we are) would reduce the costs of health care and possibly lower the cost of health insurance, as well as reduce the number of hospital stays. The public will likely accept these and other cost reductions if they can see results and if Republicans can persuade them that the cuts they’re making are in the public’s interest, and not in the interest of the GOP. That’s the challenge. Rep. Mica’s minority report offers one answer to the question, “Where would you cut spending?” Get this right and there will be many others.
many of us have noticed, ad nauseam. I used to waste my vote on third-party candidates when I was disgusted with the Dem/Repub pairs, and I still do on the primary ballot, but to no avail. Two Oct. 17 letter writers [“Ripe for Third
Autumn is mating season for Olympic Peninsula Roosevelt elk, blacktail deer and mountain goats. The people involved in the tragic goring death of an experienced hiker on the Klahhane Trail in Olympic National Park by a ram Party,” “Vote, Regardless”] mountain goat were all are correct. We need to take extremely experienced outback our country from the doors men and women. yo-yos who are destroying it. What a terrible way for This year, I’m supporting all of us to be reminded that the MAD party, at the encounters with our beautifederal level, with write-in ful wildlife can easily result votes for Alfred E. Neuman in human tragedy, especially for senator and Dagwood during the mating season. Bumstead for Beth Oakes, Joyce
When banks become the robbers The big banks that caused the collapse of the global finance market, and received tens of billions of dollars in taxpayerfunded bailouts, have likely been engaging in wholesale fraud against homeowners and the courts. But in a promising Amy development this week, Goodman attorneys general from all 50 states announced a bipartisan joint investigation into foreclosure fraud. Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, GMAC and other big mortgage lenders recently suspended most foreclosure proceedings following revelations that thousands of their foreclosures were being conducted like “foreclosure mills” — with tens of thousands of legal documents signed by low-level staffers with little or no knowledge of what they were signing. Then the Obama administration signaled that it was not supporting a foreclosure moratorium. Not long after, Bank of America announced it was restarting
its foreclosure operations. GMAC followed suit, and others will likely join in. So much for the voluntary moratorium. GMAC Mortgage engaged in mass document processing, dubbed “robo-signing.” In several cases, GMAC Mortgage filed documents with courts that were signed by Jeffrey Stephan. Stephan presided over a staff of 12 in suburban Philadelphia. Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray filed a lawsuit against GMAC Mortgage, Stephan and the bank that owns GMAC, Ally Financial (itself a subsidiary of General Motors). According to one report, Stephan received 10,000 mortgage foreclosure documents to process in one month. Based on an eight-hour workday, he would have had to read, verify and sign, in the presence of a notary, about one document per minute. He admitted to signing documents without reading them or checking the facts about homeowners said to be in default. And Stephan was just one of many “robo-signers.” Recall that GM received $51 billion in taxpayer bailouts; its subsidiary, GMAC, received $16.3
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billion; and Ally Financial subsidiary GMAC Mortgage received $1.5 billion as an “incentive payment for home loan modification.” So you as a Kapture taxpayer may have bailed out a bank that is fraudulently foreclosing on you. What recourse do you have? Back in February 2009, Ohio Rep. Marcy Kaptur advised homeowners to force lenders to “produce the note.” People facing foreclosure were being taken to court while the bank alleging default couldn’t even prove it owned the mortgage. The mortgage document often had been lost in the tangled web of financial wheeling and dealing. Kaptur told me: “Millions and millions of families are getting foreclosure notices. “They don’t have proper legal representation. . . . Possession is nine-tenths of the law; therefore, stay in your property.” If you stay in your home, your mortgage lender may break in. Nancy Jacobini of Orange County, Fla., was inside her home when she heard an intruder.
Thinking she was being burglarized, she called 9-1-1. Police determined the intruder was actually someone sent by JPMorgan Chase to change the locks. And Jacobini wasn’t even in foreclosure! Most banks that suspended foreclosure efforts only did so in 23 states — because it is only in those 23 states that courts actually adjudicate over foreclosure proceedings. One judge who oversees foreclosures is New York State Supreme Court Justice Arthur Schack. He has made national headlines for rejecting dozens of foreclosure filings. He told “Democracy Now!” news hour: “My job is to do justice. . . . We run into numerous problems with assignments of mortgages, questionable affidavits of merit and just sloppy paperwork in general.” Bruce Marks runs NACA, a national nonprofit that helps people avoid foreclosure. He told me: “When President Obama was running for president, he said one of the first things he’ll do is put a moratorium on foreclosures. “He never did. He never backed bankruptcy reform so people could have the right to go in front of a bankruptcy judge.”
News Department Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ Leah Leach, managing editor/news, 360-417-3531 ■ Roy Tanaka, news editor, 360-417-3539 ■ Brad LaBrie, sports editor; 360-417-3525 ■ Diane Urbani de la Paz, features editor; 360-417-3550 ■ General information: 360-417-3527 or 800-826-7714, Ext. 527 News fax: 360-417-3521 E-mail: news@peninsuladailynews.com Sequim office: 150 S. Fifth Ave., Suite 2 (98382) ■ Jeff Chew, Sequim/Dungeness Valley editor, 360-681-2391; jeff.chew@peninsuladailynews.com Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way (98368) ■ Charlie Bermant, Jefferson County reporter, 360-385-2335; charlie.bermant@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Julie C. McCormick, contributing reporter, 360-382-4645; juliemccormick10@gmail.com
Marks went on: “And where is President Obama? When he says, ‘Well, you know, we don’t want to upset the market,’ what is good about a market when someone is foreclosed on and . . . you’ve got a vacant building? “We have to have a national moratorium to give ourselves a window of opportunity to restructure mortgages . . . to look at homeowners as people, not as a commodity to make money.” According to RealtyTrac, banks repossessed 102,134 properties in September, a home roughly every 30 seconds. Every 30 seconds, banks — many that received funds from the Bush administration’s TARP, and that may be using fraudulent practices — foreclose on an American family’s dream of home ownership. Meanwhile, GMAC Mortgage has reported increased profits for the first half of 2010.
________
Amy Goodman hosts the radio and TV program “Democracy Now!” Her column appears every Thursday. E-mail her at mail@ democracynow.org or in care of Democracy Now!, 207 W. 25th St., Floor 11, New York, NY 10001.
Have Your Say ■ Rex Wilson, weekday commentary editor, 360-417-3530 We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” and “Teen 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, anonymous letters, personal attacks, letters advocating boycotts, letters to other people, mass mailings and commercial appeals are not published. Include your name, street address and — for verification purposes — day and evening telephone numbers. E-mail to letters@ peninsuladailynews.com, fax to 360-417-3521, or mail to Letters to the Editor, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. RANTS & RAVES for the Sunday editions can be recorded on the Rants & Raves hot line at 360-417-3506 or sent to the above addresses and fax number.
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Peninsula Daily News for Thursday, October 21, 2010
Sports
S E CT I O N
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BUSINESS, POLITICS & ENVIRONMENT Page B4
Outdoors
Beauty is hook deep CHUM SALMON DON’T need any help around Halloween. They’re scary enough as it is. As one writer put it a few years Matt ago, spawning Schubert chum look like they feed on children’s dreams. It’s not a stretch to say these fish won’t win any beauty contests. But in the salt, they are a prize to be won. Take the Hood Canal fall chum — a bloated ragtag run of hatchery spawners that inspires more than a few cat calls from North Olympic Peninsula anglers. According to Hoodsport Hatchery technician Mark Cylwik, there’s scads of top-of-the-line chum in Hood Canal. “These are some really nice biglooking chum,” said Cylwik, and some of the fish top out in the 20-pound range. “And as usual this time of year, they are pretty bright right out in front of the hatchery.” Indeed, one need not look too hard for Hood Canal chum each fall. From late October well into November, the frightful fish show up in great numbers around Hoodsport Hatchery (360-877-5222). Many anglers tend to go for your typical corkies and yarn setup when targeting the chum, but spoons, spinners or a small herring or anchovy under a float or bobber can attract action as well. The prevailing opinion is that the color green works best for chum. Just make sure to avoid Tuesdays and Thursdays, when the tribal fishery dominates the water. The tribal anglers use beach seines to catch the chum, and many of the fish that aren’t caught are usually spooked out of the area for a day or so. That makes weekend days like Saturday and Sunday particularly good times to hit the water. “Even on the day of [the tribal fishery] it can be good, but you just never know,” Cylwik said. “It should build up on Friday and definitely throughout the weekend. “Low tide is a no go [for fishing], because of the fact that the fish just won’t come up the creek; also, because the water line goes beyond our boundary markers [and into private property]. “An incoming mid-tide to high tide is a good time, and also the outgoing high to mid-tide is fine.” The chum run tends to hit its peak around the second week in November. “Things drop off drastically after Thanksgiving,” Cylwik said. But, he added, “it does tend to vary from year to year, so we could be surprised.” A handicapped fishing platform at the hatchery offers wheelchair accessibility. That is often best to fish from during high tides as long as one has a long-handled net handy. Only handicapped anglers may legally fish from the hatchery. Ideally, you should immediately bleed chum by cutting the gills. Then ice them down as soon as possible. They are excellent when barbecued or smoked.
Mushroom Mania The fungal community came out in full force for last weekend’s wild mushroom show in Sequim. If only the same enthusiasm could be displayed for “Mushroom Mania: A Fungal Festivus,” the PDN’s annual wild mushroom photo contest. It’s been nearly a week since I’ve received fungal photos from you, my dear Peninsulites. Given the cash payouts ($50 to each category winner) the PDN is already on the hook for, my future employment may depend on it. I’m enough of a sunk cost as it is. The contest’s three categories are largest mushroom, prettiest mushroom and mushroom most resembling a notable figure. All photos should be sent to matt. schubert@peninsuladailynews.com. The deadline is Nov. 8.
________ Matt Schubert is the outdoors and sports columnist for the Peninsula Daily News. His column regularly appears on Thursdays and Fridays. He can be reached at matt.schubert@peninsuladailynews.com.
Patrick Hagerty/for Peninsula Daily News
Meegan M. Reid/Kitsap Sun
Ingrid Barrentine/for Peninsula Daily News
The Olympic League has produced six state cross country champions since 2006. That includes, from left, Sequim’s Stephanie Marcy in 2006, Port Townsend’s Quinton Decker in 2008 and Sequim’s Allison Cutting in 2008.
League of champions Cross country rules in Olympic By Matt Schubert
Peninsula Daily News
SEQUIM — Pat Durr felt compelled to make a prediction after the Salt Creek Invitational in September. Kingston’s Marina Roberts had just dominated a field of 98 runners in the varsity girls race with a 32-second victory margin, while Port Angeles’ Alison Maxwell finished only two spots back in third. The message was clear: Even after the departures of former Class 2A state champions Ruby Roberts (Kingston) and Allison Cutting (Sequim), the Olympic League was still as strong as ever. “We’re going to get a state champion out of this league,” said Durr, a longtime Port Angeles cross country coach. “We have great talent, which makes our league so much better. This is a tough league.” Given recent history, it wasn’t exactly a bold statement.
After all, the Olympic League has produced six state champions since its reconstitution in 2006. At least one runner has gone on to win a state title each fall. That began with Sequim’s Stephanie Marcy in 2006, progressed with Kingston’s Ruby Roberts in ’07 and blossomed with dual state champions in ’08 (Port Townsend’s Quinton Decker and Cutting) and ’09 (Port Townsend’s Bereket Piatt and Ruby Roberts).
Today’s event So it’s hardly a stretch to expect today’s league meet at Cedars at Dungeness Golf Course — races start at approximately 3 p.m. — to produce a state champion . . . or two. “The programs now are strong and they are getting good numbers,” Sequim coach Harold Huff said. Turn
to
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Kai-Huei Yau/Tri-City Herald
Port Townsend’s Bereket Piatt, the reigning Class 1A state champion, is considered one of the favorites in today’s Olympic League meet at Cedars at Dungeness Golf Course.
MLB Playoffs
Yankees survive Game 5 The Associated Press
NEW YORK — They were facing the end of their season and a miserable winter after that. Not to worry, Also . . . Joe Girardi said. ■ Giants Speaking in the move to wee hours before within one his players went win of home for a few Series/B2 hours sleep ahead of Game 5, the New York Yankees manager implored them not to give up. “That was huge,” CC Sabathia said. “Just having us be able to relax and not panic.” No panic here. Sabathia pitched like a champion, and the Yankees are heading for Texas. Nick Swisher and Robinson Cano hit consecutive homers to build an early cushion, Sabathia made the lead stand up and the Yankees beat the Rangers 7-2 Wednesday to close within 3-2 in the AL championship series. “We’re right where we need to be,” Swisher said. A late-arriving crowd for the late-afternoon game wondered whether this would be it for the defending World Series champs after Texas outscored them 25-5 while winning three straight. A difficult comeback? Yes. Impossible? No. As Girardi remembered telling his players, “Before we lost the three games in a row, we won four in a row.” He added: “Just look at tomorrow. Win a game tomorrow.” By the time Curtis Granderson hit an eighth-inning homer for his second RBI of the game, belief among the Yankees was starting to grow. Turn
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The Associated Press
Pittsburgh linebacker James Harrison (92) hits Cleveland wide receiver Mohamed Massaquoi (11) during the second quarter of Sunday’s game in Pittsburgh. Harrison was fined $75,000 on Tuesday for his hit against Massaquoi
Laying down law Players upset over NFL rulings on helmet hits By Barry Wilner
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Ray Lewis is worried about what’s happening to his sport. The Baltimore linebacker who epitomizes hard hits in the NFL fears that the league is stripping away the inherent violence and “the game will be diluted very quickly.” “My opinion is play the game like that game is supposed to be played, and whatever happens happens,” Lewis said Wednesday about the NFL’s decision to crack down on dangerous and flagrant hits.
The NFL imposed huge fines on three players — Pittsburgh’s James Harrison, Atlanta’s Dunta Robinson and New England’s Brandon Meriweather — for illegal hits last weekend. It warned that, starting with this week’s games, violent conduct will be cause for suspension. Arizona Cardinals linebacker Joey Porter was clearly perplexed by the decision. “There’s no more hitting hard. That’s what our game is about. It’s a gladiator sport,” Porter said. “I mean, the whole excite-
ment of people getting hit hard, big plays happening, stuff like that. “Just watch — the game is going to change.” Violence has always been a part of the NFL, bringing soaring TV ratings and strong attendance — along with the allure that accompanied tackles by Chuck Bednarik, Fred “The Hammer” Williamson, and Jack “The Assassin” Tatum. The question is how much to allow. “Physical, tough football is what people are attracted to,” said Ray Anderson, the NFL’s executive vice president of football operations. “Violent, unnecessary hits that put people at risk, not just for the careers but lives . . . we’re not subscribing to the notion fans want that.” Turn
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SportsRecreation
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Today’s
Peninsula Daily News
SPORTS ON TV
Latest sports headlines can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.
Scoreboard Calendar
Today
Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”
6 a.m. (47) GOLF EPGA Golf, Castello Masters at Club de Campo Villa del Mediterraneo in Castellon, Spain. 11 a.m. (47) GOLF MWT Golf, Winn Dixie Jacksonville Open at TPC at Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. 2 p.m. (47) GOLF PGA Golf, Justin Timberlake Shriners Hospitals for Children Open at TPC at Summerlin in Las Vegas, Nev. 4:30 p.m. (13) KCPQ MLB Baseball, Philadelphia Phillies at San Francisco Giants in NLCS Game 5. 4:30 p.m. (27) ESPN2 MLS Soccer, New England Revolution at New York Red Bulls. 5 p.m. (31) TNT NBA Basketball, Miami Heat at Atlanta Hawks (Pre-season). 6 p.m. (26) ESPN College Football, UCLA at Oregon.
SPORTS SHOT
Today Volleyball: Port Townsend at North Kitsap, 6:15 p.m.; Port Angeles at Kingston, 6:15 p.m.; Olympic at Sequim, 6:15 p.m.; Rainier at Forks, 5:30 p.m.; Quilcene at Muckleshoot, 6 p.m.; Neah Bay at Crescent (Senior Night), 5 p.m. Girls Soccer: Port Townsend at North Kitsap, 6:45 p.m.; Port Angeles at Kingston, 6:45 p.m.; Sequim at Olympic, 6:45 p.m.; Chimacum at Charles Wright Academy in Tacoma, 4 p.m. Cross Country: Port Angeles, Sequim and Port Townsend at Olympic League Championships at Cedars at Dungeness Golf Coarse in Sequim, 3 p.m. Girls Swimming: Port Townsend at Bremerton, 3 p.m.; North Kitsap at Port Angeles, 3 p.m.; Sequim at Olympic, 3 p.m. Boys Tennis: Port Townsend/Chimacum at Charles Wright Academy in Tacoma, 4 p.m.
Friday Football: Klahowya at Port Angeles (Homecoming), 7 p.m.; Port Townsend at Orting, 7 p.m.; North Kitsap at Sequim, 7 p.m.; Cedar Park Christian at Chimacum (Homecoming), 7 p.m.; Forks at Tenino, 7 p.m.; Muckleshoot at Clallam Bay, 7 p.m.
Area Sports Bowling LAUREL LANES Oct. 19 Mixed Up Mix Men’s High Game: Randy Gore, 233 Men’s High Series: REandy Gore, 677 Women’s High Game: Sheri Zindel, 206 Women’s High Series: Sheri Zindel, 457 Oct. 19 Seniors Men’s High Game: Jack Whilan, 178 Men’s High Series: Richard Roper, 455 Women’s High Game: Sheri Zindel, 157 Women’s High Series: Sheri Zindel, 432 Oct. 19 Tuesday Brunch League High Score: Deb Campion, 197 High Series: Cheri Pysson, 514 League Leaders: Sunrise Meats
The Associated Press
Walk
off sacrifice?
San Francisco Giants’ Juan Uribe watches his game-winning sacrifice fly during the ninth inning of Game 4 of baseball’s NLCS against the Philadelphia Phillies on Wednesday in San Francisco. See story below for more details.
Golf PENINSULA GOLF CLUB Men’s Club Oct. 19 Better Nine Individual Gross: Kerry Perkins, 35; Lane Richards, 36 Individual Net: Gary McLaughlin, 31.5; Dennis Ingram, 31.5; Duane Vernon, 31.5; Jerry Sparks, 32; Steve Main, 33; Bill Pampell, 33.5; Ming Chang, 33.5; Terry Jackson, 33.5; Joe Tweter, 34 Team Gross: Kerry Perkins and Craig Jacobs, 71; Rick Parkhurst and Bob Brodhun, 71 Team Net: Duane Vernon and Jerry Hendricks, 61; Gary Murphy and Dave Henderson, 62; Rick Parkhurst and Terry Jackson, 62; Duane Vernon and Jac Osborn, 62; Bill Pampell and Jack Munro, 63; Tom Lowe and Gary McLaughlin, 63; Bob Brodhun and Terry Jackson, 63 Ladies Club 18 Hole Ladies Oct. 20 3-3-3 Net: Chris Anderson, 30.5; Gloria Andrus, 32.5; Dolly Burnett, 32.5; Sherry Henderson, 33; Erena Peabody, 33 9 Hole Ladies 1-3-1 Net: Helen Arnold, 3.5; Kitty Byrne, 8.5; Sandy Granger, 9
Prep Sports Football AP prep football poll Class 4A 1. Skyline (9) 6-1 99 2. Curtis (1) 7-0 91 3. Ferris 7-0 77 4. Bothell 6-1 71 5. Kentwood 7-0 61 6. Gonzaga Prep 6-1 47 7. Chiawana 7-0 42 8. Union 6-1 28 9. Rogers (Puyallup) 6-1 15 10. Eastlake 6-1 5 Class 3A 1. Bellevue (8) 6-1 98 2. Camas (1) 7-0 86 3. Capital 7-0 81 4. Juanita 6-1 66 5. Kamiakin (1) 7-0 53 5. Lakes 6-1 53 7. Liberty (Renton) 5-2 41 8. Mt. Spokane 6-1 39 9. Glacier Peak 6-1 19 10. O’Dea 6-1 11 Class 2A 1. Arch. Murphy (8) 7-0 98 2. Lynden (2) 7-0 88 3. Tumwater 6-1 81 4. W. F. West 6-1 66 5. Prosser 6-1 62 6. Centralia 6-1 39 7. Othello 5-2 31 8. Burlington-Edison 6-1 28 9. Anacortes 6-1 20 10. Port Angeles 7-0 13 Others receiving 6 or more points: Sequim 7. Class 1A 1. Cas. Christian (7) 7-0 88 2. Meridian (2) 7-0 83 3. King’s 7-0 69 4. Montesano 7-0 61 5. Connell 6-1 48 6. Chelan 6-1 43 7. Colville 7-0 39 8. Cashmere 6-1 33 9. Zillah 7-0 20 10. Royal 6-1 9
Class 2B 1. Colfax (5) 6-0 57 2. Napavine (1) 7-0 55 3. South Bend 6-1 46 4. Waitsburg-Prescott 7-0 40 5. DeSales 5-2 29 6. Oroville 6-1 27 7. White Pass 6-1 24 8. Willapa Valley 6-1 22 9. Tacoma Baptist 5-2 16 10. Asotin 4-2 6 Class 1B 1. Cusick (8) 7-0 80 2. Lummi 5-1 70 3. Al. Coulee-Hartline 6-0 66 4. St. John-Endicott 5-1 55 5. Lyle 4-2 31 Others receiving 6 or more points: Taholah 12.
NWAACC Soccer Men’s Standings WEST Lea Pts Peninsula 6-2-1 19 Bellevue 6-3-0 18 Highline 4-3-2 14 Tacoma 4-3-2 14 Olympic 2-4-3 9 Women’s Standings WEST Lea Pts Bellevue 7-1-2 23 Highline 5-3-2 17 Tacoma 4-4-2 14 Green River 4-5-1 13 Peninsula 3-4-3 12 Olympic 1-7-2 5
Sea 8-2-3 9-3-1 8-3-2 6-4-2 2-6-3 Sea 9-2-2 6-4-2 4-6-2 4-7-1 3-6-4 3-8-2
Baseball MLB Playoffs Wednesday’s Games NY Yankees 7, Texas 2 Texas leads 3-2 San Francisco 6, Philadelphia 5 SF leads 3-1 Today’s Games Philadelphia at San Francisco, 4:57 p.m. Halladay vs Lincecum Friday’s Games NY Yankees at Texas, 5:07 p.m. Hughes vs Lewis Saturday’s Games San Francisco at Philadelphia, 12:57 p.m. Sanchez vs Oswalt NY Yankees at Texas, 5:07 p.m. Pettitte vs Lee Sunday’s Game San Francisco at Philadelphia, 4:57 p.m. Cain vs Hamels
Basketball NBA Preseason Wednesday’s Games Charlotte 105, New Orleans 98 F/OT Orlando 101, Dallas 76 Philadelphia 118, New York 91 Chicago 110, Toronto103 Boston 107, New Jersey 92 Today’s Games Milwaukee at Cleveland, 4 p.m. Miami at Atlanta, 5 p.m. New Orleans at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Houston at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m. Golden State at LA Lakers, 7 p.m. Denver at Portland, 7 p.m.
Football College Today’s Games UCLA at 2 Oregon, 6 p.m. Friday’s Games South Florida at Cincinnati, 5 p.m. Saturday’s Games 7 Michigan St. at Northwestern, 9 a.m. Purdue at 10 Ohio St., 9 a.m. Iowa St. at 19 Texas, 9 a.m. Syracuse at 20 West Virginia, 9 a.m. Duke at 25 Virginia Tech, 9 a.m. Penn St. at Minnesota, 9 a.m. Rutgers at Pittsburgh, 9 a.m. Indiana at Illinois, 9 a.m. Temple at Buffalo, 9 a.m. Notre Dame vs. Navy, 9 a.m. Mississippi at 23 Arkansas, 9:30 a.m. Maryland at Boston College, 10 a.m. Ohio at Miami, 10 a.m. Florida Atlantic at Arkansas St., 10 a.m. Wyoming at Brigham Young, 11 a.m. LSU at 4 Auburn, 12:30 p.m. 13 Wisconsin at 15 Iowa, 12:30 p.m. 16 Nebraska at 14 Oklahoma St., 12:30 p.m. 22 Kansas St. at Baylor, 12:30 p.m. Arizona St. at California, 12:30 p.m. Texas Tech at Colorado, 12:30 p.m. Connecticut at Louisville, 12:30 p.m. Kent St. at Bowling Green, 12:30 p.m. Georgia Tech at Clemson, 12:30 p.m. Western Michigan at Akron, 12:30 p.m. Rice at UCF, 12:30 p.m. Houston at Southern Methodist, 12:30 p.m. Central Michigan at thern Illinois, 1 p.m. Marshall at East Carolina, 1:15 p.m. Louisiana-Mon. at Mid. Tennessee, 1:30 p.m. Washington St. at 12 Stanford, 2 p.m. New Mexico St. at Idaho, 2 p.m. Western Kentucky at Louisiana-Laf., 2 p.m. Hawaii at Utah St., 2 p.m. Colorado St. at 9 Utah, 3 p.m. Eastern Michigan at Virginia, 3 p.m. 8 Alabama at Tennessee, 4 p.m. 21 South Carolina at Vanderbilt, 4 p.m. UAB at 24 Mississippi St., 4 p.m. Texas A&M at Kansas, 4 p.m. Ball St. at Toledo, 4 p.m. Georgia at Kentucky, 4:30 p.m. North Carolina at Miami, 4:30 p.m. 1 Oklahoma at 11 Missouri, 5 p.m. Air Force at 5 TCU, 5 p.m. Fresno St. at San Jose St., 5 p.m. Tulane at UTEP, 9:05 p.m. San Diego St. at New Mexico, 7 p.m. Washington at 18 Arizona, 7:15 p.m. BCS RANKINGS RK TEAM RECORD 1 Oklahoma 6-0 2 Oregon 6-0 3 Boise State 6-0 4 Auburn 7-0 5 TCU 7-0 6 LSU 7-0 7 Michigan State 7-0 8 Alabama 6-1 9 Utah 6-0 10 Ohio State 6-1 11 Missouri 6-0 12 Stanford 5-1 13 Wisconsin 6-1 14 Oklahoma State 6-0 15 Iowa 5-1 16 Nebraska 5-1 17 Florida State 6-1
18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
Arizona Texas West Virginia South Carolina Kansas State Arkansas Mississippi State Virginia Tech
5-1 4-2 5-1 4-2 5-1 4-2 5-2 5-2
Hockey NHL Standings Western Conference PACIFIC PT HOME ROAD GF Dallas 8 2-0-0 2-1-0 20 Los Angeles 6 2-0-0 1-1-0 10 Anaheim 5 2-0-1 0-4-0 14 San Jose 3 0-2-1 1-0-0 9 Phoenix 3 0-1-1 1-1-0 8 NORTHWEST PT HOME ROAD GF Colorado 8 1-0-0 3-2-0 19 Calgary 6 2-1-0 1-1-0 9 Vancouver 6 2-0-1 0-3-1 15 Minnesota 5 2-2-0 0-0-1 16 Edmonton 4 2-0-0 0-2-0 12 CENTRAL PT HOME ROAD GF Chicago 11 3-2-0 2-0-1 25 Nashville 8 2-0-2 1-0-0 13 Detroit 7 1-0-1 2-1-0 14 Columbus 6 1-2-0 2-0-0 13 St. Louis 6 2-0-0 0-1-2 14 Eastern Conference NORTHEAST PT HOME ROAD GF Toronto 9 2-0-1 2-0-0 17 Montreal 7 1-0-1 2-1-0 14 Boston 6 0-1-0 3-0-0 12 Buffalo 5 0-3-1 2-1-0 16 Ottawa 3 1-1-0 0-3-1 12 ATLANTIC PT HOME ROAD GF NY Islanders 8 2-0-1 1-1-1 20 Pittsburgh 8 2-3-0 2-0-0 23 Philadelphia 5 1-2-0 1-0-1 11 NY Rangers 3 0-1-1 1-1-0 14 New Jersey 3 0-3-1 1-1-0 10 SOUTHEAST PT HOME ROAD GF Tampa Bay 8 2-0-0 2-1-0 17 Washington 8 3-1-0 1-1-0 18 Carolina 6 1-0-0 2-2-0 14 Atlanta 6 1-1-0 2-2-0 18 Florida 4 1-0-0 1-2-0 12 Wednesday’s Games Buffalo 4, Atlanta 1 Columbus 3, Anaheim 1 Chicago 2, Vancouver 1 Carolina at Los Angeles LATE Today’s Games Washington at Boston, 4 p.m. Anaheim at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. NY Rangers at Toronto, 4 p.m. Calgary at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. New Jersey at Montreal, 4:30 p.m. NY Islanders at Tampa Bay, 4:30 p.m. Dallas at Florida, 4:30 p.m. Pittsburgh at Nashville, 5 p.m. Minnesota at Edmonton, 6 p.m. San Jose at Colorado, 6 p.m. Los Angeles at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Friday’s Games Calgary at Columbus, 4 p.m. Ottawa at Buffalo, 4:30 p.m. Tampa Bay at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m.
GA 15 6 26 14 10 GA 19 11 20 13 11 GA 21 10 12 13 12 GA 11 13 7 19 21 GA 17 16 14 16 21 GA 18 14 14 20 5
Chicago at St. Louis, 5 p.m. Minnesota at Vancouver, 7 p.m. Saturday’s Games NY Rangers at Boston, 4 p.m. Anaheim at Detroit, 4 p.m. Buffalo at New Jersey, 4 p.m. Montreal at Ottawa, 4 p.m. Toronto at Philadelphia , 4 p.m. Atlanta at Washington, 4 p.m. NY Islanders at Florida , 4 p.m. Nashville at Dallas, 5 p.m. Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 5 p.m. Columbus at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. Los Angeles at Colorado, 6 p.m. Carolina at Phoenix, 6 p.m. San Jose at Edmonton, 7 p.m.
Racing Sprint Cup - Chase For The Cup All Times PDT Sunday’s Race Sylvania 300 at New Hampshire, 10 a.m. New Hampshire Motor Speedway SPRINT CUP STANDINGS Top 30 of 70 Driver Pnts Back Money 1 Johnson 5843 --- $6,373,551 2 Hamlin 5802 -41 $4,930,978 3 Harvick 5766 -77 $5,900,706 4 Gordon 5687 -156 $5,077,103 5 Ky Busch 5666 -177 $5,651,183 Stewart 5666 -177 $5,058,065 7 Edwards 5643 -200 $4,744,169 8 Biffle 5618 -225 $4,406,837 9 Ku Busch 5606 -237 $6,114,975 10 Burton 5604 -239 $4,614,547 11 Kenseth 5587 -256 $4,747,278 12 Bowyer 5543 -300 $4,091,754 *** Chase for the Sprint Cup Cutoff *** 13 McMurray 3786 -2057 $6,283,196 14 Newman 3711 -2132 $4,327,496 15 Martin 3632 -2211 $3,823,263 16 Montoya 3590 -2253 $4,454,003 17 Reutimann 3520 -2323 $4,515,409 18 Logano 3499 -2344 $4,393,733 19 Earnhardt Jr. 3455 -2388 $4,137,553 20 Allmendinger 3419 -2424 $4,125,619 21 Kahne 3398 -2445 $4,663,597 22 Truex Jr. 3383 -2460 $3,327,439 23 Menard 3207 -2636 $3,144,354 24 Ragan 3054 -2789 $3,133,979 25 Keselowski 2987 -2856 $3,718,848 26 Ambrose 2981 -2862 $3,719,860 27 Sadler 2777 -3066 $3,036,774 28 Speed 2774 -3069 $3,290,984 29 Hornish Jr. 2736 -3107 $3,020,899 30 Smith 2729 -3114 $3,008,989
Transactions Baseball American League New York Yankees : Removed 1B Mark Teixeira from the postseason roster. Added INF Eduardo Nunez to the postseason roster.
Basketball National Basketball Association Atlanta Hawks : Released F Evan Brock, G Richard Delk and F Ricardo Marsh. Detroit Pistons : Requested waivers on G Vernon Hamilton and F Ike Diogu. Golden State Warriors : Waived G Aaron Miles. Minnesota Timberwolves : Requested waivers on G Jason Hart and F John Thomas. San Antonio Spurs : Exercised the fourth-year contract option on G George Hill.
Football National Football League Cleveland Browns : Placed DE Robaire Smith and OT Tony Pashos on injured reserve. Signed WR Yamon Figurs and OL Paul McQuistan. Detroit Lions : Released DB Dante Wesley and DB Paul Pratt. Indianapolis Colts : Suspended P Pat McAfee one game after his arrest for public intoxication on Wednesday. Placed DB Brandon King on injured reserve. Signed TE Gijon Robinson. Waived FB Matt Clapp from the practice squad. St. Louis Rams : Signed LB Curtis Johnson from the practice squad. Signed RB Chauncey Washington and DB Antoine Thompson to the practice squad. Released DT Jimmy SaddlerMcQueen from the practice squad.
Playoffs: Giants top Phillies with sacrifice fly Continued from B1 Now the teams will go deep in the heart of Texas to decide the pennant in the best-of-seven series. When they resume in Arlington for Game 6, Phil Hughes starts for the Yankees against Colby Lewis in a rematch of Game 2, won by the Rangers 7-2. “It’s great. We’re going back home,” Lewis said. “We’ve got to win one out of two.” Texas may be holding the ultimate postseason ace in
the hole: Cliff Lee would start a Game 7 against Andy Pettitte. “Who cares about Cliff going in Game 7?” Texas right fielder Jeff Francoeur said. “We’ve got a game to win in Game 6.” Still, Lee’s 7-0 postseason record is on their minds. In the 50th anniversary of a franchise that has never reached the World Series, Texas remains one win away. “We’re in a good position,” second baseman Ian Kinsler said.
San Francisco 6, Philadelphia 5 SAN FRANCISCO — The castoff comes through with another big hit, the rookie delivers again. The slumping slugger emerges at exactly the right time, the guy too banged up to start comes through at the end. It’s been that kind of season for the charmed San Francisco Giants, now just one win away from the World Series. Juan Uribe, sore left wrist
and all, hit a sacrifice fly off reliever Roy Oswalt with one out in the ninth inning Wednesday night, sending the Giants past the Philadelphia Phillies 6-5 for a 3-1 lead in the NL championship series. “It seems like all the baseball talk is all East Coast,” said Aubrey Huff, who slid home with the final run. “Everybody watching tonight saw exactly how we’ve played all year.” Boosted by yet another big hit from late-season pickup Cody Ross, four hits
and two RBIs from rookie Buster Posey and a timely double from struggling Pablo Sandoval, the Giants pushed the two-time defending NL champion Phillies to the brink of elimination. Philadelphia will send Roy Halladay against Tim Lincecum in Game 5 on Thursday night. It’s a rematch of aces that Lincecum won in the opener. “Two of the best arms in the game,” Posey said. “We’re in a good position. But at the same time, we know anything can happen in baseball.”
A champion with the White Sox in 2005, Uribe made his mark on this NLCS in a matter of moments — a great play with his glove, then one swing to win it. Huff singled with one out in the ninth and took third when Posey singled for his fourth hit of the game. Uribe hit a medium-deep fly, leaving left fielder Ben Francisco with no chance to get Huff. “Who doesn’t want to play now? I want to be here,” Uribe said. “In that moment, everybody knew my wrist was hurting a little bit.”
SportsRecreation
Peninsula Daily News
Cowboys fall at Charles Wright Chimacum gets one more crack at league victory before season ends Peninsula Daily News
TACOMA — The Chimacum volleyball team fought hard all night, but eventually fell 3-1 to Charles Wright in Nisqually League action Wednesday. The Cowboys (0-11 in league, 4-11 overall) lost 25-23, 20-25, 23-25 and 14-25 in their second-tolast league game. Senior Dani Kaminski had 11 kills with team-
mate Krista Hathaway adding eight kills and a block for Chimacum. “It felt so good to play as a team and stay within reach of ‘Chuck Wright’,” Chimacum senior Cailey Snyder said. Snyder helped out her team by contributing 16 assists. As a team, Chimacum had a total of 29 kills and served 88 percent. “I’m very proud of our team. We really played
hard,” Kaminski said. “We were really motivated and dedicated no matter what the score was.” Chimacum hosts Cascade Christian on Monday in its final match.
Boys Tennis Sequim sends four LAKEWOOD — The Wolves qualified four players for the Class 2A West Central District Tournament at Tuesday’s sub-district competition. “I didn’t have to say anything to them,” Sequim tennis coach Mark Textor
Preps said. “They worked hard all year.” Mallory Maloney finished fourth in singles and Waylon Lam sixth as both earned a spot at districts in the third week of May. Byron Boots and Michael Lee finished in fifth in the doubles bracket and will move on as well. “Relief would be the first thing,” Textor said after being asked how his boys felt after the tourney. “But they are eager to work hard in the offseason.”
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Briefly . . . PA football ranked No. 10 in state poll PORT ANGELES — The state couldn’t ignore the Port Angeles football team any longer. The Roughriders, fresh off a 34-7 thumping of North Kitsap in Poulsbo, were ranked No. 10 in Class 2A by The Associated Press on Wednesday. Port Angeles is 7-0 for the first time since 1967, with winless Klahowya scheduled to visit Civic Field for homecoming Friday night at 7 p.m. A win there would set up a dramatic showdown against archrival Sequim at Civic Field on Oct. 29 with the Olympic League title on the line. Port Angeles’ state ranking comes less than a year after it finished the ’09 season 0-10 for the first time in school history. Sequim (6-1) landed just outside the state rankings with seven votes. The entire state rankings are in today’s scoreboard on Page B2.
AAU tryouts PORT ANGELES — There will be a pair of AAU The Associated Press
Oregon State’s Joe Halahuni, an Orting graduate, leans his head on the field in the end zone after missing a two-point conversion pass against Washington in the second overtime of Saturday night’s game in Seattle. Washington won 35-34.
All packed together Pac-10 muddled in middle at mid-point By John Marshall
The Beavers were respectable in losses to Top 10 teams PHOENIX — The top of TCU and Boise State, then the Pac-10 is easy to figure beat Arizona — No. 9 at the out: Top-ranked and time — on the road before unbeaten Oregon is barrel- failing on a potential gameing toward a shot at a winning two-point conversion attempt in the UW loss. national championship. Arizona had Same with the an impressive win bottom: Washington State, despite Midseason over then-No. 9 its progress, is Iowa, held off Cal, Report still playing catchthen got bumped up. from the Top 10 The rest of the confer- with the loss to Oregon ence? State. A mishmash of teams Arizona State pulled out that can’t distinguish them- a solid win over Washington selves and are prone to wild to end a three-game losing fluctuations. streak, USC had its first losSo, as the Pac-10 heads ing streak in nine years into the second half of the before running over Cal last season, starting today with week. UCLA-Oregon, expect more The biggest fluctuations of the unexpected. have come from the Bruins “I don’t think you can and Bears. UCLA played predict anything,” UCLA Kansas State tough on the coach Rick Neuheisel said. road, was blown out by Stan“You just have to play ford, beat ranked teams great football as often as you Houston and Texas in concan and hopefully you’re secutive weeks, then had a good enough to take a team lopsided loss to Cal. down and be consistent The Bears were caught enough not to be that off guard by Nevada’s Pistol, team.” played tough at Arizona, had Inconsistency has been the 28-point win over UCLA, the defining characteristic of followed by last week’s blowmost teams through the first out loss against the Trojans. “Our team has the potensix games. Washington has been on tial, if we execute, to be a an every-other plan this sea- very good team,” Cal coach son, following losses with Jeff Tedford said. wins every week, the latest a “That said, if we don’t double-overtime victory over [execute], the conference is Oregon State on the heels of so competitive you have a a loss to Arizona State. chance to not be successful.” The Associated Press
Here’s a look at some of the highlights of those first six games: ■ Conference king: Oregon has been the best team in the Pac-10 so far. Hasn’t been close, really. The Ducks lead the nation with 54.3 points and 567 yards per game, have a Heisman Trophy candidate in LaMichael James and enough talent on both sides of the ball to make teams dizzy. Oregon turned its highly anticipated Top 10 showdown with Stanford into a runaway and this week climbed atop the rankings for the first time in its history. The Ducks still have some tough tests ahead — at USC, against rival Oregon State — but they’ve got their sights set higher than another Rose Bowl berth. ■ Heisman hopefuls: Washington’s Jake Locker and Stanford’s Andrew Luck were the conference’s Heisman Trophy front-runners at the start of the season. Luck still has a shot, Locker doesn’t. Luck has the nation’s ninth-best passing efficiency on a team ranked No. 12, while Locker has too much ground to make up after a rough start to the season. ■ Most impressive win: UCLA 34, Texas 12. The Longhorns were ranked No. 7 and looking for long-awaited redemption from the last time the Bruins were in Austin, a humiliating 66-3 loss in 1997. Instead, UCLA forced four turnovers and churned out yards against the nation’s No. 2 rushing defense to bounce Texas from the Top 10.
Pac-10 Standings Conf. Overall Oregon 3-0 6-0 Oregon State 2-1 3-3 Arizona 2-1 5-1 Stanford 2-1 5-1 Washington 2-1 3-3 USC 2-2 5-2 Arizona State 1-2 3-3 California 1-2 3-3 UCLA 1-2 3-3 Washington State 0-4 1-6 Tonight’s Game UCLA at Oregon, 6 p.m. Saturday’s Games Arizona St. at California, 12:30 p.m. WSU at No. 12 Stanford, 2 p.m. UW at No. 18 Arizona, 7:15 p.m.
■ Biggest surprise. Arizona’s defense. As expected, the Wildcats have been able to move the ball behind quarterback Nick Foles, but the defense playing like this? A little tougher to predict. Arizona currently leads the conference in total, scoring and rushing defense ■ Toughest break: Oregon State losing flanker James Rodgers. The dynamic senior went down with a season-ending left knee injury against Arizona two weeks ago, leaving the Beavers without one of the Pac-10’s top playmakers. Silver lining for him and Oregon State: it happened early enough to qualify him for a medical redshirt and a return next season. ■ Gutsiest call: No contest: Oregon State coach Mike Riley’s decision to go for a two-point conversion in Saturday’s double overtime loss to Washington. Trailing by 1 after matching TDs with the Huskies, Riley decided to end the game right there. It did — when Joe Halahuni couldn’t hold on to Ryan Katz’s pass after being hit.
League: Competition abounds Continued from B1 Added Huff, “You give these coaches good numbers, and they are going to produce some great runners. “The Olympic League has been blessed with great athletes, but there’s some good coaches in this league, and they are getting great things out of their runners. “You’d have to put cross country right up in the top one or two [among the league’s sports programs] in terms of state recognition and scholarships.” Indeed, the amount of elite cross country talent in the Olympic League dwarfs many of its other athletic programs. Handfuls of runners have gone on to compete in college during the past four years, with several earning Division I scholarships.
That includes Marcy from Stanford, Decker from Montana and Ruby Roberts from Washington State. That number could grow in the next couple of years after Piatt and Marina Roberts — today’s favorites in the boys and girls races, respectively — graduate this year and next. “I can’t give you a definitive reason why [the league has so much talent], but we’ve had state champions come out of this league,” Durr said. “So I think the kids are rising to the occasion. They are running against state championship caliber runners. “All the kids are getting better because the competition is so good. “It’s a great cycle that faster kids means faster kids . . . competition means faster kids.”
That competition will be on full display today. The North Kitsap girls come in ranked No. 5 in Class 2A, and the Port Townsend boys No. 1 in 1A. Two other teams (Kingston girls and North Kitsap boys) sit just outside the state rankings. Port Townsend’s Piatt and Habtamu Rubio and Kingston’s Nicholas Schippers headline an impressive field of individual runners in the boys race. The Redskins duo finished 1-2 in last year’s 1A boys race, with Piatt also second at the Fort Worden Invitational two weeks ago. Schippers was this year’s Salt Creek boys champ and finished just behind Piatt at Fort Worden. On the girls side, state participants Marina Roberts, Maxwell and Sequim’s Audrey Lichten should all be
at the front of the pack. “Alison and Audrey, if they are top of their game, they could go 2-3 in the race,” Huff said. “Right now, Marina is just running better than any of them. “She’s having a good year. Even in the big races she’s doing really well.” Four of the league’s seven Class 2A teams advance to the West Central District meet, as well as the top 20 runners. (Port Townsend is unaffected.) “The level of competition isn’t just the front pack,” Durr said. “Now the level of competition moves back to the number 3, 4, 5 runner of each team. It’s intense. “That bodes really well as we get past league and get into district.” And if recent history means anything, state as well.
B3
basketball tryouts for all eligible boys in grades four through eight today and Sunday at Stevens Middle School. Today’s tryouts are from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. and Sunday’s tryouts from 2-4 p.m. at Stevens. All participants must bring their own ball and dress appropriately. Players must attend at least one tryout to be eligible for a team. For any questions, call Richard Stone at 360-4617333 or e-mail at RRKBC@ aol.com.
Eagles football SEQUIM — The Olympic Peninsula Eagles, a nonprofit semipro football team, are having a garage sale at the Rock Plaza in Sequim on Saturday and Sunday. The sale will run from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sunday. All the proceeds will help fund the team for the 2011 season. The Eagles are also looking for players and staff to help with running the team. For more information, e-mail Sarah McMahan at smcmahan77@aol.com. Peninsula Daily News
Hits: Attention Continued from B1 Commissioner Roger Goodell told the teams that “further action is required to emphasize the importance of teaching safe and controlled techniques and of playing within the rules.” “It is incumbent on all of us to support the rules we have in place to protect players,” he said. But some players think the league is asking for something much more difficult: complete changes in playing style — changes that fans don’t want to see. Not surprisingly, defensive players are most critical. “What they’re trying to say — ’We’re protecting the integrity’ — no, you’re not,” Bears cornerback Charles Tillman said. “It’s ruining the integrity. It’s not even football anymore. “We should just go out there and play two-hand touch Sunday if we can’t make contact.” Miami linebacker Channing Crowder said the only way of preventing helmetto-helmet hits is to eliminate the helmet. “If I get a chance to knock somebody out, I’m going to knock them out and take what they give me,” Crowder said. “They give me a helmet, I’m going to use it.” The players are questioning how they are supposed to adhere to the heightened emphasis on avoiding dangerous hits when it goes against everything they’ve been taught since they first stepped on the field as kids. “Guys have to be coached differently because we’ve been coached a certain way our whole lives,” said Cleveland linebacker Scott Fujita, a member of the executive committee of the players’ union, the NFLPA. “I think people out there would be shocked at the things players hear in their meetings with their coaches and the things they are supposed to do, the way they are taught to hit people.”
Want to negotiate Many players also wanted stronger discipline for flagrant fouls to be part of their negotiations for a new collective bargaining agreement, not something unilaterally imposed six weeks into the season. “We want to protect the players, absolutely,” Fujita said. “But we need to have a longer conversation about it, and if you’re going to impose sweeping changes like that and talk about suspending players, that’s something that you have to address in the offseason.” Anderson argues that the way the game is played, officiated and policed will only change for the better — and safer.
“We are not going to fundamentally change the game. We’re focused on one thing, illegal hits to the head and neck area,” he said. “We hope to culturally change it so players understand those head hits under existing rules should be taken out of the game. “For players who can’t make the adjustment on their own, they will get a lot of help from this office to make sure they don’t play that way.”
More attention Officials will be instructed to have an even higher level of attention toward flagrant hits, which Anderson categorized as limited “but very high profile and damaging.” The NFL’s crackdown was welcomed in the medical community. Dr. William Bingaman, vice chairman of the Neurological Institute at the Cleveland Clinic and one of the independent doctors who examines concussed players to determine when they can return to action, sees it as a positive step. But it’s hardly a cure-all for preventing head injuries — or any other injuries — in the NFL, where the players are bigger and faster, and the enhanced equipment can make them foolishly gallant. “We will never eliminate the dangers of a concussion occurring,” Bingaman said, taking note that both Robinson and Jackson suffered concussions in their collision. “It’s huge that we have the proper equipment and the proper training and proper tackling techniques. “Anything that reduces a blow to the head, naturally I am in favor of that, because there is less risk and less incidents of concussions or something more serious. “If you reduce helmet-tohelmet contact, it will reduce the number of concussions, but nothing they do can eliminate it.” Just as worrisome to some players, though, is limiting their ability to remain in the NFL. “The guys who have had the knack to lay somebody out, I consider it a talent in itself,” Broncos safety David Bruton said. “I feel as though these deterrents would be depriving them of the chance to showcase their abilities.” Anderson disagreed. “We’re not subscribing to the notion you want these guys out there running wild and blowing people up,” he said. “Everything is on the table with regard to advancing player safety.”
________
Contributing to this story were AP Pro Football Writer Arnie Stapleton in Denver, and Sports Writers Steven Wine in Miami, David Ginsburg in Baltimore, Bob Baum in Phoenix and Tom Withers in Cleveland.
Peninsula Daily News for Thursday, October 21, 2010
Page
B4
Business
Politics & Environment
Enrollment up at state’s public universities again Out-of-state students fill count, coffer The Associated Press
SEATTLE — Enrollment is up again this fall at Washington’s public universities, despite cuts in state dollars to support their operations. Part of the enrollment jump comes from an intentional increase in out-ofstate students, who give a university a financial boost through the much higher tuition they pay. The University of Washington, for example, has about 160 more freshmen this fall — all from outside Washington state or the country. The increase in out-ofstate students was intended to help prevent cuts in instate enrollment and university programs, said Philip A. Ballinger, assistant vice president for enrollment, admissions. “If we are to maintain
resident enrollment, we have to be able to find ways to do that financially,” Ballinger said. “One way is to enroll a higher number of nonresident students.” Ballinger said applications from in-state students have plateaued over the past few years, but the number of students applying from other states and countries have continued to grow rapidly, without any recruiting by the university. Fifty-three percent of freshman applications to the University of Washington are from students who live out of state, although on the university’s three campuses only 18 percent of the students are from other states or countries.
Higher GPA, SAT It was more difficult to get accepted to the University of Washington again this fall, but out-of-state students have to work even harder to get in, Ballinger said. The average GPA of UW’s entering freshman class was 3.73, compared to 3.72 last year, and the aver-
age SAT score went up from 1790 to 1802. All of Washington’s public universities are significantly over-enrolled compared to what the state budget pays for after years of student increases, Ballinger said. Total enrollment at the Seattle campus of UW is 42,446 this fall compared to 42,094 in fall 2009. Enrollment at the Tacoma campus rose by 7 percent to 3,331 students, compared to 3,111 last year. The Bothell campus reported a count of 3,272 students, compared to 2,801 last fall. Washington State University reported a fall semester enrollment of 25,996 for its four campuses, compared to 25,782 in fall 2009. Enrollment at the Pullman campus passed 20,000 students for the first time, up from 19,944 in 2009. Western Washington University has a record enrollment of 14,979 students this fall, compared to 13,785 on campus last fall. Central Washington
University reported a fall enrollment of 11,613 compared to 11,460 in 2009. The freshman class was exactly the same both years: 1,667. Eastern Washington University reported jumps in both freshman and ongoing student enrollment this year, adding up to 10,750 full-time equivalent students. This is the second year in a row of record enrollment at Eastern, where 10,504 were enrolled last fall. Fall enrollment figures for The Evergreen State College showed freshman and transfer students have increased this year but overall enrollment is down slightly, from 4,847 in fall 2009 to about 4,778 this fall, although those numbers are still preliminary. The university attributed the drop in overall students to a big graduating class this past spring, said Steve Hunter, associate vice president for enrollment management at Evergreen. Washington’s community and technical colleges also reported record enrollments.
Four deaths prompt recall of 2 million Graco strollers The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Baby gear maker Graco is recalling about 2 million strollers after receiving reports that four infants died in the strollers. The Consumer Product Safety Commission, which announced the recall Wednesday, said the four infants became trapped inside the strollers and were strangled.
The deaths occurred between 2003 and 2005. The strollers being recalled are older versions of the Graco Quattro Tour and MetroLite strollers and travel systems, all made before 2007 and distributed by Graco Children’s Products Inc. of Atlanta. CPSC said if babies aren’t strapped into the strollers properly, they can slide through the opening between the stroller tray
and bottom of the seat — where they can get stuck and be strangled. The commission also said it was aware of five reports of infants becoming trapped, resulting in cuts and bruises, and one report of an infant having difficulty breathing. The recalled strollers were made before the development in 2008 of a voluntary standard that requires a larger stroller opening
between the stroller’s tray and seat bottom in order to prevent entrapment and strangulation. The recalled strollers were sold at retailers nationwide between November 2000 and December 2007. More information on the model numbers involved in the recall can be found at the company’s website, www.gracobaby.com.
36,000 Chrysler, Volvo vehicles recalled amid safety problems The Associated Press
DETROIT — Chrysler and Volvo are recalling a total of 36,000 vehicles to fix problems that could pose safety risks. Chrysler’s recall affects about 26,000 cars and pickup trucks because power steering fluid can leak onto a hot engine and cause a fire.
The recall affects some 2010 models of the Chrysler 300 and Sebring; the Dodge Avenger, Charger, Challenger and Journey; and some 2011 Dodge Ram pickups. Only vehicles built between June 24 and Aug. 30 are affected by the recall. Chrysler will notify all
owners of the affected cars and trucks sometime this month. Owners with questions can contact Chrysler at 800853-1403. The Volvo recall affects nearly 10,000 vehicles to fix front air bag systems that may not deploy in a crash. The recall includes certain
S80 sedans and XC70 crossover vehicles from the 20102011 model year and model year 2010 V70 wagons. Volvo also said the vehicles will be fixed free of charge, and the recall is expected to begin late this month. Owners may contact Volvo at 800-458-1552.
Boeing tops third quarter forecasts
$ Briefly . . . PA resident now banking school alum
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peninsuladailynews.com
PORT ANGELES — Patricia Gormley recently graduated from Pacific Coast Banking School. The Port Angeles resident attended courses on risk management, financial performance and leadership to gain an executive-level understanding of the banking business. Pacific Coast Banking School partners with the University of Washington’s Foster School of Business graduate program to offer this threeyear-long degree program. Gormley attended a two-week resident session each August on the University of Washington campus and completed six intersession written assignments, including an origiphone 360-452-9948. nal management thesis.
Main Street loans PORT TOWNSEND — The deadline to apply for federal Department of Housing and Urban Development loans through the Port Townsend Main Street Program is at 5 p.m. Wednesday. The low-interest revolving loans are available for commercial property in Port Townsend’s Uptown and downtown historic districts. Businesses can apply for loans ranging from $1,000 to $40,000 with 10-year terms. Interest is set at 5 percent, but with early repayment, interest could be as low as zero percent. More than $360,000 has been loaned for restorations and renovations in Port Townsend’s historic districts since the program began in 1986. Owners have used funding to repair roofs, staircases, brick facades, add safety improvements and install windows. Funding is available upon completion of each project and the submission of invoices. Retroactive proposals will not be funded. Applicants must fill out a short form and attach a photo of the building, a work time line and the amount of funds requested. Applications are available at ptmainstreet.org. Forms are also available at the Port Townsend Main Street office, 211 Taylor St., Suite 3.
Teeth whitening PORT ANGELES — Bada Bean! Bada Bloom! has added teeth whitening to its core services of espresso, flowers and tanning. Teeth whitening is available seven days a week. Cost is $99, and the service takes around 15 minutes. For more information,
Wells Fargo
SAN FRANCISCO — Banking giant Wells Fargo said Wednesday that its business shows no signs of the looming crisis some analysts fear the industry faces from shoddy lending and foreclosure practices. Some analysts and investors predict that Bank of America and other big banks could be forced to issue huge refunds to investors because the banks misrepresented the quality of loans or bungled the paperwork when they pooled the loans into securities and sold them to investors. In addition, the analysts say, slipshod or fraudulent processing of foreclosures could delay banks from getting delinquent loans off their books and expose them to litigation. Wells Fargo said it is not threatened by those problems because its paperwork complies with local laws and investor requirements. Also Wednesday, Wells Fargo reported a thirdquarter profit of $3.3 billion, and the bank’s shares closed up $1.05, or 4.28 percent, to $25.60.
Nonferrous metals NEW YORK — Spot nonferrous metal prices Wednesday. Aluminum - $1.0689 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper - $3.7601 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper - $3.7885 N.Y. Merc spot Wed. Lead - $2376.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $1.0780 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1339.00 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1343.30 troy oz., NY Merc spot Wed. Silver - $23.770 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $23.848 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Wed. Platinum - $1673.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum - $1683.30 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Wed.
It expects revenue of $16.97 billion. Boeing now expects to $64.5 billion to $65.5 bilearn $3.80 to $4 per share Net income worked out CHICAGO — Boeing Peninsula Daily News lion. and The Associated Press to $1.12 per share. for the full year. posted an $837 million third-quarter profit Wednesday and raised its Say to the profit guidance for the full year as it sold more comMasonic Hall mercial airplanes. 700 S. 5th Ave Boeing has already made mini Sequim, WA plans to raise production Axio ST is more rates on the 737, its bestpowerful than any selling plane. 9:30 am 5:00 pm other hearing aid The improved 2010 guidtechnology Major stamp and Coin Dealers from the Northwest ance reflects a strong outavailable today. Call us Today Buying and Selling stamps, covers, coins, bullion, etc. look for commercial planes. FREE Appraisals Orders and deliveries 819 Georgiana St., Suite B • Port Angeles • 360-452-2228 have rebounded this year, reversing a decline that occurred when airlines pulled back on orders dur™ ing the recession. Boeing expects to deliver 460 commercial planes this year, at the low end of what it predicted in April. *Compared to similar recliners The aircraft maker Guitar. Excellent Quality repeated its hope to deliver Yamaha acoustic, for 1/3 the price new FurniTure anD the new 787 in the middle of gold hardware, MaTTresses the first quarter of 2011, and Available Features: black gig bag, Port Angeles: Mon.–Sat. 9:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. the latest version of the 747 reward offered, no • Sun. 11:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. • Top-grain leather in the middle of the year. questions asked. & custom-match vinyl Financing available Both planes are late — • Swivel base • Riser base more than two years for the • Side table • Adjustable 787. headrest • Warranty 775-1227 Boeing’s revenue for w w w . p a b a r g a i n w a r e h o u s e . n e T the quarter that ended 4 5 2 - 3 9 3 6 • 2 8 3 0 H w y. 1 0 1 E a s t • P o r t A n g e l e s Sept. 30 rose 2 percent to The Associated Press
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Peninsula Daily News for Thursday, October 21, 2010
c Our Peninsula Youths celebrate 10 years of jazz SECTION
CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, PUZZLES, DEAR ABBY In this section
Group keeps traditional genre alive By Jeff Chew
Peninsula Daily News
PORT ANGELES — These young musicians are playing to help preserve a great American tradition — Dixieland jazz. The Olympic Dixielanders, sponsored by the Jazz in the Olympics Society, are playing on a high note this year as they mark their own 10-year-old tradition. Young musicians have come and gone, but they never leave without a good feel for the jazz genre. “This is an effort by the jazz society to perpetuate Dixieland jazz, made popular by Louis Armstrong in the 1920s,” said Bud Critchfield, a longtime Sequim resident and former Port of Port Angeles commissioner who helped found the youth music program.
Program director The program now is directed by Signe Crawford, a clarinetist and longtime music instructor in Port Angeles. Others who have directed the youth band are Jerry Yahna, Sanford Feibus, George Snyder and Al Harris, Critchfield said. “This music form is not taught in the public school systems. It allows the individual players to demonstrate their unique capabilities,” he added. The group, with players ages 13 to 17, is under Crawford’s direction, and they practice Tuesday nights in Port Angeles High School’s band room.
20 performances annually Each year, the band puts on about 20 performances, including the annual Jazz Festival in Port Angeles, the Juan de Fuca Festival of the Arts, with the Sequim City Band, at Sequim Community Church and at many retirement and assisted living venues.
Jeff Chew/Peninsula Daily News
The young musicians in the Olympic Dixielanders are led by director Signe Crawford, playing the clarinet at right. ing the band three years ago. “But I got more of a feel for the history of it,” she said, and Bud Critchfield that appealed to her musical one of the founders of the Olympic Dixielanders interests.
“This music form is not taught in the public school systems. It allows the individual players to demonstrate their unique capabilities.” The band’s next performance will be a warm-up for the Senior Swingers’ dance at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 9, at the Port Angeles Senior Center, 327 E. Seventh St. As a partial reward for their work and dedication, the group is sponsored every year to attend the Heebie Jeebies Jazz Camp at Camp David Jr., the Clallam County camp on the western shore of Lake Crescent.
‘Wonderful music’ “It’s wonderful music, and I think anybody will tell you that it makes you feel good when you listen to it,” said the band’s banjo player and vocalist, Cole Gibson,
a 17-year-old Port Angeles High School student. He spoke in between practicing “Everybody Loves My Baby,” a popular and jazz standard composed by Spencer Williams in 1924. Gibson is joined in the band by Amber Wood, piano; Gavin Alward and James Reike, drums; Cole Urnes, tuba; Nathanael Mullins, trumpet; Jess Allyn Rogers, trumpet; Michaela Rogers, trumpet; CJ Urnes, clarinet and tenor; and Joshua Mullins, clarinet. It’s CJ Urnes’ fifth year with the Olympic Dixielanders. He’s a Port Angeles High School senior, and Crawford calls him the
Audience disappearing band’s “spark plug.” He joined the band after seeShe has since joined Jim ing it perform at the Jazz Festi- Quick’s Dungeness Dixieland val. Band and plays clarinet with them. ‘Have to feel it’ “The audience is going away, “This music is not very cere- so it is important to get to the bral,” Urnes said. “You have to young people to help continue feel it.” the base of appreciation,” CrawJoshua Mullins is the band’s ford said. youngest talent at 13, playing Contact Critchfield, Jazz in alongside his brother Nathanael, the Olympics youth program 17, both home-schooled. director, at 360-582-3082 to ask Crawford, a longtime North about joining the band. Olympic Peninsula professional ________ musician and instructor, admitted she was not originally too Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Jeff fond of the music when Critch- Chew can be reached at 360-681-2391 or field approached her about lead- at jeff.chew@peninsuladailynews.com.
Loss of friend reminder to appreciate talents The greater Peninsula community lost a caring, compassionate friend and musician with the heroic, tragic death of Bob Boardman last Saturday on Klahhane Ridge. Bob will not only be missed by musicians and dancers from the Black Diamond Community Hall, but also by many all across the Peninsula as well as those in nursing and those he cared for and taught how to deal with their diabetes. Rest in eternal peace, Bob Boardman. As you follow your own particular musical muse this week, pay a little more attention to and appreciate a little more the efforts and talents of the musicians because it can, perhaps, be very fleeting.
Port Angeles ■ On Saturday, SuperTrees returns to The Junction Roadhouse, junction of U.S. Highway 101 and state Highway 112 five miles west of Port Angeles, with their high-energy mix of rock ’n’ roll classics and genetically engineered originals from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Come and have a dancing good time! $3 cover. Barry Burnett will be doing his Sunday Jam from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. On Wednesday, Jason and friends play roots music and more from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. ■ Tonight at Castaways Restaurant and Night Club, 1213 Marine Drive, the Spence Brothers Band plays ’70s-’80s hits from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. $3 cover. ■ Tonight, talented pianist Linda Dowdell brings her soul jazz show back to Wine on the Waterfront, 115 Railroad Ave., at 7:30 p.m. $3 cover. On Saturday, Mississippi Delta blues man Thom Davis plays his last PA gig before going back on tour. Check out his blues, popular and Spanish classic music at 7 p.m. $3 cover ■ Tonight, Howly Slim performs vocal and guitar at Kokopelli’s Underground, 203 E.
Live Music Front St., at 6 p.m. and Nelson again Sunday, with George Radebaugh, at 5 p.m. ■ On Saturday, at the RBar, 132 E. Front St., the Tim Hall Band returns with its harddriving blues and a new horn section. $3 cover. ■ Dave and Rosalie Secord’s Luck of the Draw Band, with a special appearance by Chuck Grall’s Sound Dog Band, will be playing a variety of music Wednesday at Smuggler’s Landing Restaurant & Lounge, 115 Railroad Ave., from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Come join the fun! ■ Tonight and every Thursday, Larry and Rene Bauer direct the goings-on at the open mic hosted by The Cracked Bean, 108 DelGuzzi Drive, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Welcome to the live music mix. ■ On Tuesday, Victor Reventlow hosts the acoustic jam at the Fairmount Restaurant, 1127 W. U.S. Highway 101, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. ■ On Friday night, The Veela Cafe, 133 E. First St., has Jim Lind providing both rock and country, fast and slow, from his impressive repertoire at 7:30 p.m. ■ Every Tuesday evening, the Port Angeles Senior Swingers presents Wally and the Boys playing ballroom dance favorites for the dancing pleasure of all adults 45 and older from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at the Port Angeles Senior Center, Seventh and Peabody streets. $5 cover, first-timers free! ■ Craig Logue hosts the open mic and plays a tune, too, at the Coo Coo Nest, 1017 E. First St., Wednesdays at 8 p.m.
John
Joyce ■ Dirty Joe hosts the open mic at the Salt Creek Restaurant and Lounge, state Highway 112 and Camp Hayden Road, tonight and every Thursday at 9 p.m.
rock from the ’50s and ’60s at 6 p.m. On Sunday, Jim Nyby plays blues, ballads, jazz and soul at 5:30 p.m. On Tuesday, Jess is styling on the piano at 6 p.m.
Sequim and Blyn
Port Ludlow
■ Tonight, don’t miss the jam hosted by Chantilly Lace at the Oasis Sports Bar and Grill, 301 E. Washington, from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. Any Thursday night, you’ll find some of the best jammers from your favorite bands joining in on the fun. Classic rock and country from the ’50s and ’60s, blues and pop from later decades are all in the broad repertoire honed over 35 years. Jammers come in early and sign in on the sign-up sheet. On Friday, Gil Ysla and Rick May play from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Monday’s dance night features Mary Lou Montgomery and Nostalgia for your dancing and dining pleasure from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Next Wednesday, enjoy the boomer music of Final Approach from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. ■ At The Buzz, 128 N. Sequim Ave., Kelly Thomas hosts the very popular and rousing open mic Wednesday from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. ■ On Friday and Saturday at Club Seven Lounge at 7 Cedars Casino, Blyn, groove to Nite Crew from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. On Sunday, boogie to the roots, rock and blues of Junkyard Jane from 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.
■ On Sunday at the Bay Club, 120 Spinnaker Place, Performing Arts in Port Ludlow presents Quartango, sharing a passion for tango with a dose of humor, at 7:30 p.m. Cover.
Port Townsend
■ Tonight at The Upstage, 923 Washington St., The RicePayson Quartet, with special guest Carla Main and featuring Rex Rice, Herb Payson, Dirk Anderson and Tom Svornich, plays jazz at 7 p.m. $5 cover. On Friday, the Armstrong Lawton Katz band plays swingin’ mountain, country and blues, true Americana, at 8 p.m. Ethan Lawton (mandolin and vocals), Nancy Katz (bass) and Cort Armstrong (“chicken pickin’” guitar) make up this very talented band. $7 cover. On Saturday, the David Vest Blues Band plays at 8 p.m. This barrelhouse boogie-woogie dance band plays “rock ’n’ roll for grown-ups — dangerous, fast, addictive.” $12 cover. On Sunday, Kim Rushing joins the Louis Aissen Sextet with some straight-ahead jazz featuring Ed Donahue, Rex Rice, George Radebaugh, Ted Enderly and Tim Sheffel from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. $6 cover. On Wednesday, Mark HumPort Hadlock mel and the Blues Survivors ■ Tonight, Buzz Rogowski with guitarist Rusty Zinn play at 8 p.m. $17 cover. plays jazz and originals at The Phone 360-385-2216 for resAjax Cafe, 271 Water St., at ervations. 6 p.m. ■ The Rickey Kelly QuarOn Friday, Howly Slim will be performing original vocal and tet brings a little jazz to Castle Key Restaurant and Lounge, guitar at 6 p.m. Seventh and Sheridan streets, On Saturday, Barry and Bill of BBR perform classic Saturday at 7:30 p.m. $10 cover.
■ Two shows, two genres Friday at the Uptown Pub, 1016 Lawrence St. The first show features jazz and blues artist Sylvia Heins from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. The second features Old West adventurer Daniel Palmer on guitar and harmonica at 9 p.m. On Saturday, Joe Crella and the Homewreckers play classic rock ’n’ roll classics at 9 p.m. ■ Tonight at The Boiler Room, 711 Water St., the open mic at 7 p.m. features The Openers. Sign up at 7 p.m. On Saturday, touch-style guitarist Thom Catts performs at 8 p.m. ■ Sirens, 823 Water St., brings folk to the folks with Brownesville Highway entertaining Friday at 9 p.m. On Saturday, Adrian & the Sickness give out with a little Texan rock at 9 p.m. $5 cover. ■ On Friday from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., Ahmad Baabahar performs at the Undertown, 211 Taylor St. On Saturday, the Sugar Shakers (Freddy Pink unplugged) perform from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. $5 cover
Music news ■ On Saturday, the Washington Old Time Fiddlers Jam is at the Tri-Area Community Center, 10 West Valley Road, Chimacum, from 11:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. with a performance from 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. There is no cover, but donations to the scholarship fund are always appreciated.
________ John Nelson is a self-styled music lover and compulsive night owl who believes in “KLMA — Keep Live Music Alive” on the North Olympic Peninsula. His column, Live Music, appears every Thursday. Are you performing in or promoting a live music gig? Contact John by phoning 360-5651139 or e-mailing news@peninsuladailynews. com (subject line: John Nelson). Also, check out “Nightlife,” a listing of entertainment at nightspots across the Peninsula, in Friday’s Peninsula Spotlight magazine.
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PeninsulaNorthwest
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Things to Do Today and Friday, Oct. 21-22, in: n Port Angeles n Sequim-Dungeness Valley n Port TownsendJefferson County n Forks-West End
disorders. Peninsula Community Mental Health Center, 118 E. Eighth St., noon to 1:15 p.m. Phone Rebecca Brown, 360457-0431. Studium Generale — Peninsula College English faculty member Kate Reavey will talk about her experiences teaching English in Florence, Italy, during the spring quarter. Peninsula College Little Theatre, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd. 12:35 p.m. to 1:25 p.m. Free
Port Angeles Today
PA Vintage Softball — Co-ed slow pitch for fun, fellowship and recreation. Phone Gordon Gardner at 360-452First Step drop-in center 5973 or Ken Foster at 360-683- — 325 E. Sixth St., 1 p.m. to 0141 for information including 4 p.m. Free clothing and equiptime of day and location. ment closet, information and referrals, play area, emergency Tai chi class — Ginger and supplies, access to phones, Ginseng, 1012 W. 15th St., computers, fax and copier. 7 a.m. $12 per class or $10 for Phone 360-457-8355. three or more classes. No experience necessary, wear Museum at the Carnegie loose comfortable clothing. — Open Wednesday through Phone 360-808-5605. Saturday 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Second and Lincoln Streets. FeaPeninsula Pre-Three tured exhibit: “Strong People: Co-op Class — Class for par- The Faces of Clallam County.” ents and toddlers ages 10 Miniature exhibit runs until Dec. months to 31⁄2 years. Located 31. Children welcome. Elevain the First Baptist Church at tor, ADA access and parking at Fifth and Laurel streets. Class rear of building. 360-452-6779. times from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. AssociGastric bypass surgery ated with Peninsula College, support group — 114 E. Sixth quarterly cost is $75 with St., No. 116, 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. annual $25 registration fee. Open to the public. Phone 360Phone 360-681-7883 or e-mail 457-1456. prethree@yahoo.com. Newborn parenting class Olympic Coast Discovery — “You and Your New Baby,” Center — Second floor, The third-floor sunroom, Olympic Landing mall, 115 E. Railroad Medical Center, 939 Caroline Ave., 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Free. St., 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Free. Phone 360-417-7652. Ongoing Bhagavad Gita book study — Reading and Mental health drop-in cendiscussion of the Bhagavad ter — The Horizon Center, 205 Gita (sacred Hindu text). Olym- E. Fifth St., 4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. pic Iyengar Yoga, Eighth and For those with mental disorLincoln streets, 10 a.m. to ders and looking for a place to 11 a.m. Parking in rear of build- socialize, something to do or a ing. Phone 360-683-4778. hot meal. For more information, phone Rebecca Brown at 360Guided walking tour — Historic downtown buildings, 457-0431. an old brothel and “Underground Port Angeles.” Chamber of Commerce, 121 E. Railroad Ave., 10:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. Tickets: $12 adults, $10 senior citizens and students, $6 ages 6 to 12. Children younger than 6, free. Reservations, phone 360-452-2363, ext. 0.
Port Angeles Fine Arts Center — “Future Relics of the Elwha Dam.” 1203 E. Lauridsen Blvd., 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Free. Open Wednesday through Sunday through Nov. 28. Phone 360-457-3532.
Pathways to Success — Orientation program for Pathways to Success, an assistance program for income-eligible youth ages 16-21 looking to increase their employability. 4 p.m. Clallam County WorkSource office, 228 W. First St. Senior meal — Nutrition program, Port Angeles Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh St., 4:30 p.m. Donation $3 to $5 per meal. Reservations recommended. Phone 360-4578921.
Knit, crochet and spin — Mental illness family sup- All ages and skill levels, Veela port group — For families and Cafe, 133 E. First St., 4:30 p.m. friends of people with mental to 6 p.m.
Peninsula Daily News
. . . planning your day on the North Olympic Peninsula
The Faces of Clallam County.” domestic violence. Vigil at Miniature exhibit runs until Dec. noon. 31. Children welcome. Elevator, ADA access and parking at Line dancing lessons — rear of building. 360-452-6779. High-beginner, intermediate The daily Things to Do calendar focuses on events and advanced dancers. Sequim open to the public. There is no cost for inclusion in both Introduction to line dance Elks Lodge, 143 Port Williams the print and online version at peninsuladailynews.com. for beginners — Port Angeles Road, 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. DropSubmissions must be received at least two weeks in Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh ins welcome. $3 per class. advance of the event and contain the event’s name, locaSt., 2:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. $2 Phone 360-681-2826. tion and address, times, cost if any, contact phone nummembers, $3 nonmembers. ber and a brief description. Phone 360-457-7004. Sequim Senior Softball — Submitting items for Things to Do is easy: Co-ed recreational league. ■ E-MAIL: Send items to news@peninsuladailynews. The Answer for Youth — Carrie Blake Park, 9:30 a.m. for com or via the “Calendar” link at peninsuladailynews. Drop-in outreach center for practice and pickup games. com. youth and young adults, provid- Phone John Zervos at 360■ U.S. MAIL: PDN News, P.O. Box 1330, ing essentials like clothes, food, 681-2587. Port Angeles, WA 98362. Narcotics and Alcoholics Anon■ IN PERSON: At any of the PDN’s three news ymous meetings, etc. 711 E. Sequim Museum & Arts offices. Please see Page A2 for the address of the one Second St., 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. Center — “Your Daily Fiber — nearest you in Port Angeles, Port Townsend and Sequim. Conspicuous Consumption, Mental health drop-in cen- Community and Ceremony,” ter — The Horizon Center, 205 175 W. Cedar St., 10 a.m. to E. Fifth St., 4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. 4 p.m., Tuesday through SaturSacred meditation healing www.visionlossservices.org/ For those with mental disor- day through Oct. 30. Free. — Unity in the Olympics vision. ders and looking for a place to Phone 360-683-8110. socialize, something to do or a Church, 2917 E. Myrtle St., Olympic Coast Discovery hot meal. For more information, Parent connections — First 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. To regisCenter — Second floor, The phone Rebecca Brown at 360- Teacher, 220 W. Alder St., ter, phone 360-457-3981. Landing mall, 115 E. Railroad 457-0431. 10 a.m. Phone 360-461-9992. Volunteers in Medicine of Ave., 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Free. Global Lens Film Series Meditation class — Willow the Olympics health clinic — Nicotine Anonymous — — Peruvian film “Gods.” 4 p.m., Pond Consulting and Intuitive 909 Georgiana St., 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Free for patients with no Klallam Counseling, 1026 E. Little Theatre, Peninsula Col- Development Center, 131 insurance or access to health First St., 10:30 a.m. Phone lege, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd. Kitchen-Dick Road, 10 a.m. to $5. Students free. All films in 11 a.m. Learn different meditacare. For appointment, phone 360-452-1060. series have English subtitles. tion techniques. To register, 360-457-4431. Insurance assistance — phone Marie-Claire Bernards Senior meal — Nutrition at 360-681-4411, e-mail Olympic Peninsula Entre- Statewide benefits advisers preneurs Network — Coldwell help with health insurance and program, Port Angeles Senior willowpond@olympus.net or Banker Uptown Realty, 1115 E. Medicare. Port Angeles Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh St., visit www.thewillowpond.com. Front St., 6:30 p.m. Inventors, Center, 328 E. Seventh St., 4:30 p.m. Donation of $3 to $5 Olympic Minds meeting — innovators and entrepreneurs 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Phone Marge per meal. Reservations recomStewart at 360-452-3221, ext. mended. Phone 360-457- Conference room, The Lodge of all ages welcome. Members 3425. 8921. at Sherwood Village, 660 Evercan share resources and talgreen Farm Way, 1 p.m. Open ent. Phone Tim Riley at 360Scrapbook and paperPA Peggers Cribbage Club to the public. Phone 360 681460-4655. crafts class — Clallam County — Meet at the Eagles Club, 8677. Family YMCA Art School, 723 110 S. Penn St., at 5:30 p.m. Bariatric surgery support E. Fourth St., 10 a.m. to noon. for check-in with games startSpanish class — Prairie group — Terrace Apartments, Cost: $8, $5 for YMCA mem- ing at 6 p.m. The PA Peggers is Springs Assisted Living, 680 W. 114 E. Sixth St., 7 p.m. to bers. For children 8 to 14. To an American Cribbage Con- Prairie St., 2 p.m. 360-6818 p.m. Phone 360-457-1456. register, phone 360-452-9244, gress Grass Roots Club and 0226. ext. 309, or e-mail cheryl@ always welcomes new memccfymca.org. bers. For more information, Friday Travel seminar — Morgan’s e-mail papeggers@hughes. Travel Service will host a free Play and Learn Port AngeCity Manager Coffee — net, phone 360-808-7129 or travel seminar at The Lodge at les — 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. A pro- Port Angeles City Manager visit www.papeggers.com. Sherwood Village, 660 W. Evergram for children for ages 0-5 Kent Myers holds a weekly green Farm Way, from 2 p.m. to to attend with their parent, informal coffee hour with city Bingo — Masonic Lodge, 5 p.m. Topic: River cruises. grandparent or caregiver, with residents. Various locations. 622 Lincoln St., 6:30 p.m. individual play, group activities, 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Phone 360- Doors open at 4 p.m. Food, Chess Club — Dungeness songs and story time. Phone 417-4630 or e-mail tpierce@ drinks and pull tabs available. Valley Lutheran Church, 925 N. 360-452-5437 for location and cityofpa.us. Phone 360-457-7377. Sequim Ave. 3:30 p.m. to more information. 6:30 p.m. Bring clocks, sets Guided walking tour — Global Lens Film Series and boards. All are welcome. Silent Witness exhibit — Historic downtown buildings, — Algerian film “Masquerades.” Phone 360-681-8481. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Peninsula Col- an old brothel and “Under- 7 p.m., Little Theatre, Peninlege, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd. ground Port Angeles.” Cham- sula College, 1502 E. LauridHealth clinic — Free mediRecognizes victims of domes- ber of Commerce, 121 E. Rail- sen Blvd. $5. Students free. All cal services for uninsured or road Ave., 10:30 a.m. and films in series have English under-insured, Dungeness Valtic violence. 2 p.m. Tickets: $12 adults, $10 subtitles. ley Health & Wellness Clinic, 777 N. Fifth Ave., Suite 109, Walk-in vision clinic — senior citizens and students, 5 p.m.. Phone 360-582-0218. Information for visually impaired $6 ages 6 to 12. Children Sequim and the and blind people, including younger than 6, free. ReservaFamily Caregivers support accessible technology display, tions, phone 360-452-2363, Dungeness Valley group — 411 W. Washington library, Braille training and vari- ext. 0. St., 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Phone Today ous magnification aids. Vision Port Angeles Fine Arts Carolyn Lindley, 360-417Loss Center, 228 W. First St., Vinyasa Yoga — 92 Plain 8554. Suite N, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Center — “Future Relics of the Phone 360-457-1383 or visit Elwha Dam.” 1203 E. Laurid- Jane Lane, 6 a.m. Phone 206sen Blvd., 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 321-1718 or visit www. Gamblers Anonymous — Free. Open Wednesday through sequimyoga.com. Calvary Chapel, 91 S. Boyce Sunday through Nov. 28. Phone Road, 6:30 p.m. Phone 360Strength and toning exer- 460-9662. 360-457-3532. cise class — Sequim ComBingo — Port Angeles munity Church, 1000 N. Fifth Food Addicts in Recovery Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh Ave., 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. $5 per Anonymous — Calvary ChaSt., 12:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. Phone class. Phone Shelley Haupt at pel, 91 S. Boyce Road, 7 p.m. 360-477-2409 or e-mail Phone 360-452-1050 or click 360-457-7004. jhaupt6@wavecable.com. on www.foodaddicts.org. Museum at the Carnegie Silent Witness exhibit — — Open Wednesday through Saturday 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sec- 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Corner of Friday ond and Lincoln Streets. Fea- Washington Street and Sequim Vinyasa Yoga — 92 Plain tured exhibit: “Strong People: Avenue. Recognizes victims of Jane Lane, 6 a.m. and 9 a.m. Phone 206-321-1718 or visit www.sequimyoga.com.
Get in on the Things to Do
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Buying U.S. Paper Money bills dated before 1964 and all Star Notes.
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Saturday, October 23, 2010 9:30am - 5:00pm See Us At The
Things/C5
During your anniversary month, you can run an ad at the following discount prices: (One time only – any day of the week. No variations of size or price)
Masonic Hall, 700 S. 5th Ave. Sequim, WA 98382
PDN
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We’d like to help you celebrate!
Sequim Stamp & Coin Show
Friends That We Pay For Final. Referrals!
Turn
Business Name _____________________________________________________________________ Address____________________________________________________________________________ City__________________ State________________ Type of Business________________________ Zip Telephone________________________________ What date is your anniversary?_______________________________________________________ Which anniversary is your business celebrating?______________________________________________ Please Mail or Bring to: Peninsula Daily News 305 W. 1st St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 Attn: ANNIVERSARY EVENT
$1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50, $100, $500, $1,000
360.452.3358
Circuit training exercise class — Sequim Community Church, 1000 N. Fifth Ave., 9 a.m. to 10:15 a.m. $5 a person. Phone Shelley Haupt at 360-477-2409 or e-mail jhaupt6@wavecable.com.
The Peninsula Daily News wants to congratulate North Olympic Peninsula businesses celebrating anniversaries in November. On Nov. 5th, we will publish a FREE ad listing the businesses who respond to this special event by Nov. 1st. Is your business having an anniversary later this year? You can use this coupon now to let us know the date.
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FREE BRAKE INSPECTIONS
Walk aerobics — First Baptist Church of Sequim, 1323 Sequim-Dungeness Way, 8 a.m. Free. Phone 360-683-2114.
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Peninsula Daily News
Thursday, October 21, 2010
C3
rdAge
Options for Medicare: As easy as A, B, D? Ten years ago, one out of every three humans on the Peninsula was 60 or better. Ten years later, I’m going to bet that the numbers are even better than that because (a) most of us who didn’t die got older and (b) a lot of folks have figured out that this is a pretty nice place to retire. True, some folks have left (one way or the other), but I’d bet good money (as opposed to “bad money,” which I’ll keep for myself) that it’s considerably better than one out of three. I’ve stopped keeping track of things like that because I, too, have gotten older and have realized that I just don’t have the time to keep track of things like that. But I have managed to observe that an awful lot of baby boomers (drop the baby and emphasize BOOM!) have managed to achieve a respectable age and are more than a little interested in what I’m going to talk about today, which is (again) Medicare. After that rather lengthy preamble, here’s the deal, which is actually a couple of deals, so let’s be sure that we’re all in the same ballpark: There is Medicare Part A and Medicare Part B, and I’m not
some provide some extra benefits like more preventive features or even vision going to or hearing and the like. Mark waste Some have a prescripHarvey your time tion drug coverage compoor mine nent (Part D); some don’t. going They work very well for back over some people and miserably that. for others, like pretty much At this everything else on the juncture, planet. most of Now, with the end of the us do one year in sight, several of two things are happening or things: getting ready to happen. We either purchase (a) a Medicare Part D plan supplement plan, which One is that, if you have will pay for most of what Medicare doesn’t pay, and a a Part D plan, you’ve already begun to dread its Part D (prescription drug) open enrollment period, plan, or (b) we purchase a which will run from Nov. Medicare Advantage plan. 15 through Dec. 31. (That will change next year, Advantage plans when the period will be Advantage plans are Oct. 15 through Dec. 7 — a Medicare’s version of man- day that will live in aged care — think HMO. infamy.) Since we don’t have “Open enrollment” is health maintenance orgaactually an “annual elecnizations around here (in tion period,” but the only the sense that you go to people who care that you some building and they call it that are people who provide you with virtually make their living by caring. all of your health care), What open enrollment Advantage plans operate means for Part D is that on a fee-for-service basis: it’s when you’re allowed to You find a provider who switch from one Part D will accept that plan, and plan to another. the plan pays. Regrettably, it’s always Most Advantage plans a good idea to check out all are relatively cheap, and of them because premiums
Help line
change, formularies change, etc., so the Part D plan that was your “best friend forever” this year might not be next year.
Plan bails out Another thing that’s happening is that some Advantage plans are bailing out; or, at least, bailing out of here, which is referred to as “plan nonrenewal” by the same people who say “annual election period.” So, if you’ve had one of these plans, you probably already received a letter telling you that. Or you will get one soon. If you get that letter, keep it! Then start thinking to yourself, “Now what?” Well, since your particular Advantage plan bailed out, you can do one of two things: (1) get a different Advantage plan or (2) switch back to “original” Medicare plus a Medicare supplement plan plus a Part D plan. And you can do that through Jan. 31. If you do it before Dec. 31, the new stuff will kick in on Jan. 1. If you do it in January, they start Feb. 1. Sooner is better. Now, listen to this: If your Advantage plan is
bailing, you have “guaranteed issue rights” to buy a Medicare supplement plan (you might also hear MediGap, but they mean the same thing) A through D, F, K or L for up to 63 days after your Advantage plan goes, which probably will be Dec. 31. That means that you can get one of those without having to first pass a health screening! Now think about that, then think about you: Right, that could be a very big deal for some folks. Maybe you don’t have an Advantage plan and don’t care about any of this, but if you do have a Part D plan, remember: Open enrollment is from Nov. 15 through Dec. 31.
Do something I know: Some of you totally get it, some of you are totally glazed over and some of you are already in mid-tantrum and hurling what I hope are inanimate objects at other inanimate objects and screaming, “This is ridiculous!” OK, I don’t blame you, but the fact remains that you will have to do something or pay the price — literally. And if you’re smart enough to have made it to
From the Air photography event slated Peninsula Daily News
SEQUIM —– Photographer and pilot David Woodcock will present a slide discussion and book signing for From the Air: The Olympic Peninsula at the Dungeness River Audubon
Center, 2151 W. Hendrickson Road, at 7 p.m. Friday, Oct. 29. Suggested donation is $5. Proceeds will support education programs of the Dungeness River Audubon Center and help maintain
Railroad Bridge Park. Over a six-year span Woodcock photographed Olympic National Park and other areas of the Olympic Peninsula from the air in all seasons and conditions. He took all the photos in From the Air, while poet
Judy Hagelstein directed the game Friday, Oct. 1, with winners: Suzanne Berg-Gert Wiitala, first; Dave JacksonTom Loveday, second; Jim De Vogler-Bill Farnum, third; Marlis PanchyshynBob MacNeal, fourth (north/south); Bob Wilkinson-Larry Phelps, first; Jim Wiitala-Vern Nunnally, second; Mary Norwood-David Johnson, third; Tom Markley-Jodi O’Neill, fourth (east/west).
Ted Rogers directed on Friday, Oct. 8, with winners: Dave Jackson-Frank Brown, first; Paula Cramer-Gert Wiitala, second; Barbara Woodson-Rick Zander, third (north/south); Larry Phelps-Jack Real, first; June Nelson-Pete Mayberg, second; Ruby Mantle-Phyllis Thompson, third (east/west). Ted Miller directed the unit game on Monday, Oct. 11, with winners: Thomas Larsen-Patrick Thomson, first and first overall; Paula Cramer-Wilma Lambert,
second; Frank BrownDavid Jackson, third; Frank Herodes-Nancy Herodes, fourth (north/ south); Ted Rogers-Mona VanDyke, first; Ruby Mantle-Marge Knee, second; Gerry Paul-Bobby Spoerri, third; June Nelson-Gert Wiitala, fourth (east/west).
Chimacum The winners Tuesday, Oct, 12, were: Mike Edwards-Fay Coupe, first; Dell Craig-John McClure, second; Wilma Lambert-
________ Mark Harvey is director of Clallam/Jefferson Senior Information & Assistance, which operates through the Olympic Area Agency on Aging. He is also a member of the Community Advocates for Rural Elders partnership. He can be reached at 360-452-3221 (Port Angeles-Sequim), 360-385-2552 (Jefferson County) or 360-3749496 (West End), or by e-mailing harvemb@dshs.wa.gov.
Tax-Aide seeks volunteers
and nature writer Tim McNulty wrote the essays for the book. Copies of the book are available in the gift shop at the River Center. For more information, visit www.DungenessRiver Center.org.
with experienced volunteers at locations such as libraries and community centers. Peninsula Daily News Program sponsors are The AARP Tax-Aide the AARP Foundation program is looking for and the IRS. volunteers to prepare One need not be an federal income tax AARP member or retiree returns for residents in to volunteer or to receive Jefferson and Clallam free tax preparation sercounties. vices from the program. Training will be in For information: December and January, ■ Jefferson County using IRS-provided — Phone David Self at training materials and 360-385-2617 or e-mail software. dcself@olypen.com. All volunteers must ■ Port Angeles — attend the training and Phone Hearst Coen at pass an Internal Reve360-452-6541 or e-mail nue Service test and are hj_coen@msn.com. expected to work at least ■ Sequim — Phone four hours per week dur- Jon Wendt at 360-681ing the tax season, pro0137 or wendtsequim@q. viding free tax return com. preparation and elec■ Forks — Phone tronic filing. Corinne Spicer at 360New volunteers work 374-6332.
AARP program not just for retirees
Duplicate Bridge Results Sequim
the age where this even matters to you, you’re smart enough to figure this out. Some of us are even smart enough to say, “Help.” If you’re that smart, call any of the numbers at the end of the column and say “SHIBA” (Statewide Health Insurance Benefits Advisors) or just mumble anything related to insurance and decent people will help you without making you feel like an idiot. For free. Yes, the game is changing and, yes, the changes are maddening, but they may not be all bad. In fact, come next year, Medicare is going to pay for a lot more preventive benefits than it ever has before, but that’s a story for another day. And remember this: You didn’t get this far by standing still.
Diane Schonians, third; Ted Rogers-Bob MacNeal, fourth.
Port Townsend The winners Oct. 6, were: Vivian Hayter-Ernie Sauerland, first; Delle Craig-Bob MacNeal, second; Jean Gilliland-Mike Edwards, third. The winners for Oct. 13 were: Eileen Deutsch-Bonnie Broders, first; Betty Abersold-Mike Edwards, second; Jane Rogers-Jean Gilliland, third.
The New York Times Crossword Puzzle FIGURE OF SPEECH
1
BY PATRICK BLINDAUER / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ
ACROSS 1 Alaska senator Murkowski 5 Sean who played the title role in “Rudy,” 1993 10 Start to frost? 15 Pan handler 19 El océano, por ejemplo 20 Shakespeare’s Lennox, Angus or Ross 21 Bitter 22 Aries or Taurus 23 Hoop grp. 24 They may be split 25 Singer with the #1 country hit “Hello Darlin’” 27 When repeated, a calming phrase 28 A whole lot 29 Debate side 30 Cartographic extra 31 Egg protector 32 Easy as falling off ___ 33 Salon, for example 35 Listens, old-style 37 Suspenseful 1966 Broadway hit 43 Grp. that conducts many tests 46 Biblical liar 48 See 39-Down 49 Actress ___ Chong 51 Least welcoming 52 Wait upon 53 Gathered 54 ___ Coty, French president before de Gaulle
55 Stick in the mud 57 Subtracting 59 Cassandra, for one 60 Repeatedly raised the bar? 63 Long piece of glassware 67 N.F.C. South player 70 Noggin 71 Still product: Abbr. 72 On the safe side 73 Wave function symbol in quantum mechanics 74 Items of short-lived use 76 Racy best-selling novel of 1956 79 Take ___ (rest) 80 Hindu titles 82 Speed-skating champ Johann ___ Koss 83 Out of 87 Like an egocentric’s attitude 91 Flammable fuel 93 Part of a postal address for Gannon University 95 Carry out 96 Moon of Saturn 97 Barbecue cook 98 Football linemen: Abbr. 99 Fast-talking salesman’s tactic 102 Itsy-bitsy 103 Explorer ___ da Gama 104 Shout from one who’s on a roll?
106 ___ loss 107 One to a customer, e.g. 110 Prime 113 Camping treats 115 B.M.O.C.’s, often 116 X Games competitor 118 Rikki-___-tavi 119 Tanned 120 Zoom 121 Florida univ. affiliated with the Catholic Church 122 ___ the hole 123 “… and ___ it again!” 124 “Twilight,” e.g. 125 ___ manual 126 Gull relatives 127 Spat
14 Lessen 15 “Educating Rita” star 16 Sheds 17 Novel conclusion? 18 Track star A. J. 26 Gave a sly signal 28 Good spot for a date? 34 “Dies ___” (hymn) 36 Prepare for a dubbing 38 Yucatán “you” 39 With 48-Across, mediocre 40 Insomniac’s TV viewing 41 “The Chairs” playwright 42 Former Fords 43 Showing, as a deck member DOWN 44 Square sorts 1 Common patio sight 45 Peace Nobelist Sakharov 2 Bliss, it is said 47 Cost for getting 3 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 or 7, money, maybe in New York City 4 Prominent tower, for 50 Common settler 52 Bowls short 5 Massachusetts indus- 56 ___-Tass news agency trial city on the 58 Bread, milk or eggs Millers River 61 Tech stock 6 Trails 7 Follow too closely 62 Elk 8 Dictator’s phrase 64 Folk singer Jenkins 9 Dread loch? 65 Miracle Mets 10 Spotted cavy pitcher, 1969 11 H.S. class 66 Shamus 12 Didn’t buy, perhaps 67 Person who’s visi13 Don Herbert’s monbly happy iker on 1950s-’60s 68 On deck TV 69 Rubs
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in Newton, Iowa, until 2006 111 Not e’en once 112 Winged Greek god 113 Ballpark figure 114 Cheese lovers 117 The Sun Devils of the N.C.A.A. 119 Magnanimous
C4
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Fun ’n’ Advice
Mister Boffo • “Cathy” has been retired; we’re auditioning this comic. Share your thoughts: comics@peninsuladailynews.com.
Peninsula Daily News
Joy not measured by partner’s height DEAR ABBY: Regarding the letter from “Lost in the Land of Aloha” and whether short men are considered less desirable — height is relative. I am 5-foot-3 and dated taller men, usually 6 feet and over, because those were the guys who just were around and seemed to be attracted to me. Then I met my husband. He’s 5-foot-6 and absolutely wonderful. Before me, he dated much taller women. He’s kind, loving, showers me with affection, offers me understanding, is a fantastic father and a complete kid-magnet. He cooks, washes dishes, does laundry, changes diapers and actually picks things up off the floor instead of vacuuming around them. I am the luckiest woman on this planet, and I know it. Never pass up a short guy. They’re not short — they’re funsized! Very, Very Happy Wife in Texas
For Better or For Worse
Pickles
Dear Wife: I received a tsunami of responses to my question, “Does height really matter?” And it shows there’s no “shortage” of support for men like “Kal” (“Aloha’s” friend) and your honey of a husband. Read on:
Dear Abby: You bet a man Van Buren being tall makes a difference. I’m an average-sized bachelor who works around many attractive women. I get plenty of flirting and interest, but every time I meet one of my co-workers’ husbands, he’s a tall, athletic stud. That’s just the way it goes. The Short of It in Longmont, Colo.
Abigail
Dear Abby: This may seem shallow, but height does matter to me. I’m a tall woman, and when I date men who are shorter than I am, I feel even bigger. It makes me uncomfortable, which does not make for a good date. Tall Drink of Water in Eugene, Ore. Dear Abby: Aren’t you aware that the vast majority of females prefer taller men? “Heightism” is a rampant and virulent prejudice. Even if a guy is an inch or two taller than the woman, he will be considered too short if he isn’t taller than she is when she’s wearing heels. Women go gaga over the really tall guys. I can’t count the number of times I’ve heard them brag about how tall their man happens to be. I have never heard a female boast, “My boyfriend’s only 5-foot-6, but he really is all man.” Roland in Maine
Dear Abby: My husband and I are both 5-foot-6. In the past, I was concerned that we didn’t fit the stereotype of the man being taller than the woman, but it has actually worked out great. We can switch cars without having to adjust the seats and mirrors. Our lips line up exactly when we kiss. I never have to stand on my toes! On our wedding day, I wore gorgeous ballet flats. “Kal” will eventually find a woman who appreciates Dear Abby: Does height matter? him for the breadth of his heart and Not a whit! I’m a 6-foot-2-inch guy. not the length of his body. Seeing Eye to Eye The men who catch my eye are in in Illinois the 5-foot-7 to 5-foot-9 range, but I certainly don’t draw the line. Shorter guys? Bring ’em on! (One at a time, Dear Abby: It’s all a matter of though.) personal preference. I need to think Don in California the man I’m with will be able to protect me if need be. I don’t have that ________ feeling with a short guy. And it Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, doesn’t matter how muscular he is also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was — it’s the height that counts in my founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Letmind. ters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. Box Likes Looking Up 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via e-mail at the Guy by logging onto www.dearabby.com.
Frank & Ernest
Garfield
Momma
The Last Word in Astrology By Eugenia Last
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Let go of relationships that are not a benefit. Moving on will allow you to befriend someone new with something to offer or share with you. Expressing confidence will help you get ahead. 3 stars TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Take heed of what’s being said and make sure you do things by the book. Stand tall and speak your mind. Don’t be afraid to put pressure on someone you don’t feel is measuring up to your standards. It’s time to move forward. 3 stars
Rose is Rose
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You may think opportunity is knocking but, at the same time, you can expect a tailspin that will leave you confused. Insincere gestures of friendliness are apparent. Don’t offer private information unless you don’t care if it is made public. 4 stars
Elderberries
CANCER (June 21-July 22): There is a time and place for everything and, although you will be a little emotional, take advantage of any possibility. A romantic connection is evident and, whether it is with someone you are already involved with or someone new, the forecast is superb. 2 stars
Dennis the Menace
dear abby
Doonesbury
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Don’t give in to someone who is bossy or standing in the way of your personal progress. Love issues may surface due to jealousy or possessiveness. It’s time to make a decision about the future of a relationship. 5 stars VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Take the lead position in whatever event, project or activity you are participating in and you will make new friends and get credit for your contribution. A change in your current income is apparent and is likely to come to you as a surprise, gift or bonus of some sort. 3 stars
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Give some thought to the people who have supported you. You may want to do something nice to show your appreciation. A surprise will help to seal a deal. Don’t give in to someone who has disappointed you in the past. 5 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Use your will power and you will accomplish all you set out to do. Don’t let someone burden you with something that is not your problem. Put any emotional entanglement in your life on the back burner. 2 stars
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Don’t underestimate what a partner or competitor will do in order to come out on top. Protect your assets as well as your wellbeing. Problems at home will result in uncertainty and confusion. Don’t show your true feelings. 3 stars
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Don’t get mixed up with the wrong crowd. Get serious about something that can help you earn more money or improve your living arrangements. Stick to the rules or you’ll pay the price. 4 stars
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Take action, make changes and concentrate on your goals. Take advantage of any opportunity to network. Plan to spend some quality time with someone you love or whose company you enjoy. There is plenty you will discover. 3 stars
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Being passionate about what you do or how you handle a situation will lead to financial freedom. Strive for perfection and present the best possible product, suggestion or service. Your enthusiasm will inspire those around you. 3 stars
The Family Circus
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PeninsulaNorthwest
Peninsula Daily News
Things to Do Continued from C2 385-0373 or e-mail artymus@ olypen.com.
Line dancing lessons — Beginning dancers. Sequim Elks Lodge, 143 Port Williams Road, 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. $3 per class. Phone 360-681-2826.
Rothschild House — Franklin and Taylor streets, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission: $4 for adults; $1 for children 3 to 12; free to Jefferson County Historical Society members. Sequim Museum & Arts Phone 360-385-1003 or visit Center — “Your Daily Fiber — www.jchsmuseum.org. Conspicuous Consumption, Community and Ceremony,” Jefferson County Histori175 W. Cedar St., 10 a.m. to cal Museum and shop — 540 4 p.m., Tuesday through Satur- Water St., Port Townsend, day through Oct. 30. Free. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission: $4 Phone 360-683-8110. for adults; $1 for children 3 to 12; free to historical society Sequim Duplicate Bridge members. Exhibits include “Jef— Masonic Lodge, 700 S. Fifth ferson County’s Maritime HeriAve., 12:30 p.m. Phone 360- tage,” “James Swan and the 681-4308, or partnership 360- Native Americans” and “The 683-5635. Chinese in Early Port Townsend.” Phone 360-385French class — 2 p.m. For 1003 or visit www.jchsmuseum. more information, phone 360- org. 681-0226. Commanding Officer’s Port Townsend and Quarters museum tour — Fort Worden State Park, Jefferson County 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. $4 adults, free for children. Phone 360-385Today 1003. “Windows on the World” watercolors exhibit — Sandra Smith-Poling. Art Mine Gallery in the Inn at Port Hadlock, 310 Hadlock Bay Road. Through November.
The Rotary Club of East Jefferson County — Tri-Area Community Center, 10 West Valley Road. 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. Lunch meeting (salad $7, meal $10). Speaker: Katherine Baril; topic: Team JefferPort Townsend Aero son — Economic Development Museum — Jefferson County Update. Phone Ray Serebrin International Airport, 195 Air- 360-385-6544 of visit www. port Road, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. clubrunner.ca/Portal/Home. Admission: $10 for adults, $9 aspx?cid=705. for seniors, $6 for children ages 7-12. Free for children younger Northwest Maritime Centhan 6. Features vintage air- ter tour — Wooden Boat Founcraft and aviation art. dation and Northwest Maritime Center offer free hourlong tour Chimacum TOPS 1393 — of the center’s new headquarEvergreen Coho Resort Club ters and telling of the property’s House, 2481 Anderson Lake story. Meet docent in the cenRoad, Chimacum, 9 a.m. Visi- ter’s chandlery, 431 Water St., tors welcome. Phone: 360-765- 2 p.m. Elevators available, chil3164. dren welcome and pets not allowed inside building. Phone East Jefferson County 360-385-3628, ext. 102, or Senior Co-ed Softball — H.J. e-mail sue@nwmaritime.org. Carroll Park, 1000 Rhody Drive, Chimacum, 10 a.m. to noon. Kayak program — Help Open to men 50 and older and build a cedar-strip wooden women 45 and older. Phone kayak. Chandler Building Boat 360-437-5053 or 360-437-2672 Shop, Maritime Center, Water or 360-379-5443. and Monroe streets, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Free. Offered by the Puget Sound Coast Artil- Northwest Maritime Center and lery Museum — Fort Worden Redfish Custom Kayaks. Phone State Park, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Joe Greenley at 360-808-5488 Admission: $3 for adults; $1 for or visit www.redfishkayak.com. children 6 to 12; free for children 5 and younger. Exhibits interpret the Harbor Defenses peninsuladailynews.com of Puget Sound and the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Phone 360-
C5
Thursday, October 21, 2010
. . . planning your day on the North Olympic Peninsula
TLC for Septic Systems — 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Cape George Fire Hall, 3850 Cape George Road. Admiralty Audubon — “Interpreting the Behavior of Northwest Birds” with Naturalist Ken Wilson. 7 p.m. Port Townsend Community Center, 620 Lawrence St. Comedy night benefit — Comedian Dwight Slade performs a benefit show for the Key City Public Theatre at the Key City Playhouse, 419 Washington St. 8 p.m. General admission, $15; VIP tickets, $25, includes two free drinks and priority seating. Tickets are available at www.keycity publictheatre.org or at Quimper Sound, 230 Taylor St.
Friday “Windows on the World” watercolors exhibit — Sandra Smith-Poling. Art Mine Gallery in the Inn at Port Hadlock, 310 Hadlock Bay Road. Through November. Port Townsend Aero Museum — Jefferson County International Airport, 195 Airport Road, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission: $10 for adults, $9 for seniors, $6 for children ages 7-12. Free for children younger than 6. Features vintage aircraft and aviation art.
of Puget Sound and the Strait 385-6959 or visit www. of Juan de Fuca. Phone 360- conversationcafe.org. Topic: 385-0373 or e-mail artymus@ President Obama. olypen.com. Quilcene Historical Rothschild House — Museum — 151 E. Columbia Franklin and Taylor streets, St., by appointment. Artifacts, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission: $4 documents, family histories for adults; $1 for children 3 to and photos of Quilcene and 12; free to Jefferson County surrounding communities. New Historical Society members. exhibits on Brinnon, military, Phone 360-385-1003 or visit millinery and Quilcene High www.jchsmuseum.org. School’s 100th anniversary. Phone 360-765-0688, 360Jefferson County Histori- 765-3192 or 360-765-4848 or cal Museum and shop — 540 e-mail quilcenemuseum@ Water St., Port Townsend, olypen.com or quilcene 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission: $4 museum@embarqmail.com. for adults; $1 for children 3 to 12; free to historical society Northwest Maritime Cenmembers. Exhibits include “Jef- ter tour — Wooden Boat Founferson County’s Maritime Heri- dation and Northwest Maritime tage,” “James Swan and the Center offer free hourlong tour Native Americans” and “The of the center’s new headquarChinese in Early Port ters and telling of the property’s Townsend.” Phone 360-385- story. Meet docent in the cen1003 or visit www.jchsmuseum. ter’s chandlery, 431 Water St., org. 2 p.m. Elevators available, children welcome and pets not Commanding Officer’s allowed inside building. Phone Quarters museum tour — 360-385-3628, ext. 102, or Fort Worden State Park, e-mail sue@nwmaritime.org. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. $4 adults, free for children. Phone 360-385Overeaters Anonymous — 1003. St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 1032 Jefferson St., 5 p.m. Port Townsend Marine Sci- Phone 360-385-6854. ence Center — Fort Worden State Park. Natural history and Whole Person Drumming marine exhibits, noon to 4 p.m. drum series — Beginners Admission: $5 for adults; $3 for Mind with Zorina Wolf. 6 p.m. to youth (6-17); free for science center members. “Whales in 8 p.m. Madrona Mind Body Our Midst” till Dec. 31. Phone Institute at Fort Worden State 360-385-5582, e-mail info@ Park. Visit www.villageheart ptmsc.org or visit www.ptmsc. org.
Puget Sound Coast Artillery Museum — Fort Worden State Park, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission: $3 for adults; $1 for Conversation Cafe — Vicchildren 6 to 12; free for children 5 and younger. Exhibits torian Square Deli, 940 Water interpret the Harbor Defenses St., No. 1, noon. Phone 360-
Now Showing n Deer Park Cinema,
Port Angeles (360-4527176) “Jackass 3-D” (R) “Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga’Hoole” (PG) “Red” (PG-13) “Secretariat” (PG) “The Social Network” (PG13) “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps” (PG-13) Paranormal Activity (R)
n Lincoln Theater, Port
Angeles (360-457-7997) “Easy A” (PG-13)
“Life As We Know It (PG13) “My Soul To Take” (R) “The Town” (R)
n The Rose Theatre,
Port Townsend (360385-1089) “Secretariat” (PG) “The Social Network” (PG13)
n Uptown Theater, Port Townsend (360-3853883) “Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga’Hoole” (PG)
beat.com. Phone 360-6815407 or e-mail vhb@village heartbeat.com. Jungian analyst — J. Gary Sparks will present “The Heart of a Scientist: An Atomic Physicist’s Ordeal of Matter and Meaning,” 7 p.m. Quimper Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 2333 San Juan Avenue. $10. “Here’s to the Ladies! The Women of Tin Pan Alley” — Key City Public Theatre at Key City Playhouse, 419 Washington St., 7 p.m. General admission $18 and students $10. Advance tickets online or at Quimper Sound, 230 Taylor St. For more information, phone 360-385-7396 or visit keycity publictheatre.org.
Forks and the West End Today Forks Timber Museum — Next to Forks Visitors Center, 1421 S. Forks Ave., 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. $3 admission. Phone 360-374-9663.
Friday Forks Timber Museum — Next to Forks Visitors Center, 1421 S. Forks Ave., 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. $3 admission. Phone 360-374-9663.
Solution to Puzzle on C3
L A W N C H A I R
I G N O R A N C E
S U B W 8 R A I N
B E A M E R
U P N E X T
C H A F E S
L S T S
I K E A
M 8 A G
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A T H O O A L S I A S T M I F B E M E
E P I R S C U T B 8 V A S I T B O A R S A U
S H A D O W S
T A I L G 8
I N R E
U S A T I R E T E D A N R A S R T E E D A N D C O A O N R D E T L E S E R
N E S S
P A C A
N T I O H O T E N L E W 8 S A L C P 8 O I S T H A I O N S W I E R O S
S T A T
E C O N
R E N T E L D T D S S T A N P O L N E E T C H M O I K C E E R
M R W I Z A R D E L L A
A B 8 W I I N R K A E E D
S E A V E G R H E R R E K I I N N S
C A I N E
D U S T T E C E F R I I L T E E S B I G
Peninsula MARKETPLACE
H U T S
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F O Y T
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A N D R E I
R E L E A S E D 8
O P E N T R A D E
M A R Y A S T O R
IN PRINT & ONLINE PLACE ADS FOR PRINT AND WEB: Visit | www.peninsulamarketplace.com
Reach The North Olympic Peninsula & The World
Place Your Ad Online 24/7 with Photos & Video Office Hours Call | 360.452.8435 | 800.826.7714 | FAX 360.417.3507 Monday - Friday IN PERSON: PORT ANGELES: 305 W. 1ST ST. | SEQUIM: 150 S. 5TH AVE #2 | PORT TOWNSEND: 1939 E. SIMS WAY 8AM - 5PM
22
SNEAK A PEEK •
•
Community Notes
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Community Notes
TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507
T O DAY ’ S H O T T E S T N E W C L A S S I F I E D S ! FIREWOOD: Decked alder. You cut/haul. $50/cord. 452-9358.
Job loss forces bottom price. Must sell to pay loan. 1979 Fiberform 26' Baja Flybridge Galvanized EZ-Loader trailer (1999 dual axle) Chevy 350 engine with rebuilt FORD: ‘92 Crown Vic- Rochester Quadrajet 280 Volvo outdrive. toria. Runs and looks great, 83K. $3,000/ $2,500. 360-504-2298 PST In Port Angeles. obo. 683-2542. FOR SALE Shine-ABlind . Blind cleaning and repair business operating from the back of a large box truck. $17,500. Call 360-683-9050
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Community Notes
CRAFTERS/VENDORS WANTED! Sell your items at our Christmas Bazaar & Craft Fair, Nov. 5 & 6, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Call Judy: 683-4969.
STOLEN Ford: ‘83 LTD Wagon. Dark green. If seen, please notify police.
23
Lost and Found
Compose your Classified Ad on
FOUND: Cat. Calico, Sequim area. 681-4129
www.peninsula dailynews.com
FOUND: Keys. Honda keys, Cafe Garden, P.A. Call to identify. 457-4611
TIPS
FOUND: Kitten. 4 mo. old, gray with white on paws and chest, no collar, Solmar area, Dryke Rd., Sequim. 775-5935.
ARTISANS CREATIVE CONSIGNMENT OPENING SOON IN CARLSBORG. PROUD SPONSORS OF BRIGHTER SMILES! We are looking for talented people who make Jewelry, paint, pottery, quilting, knitting. Any unique artistic talent qualifies!!! Also great consignable items. Clothes, household etc. We are located at 803 Carlsborg Rd. Ste D. Across from the post office. Our consignment days will be on Tues. Oct. 12th 10 am until 5:30 pm. Thurs. Oct. 14th 10 am to 3 pm and Sat. 16th 10am to 2 pm. Call for future dates. We are aiming to be open by November 1st. Our goal is to donate a portion of the proceeds to help children receive dental care. This is such a great need and something I feel passionate about! Your consignment or donation will be greatly appreciated and help create a brighter smile! Please contact Michele at 360461-4799 or Heather 360-7756554. The Business line is activated on Tues the 12th. 360-681-7655
Make sure your information is clear and includes details that make the reader want to respond.
SELL YOUR HOME IN PENINSULA CLASSIFIED 1-800-826-7714
PENINSULA CLASSIFIED
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LOST: “Slow Down” stand-up display with flag. Stolen from alley in Sequim. Call 360-809-9229, no questions asked if returned. Reward. LOST: Cat. Long hair Calico female, answers to Gingerbread, 9th and Vine area, P.A. 775-6855. LOST: Cat. Male Bengal, looks like a cheetah or bobcat with a long tail, was wearing a purple collar, answers to the name Shadow, upper Old Mill Road, P.A. If seen or captured, please call. 360-477-3016 LOST: Cat. Solid black. Missing since 10/11 from Agnew area. Call 360-4576618 or 206-3536400. LOST: Envelope. Small manila envelope that contains several 60 cent and 3 cent stamps and misc. items. Post Office, P.A. 565-0262 LOST: Keys. On a sports ribbon, downtown P.A. 452-2114.
VISIT: WWW.PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM OR E-MAIL: CLASSIFIED@PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM DEADLINES: 4:00 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.
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Lost and Found
LOST: Palm Pilot. In dark green leather case, P.A. or Sequim. 360-457-6677 MISSING: Guitar. Yamaha acoustic, gold hardware, black gig bag, reward offered, no questions asked. 775-1227.
Whether you are selling or buying, browsing or creating, looking or booking… classified has it all! As low as 4 days for $16.50
PENINSULA CLASSIFIED
360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714
31 Help Wanted 32 Independent Agents 33 Employment Info 34 Work Wanted 35 Schools/Instruction
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Help Wanted
AIDES/RNA OR CNA Best wages, bonuses. Wright’s. 457-9236.
4C235420
GARAGE Sale: Fri.Sat.-Sun., 8-1 p.m., 502 W. Hemlock. Lots of guy stuff. MOTOR HOME: ‘94 28’ Minnie Winnie. GARAGE Sale: Fri. - Class C, good Sat., 9-1 p.m., 1937 shape. $10,000. W 5th St. Wall unit, 457-8912, 670-3970 garden cart, lawn mower, coffee table, MOVING Sale: Sat., file cabinet, puzzles 9-3 p.m., 812 E. 10th and much more! St. Sewing notions, GARAGE Sale: Fri.- household goods, Sat.-Sun., 8-5 p.m., gardening supplies, 538 W. 6th St., little bit of everything between the bridges. MULTI-FAMILY Sale Lots of stuff. Fri.-Sat., 9-3 p.m., 619 E. 4th St. All GARAGE/ proceeds go to DECK SALE benefit Campfire RAIN OR SHINE USA. 2 BIG TENTS FULL 30 years of MULTI-FAMILY Sale: family storage. Fri.-Sat., 9-2 p.m. Fri.-Sat.-Sun., 8-3 1542 Dan Kelly Rd. p.m. 1638 W. 12th Tools, building mateSt., corner of 12th rials, household and K Street in the goods, appliances, alley! Furniture, and more. dressers, bookshelves, kitchen MULTI-FAMILY Sale: table, outdoor Sat., 9-3 p.m. 933 E. patio sets, bunk 1st St. Antiques, beds, school toys, brand new desks, toys, store medical scrubs, coldisplays, luggage, lectibles, and so kitchen appliances, much more! bar stools, bath vanity, sinks... THIS IS IT! Oh Ya, Fri.-Sat., 9-3 p.m., There’s More! 7496 Old Olympic MISSING: Guitar. Hwy. Christmas and Yamaha acoustic, Halloween tables, gold hardware, black yard and misc. items. gig bag, reward offered, no questions WANTED: Canopy for ‘95 Dodge 1/2 ton asked. 775-1227. short bed, 80x68. SEQUIM: Guest stu- Nice storage trunk dio in town. Sm yard, for bedroom. 360-963-2018 priv. $495. 683-1530.
22 Community Notes 23 Lost and Found 24 Personals
5000900
2-FAMILY Sale: Sat., 8 a.m., 101 to Palo Alto, south to 704 Vista Del Mar. Good stuff, no junk, no clothing, no baby items. Some furniture, tools and garden tools. AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPS 4 male $350 ea., 1 female $450, parents on site, quality, 1st shots, wormed. Experienced breeder. Ready. 582-3181. BIG, nice apts. $650. Great P.A. location. 417-6638 CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES 1 female, $350, 2 males, $200 ea. Ready to go. 452-7746 DATO RUMMAGE Sale: 8 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday, October 23th, 114 E. 6th Terrace Apts. Community Rm. Free coffee and doughnuts! Candy Bars will also be on hand for sale. Money raised for DATO. DODGE: ‘75 1/2 ton pickup. 318, 8’ bed with shell, 87,500 actual miles, good tires, brakes, runs well. $900/obo. 683-4021 ESTATE Sale: Thurs.Fri.-Sat., 8-2 p.m. 973 New Meadows Loop. Quality adult clothing, and quality miscellaneous possessions. ESTATE Sale: Sat.Sun., 9-3 p.m., 438 N. Carne St., off Hwy. 101 turn north at stop light at Les Schwab. Furniture, tools, lawn mowers, weed eaters, etc. ESTATE Sale: Fri.Sat., 9-4 p.m. 3413 Mt. Angeles Rd. New stuff added. Electronics, P.A. aerial photos, reel-to-reels, pictures and frames, bikes, saddle, etc., etc., etc.!
ACROSS 1 A party to 5 Quite the fashion plate 9 Spring bloomer 14 His epitaph reads “And the beat goes on” 15 Faulkner femme fatale Varner 16 BP merger partner 17 TV role for Bamboo Harvester 18 Pie flop? 20 Italian deli sandwich 22 Travelers’ burdens 23 Pie taste-test site? 26 X, at times 27 www bookmark 28 Film director’s headaches 32 Luther’s lang. 34 First Amendment lobbying gp. 36 Numbers game 38 Buckeyes’ home: Abbr. 39 Pie to-do? 41 Post- opposite 42 One in distress? 44 Slug or song ending 45 Loft material 46 Apartment manager, familiarly 47 Quaff for Andy Capp 48 Curling setting 50 Pie charts? 56 Like the auditory and optic nerves, e.g. 59 Aspen topper 60 Pie patter? 63 Prohibited thing 64 Days of Hanukkah, e.g. 65 Flag 66 First name in Olympics gymnastics 67 Like beer halls, usually 68 Eyewear, in ads 69 Raid target DOWN 1 High-tech debut of 1981
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Classified
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2010
Help Wanted
ASSURED HOSPICE LHC Group RN Forks and West End Seeking motivated individuals to enhance our expanding program. For application call 360-582-3796 AUTO SALESPERSON Koenig Chevrolet Subaru is looking for a highly motivated individual for our Auto Salesperson position. Excellent pay program and benefits. Contact Bill Koenig Chevrolet Subaru 457-4444 COUNTER HELP Cock-A-Doodle Doughnuts is looking for a reliable and friendly person, Tues.-Fri., approx. 30 hrs. wk. Apply at 105 E. Front St., P.A. with resume or fill out application. FACEBOOK: Port Angeles business desires experienced social networking individual to manage it’s Facebook site. Responsibilities include posting photographs, announcements, sales, as well as local activities of interest to our Facebook friends. We anticipate an average of 1 hr. a day employment and a pay scale of $600 mo. George 683-9033 FRONT DESK RECEPTIONIST FT, plus benefits, experience required. No calls. Bring resume and fill out application at Peninsula Children’s Clinic, 902 Caroline Street, P.A. LABORER: Must have valid drivers license, 18 yrs min., able to lift 60 lbs. Apply at 306 S. Valley St., P.A.
By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle –– horizontally, vertically, diagonally, even backward. Find them and CIRCLE THEIR LETTERS ONLY. DO NOT CIRCLE THE WORD. The leftover letters spell the Wonderword. THE WORLD OF ANIMALS
R A E B U F F A L O T T E R X
By Ed Sessa
10/21/10
2 Grammy winner Jones 3 Bridge opening 4 “Fuggedaboutit!” 5 1980s-’90s slugger Fielder 6 “Whazzat?” 7 Seine sight 8 Longtime ice cream cake brand 9 Clapton title woman 10 Wet one’s whistle 11 Johns, to Elton 12 Top 13 Male swans 19 “Too-Ra-Loo-RaLoo-__”: Irish lullaby 21 Hardly distinguished 24 Nostalgic song title word 25 Godiva product 29 Tunnel entrance of sorts 30 Gumbo ingredient 31 Chop __ 32 Mars and Venus 33 Name meaning “hairy” in Hebrew 35 __-de-sac 36 Airline to Oslo 37 Slight market Help Wanted
Marine Electronics Co. seeks hi-energy Customer Service/ Marketing Associate. Successful candidate will possess excellent computer skills including MS Work/Excel/ Adobe Acrobat/ Salesforce and Fireworks. Excellent verbal & written communications skills required along with reasonable technical and operational understanding of basic marine electronics. Salary DOE. Complete job description at www.shinemicro.co m. Send resume to jobs@ shinemicro.com MENTAL HEALTH Crisis Intervention Specialist for mobile crisis interventions/ assessments/stabilization svcs. Req. Master’s degr. or RN plus 2 yrs mental health exp. Case Manager/Therapist for chronically mentally ill adults. Pref. Master’s w/2 yrs exp. Resume and cvr ltr: PCMHC, 118 E. 8th St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. www.pcmhc.org AA/EOE BUSINESS MANAGER For Crescent School District, full-time. Complete job description and application at www.crescent.wednet.edu or contact 360-9283311, ext. 100. Closing date for applications October 27, 2010. POWERPOINT: Port Angeles business desires individual experienced in Microsoft PowerPoint to develop continuing presentations highlighting it’s business. George 683-9033 ROOFER: Experienced, valid license, own transportation, wage DOE. 683-9619/452-0840
D M P N E R A G U O C O N G L
© 2010 Universal Uclick
N S U T O M A T N R O L A L E
I T C N W C A Z O G I F K E O
E E R A L J E C I Y M N E L P
R R O H S S O R E L P A N D A
www.wonderword.com
A S P P E D A K O A A W N O R
T R W E I F R T N S L S O G D
S O B L F U O T I P A E O S U
C H E E T A H X O B N A C H C
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T I G E R S A P I G S A A E S
S Q U I R R E L I T P E R P E
10/21
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Ants, Bear, Bees, Boa, Buffalo, Camel, Cats, Cheetah, Cougar, Cow, Crocodile, Dogs, Donkey, Ducks, Eagle, Elephant, Fox, Giraffe, Goat, Goose, Hamsters, Impala, Leopard, Lion, Lizard, Lynx, Nightingale, Owls, Otter, Panda, Panther, Pigs, Polar, Porcupine, Rabbit, Raccoon, Rats, Reindeer, Reptile, Rhinoceros, Seal, Sheep, Snake, Squirrel, Swan, Tigers, Turkey, Wolf, Zebra Yesterday’s Answer: Aye Carumba
Wednesday’s Puzzle Solved
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by Mike Argirion and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
BUIME ©2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
FLAYE (c)2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
improvement 40 Disconcerting glance 43 Hand-holding events 47 Parcels out 49 Requiring change, briefly 51 Reverence 52 A pad helps protect it 53 Elizabeth I’s beloved
Help Wanted
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Hydraulic wood splitting, big or small, we’ll split them all. 457-9037
UTILITY BILLING LEAD The City of Sequim has an immediate opening for a Utility Billing Lead. Minimum 4 years experience in utilities, billing, collections, and customer service - including serving in a lead or supervisory capacity. This position is also responsible for general accounting work as assigned. Undergraduate degree in Accounting, Business Administration or related field preferred. Excellent communication, people, and organizational skills needed. Must have demonstrated experience working with customers with advanced and complex issues. Union position with benefits. $19.81-$23.55 hr. For application and job description visit http://www.ci. sequim.wa.us/jobs/ Open until filled. EOE
MOWING, pruning. Honest and Dependable. 582-7142.
Work Wanted
Aaron’s Garden. Hand weeding, weedeater, pruning, clean-up, hauling. Whatever your garden needs. 360-808-7276 ADEPT YARD CARE Weeding and mowing. 452-2034
O’Leary General LLC. Local college grad seeks your fall projects. Carports, decks, debris hauling, & much more! No job too big or too small. Highly conscientious & efficient. Over 10 yrs exp! Excellent references. Res. & comm. accts. accepted. Lisc., bonded, insured. Call Bryan today. 360-460-1557 OLEARGL929MH PROFESSIONAL COMPUTER REPAIR HelperTek.com - We offer courteous, professional computer repair and other IT related services at an affordable price. Visit us at helpertek.com or contact us 775-2525 helpdesk@helpertek.c om Purple Cow Cleaning Services. Fast and reliable. Mon.-Fri., Sequim/P.A. References. 797-4906. TUTORING: Certified teacher, all subjects except higher math. 360-609-2927
41 Business Opportunities 42 Mortgages/Contracts 43 Money Loaned/Wanted
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Business Opportunities
Hedge trim, prune, mow, haul, odd jobs. 452-7249 HOME CLEANING Meticulous and honest. Amie 452-4184. Honest, reliable, housekeeping. $20 hr. Quality service counts. For details, 360-434-2308
54 Mild expletives 55 Brown ermine 56 “Get real!” 57 Guy who “wore a diamond,” in the song “Copacabana” 58 ABM component? 61 Scary current 62 Grammy-winning Dr.
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51 Homes 52 Manufacured Homes 53 Open House 54 Lots/Acreage 55 Farms/Ranches 57 Recreational 58 Commercial Publisher’s Notice The Fair Housing Act makes it illegal to advertise any sale or rental of real estate with preference, limitation or discriminatory language based on race, color, religion, sex, age, national origin, handicap or familial status. Also, local laws forbidding discrimination in real estate ads prohibit discrimination based on marital status, political ideology, sexual orientation or a renter’s qualification for subsidy support. The Peninsula Daily News will not knowingly accept any advertising which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Housing for the elderly may be exempt from the Fair Housing Act if specific criteria have been met.
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Welding Services. 25 years experience, local references. Large and small jobs welcome. Call Bob at 457-5749
Best Choice Lawn Care. Maintenance and clean up. Free estimates. Sequim/ P.A. 248-230-0450. Hannah’s helping hands. My name is Hannah and I clean houses. I am reliable, no hassles, and very detailed. I will go to Joyce, Port Angeles, or Sequim. Please call me at 775-1258, I would love to clean your home.
10/21/10
Work Wanted
LABORER: License/ transportation needed. 683-9619 or 452-0840.
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E A I L D O N K E Y G W S A Y
Solution: 6 letters
FOR SALE Shine-ABlind . Blind cleaning and repair business operating from the back of a large box truck. $17,500. Call 360-683-9050
SIGAHR
GOYNEX Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Print your answer here: Yesterday’s
(Answers tomorrow) ROBOT SUNDAE VERIFY Jumbles: DECRY Answer: When the exhausted spy went to bed, he was — UNDER COVER
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Homes
A RARE FIND! 20 acres within Sequim city limits zoned residential with water view! Potential for future development; horse property or lavender farm. Highland irrigation ditch on property and quite private. Value is in the land; 1967 home has been rental property. Possible owner terms with substantial down and good credit report. $995,000. ML252107. Carolyn and Robert Dodds 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East AFFORDABLE HOME Beautiful duplex style 2 Br., 2 bath, condo unit with a 1 car garage located just outside the Sequim City limits. Nice open country feel, all appliances are included, low monthly home owners fees and easy access to town. $110,000. ML252092 Tom Blore Peter Black Real Estate 683-4116
Homes
BEYOND THE ORDINARY Unblockable views of Port Angeles Harbor and Victoria from this one level 3 Br., 2.5 bath centrally located home. Gourmet kitchen, Cambria countertops, custom cupboards, propane cook top. Includes beautiful formal dining area and sunken living room. Beautiful ponds, waterfalls, and gorgeous landscaping. You must see this home! $470,000. ML252146. Jean Irvine 417-2797 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY
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Homes
BY OWNER DIAMOND POINT Sale or lease, 2,930 sf, 3 Br., 2.5 ba, 2 story, .88 acre, lg. custom windows, water views/Victoria, library plus computer loft, remodeled, upgraded, garage and lg. carport, new roof/ paint. $499,000. 681-3717 CENTRALLY LOCATED Close to Sequim amenities. Zoned R3, allowing medium density single family or multi-family. 3 Br., 2 bath, 2,188 sf, mountain view. $239,900. ML251646. Alan Burwell 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East
Visit our website at www.peninsula dailynews.com Or email us at classified@ peninsula dailynews.com
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Homes
CHARM ABOUNDS You’ll find an open floor plan in this home, with a large living room, 1,292 sf, 3 Br., 2 bath with new exterior paint, newer laminate floors and countertops, plus a delightful covered porch and private patio. $54,500. ML251807. Jo Cummins Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim 683-3900 CHARMING BUNGALOW This home features hardwood floors, lots of windows, a spacious kitchen, separate laundry room and an updated bathroom. Large back yard with room to build a garage off of the alley. Ready for you to move right in! $109,000. ML251363/92270 Kelly Johnson 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. www.peninsula dailynews.com
FREE GARAGE SALE KIT With your
2 DAY
3 bed, 1.75 bath, 1,096 sf on large corner lot. Large kitchen. Master bath newly remodeled with tile shower & granite countertop. Peek a boo water view & mountain view. 1 car attached garage, detached 30x24 shop with wood heat. Fenced backyard with large patio. Near college. $210,000 360-460-7503
Peninsula Daily News can print your publication at an affordable price! Call Dean at 360-417-3520 1-800-826-7714
Peninsula Daily News Garage Sale Ad!
4 Signs Prices Stickers And More! 360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714 www.peninsula dailynews.com PENINSULA CLASSIFIED
New Medical Office
If you re looking for the best home for your lifestyle, turn to the best source for real estate information —Peninsula Classified. It only takes MINUTES to find a home that s just what you want.
space available in Sequim! 500-3000 SF available. Prices starting at $1.20/SF/month. Call Brody Broker 360.477.9665
PENINSULA CLASSIFIED 452-8435
52241068
SARC is now accepting applications for the part time positions of cashier, lifeguard, swim instructor, and eve. and weekend custodian. Please pick up application 610 N. 5th Ave., Sequim.
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E H N I G H T I N G A L E E N
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
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ATTENTION ADVERTISERS: No cancellations or corrections can be made on the day of publication. It is the Advertiser's responsibility to check their ad on the first day of publication and notify the Classified department if it is not correct. Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., is responsible for only one incorrect insertion. All advertising, whether paid for or not, whether initially accepted or published, is subject to approval or rescission of approval by Northwest Media (Washington), L.P. The position, subject matter, form, size, wording, illustrations, and typography of an advertisement are subject to approval of Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., which reserves the right to classify, edit, reject, position, or cancel any advertisement at any time, before or after insertion. Neither Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., nor Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., investigates statements made directly or indirectly in any advertisement and neither makes any representations regarding the advertisers, their products, or their services or the legitimacy or value of the advertisers or their products or services. In consideration of publication of an advertisement, the Advertiser and any advertising agency that it may employ, jointly and severally, will indemnify and hold harmles Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., and Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., their officers, agents, and employees against expenses (including all legal fees), liabilities, and losses resulting from the publication or distribution of advertising, including, without limitation, claims or suits for libel, violation of privacy, copyright or trademark infringement, deception, or other violations of law. Except as provided in this paragraph, neither Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., nor Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., shall be liable for any damages resulting from error in or non-publication of ads, whether paid for or not, including but not limited to, incidental, consequential, special, general, presumed, or punitive damages or lost profits. The sole and exclusive remedy against Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., and Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., for any error in, or non-publication of, an ad shall be a refund of the cost of the ad or the printing of one make-good insertion, at the discretion of the Publisher; provided that Advertiser and/or its agency has paid for the ad containing the error or which was not published; otherwise, the sole remedy shall be one make-good insertion. No claim for repetition shall be allowed. No allowance shall be made for imperfect printing or minor errors. Neither Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., nor Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., shall be liable for failure to print, publish, or circulate all or any portion of an advertisement or of advertising linage contracted for, if such failure is due to acts of God, strikes, accidents, or other circumstances beyond the control of Northwest Media (Washington), L.P. Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., and Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., shall not be liable for errors in or non-publication of advertisements submitted after normal deadlines. Any legal action arising from these terms and conditions or relating to the publication of, or payment for, advertising shall, if filed, be commenced and maintained in any court situated in King or Clallam County, Washington. Other terms and conditions, stated on our Advertising Rate Cards and Contracts, may apply. This service is not to be used to defraud or otherwise harm users or others, and Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., reserves the right to disclose a user's identity where deemed necessary to protect Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., or others or to respond to subpoenas or other lawful demands for information.
Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
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Homes
Charming, Vintage 2 Br., 1 bath remodeled Port Angeles home. $137,000 Improvements include: newly painted exterior and interior, new carpet. Bath includes maple vanity, ceramic tile and new fixtures. Updated kitchen with new countertops, flooring and appliances. Slider off master opens to large backyard. 12x12 deck and backyard fence in progress. Open House Saturday, October 9, 10-2 p.m. 628 W. 9th Contact: Susan 206-948-6653. Custom home minutes from town on acreage. Barbequing and entertaining will be easy with the spacious sunny deck with views. This 2007 built home has 2 Br., and a den, all on one level. Master bath has jetted tub and shower. Vaulted ceilings and huge windows provide views out to landscaped yard. 2 garages and space for RV parking. Oak flooring with cherry inserts show the quality throughout. $499,000 ML251472/100753 Clarice Arakawa 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. Custom home minutes from town on acreage. Barbequing and entertaining will be easy with the spacious sunny deck with views. This 2007 built home has 2 Br. and a den, all on one level. Master bath has jetted tub and shower. Vaulted ceilings and huge windows provide views out to landscaped yard. 2 garages and space for RV parking. Oak flooring with cherry inserts show the quality throughout. $499,000 ML251472/100753 Clarice Arakawa 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A.
CUSTOM HOME ON 1.25 ACRES OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE OFFERED AT ONLY 289k. Owner terms are only 10% down, balance at 6% for 30 years, easy qualifying. Possible Lease Option with only 5% down. NO AGENTS. Serious calls only. SEE photos, PDN ONLINE. PLEASE CALL REX @ 360-460-1855
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ENTICING LOG HOME On private 5 acres with seasonal pond. Spacious master suite features a jacuzzi tub. 720 sf shop, 2 RV hookups, a fenced garden area with fruit trees and greenhouse. $479,000 ML251838/122205 Helga Filler 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. EXQUISITE QUALITY And design in this lovely Bell Hill home. Exceptional kitchen with cherry cabinets, corian counters and a large pantry. Large bay windows, propane fireplace and a beautiful deck that looks out over the park-like yard. Water views. $309,900 Jim Hardie U-$ave Real Estate 775-7146 FABULOUS OLYMPIC MTN VIEWS Lovely traditional 3 Br., 2 bath home on 1.15 serene acres between Sequim and Port Angeles. Great area for gardening, hiking and bicycling. Great Sequim schools. Lovely kitchen with lots of cabinets and a handy kitchen bar. Family room with high vaulted ceilings and lots of windows facing the Olympics. $279,900. ML251440. Karen Kilgore 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East FABULOUS VIEWS This spacious 3 plus Br. home has had many upgrades including floor coverings and a new deck. You won’t find this much sf and this much view at this little price. Possibility of a mother-in-law apartment downstairs. $219,000. ML251629 Pili Meyer 417-2799 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY GREAT HORSE PROPERTY 2,849 sf, 3 Br., 2.5 bath, den and 450 sf bonus room, 8’ and 9’ ceilings with column entry, large master Br. with jacuzzi tub in bath, pole barn with RV opening, fenced pasture. $499,000. ML29072566/241304 Team Topper 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
PLACE YOUR AD ONLINE With our new Classified Wizard you can see your ad before it prints! www.peninsula dailynews.com
Homes
FOUR SEASONS RANCH A delightful updated home with 3 Br. + den, formal dining room. Nice private area in the backyard. Enjoy all of the amenities of the Ranch including golf, pool, club house and beach. $299,900. ML251604/109356 Thelma Durham 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. HILLY HIDEAWAY Beautiful country setting for this 3 Br., 2 bath mobile setting atop a knoll amid 2.5 acres in the Black Diamond foothills. Enjoy the serenity and seclusion of deep country but, at barely two miles from Port Angeles, still enjoy easy access to city amenities. Motivated seller slashes price and wants offers. $219,000. ML251384 Rita Erdmann Carroll Realty 457-1111 IF YOU WANT PRIVACY And a large home, this is it. 3,204 sf on two levels. This home has 3 Br., plus an office, workshop, den, and 2 living rooms. Beautiful wood ceiling and large windows. Circular driveway around a very nicely landscaped yard that has fruit trees, flowers, garden space, and a large yard $375,000 ML251348/91363 Dave Stofferahn 477-5542 COLDWELL BANKER TOWN & COUNTRY LIKE NEW OPEN FLOOR PLAN 3 Br., 1.75 bath. Living room with propane fireplace. Kitchen with breakfast bar and dining area. Spacious master with double closets. Guest bedrooms opposite master for privacy. Laundry room, double garage, deck landscaped yard $242,500. ML139019. Laura Halady 360-437-1011 Windermere Port Ludlow METICULOUSLY MAINTAINED Gracious entry leads into great room with propane fireplace and coved ceiling. Den/office/TV room/ formal dining room accessed by glass doors. Spacious master Br. and bath built-in cabinets with padded seat, two large separate closets with organizers, large tiled shower, double sinks. $395,000. ML251201. Cathy Reed and Sheryl Payseno Burley 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East
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MAGICAL SETTING Saltwater views, main house has 2,530 sf, guest apartment is 864 sf plus a 2 car garage. Situated on a private 5 acre parcel, upper and lower pastures, top quality design and materials. $756,000. ML9719/240911 Cath Mich 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND NEW LISTING New roof, new paint, new granite counters. This home is situated on two lots. 4 Br., 3 baths, 2,487 sf. Enter on main level, gently sloping lot with entrance to daylight basement that has family room with wet bar. Would make a great in-law apartment or for guests. Outside water feature, private deck and much more to see. $334,000 is a great price. ML252056 Becky Jackson 417-2781 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY NICE HOME, GREAT PRICE Well maintained single level home in desirable Four Seasons Ranch with access to the beach, Discovery Trail, pool, club house, executive golf course and equestrian facilities. Natural light, newer laminate flooring, double pane windows and other upgrades. Newer roof. $217,000. ML252157 Jace Schmitz 360-452-1210 JACE The Real Estate Company NICE SUNLAND HOME 4 Br., 2.5 bath on culde-sac. Living room with woodstove and separate dining room. Family room has built in bookshelves, woodstove, 2 skylights and sauna. Backyard has green house and wood deck with hot tub. Lovely landscaping with pond in front yard. $279,000. ML252100. Claire Koenigsaecker 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East NO, THIS IS NOT A MISPRINT! Water views, private dead-end road, 2 Br. and 2 baths in this 960 sf double wide. There is also an office or art studio with bath above the garage. $85,000. ML250477 Dave Ramey 417-2800 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY
EMAIL US AT classified@peninsula dailynews.com
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Homes
NOT A HOUSE... THIS IS A HOME! Spacious 4 Br. with beautiful water view. Enjoy the deck overlooking the huge sun filled fenced backyard. Oversized 2 car garage with workshop, family room, craft/hobby room and so much more. $249,000. ML250909. Jennifer Holcomb 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. PARKWOOD HOME 2 Br., 2 bath, 1,998 sf home. Master Br. with sitting area, oversized 2 car garage with work bench, enclosed patio and landscaped yard, large corner lot. $130,000. ML108036/251593 Deb Kahle 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND PRICED TO SELL White picket fence and all. There is no catch to the low price. With a little love and elbow grease this 3 Br., 1 bath home could be a doll house, very sweet. It has loads of character with a surprisingly large kitchen. $109,000. ML251746/118999 Lynn Moreno 477-5582 COLDWELL BANKER TOWN & COUNTRY READY AND WAITING For the right owner. Large open home in Parkwood. 1,803 sf, 3 Br., 2 bath. Two living rooms, large master, heat pump and a new roof. Very private fenced back yard. Good home, good price. $85,000. ML251574 Cathy Reed and Sheryl Payseno Burley 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East RECENTLY REDUCED Completely remodeled, ready to sell. 2 Br., 1 bath, separate storage shed, nice quiet setting. $25,000 ML29115823/241972 Kim Bower 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND SIMPLY BEAUTIFUL Beautifully landscaped lot in Sunland, 3 Br., 2.5 bath home plus bonus room, formal living and dining rooms, propane fireplace in family room, private deck for entertaining. $349,500 ML71200/251019 Brenda Clark 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
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Homes
SEQUIM: 5 acres, flat land on Dungeness River, with damaged 2 story home on property 100’ from river, perfect view, approved septic plans 1-5 Br., above flood plane, fenced, with pond. $137,500. 582-1292 SPACIOUS SUNLAND HOME Situated on the 13th fairway, saltwater and golf course views, two decks off kitchen/dining, two master suites, separate golf cart storage, enjoy Sunland amenities. $515,000. ML46530/250630 Team Schmidt 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND STRAIT VIEW HOME Views of Mt. Baker, golf course, and Strait, guest area with kitchen and bath, gourmet kitchen, built-in sound system, bar with sink and refrigerator, wraparound deck. $498,800. ML117675/251737 Tom Cantwell 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND VERY PRIVATE SETTING IN TOWN 3 Br., 3.5 baths, 1920 sf home with a great view of the Olympic Mountains. Circular driveway, 2 car attached garage, lots of exposed wood and stone throughout the home, vaulted ceilings that open to the great view. $249,900 ML251336/90883 Holly Coburn 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. WANT OPEN SPACE? 1.96 cleared acres with small barn/ workshop, 2 garden sheds. House has had some recent updates. There is 111’ of Dungeness River frontage. This property would be a wonderful investment or starter home. $219,900. ML250991 Linda Ulin 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East YOU’LL THINK YOU’RE IN THE COUNTRY! Lovingly cared for 3 Br., 2 bath, 1 story. Newer roof and vinyl windows, private and beautifully landscaped, fenced back yard – a bird watchers delight! 800 sf garage with separate shop. Lots of room for RV and boat parking, .32 acre. $200,000. ML250807. Marc Thomsen 417-2782 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2010
51
Homes
TWO FOR ONE ON FIVE A 3 Br., 2.5 bath rambler with rec room and double garage. Plus a 1 Br., 1 bath, bungalow and a barn. $219,000. ML252132 Chuck Turner 452-3333 PORT ANGELES REALTY
52
Manufactured Homes
2 Br., 2 bath - Complete remodel in & out. Over 1,000 sf, very nice. Too much new to list. Must see. 55+park, near town, only $250/mo. Asking $27,500. 360-683-1652 MOBILE HOME: 2 Br., 1 bath, copper wire, newly remodeled. Must be moved. Very clean. $8,000. 360-301-9109
54
Lots/ Acreage
54
Lots/ Acreage
FSBO: 5 acres, Joyce area. Power and water fronts property. $76,500. 360-461-6340 STUNNING WATER FRONT PROPERTY Breathtaking and rare panoramic waterfront property! 5.52 acres just above the beach on stunning highbank waterfront mountain and ocean view is unobstructed on this level and prime lot. Value of the property is undeniable as it is surrounded by luxury homes-behind and beside you. Soils registered and septic design already done. Water well site report has been done and registered. Land has been surveyed. $399,000. ML252153. Brody Broker 360-477-9665 JACE The Real Estate Company WATER VIEW 9.5 acres in Clallam Bay. Two identified buildable areas, one on each end. $103,000. ML250406. Doc Reiss 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. WEST P.A.: 30 acres, utilities. $138,000 cash. 928-9528.
LAKE PLEASANT LAKEFRONT PROPERTY fully loaded 2006 5TH WHEEL w/slideout. carport, deck. DOCK, well maintained SKI BOAT 2 KAWASAKI JET SKIES. fishing. great family vacation spot or use as a nightly rental investment. seller owns local resort and will give overflow of renters. $199,000. 360-374-3118 Lake Sutherland, 3+ acres with beach rights with dock, Hwy 101 frontage. electrical close by. Subdividable, zoned R1. 360-460-4589. NO BINOCULARS NEEDED 1.84 high bank waterfront acres, ready to build. Also a quarter share of 12 treed acres, that can never be developed. Power and phone in at road. CC&R’s to protect your investment $225,000. ML252101. Quint Boe 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. RARE OPPORTUNITY! Nearly 50 acres of Sequim’s finest farmland. Ten separate parcels enjoy stunning mountain views and close proximity to the Discovery Trail. Cleared, level and ready for your ideas. Existing 40x60 pole barn with power. $1,100,000. ML251296 Dianna Erickson 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East
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C7
Apartments Unfurnished
P.A.: Lg. 2 Br. $625. Lg. 1 Br. $560. Now accepting pets. 4020 Newell Rd. 360-452-4524 P.A.: West side 2 Br., $515. 360-379-6642 STUDIO: Newer, nice, cozy, fenced, west side, W/D, close to town $650, util. paid. 460-7454 or 670-9329
63
Duplexes
CENTRAL P.A.: 2 Br., 1 bath. $600. 813 E. 2nd St. 460-7235.
64
Houses
2 bedrm 2 bath house For Rent East End Port Angeles. $725 rent, $700 deposit. 360-718-6101 day4@q.com 4
Br., 2.5 bath, Sequim, 2 AC, large shop. JACE TREC. 360-417-8585
Between P.A. & Sequim. 123 Amarillo Rd. 2 bed, 1 bath with W/D on 1.5 acres. Storage shed. No smoking or pets. $775 mo. 360-452-7721 61 Apartments Furnished 62 Apartments Unfurnished 63 Duplexes 64 Houses 65 Share Rental/Rooms 66 Spaces RV/Mobile 67 Vacation 68 Commercial Space
62
Apartments Unfurnished
BIG, nice apts. $650. Great P.A. location. 417-6638 CENTRAL P.A. Clean, quiet, 2 Br., ground floor, excellent refs. req. $700. 360-460-3124
CENTRAL P.A.: Convenient 1st floor 3 Br. $695, 2 Br. $495, Studio $390 + Util. No smoke/pets. 452-4258 COLLEGE AREA P.A. 2 Br., W/D, no pets, fireplace, 1226 Craig Ave. $625 mo., $625 dep. 452-3423. P.A.: 1 Br. $475. Dwntown, some pets ok. 425-881-7267 P.A.: Lg 1 Br., storage, no smoke/pets. $650. 457-8438.
CENTRAL P.A.: Country in city, 2 Br., updated, nice house. $800 or $825. References, deposits. Drive by 415 Valley and call 460-7652. Clean, furnished 1 Br. trailer with tip out, near beach, util. incl. $650. 928-3006.
Cozy 3 bdrm. house for lease on 2 acres. 3 bdrm. 2 ba. 2 car gar. W/D. pantry, large kitch. Yes to pets, pet deposit, cleaning deposit. $1,100 a month, no util. 360-808-4528.
JAMES & ASSOCIATES INC. Property Mgmt. P.A. APTS & HOUSES A Studio..........$400 H 1 br 1 ba......$525 A 2 br 1 ba......$550 H 2 br 2 ba......$800 H 3 br 1 ba......$850 H 3 br 2 ba......$990 SEQ APTS/HOUSES H 1 br 1 ba.......$685 A 2 br 1.5 ba....$825 H 2 br 2 ba......$925 H 2+ br 2 ba....$950
360-417-2810
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 92313082
305 W. 1st St. P.O. Box 1330 | Port Angeles, WA 98362
C8
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2010
64
Houses
64
Houses
Classified 68
72
Commercial Space
DIAMOND PT: 2 Br., 2 bath, skylights. $850. 681-0140.
P.A.: Rent or sale, 1409 E. 1st. 2 lots. 4,400 sf. 457-5678.
DUNGENESS: Lease purchase. $138,000. Call 928-9528
PROPERTIES BY LANDMARK 452-1326
NEED A RENTAL?
SEQUIM: Energy efficient 1 Br. Water view. $870 mo. 1st/last/SD, ref rqd. No pets/smoke. 582-0637
Windermere Property Mgmt. 457-0457. olympicpeninsularent als.com
SEQUIM: Guest studio in town. Sm yard, priv. $495. 683-1530.
EAST P.A.: 3 Br., 2 bath, 5 acres, mtn./ water view. Horses ? $1,200. 477-0747.
WAREHOUSE: Heated space. 800-8,000 sf. 360-683-6624.
P.A.: 2 story, 3 Br. plus den, 2 ba, garage plus carport, all appliances, built in ‘04, no pets. Dep. and refs. $1,150 mo. 360-808-4476 P.A.: 218 W. 8th. 2 Br., W/D, no smoking/ pets. $600. Credit check. 460-5639. P.A.: 3 Br., 2 ba, lg. covered deck, cathedral ceilings, gas fireplace/heat, no pets/ smoke, credit check. $900. 360-808-0009. P.A.: 3 Br., 2 bath, garage, nice area, $990. 452-1395. P.A.: 4 Br., 2 bath, shop, acreage. $1,200. 461-9287. P.A.: Charming tudor, 3 Br., 1 ba, lg. yard, deck. $1,050, 6 mo. lease. 221 E. 11th St. 360-457-3137 P.A.: Lg. house, 3 Br., 2 bath, 814 W. 5th St. $1,075 or $1,025 lease. 452-5050. P.A.: Residential or comm’l, 834 W. 8th, 5 Br., 3 ba, garage. $2,000. 683-9626. Properties by Landmark. portangeleslandmark.com SEQUIM: 2 Br., 1 ba, no pets/smoke. $800, 1st, last, dep. req. 360-683-4336. SEQUIM: 3 bdrm, 2 ba, livng rm, lrg den, cul-de-sac, pets OK. $1,000 mo. 360-460-9917 SEQUIM: 3 Br., 1 bath rambler, large yard above the QFC parking lot. Wood stove, attached garage, nice neighborhood Properties by Landmark, 452-1326. SEQUIM: 3 Br., 2 ba, clean, quiet, garage, credit ck, no smoking/pets. $1,095 mo, last, dep. 683-0123.
Vintage, completely remodeled 2 Br., 1 bath Port Angeles home. $900. Open House Saturday, October 9, 10-2 p.m. First, last and deposit, credit check. Sorry no smoking or pets. Contact Susan at 206-948-6653 Waterfront Homes Troll Haven Farm, amenity laden properties, secluded luxurious homes, water/mtn. views, lease options, owner financing possible. 360-775-6633 WEST P.A.: 4 Br, 2 ba, no smoking. $1,000, $1,000 sec. 417-0153
65
Share Rentals/ Rooms
SEQUIM: Master bedroom, private bath, private entry. $575. Charlie at 681-2860.
67
Vacation
WANTED: WINTER SEQUIM AREA VACATION RENTAL We are a retired couple looking to rent in Jan.-Feb. 2011. Local references available, no pets. Can combine house sitting with rental. Would prefer (but not necessary) 2 Br., 1 bath, house or condo completely furnished with linens and fully equipped kitchen, mountain or salt water view, local phone, TV, hispeed internet and laundry. Would return in future years if everything is satisfactory to all. Phone: 641-856-8375 or email benswalnuts@yahoo.com
Leather sofa and chair. Beautiful set. Unemployed and must sacrifice. Call Chris 404-423-9629. Pics avail. for email. LOVE SEAT Blue. $60. 477-7834 or 452-9693
P.A.: 2 Br., 1 bath, newly remodeled, no pets/smoking. $690 mo., $700 deposit. 460-5290 P.A.: 2 Br., 1.5 ba, gar. $1,100, dep. 820 W. 10th St. 457-1902.
Furniture
71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79
Appliances Furniture General Merchandise Home Electronics Musical Sporting Goods Bargain Box Garage Sales Wanted to Buy
72
Furniture
ANTIQUES: Brass bed, settee, lg. oak rocker. $900 all or $350 each. 670-9264 BED: King Sealy Posturpedic Plush Pillowtop, mattress and box spring, pillow top on both sides, great shape, will deliver. $300/obo. 681-3299 BOOKCASES: 3 entertainment/bookcases, cherry wood, 32”Wx78”Hx18” D, 1 with two glass doors. $684 for all three. 360-385-9316 DESK Medium sized, black, shabbychic. Very cute, vintage piece. $75/obo. 360-775-8746 ELECTRIC BED: 3 positions, guard rail optional. $75. 452-6224 ENTERTAINMENT CENTER Large, very sturdy, light colored oak. Plenty of room for a large television with two big storage drawers underneath, plus a side cabinet with three shelves and glass-front door. $175/obo. 360-775-8746
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER Pine armoire style. $100. 808-1767.
MISC: 2 sofas with recliners, beige, with blue and brown, great condition, $200 each. Overstuffed chair with ottoman, soft gold, great condition. $125. 457-5656 MISC: Dinette set, oak table with tile inlay, 4 swivel chairs, $350. 2 matching bar high chairs, $60 ea. 452-4760 MISC: Maple hutch/ buffet, glass doors on top, $695. Antique medium oak armoire, $495. 100 yr. old oak New England style drop leaf dining table, $395. Over size brown leather arm chair and ottoman, $295. Mauve 9x12 persian rug, $249. Brown leather swivel desk arm chair, $249. 360-302-0839 RECLINER: Hancock, Savanna saddle, leather, over $3,000 at Mason’s in Seattle, large scale, excellent. $575. 681-0151 RECLINERS: Leather, swivel rocker, black, $185 ea. or $300 pair. Can deliver for gas. Port Angeles. 808-5636 SOFA: Like new, black leather, paid $1,200 new, near perfect condition. $600 firm. 457-5679
73
General Merchandise
Campground memberships TT/NACO Alliance. $600 plus tfr fee. Coast to Coast Hart Ranch B $900 plus tfr fee. Dues paid both $1,400. 452-6974. CASH FOR: Antiques and collectibles. 360-928-9563 COMFORTER SET Barney twin, with sheets, good shape. $15. 452-9693, eves. DRESSES: 5 nice prom dresses 4 size small, 1 size med, like new worn once, call for description. $30 each. 452-9693 or 417-3504.
73
General Merchandise
FIREWOOD: $175 delivered SequimP.A. True cord. Credit card accepted. 360-582-7910 www.portangeles firewood.com FIREWOOD: Decked alder. You cut/haul. $50/cord. 452-9358. GAZEBO: Cedar wood, with skylight, 8’x8’ sq. New from Seattle Spas cost $2,400. Will sell for $500. Must see! 360-681-4218 GENERATOR: 8000 watts, diesel. $1,000. 452-5154. Go Go Elite Mobility Scooter. Like New. Nice Scooter, less than 2 hours use. Purchased for $1,900, sell for $900. Great for small spaces, folds to fit in most vehicles. Suitable for a large or small person. 360-928-3625 HOT TUB: Bradford Southport. Stainless steel, 84x33, cover, steps, and umbrella. Seats 4 people. $2,500. 681-5178. Leaf/Lawn Vacuum Craftsman, professional, 5.5 hp B&W engine, barely used, paid $1,100. Now $725. 681-3522. MISC: Aller air purifier, new HEPA/Carbon filter, $400. Hardood futon frame, like new, $175. Twin bed frame, mission style head board, no footboard, $30. 2” faux wood blinds, 48”x 72”, 46.75”x72”, $30 ea. Soft leather jacket, w/Thinsulate liner, original, exc. cond., med. $75. 385-1287. MISC: Dial indicator, dial caliper, $20 ea. Oxy acetylene complete set, $100. Craftsman 1/2” chuck bench drill press, $110. Presto pressure cooker, large size, $25. Mercury 10 hp long shaft, low hrs., $500. 683-2761. MISC: Husqvarna chainsaws: #395, $650. #385, $450. #575, $300. Leister plastic air welder, $200. Antique partridge bamboo fly rod, #8, $200. Commercial canopy, side and full backdoors, short bed, white, $800. Willies Jeep tranny, 3 speed with overdrive, $800. 461-8060 MISC: Total Gym XLS, $799. Pfaff Creative 4874 cover lock, $849. 683-1883.
73
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
General Merchandise
76
Sporting Goods
SEAHAWK TICKETS (2) Section 337, seat 21 and 22, row T. Oct. 24, vs. Arizona Cardinals. $78 ea. 461-3661
GUN: S&W model 57, 41 mag, 6” barrel, clam shell shoulder holster, $650. 360-912-1277
SUSHI GRADE TUNA Whole fish and loins. Boat Haven Marina, by Castaways Restaurant, F/V Princess. Until 10/22 707-972-0707
GUNS: 45-70 plus ammo, $400. German sporting rifle, $700. 461-6339 after 4 p.m.
TIMESHARE WEEK Hot August Nights! RENO August 6th-13th Tons of old cars and old time music. LOCAL SELLER. Great Christmas Gift! $500. 460-6814. TOOLS: Wood planer, Delta model DC-380, $750/obo. Bosch router table, compete, $450/obo. 460-5762 Trailer. 4X8 utility trailer with side boards. Great shape, every thing works. $225. Roger 683-1952. VENDORS WANTED Eagles Crafts Fair and Flea Market. Nov. 6th. Table rental, $25. 360-683-6450 WANTED LOGS FOR FIREWOOD 477-8832
XBOX 360 ELITE 1 wireless controller, 5 games - Rainbow 6 Vegas, Saints Row 2, Skate 2, Lego Batman, and Pure. $300/obo. 360-477-8505
74
Home Electronics
COMPUTERS: Rock solid computers, Rock bottom prices. Guarantee 683-9394
Harmon Kardon AVR225 mint, 5.1, $250. Polk RM6600 Speakers & PSW350 Powered Subwoofer, mint. $550. HK & Polk Combo $650 firm. Sony RDRGX300 DVD Play/Rec $100. Online classified 4 details. 457-1168.
75
Musical
VIOLIN: 3/4, nice shape. $150. 452-6439
PISTOLS: EAA Witness 40 cal., $450. Llama 45 ACP, $450. Marty 670-8918 RIFLE: 1941 Winchester model 94, very good condition, with ammo. $650 firm. 460-7566. RIFLE: Savage model 93 R17, 17HMR caliber, thumb hole stock, Accutrigger, Bushnell 3 to 9 scope, bi-pod. $550. 457-9608 SKATES: Bauer aggressive skates, black, size 11 good shape $20. 460-0845
77
Bargain Box
PINE ARMOIRE ENTERTAINMENT CENTER Beautiful. $125/obo. 808-1767
78A
Garage Sales Central P.A.
DATO RUMMAGE Sale: 8 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday, October 23th, 114 E. 6th Terrace Apts. Community Rm. Free coffee and doughnuts! Candy Bars will also be on hand for sale. Money raised for DATO. GARAGE Sale: Fri.Sat.-Sun., 8-5 p.m., 538 W. 6th St., between the bridges. Lots of stuff. MOVING Sale: Sat., 9-3 p.m., 812 E. 10th St. Sewing notions, household goods, gardening supplies, little bit of everything MULTI-FAMILY Sale: Sat., 9-3 p.m. 933 E. 1st St. Antiques, toys, brand new medical scrubs, collectibles, and so much more!
78B
Garage Sales Westside P.A.
GARAGE Sale: Fri. Sat., 9-1 p.m., 1937 W 5th St. Wall unit, garden cart, lawn mower, coffee table, file cabinet, puzzles and much more!
78B
Garage Sales Westside P.A.
GARAGE/ DECK SALE RAIN OR SHINE 2 BIG TENTS FULL 30 years of family storage. Fri.-Sat.-Sun., 8-3 p.m. 1638 W. 12th St., corner of 12th and K Street in the alley! Furniture, dressers, bookshelves, kitchen table, outdoor patio sets, bunk beds, school desks, toys, store displays, luggage, kitchen appliances, bar stools, bath vanity, sinks... Oh Ya, There’s More! MULTI-FAMILY Sale: Fri.-Sat., 9-2 p.m. 1542 Dan Kelly Rd. Tools, building materials, household goods, appliances, and more.
78D
Garage Sales Eastside P.A.
ESTATE Sale: Fri.Sat., 9-4 p.m. 3413 Mt. Angeles Rd. New stuff added. Electronics, P.A. aerial photos, reel-to-reels, pictures and frames, bikes, saddle, etc., etc., etc.! ESTATE Sale: Sat.Sun., 9-3 p.m., 438 N. Carne St., off Hwy. 101 turn north at stop light at Les Schwab. Furniture, tools, lawn mowers, weed eaters, etc.
78E
Garage Sales Sequim
2-FAMILY Sale: Sat., 8 a.m., 101 to Palo Alto, south to 704 Vista Del Mar. Good stuff, no junk, no clothing, no baby items. Some furniture, tools and garden tools. ESTATE Sale: Thurs.Fri.-Sat., 8-2 p.m. 973 New Meadows Loop. Quality adult clothing, and quality miscellaneous possessions. GARAGE Sale: Fri.Sat.-Sun., 8-1 p.m., 502 W. Hemlock. Lots of guy stuff. THIS IS IT! Fri.-Sat., 9-3 p.m., 7496 Old Olympic Hwy. Christmas and Halloween tables, yard and misc. items.
79
Wanted To Buy
BOOKS WANTED! We love books, we’ll buy yours. 457-9789 LOOKING FOR HAND CARVED HITTY DOLL Please call 417-7691 WANTED: Canopy for ‘95 Dodge 1/2 ton short bed, 80x68. Nice storage trunk for bedroom. 360-963-2018 WANTED: Silver dollars, $18 and up. Bars. Halves, quarters, dimes, pre 1964. 452-8092.
MULTI-FAMILY Sale Fri.-Sat., 9-3 p.m., 619 E. 4th St. All proceeds go to benefit Campfire USA.
78E
Garage Sales Sequim
Charity Estate Sale (10/22,10/23/10/24) Fri.-Sat., 8-3 p.m., Sun., 11:30-3 p.m. No Earlies! 403 Cays Road. RAIN OR SHINE! Tools and man stuff, 14’ boat and trailer, art supplies, furniture, books, collector plates, fishing rods, kitchen stuff, antiques, collectibles, 60s/ 70s R&R albums, sheet music, refrigerator, freezer, W/D, ALL MUST GO! Rain or Shine. CASH PLEASE! Proceeds to Mexico Orphanage Mission & Basque Exchange Student Program.
81 82 83 84 85
Food/Produce Pets Farm Animals Horses/Tack Farm Equipment
81
Food Produce
CYPRESS: 6’-7’, $13 ea. G&G Farms, 95 Clover Lane, off Taylor-Cutoff. 683-8809.
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82
Pets
AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPS 4 male $350 ea., 1 female $450, parents on site, quality, 1st shots, wormed. Experienced breeder. Ready. 582-3181. AQUARIUM: 30 gallon aquarium. $45. 360-457-1560 BASIC OBEDIENCE CLASSES Starting on Sat. Oct. 23rd at Goin’ to the Dogs. Call for more info. 681-5055 BEAGLE: Female, spayed. Pr Br Beagle F. 5yrs loves the indoors as well as out.. should have fenced yrd-leash when walking. great companionship, for kids or elders. kind loving, my name is Dolli. $100. 360-461-4622 BLACK LABS: AKC/ UKC Black Lab pups excellent hunting lines. $650. 461-7583 CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES 1 female, $350, 2 males, $200 ea. Ready to go. 452-7746 FISH TANK: 80 gal., with 5 saltwater fish, pump, lights everything included. $100. 460-0965 FREE: Downsizing. Cats to kittens, to good homes only. Call for info. 360452-1120, leave message if no answer.
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Pets
FREE: Cat. 3 yr. old, needs lots of attention and love, great for older person. Neutered and has all shots. 417-2130. FREE: To good home Tabby cat, adult male, neutered, best for adult home only. 683-9899 LABRADOODLE PUPPIES CHOCOLATE. Mom is AKC Chocolate Lab and Dad is AKC Chocolate Standard Poodle. 5 girls and 2 boys. First set of shots, wormed and vet checked. Happy, healthy and ready for their new homes. $900. Call 360-460-6605 PUPPIES: (5) purebred Havenese, 8 weeks old, $400 ea. 360-477-8349
PUPPIES: Chihuahuas. Very cute, 3 females, 1 male. Ready to go October 18th. $175 each. 452-5049 or 670-5118 PUPPIES: Golden Retrievers, beautiful AKC, dark golden, championship lines on sires side, ready 10/15. 4 males, $450 ea. 2 females, $500 ea. 1st shots, wormed. 681-3160, after 4 p.m. PUPPIES: Jack Russell Terriers, Powder Puff China-Jacks, registered, vet checked, shots, wormed. $800 each. 582-9006
83
Farm Animals
HAY: Alf/grass. $5.50 bale. Grass, $4.50. In barn. 683-5817. WANTED Free spoiled hay. 360-461-5026
84
Horses/ Tack
AQHA: Gelding, 15 yrs., reining/cow horse, $25,000 in training. $2,500. 461-7583 FILLY: 2 yr old registered AQHA. Ready to be started, friendly. $475. 640-2325.
85
Farm Equipment
TRACTOR: John Deere Model H. Resotred. $3,200. 457-3120
92
TRACK LOADER 125E, I-H Dresser, 1,900 hrs. $11,000. 683-3843
93
91 Aircraft 92 Heavy Equipment/Truck 93 Marine 94 Motorcycles/Snowmobiles 95 Recreational Vehicles 96 Parts/Accessories 97 Four Wheel Drive 98 Trucks/Vans 99 Cars
91
Aircraft
ULTRALITE: Avenger/Hurricane. 503 Rotax engine, 10 gal tank, new tires, 4 year old sails, always hangered, full instruments including CHT, EGT, RPM, airspeed, recording G meter, hr meter, hydraulic disc brakes, ballistic chute. $7,500. 360-640-1498 360-374-2668
92
Heavy Equipment/ Trucks
DUMP TRUCK: ‘00 Western Star. 3406E, 500 hp, does not use oil, no leaks, good Dyno report, cruise, air, jakes, air ride cab, power mirror and windows, new 16’ box and wet kit, and hitch for pup, excellent inside and out, all new brakes. $42,000. 460-8325. FLAT BED: ‘73 Ford F600 with liftgate, needs work. $1,000. 457-3120 GMC: ‘91 Top Kick. GVWR 26,180 lbs, 19,466 mi., 16’ bed, dump-through lift gate, Fuller 10 spd. $19,995. 683-2383. SEMI-END DUMP ‘85 Freightliner, Cummins 400BC, 24 yard end dump, excellent condition. $35,000/ obo. 417-0153.
Heavy Equipment/ Trucks
Marine
Aluminum 17 ft., C/C, 2 Mercury 4 strokes. $8,000 firm. 452-2779 APOLLO: ‘77 20’. Must see! Very clean in and out. Rebuilt 302 IB OMC OB. Fresh water cooled, hydraulic trim tabs, head, galley. Priced to sell. $3,800/obo. 681-0411 ARIMA: ‘89 17’, 70 hp Yamaha, canvas top, galv. trailer, with extras. $8,000. 928-3900 BAYLINER: ‘02 2452 Classic with ‘05 EZ Loader Trailer. 250HP, Bravo 2 outdrive, micro, stove, refrigerator, marine head, masserator, heated cabin, radar, fish finder, VHF radio, GPS, (2) Scotty electric down riggers, Yamaha 8T kicker motor, all safety equip., trim tabs, hot water, cruising canvas, fresh water cooling. $28,500/obo. 360-683-3887 COOKIE MONSTER ‘78 Sloop, 30’. 4 head sails, main, 3/4 and 1/2 oz. spinnakers. Head foil and hydraulic backstay. All new halyards, knot, depth, and wind meters in ‘08. Best of all, new 14 hp FWC Yanmar diesel in ‘09. Propane 2 burner stove and cabin heater. Marine UHF radio and Sony AM/FM CD radio. Sleeps 5. See at slip Q-5 in P.A. Boat Haven. $18,500. 457-8382. CRESTLINER: Sturdy ‘96 16’ aluminum boat. With newer 20 hp merc, E-Z Loader trailer, good cond. Light use, freshwater only. $2,250. 360-681-7989 GLASPLY: ‘79 19’. Cuddy cabin, 170 hp I/O, newer 15 hp Honda tolling motor and pot puller, galvanized trailer, electric winch. $8,000. 360-417-2606
93
93
Marine
BAYLINER: With 70 hp Evinrude. Fully equipped with EZ Loader trailer, lots of extras. $4,000. 683-4698 GLASPLY: They don’t make ‘em like they used to! ‘77 24’. Lots of extras. $12,000/obo 360-374-2234 HEWESCRAFT: ‘06 18’ Sea Runner. 115 hp and 8 hp 4 stroke Yamahas, all elelctric tilt, much more. $21,900. Just completely serviced. Bob 360-732-0067 JET SKI: ‘96 ZXI750. Low hours. $2,600/ obo. 928-3450.
Job loss forces bottom price. Must sell to pay loan. 1979 Fiberform 26' Baja Flybridge Galvanized EZ-Loader trailer (1999 dual axle) Chevy 350 engine with rebuilt Rochester Quadrajet 280 Volvo outdrive. $2,500. 360-504-2298 PST In Port Angeles.
Marine
RAIDER: ‘07 24’ aluminum, well equipped. $53,500. 683-5120 RUNABOUT: 16’ and trailer, Sunbrella top. $350/obo. 477-0711. SAIL BOAT: 1940 34’ Rhodes 6 meter cruising sloop, heavy construction. $2,500. 360-468-2052 SAIL BOAT: 30’ sloop. Yanmar diesel, low hrs., VHF radio, depth and knot meter, working galley and head, color TV, CD player, wheel steering, sleeps 5. $10,500. 457-0684. SAILBOAT: 12’ wooden, extra sail, trailer. $990. 683-6889. SAILBOAT: 16’ classic daysailer. Very stable, very good condition, a beauty, trailer and more incl. $10,000/obo. 360-582-1683 SANGER: ‘76 Super Jet. Built 455 Olds, Hardin in water exhaust, seats 5, upholstery good, dog house fair, turnkey ready. $2,500/obo. 681-3838
Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714 MALIBU: ‘01 Sportster LX. Fuel injected 350, great shape, only 240 hours. $17,000. 808-6402. MALIBU: ‘96 Response. 514 hrs., heater, shower, custom Bimini top. $11,500/ obo. 928-9461. OLYMPIC: ‘94 22’ Resorter. Alaska bulkhead, ‘06 225 Merc Optimax. ‘07 9.9 4 cycle Merc Bigfoot. Large fishing deck, solid and fast. 84 gal. fuel. $14,500/ obo. 683-4062 or 530-412-0854 REINELL: ‘95 19.5’ V6 I/O. EZ-Load galvanized trailer, half cutty. $4,800/obo. 452-2459 SAIL BOAT: 1932 42’ Frank Prothero fishing scooner, 50 hp Isuzu diesel, Paragon gear, solid construction, needs TLC. $3,000. 360-468-2052
Sea going sailing canoe. Project wood boat partially restored, all parts including good sail, mast, tiller,dagger board, lines, mast and rudder with all fittings except for oars. 17 feet long with a wide beam. $500. 360-683-6575 or 360-808-5200
94
Motorcycles
BMW: ‘94 K1100RS. Exceptionally clean bike, 41,000 miles, ABS brakes, 4 cylinder engine, stainless steel exhaust, Corbin seat, saddlebags, no road-rash, blue paint. For information call Ed. 360-681-2334
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2010
94
Motorcycles
CAN-AM ‘08 OUTLANDER XTMAX QUAD 4x4, 2 seater, 400cc EFI, winch. VIN#000298 $5,700 Randy’s Auto Sales 457-7272 HARLEY DAVIDSON ‘08 1200C. 450 miles. $8,495/obo. 452-6448 Harley Davidson 1993 Wideglide, custom wheels, lots of extras. $15,000. 477-3670 HARLEY: ‘02 1200 Sportser. Black, lots of chrome. Saddle bags, detachable windshield, beautiful bike! $5,995. 360-461-0961 HARLEY: ‘05 Soft Tail Deluxe. Glacier white, vivid black, 2,000 mi. 1450 ST1 EFI, bags, chrome foot boards, sport rack, back rest, lots of chrome, much gear included garaged. $17,500. 460-0895.
HD: ‘05 Electra Glide Ultra Classic. Black cherry/black pearl, 10,850 miles. One owner, garage kept. Screamin' Eagle and Tall Boy package. never down or in rain. Excellent condition! $15,900. 360-461-4222 HD: ‘06 1200 Sportster. 7K miles, mint, extras. $7,900. 452-6677 HONDA: ‘04 CFR 100F. Less than 60 hrs., original owner. $1,500. 417-1151. HONDA: ’06 Shadow VLX 600. Saddle bags, windshield, custom paint, lots of chrome, 1,800 mi., super clean, must see. $4,000/obo. 452-5813 HONDA: ‘85 Goldwing Aspencade GL 1200. Black and chrome, like new condition, always garaged. $4,000. 417-0153.
94
Motorcycles
HONDA: ‘99 XR400. All stock, low hrs., good tires, new graphics. $1,700. 461-1202 KAWASAKI: ‘03 KX125. 2 stroke, exc. cond., hardly ridden, must go. $2,200/ obo. 452-5290.
94
C9
Motorcycles
QUAD: ‘06 Suzuki 250. Like brand new. $2,500 firm. 452-3213 SUZUKI: ‘98 Maurder. 800cc, 1 owner, FMC, D&H pipes, custom seat, cruise, sissy bar, billett mirrors, 15K. Great entry cruiser. $2,500. 360-457-6510 TRIKE: ‘08 Suzuki Burgman 400 CC. Looks and runs like new. Very stable. $6,500/obo. 683-6079
KAWASAKI: ‘09 KLX 250s Dual-Sport Excel. cond., 1,600 mi., street legal, 65 mpg, elec start, 6 speed, liquid cooled, new tires, Comes w/ riding gear and helmet, perfect for commute and trail! $3,850. 360-477-7589 KAWASAKI: ‘00 Vulcan 800. Mustang seat, also has stock seat, K&N air filter, new chain and rear sprocket, 29K miles. $2,000. 206-913-7906 POLARIS ‘08 TRAILBOSS 330 QUAD Auto, racks. VIN#316882 $3,200 Randy’s Auto Sales 457-7272
QAUD: ‘05 POLARIS PHEONIX 200. Red, automatic, approx. 5-10 riding hours, Like new $2,300. 360-460-5982 QUAD: ‘00 Polaris. 250cc, plus extras. $1,500. 417-9170. QUAD: ‘04 Honda 250 EX Sportrax. Low mi. $2,200. 683-2107.
SUZUKI: ‘05 Boulevard (S50). Very nice, well maintained. Gray, saddlebag hardware, great bike for smaller people. 14K miles. Garage stored. $3,500/obo. 460-0012 or jbgoode1017@hotmail .com
TRIUMPH: ‘05 Bonaville. 1,000 mi., extras. $5,500. 460-6780 URAL: ‘03 Wolfe. 1,000 mi. $3,200. 460-0895 YAMAHA ‘07 GRIZZLY 350 4X4 QUAD Auto, reverse, warn winch. VIN#OU1599 $4,300 Randy’s Auto Sales 457-7272 YAMAHA: ‘03 V-Star 1100. Excellent condition, windshield, bags, air kit, crash bars, 15K mi. $4,300. 452-7184. YAMAHA: ‘09 250 Star. Under 500 mi., mint cond. $3,500. 765-4775, leave msg
YAMAHA: ‘03 YZ85. Runs great, son outgrown, $800. 360-457-0913 or 360-461-9054
95
Recreational Vehicles
‘01 Monaco Diplomat LE (luxury edition). 40’ diesel pusher, 330 Cummings with Banks power pack, 6 speed Allison trans, 2 slides, electric power awnings, 2 TVs, AM/FM CD VCR, sat dome, like new washer and dryer unit, all new Michelin tires, 7.5 KW generator, leveling system, battery charger with inverter, beige leather interior, real tile floors, Corian counters, well maintained, always garaged, beautiful coach, 30K miles, non-smoker, no pets. $79,000. 681-4218.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
WINDOW/CARPET CLEANING
REMODELING
HOME/YARD SERVICES
MOLE CONTROL/PRUNING
RENOVATION/REPAIR
TREE SERVICE
PAINTING
RESTORATION
DIRT WORK
EXCAVATING/SEPTIC
LANDSCAPING
ASBESTOS
ELECTRICAL
COMPUTERIZED ALIGNMENT
CARPET CLEANING
TREE SERVICE
Call NOW To Advertise Here 360-452-8435 or 1-800-826-7714
0A5100319
SERVICE DIRECTORY
C10
ClassifiedAutomotive
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Peninsula Daily News
Shudder problems on F-150 Dear Doctor: My grandfather gave me his 1995 Ford F-150 Flareside pickup that has 85,000 miles. It’s a great truck except that occasionally, while driving over some minor road bumps, the front end will start shuddering violently. It usually only happens when going over 40 mph. The only way I can stop it is to get on the brakes — hard. The shocks on the front end were replaced one year ago. Any insight would be greatly appreciated. Ben Dear Ben: You need to make sure all the front-end parts (wheel bearings) are in good condition and that the tire pressure and tire size are correct. We also recommend the use of a factory steering shock stabilizer that connects between the frame and steering center link. Even if your truck does not have one, you can order the attaching hardware from your Ford dealer parts department.
Spark problem Dear Doctor: We are the original owners of a 2000 Mazda Miata with 56,000 miles.
Oil pressure gauge
The auto doc Sometimes it Damato runs rough and the “check engine” light flashes. We took it to our garage, and it shows a misfire code, so we put in new plugs and plug wires, but it did not fix it. Our mechanic said until he hears it running rough, he is at a loss as to what it is. Could it be a coil? It would probably be a $500 part and labor gamble. I don’t want to change parts for the sake of changing parts and not fix the problem. What’s your advice? Walt Dear Walt: Multiple and random misfire codes usually equals a spark problem. Ignition coils are very common on this car. Have your technician check with Identifix and also look on the Alldata website for a history of problems listed on this car.
Junior
Dear Doctor: I have a 1997 Jeep Wrangler with about 83,000 miles. When warmed up and resting at idle, the oil pressure gauge drops to zero and the warning buzzer goes off. When engine speed increases, the gauge registers normal again. I had the sending unit replaced and an auxiliary unit attached. There is plenty of oil pressure in the engine. I’ve been told the problem is in the gauge or the dash cluster. I don’t want to spend great amounts of money. Is there another place I should look, or should I just hook up an auxiliary gauge and forget the one on the dash? Brian Dear Brian: As long as the oil pressure is at specification with a mechanical gauge, then your engine is safe. I suggest you use a factory oil pressure-sending switch from the dealer. There are a few simple tests that can be done to see if the problem is in the dash cluster. Visit the Alldata website for the way to check the gauge and actual voltage specs.
Car of the Week
You can also continue with the use of the aftermarket mechanical oil pressure gauge.
Post-Freon Dear Doctor: I own a 1994 GMC Sonoma. My air conditioner doesn’t work because the coolant for this vehicle is no longer available. What do you suggest to solve this problem? Ermano Dear Ermano: The old refrigerant called Freon is now replaced by R134a. It is a simple task to convert the old system over to the new R134a. The problem most technicians have is putting too much R134a in the old system. A good rule of thumb after removing the old Freon and adding the new is to fill the system 75 percent and see how it cools. If the system is working properly, then it will blow cool.
2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo 4X4 BASE PRICE: $30,215 for base Laredo; $32,215 for Laredo 4X4. AS TESTED: $36,995. TYPE: Front-engine, four-wheel-drive, five-passenger, mid-size sport utility vehicle. ENGINE: 3.6-liter, double overhead cam, Pentastar V-6. MILEAGE: 16 mpg (city), 22 mpg (highway). TOP SPEED: 113 mph. LENGTH: 189.8 inches. WHEELBASE: 114.8 inches. CURB WEIGHT: 4,470 pounds. BUILT AT: Detroit. OPTIONS: Quick order package (includes Bluetooth connectivity, cargo cover, leather seat trim, rear park assist, rearview camera, upgraded audio, dual-zone automatic climate control, alarm) $4,000. DESTINATION CHARGE: $780. The Associated Press
________
Junior Damato is an accredited Master Automobile Technician, radio host and writer for Motor Matters who also finds time to run his own seven-bay garage. Questions for the Auto Doc? Send them to Junior Damato, 3 Court Circle, Lakeville, MA, 02347. Personal replies are not possible; questions are answered only in the column.
0A405306
GET A GREAT DEAL ON USED WHEELS FROM THESE AUTO SALES PROFESSIONALS 2001 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO SS CPE
2001 FORD F350 SUPER CAB LB LARIAT 4X4
1999 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE
2002 FORD RANGER LONGBED
3.8L V6, AUTO, PREM WHLS, DUAL MAGNAFLOW EXHAUST, TRAC CTRL, KEYLESS ENTRY, TINTED WINDOWS, SUNROOF, PWR WINDOWS, LOCKS & MIRRORS, PWR HTD LEATHER SEATS, CD/CASS, DUAL ZONE AC, CRUISE, STEERING WHL AUDIO CTRLS, ONSTAR, INFO CENT, HOMELINK, DUAL FRT AIRBAGS, KBB VALUE OF $9,110! TRIPLE BLACK/TINTED WINDOWS, THIS SS HAS BEEN BABIED! STOP BY GRAY MOTORS TODAY!
7.3L POWERSTROKE TURBO DIESEL, AUTO, ALLOYS RUNNING BOARDS, MATCHING CANOPY, BEDLINER, TOW PKG, PWR WINDOWS, LOCKS, MIRRORS & DRV SEAT, LEATHER, CRUISE, TILT, AC, CD/CASS, BACKUP SENSORS, COMP/TEMP, DUAL FRT AIRBAGS, ONLY 64K MILES ON THIS BEAUTIFUL 1 OWNER TRUCK! EVER POPULAR 7.3L POWERSTROKE! NOT USED TO TOW A 5TH WHL YET! YOU WOULD BE HARD PRESSED TO FIND ONE NICER! STOP BY GRAY MOTORS TODAY!
4.6L NORTHSTAR V8, AUTO, ALLOYS, KEYLESS ENTRY, PWR WINDOWS, LOCKS & MIRRORS, PWR HTD LEATHER SEATS, INFO CENT, CRUISE, TILT, AC, ONLY 95K MILES ON THIS BEAUTIFUL CADILLAC! WELL MAINTAINED LOCAL TRADE-IN! YOU CAN’T GET MUCH MORE LUXURY THAN THIS! STOP BY GRAY MOTORS TODAY!
2.3L 4 CYL, AUTO, SPRAY-IN BEDLINER, TOW BALL, REAR SLIDING WINDOW, PANASONIC MP3 CD, AC, DUAL FRT AIRBAGS, KBB VALUE OF $7,790! ONLY 52K MILES! EXTRA CLEAN INSIDE & OUT! GREAT MPG! STOP BY GRAY MOTORS TODAY!
TRADES WELCOME • FINANCING AVAILABLE
TRADES WELCOME • FINANCING AVAILABLE
TRADES WELCOME • FINANCING AVAILABLE
TRADES WELCOME • FINANCING AVAILABLE
www.graymotors.com CALL 457-4901 Since 1957 1-888-457-4901 1937 E. First, Port Angeles
www.graymotors.com CALL 457-4901 Since 1957 1-888-457-4901 1937 E. First, Port Angeles
www.graymotors.com CALL 457-4901 Since 1957 1-888-457-4901 1937 E. First, Port Angeles
www.graymotors.com CALL 457-4901 Since 1957 1-888-457-4901 1937 E. First, Port Angeles
2006 MERCURY MARINER PREMIER AWD
2008 HONDA CIVIC EX COUPE
2006 HONDA ACCORD SE 4DR
2008 SUBARU LEGACY SPECIAL ED. AWD 4DR
3.0L V6, AUTO, AC, AWD, CRUISE, TILT, AM/FM/CD CHANGER, PWR WINDOWS, LOCKS & SEAT, LEATHER W/HTD SEATS, KEYLESS ENTRY, LUGGAGE RACK, ALLOYS, PRIV GLASS, FOG LAMPS, VERY, VERY CLEAN 1 OWNER CORPORATE LEASE RETURN, NON-SMOKER
1.8L 4 CYL, 5 SPD, AC, CRUISE, TILT, AM/ FM/CD, PWR WINDOWS & LOCKS, PWR MOONROOF, ALLOYS, FOG LAMPS, SIDE AIRBAGS, NON-SMOKER, ONLY 32K MILES! BAL OF FACT 3/36 & 5/60 WARRANTY!
VERY ECONOMICAL 2.4L 4 CYL, AUTO, AC, CRUISE, TILT, AM/FM/CD, PWR WINDOWS & LOCKS, KEYLESS ENTRY, SIDE AIRBAGS, ALLOYS, ONLY 23K MILES! BAL OF FACT 5/60 WARRANTY, VERY, VERY CLEAN 1 OWNER FACT LEASE RETURN, NON-SMOKER V.I.N.S POSTED AT
ECONOMICAL 2.5L 4 CYL, AUTO, AC, CRUISE, TILT, AM/FM/CD, PWR WINDOWS, LOCKS & SEATS, PWR MOONROOF, ALLOYS, SIDE AIRBAGS, 32K MILES! BAL OF FACT 5/60 WARRANTY, NON-SMOKER
$7,995
GRAY MOTORS
$14,695
V.I.N.S POSTED AT DEALERSHIP. A NEGOTIABLE $50 DOCUMENT SERVICE FEE WILL BE CHARGED ON ALL TRANSACTIONS.
$20,995
GRAY MOTORS
$15,995
V.I.N.S POSTED AT DEALERSHIP. A NEGOTIABLE $50 DOCUMENT SERVICE FEE WILL BE CHARGED ON ALL TRANSACTIONS.
$4,995
GRAY MOTORS
$15,495
$6,995
GRAY MOTORS
$16,995
DEALERSHIP. A NEGOTIABLE $50 DOCUMENT SERVICE FEE WILL BE CHARGED ON ALL TRANSACTIONS.
V.I.N.S POSTED AT DEALERSHIP. A NEGOTIABLE $50 DOCUMENT SERVICE FEE WILL BE CHARGED ON ALL TRANSACTIONS.
Race St., Race St., Race St., Race St., REID & JOHNSON 1stPortat Angeles REID & JOHNSON 1stPortat Angeles REID & JOHNSON 1stPortat Angeles REID & JOHNSON 1stPortat Angeles MOTORS 457-9663 MOTORS 457-9663 MOTORS 457-9663 MOTORS 457-9663 www.reidandjohnson.com
www.reidandjohnson.com
2007 KTM 50SX SENIOR
2005 SUZUKI RM250
WATER COOLED VIN#018822
2 STROKE, LOCAL TRADE, GREAT SHAPE! COME WE FINANCE VIN#100566 SEE US EVERYONE! FIRST!
HOME OF THE 5 MINUTE APPROVAL!
$1,350
HOME OF THE BUY HERE, PAY HERE! Expires 10/27/10
WE FINANCE! 5 Minute Approvals! 819 E. 1st St. Port Angeles, WA
$2,950
Expires 10/27/10
WE FINANCE! 5 Minute Approvals! 819 E. 1st St. Port Angeles, WA
www.reidandjohnson.com
www.reidandjohnson.com
2007 YAMAHA BRUIN 4X4 QUAD
1999 HARLEYDAVIDSON 1200
AUTO, REVERSE, LOCAL TRADE VIN#029697
5 SPD, TONS OF CHROME! LOW MILES! “0” 7 MUST SEE! DOWN HARLEYS FINANCING VIN#133659 IN STOCK! AVAILABLE!
HOME OF THE BUY HERE, PAY HERE!
$3,650
WE BUY ATVS, HARLEYS & STREET BIKES! Expires 10/27/10
WE FINANCE! 5 Minute Approvals! 819 E. 1st St. Port Angeles, WA
ASK FOR DETAILS!
$4,950
Expires 10/27/10
WE FINANCE! 5 Minute Approvals! 819 E. 1st St. Port Angeles, WA
Dealers, To Advertise Here: Call Lyndi @ 360-417-3551 TODAY for more information
Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
95
Recreational Vehicles
95
Recreational Vehicles
97
4 Wheel Drive
CHEV: ‘70 3/4 Ton. $850. 360-434-4056.
‘03 Newmar Dutch Star. 40’, 3 slides, 6 speed Allison Trans. micro/conv. oven, 3 burner cooktop, sliding shelf pantry, 2 Sony flatscreen TVs, Sony AM/FM/CD, VCR, Sat. Dome, computer/printer table, light oak interior, washer/dryer hookup, 6 kw generator, leveling system, solar battery charger, low mileage (22k), gently used, non smokers. $117,000. 360-683-3887
5TH WHEEL: '01 36' Cardinal by Forrest River. Fully equipped home. 3 slides, 3 axles, 2 AC, Trailaire pin box, hydraulic brakes, Alum rims. Retail $35,000 asking $26,000 w/ or w/o tow vehicle. 582-0803 5TH WHEEL: ‘88 25’ Alpenlite. $7,000. 457-4914
5TH WHEEL: ‘05 34’ Montana Mountaineer 348RLS. 3 slides. Great condition. Extended warranty. 50 amp, central heat/air. Kelley Blue Book is $32,000. Asking $24,900/obo. Call Steve at 360-477-3949
MOTOR HOME: ‘98 25’ Tioga Class C. Gen., A/C, kept in garage, V10. $16,500. 457-7097. TRAILER: ‘00 24’ SandPiper By Forest River. Built in the Northwest, for the Northwest, w/queen bed up front, sofa & dining areas convert to bed, awning. In Sequim. $8,000. 602-615-6887 TRAILER: ‘06 26’ Jayco. Excellent condition, extras. Reduced price. $13,000. 477-3695. TRAILER: ‘72 Sportsmaster 20’ living space and tongue. Good condition. $3,000/obo. 775-7504 TRAILER: ‘94 40x10 Woodland Park. 2 slide outs, micro, W/D, air, full length porch with metal awning, refrigerator ice maker. $10,500. 425-776-5816 or 206-853-5546
TRAILER: ‘03 30’ Airstream. Interior in great condition, some dents on exterior, reconstructed title. $9,995. 971-226-0002 TRAILER: ‘72 22’ plus ‘76 Suburban ‘454. Both for $1,100. 681-2427. TRAILER: ‘88 32’ Aljo Alliance. Everything works, good condition. $3,500/obo. 457-7600
96 5TH WHEEL: 2007 Mckenzie Lakota 33SKT 4 SEASON. 3 slides, no smoke/ pets, dual Euro recliners, king bed, large corner shower, washer/dryer closet, large wardrobe closets, central vac, more than adequate storage, very nice little one bedroom on wheels. Over 11,000 under dealer value at $37,900. elgreengos@hotmail.com for more pictures or come see. 683-7411 or 477-5621. 5TH WHEEL: ‘89 25’ Alpenlite DL. Gas stove/oven, electric/gas freezer, fridge, air, microwave, antenna, AM/FM cassette stereo, roof ladder, storage, new tires, Hijacker Ultraslide hitch with mounting brackets, Super Shade awning, ONAN gen. set, low hours, very good condition. $5,000. 360-452-3402 Affordable Home 32’ Royal Coachman, park model, very clean, good shape. $5,500. 457-6540. BRAND NEW STORAGE 18’x44’ with 12’x14’ door. $225 mo. 2 units available. 452-1254, 460-9466 CAMPER: ‘72. Fits 8’ bed, no leaks. $350. 797-4518 CAMPER: 8’ cabover, warm and dry. $600. 683-3639. MOTOR HOME: ‘05 Bounder diesel pusher. Loaded. $95,000/obo. 360-460-0432 MOTOR HOME: ‘03 29’. Ford Sunseeker, under 8,000 mi, double tip-out. $55,000/ obo. 360-808-6392. MOTOR HOME: ‘05 Winnebago Journey 39K. 27,000 mi., loaded, 3-sides, 350 Cat diesel, 6.5 Onan generator. $115,000. 460-0895 MOTOR HOME: ‘82 24’ Travelcraft. Must see. $3,400/obo. 452-2609 MOTOR HOME: ‘89 21’ Winnebago Warrior. New tires and refrigerator. $8,000. 360-681-7614 MOTOR HOME: ‘92 23’ Itasca. 30K, good condition. $11,500. 452-2162. MOTOR HOME: ‘92 38’ Country Coach Affinity, their best model. Mint condition, loaded, 325 Turbo Cat, 7,500W diesel generator, solid oak and leather throughout, air ride and leveling, was $400,000 new, very livable. Reduced again! $52,000/ obo. 360-460-1071. MOTOR HOME: ‘93 30’ Monterey. Loaded $9,500. 797-1625 MOTOR HOME: ‘94 28’ Minnie Winnie. Class C, good shape. $10,000. 457-8912, 670-3970
CLASSIFIED can help with all your advertising needs: Buying Selling Hiring Trading Call today! 360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714 www.peninsula dailynews.com
Parts/ Accessories
GAS PUMP: Old gas pump and oil dispenser. $700 firm. 452-5803 SNOW/WINTER TIRES Nokian Hakkapelitta 4 Set of 4. Tires are studded with sipping. Size is 225/50R-17. Approx. 75%-80% tread left. $350. 360-460-5420
97
4 Wheel Drive
BE APPROVED IN MINUTES! Lowest in house financing guaranteed! Buy here! Pay here! Kia ‘03 Sorrento LX. Blue, tan cloth interior, power locks, windows, air, cruise, auto, 4x4, clean, nice! 123K. $7,995. The Other Guys Auto and Truck Center 360-417-3788 BUICK: ‘04 Rainier. V8, AWD, leather, 87K, premium sound, wheels, all power. $12,800. 460-3037 CHEV ‘06 SILVERADO LT CREWCAB LB 4X4 6.o liter Vortec V8, auto, loaded! White exterior in excellent shape! Gray leather interior in excellent condition! Dual power heated seats, moon roof, OnStar, CD with Bose sound dual climate, power folding mirrors, premium alloys, spotless 2 owner Carfax, and more! Very nice well optioned Chevy at our no haggle price of only $18,995
Carpenter Auto Center 681-5090
DODGE ‘05 RAM 1500 QUAD CAB 4X4 5.7 liter HEMI V8, auto, 20” alloy wheels, spray-in bedliner, tow package, power windows, locks, mirrors, keyless entry, cruise, tilt, air, Sony MP3, CD player, information center. Kelley Blue Book value of $22,900! Only 48,430 miles! Sparkling clean inside and out! Stop by Gray Motors today and save some bucks on your next truck! $18,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com
DODGE: ‘02 Ram 1500. 85K miles, lifted, canopy, 5.9 V8, new tires. $12,000. 477-5556 FORD ‘00 F250 XLT EXTRA CAB LB 7.3 liter Powerstroke diesel V8, 6 speed manual trans! White exterior in great shape! Gray cloth interior in great condition! Power windows, power locks, cruise, tilt, CD/cassette, air, privacy glass, tow, running boards, bedliner, alloys, full 4” exhaust, predator chip, spotless 2 owner Carfax! A great diesel truck at our no haggle price of only $9,995
Carpenter Auto Center 681-5090 FORD ‘04 EXCURSION XLT 4X4 82K, original miles, 5.4 liter Triton V8, auto, loaded! 2 tone silver/gray exterior in excellent shape! Gray cloth interior in great condition! Dual power seats, CD/cassette, 3rd seat, rear air, privacy glass, roof rack, running boards, tow package, alloys with 70% BFG’s, spotless 2 owner Carfax! Very nice, very clean Excursion at our no haggle price of only $15,995
Carpenter Auto Center 681-5090 FORD ‘08 F150 LARIAT SUPERCREW 4X4 5.4 Triton V8, auto, loaded! White exterior in great condition! Tan leather interior in great condition! Dual power heated seats, 6 disk CD with auxiliary, park sensors, power slider, heated mirrors, privacy glass, wood trim, 18” alloys, spotless 1 owner Carfax, and much more! We are a ridiculous $7,500 less than Kelley Blue Book at our no haggle price of only $19,995
Carpenter Auto Center 681-5090 FORD: ‘09 F150 4x4. XLT super cab, 15K mi. $26,500. 360-765-4599 FORD: ‘79 Bronco. Full size, ‘351’ Cleveland, good body. $2,000. 797-3436.
FORD: ‘95, Eddie Bauer Explorer. Loaded, all service records, FWD, very good condition. $3,995/obo. 460-7348
CHEV: ‘98 S10 Blazer. 4 dr, passenger door damage, runs/drives great, must see. $1,295. 452-5803.
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CHEV: ‘97 1/2 ton extended cab, 3 doors, short bed, 80K mi. $5,000. 406-381-9362 CHEV: ‘02 Club Cab. Long bed. 4WD. Loaded. 44,000 mi., $15,500. 452-8713. CHEV: ‘88 S-10 4x4. As is. $1,000. 457-9292
Legals Clallam Co.
4 Wheel Drive
FORD: ‘85 Bronco. Sat. radio, 33” tires. $1,300. 640-8996. FORD: ‘94 Explorer. All power, auto, air, runs/drives great. $1,500. 457-8193 or 460-7534 GET READY FOR WINTER All WD, great in snow, ‘99 Oldsmobile Bravada. Leather, loaded, 129K, exc. cond. $6,299. 928-2181, 461-6273 GMC: ‘73 3/4 ton. Runs good, ugly. $1,495. 582-1381. GMC: ‘96 Sonoma. Two color, extra cab. $3,800/obo or trade for equal value SUV/ car. 360-460-3756.
DODGE: ‘88 3/4 ton long bed. $850/obo. 452-2459
GMC ‘03 YUKON 4X4 5.3 liter V8, auto, SLT package, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, locks, mirrors, and dual power heated seats, leather interior, power sunroof, 3rd row seating, AM/FM CD with 6 disc stacker, memory seat and adjustable pedals, roof rack, privacy glass, running boards, alloy wheels, tow package, remote entry, and more! One owner. Expires 1023-10. $9,995 We Finance Dave Barnier Auto Sales 452-6599 davebarnier.com
CHEV: ‘02 Trailblazer LTZ. Low mi., all power, air, leather, new tires/brakes, Bose audio & more. Low book. $9,250. 460-4765
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Legals Clallam Co.
SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR CLALLAM COUNTY In re the Estate of Lottie B. Bayton, Deceased. NO. 10-4-00279-1 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 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)(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: October 7, 2010 Personal Representative: Russelle A. Graf Attorney for Personal Representative: Stephen C. Moriarty, WSBA #18810 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: 10-4-00279-1 Pub: Oct. 7, 14, 21, 2010
HONDA: ‘06 Element EX AWD. $18,000. 43K mi. Excellent cond, Automatic, Air cond, Roof rack, 2" tow receiver, Hood and window wind deflectors, Warranty to 2014. Call 360-477-2196 between 10 AM and 10PM ISUZU: ‘91 Trooper. Runs good, new tires. $1,500/obo. 670-6041 JEEP: ‘76 CJ7. Stock 304 engine with headers, auto, TH400 tranny, good tires, straight body, full cage, hard top, aluminum tow bar attached and ready to go, 1st year of Jeep CJ7’s, many new parts, can see at P.T. Golf Club. $5,750/obo. 360-531-2272 JEEP: ‘88 Cherokee. 89K miles, body and interior rough, good powertrain, driveable or parts. $650. 452-1162 MAZDA: ‘03 Tribute ES. Loaded, leather, great shape, 62K, towing pkg. $10,510. 928-9527 NISSAN ‘99 FRONTIER XE KING CAB 4X4 3.3 liter V6, 5 speed, alloy wheels, good rubber, spray-in bedliner, rear sliding window, Sony MP3 CD stereo, air, cruise, tilt, dual front airbags. This truck is sparkling clean inside and out! Service records include timing belt replacement at 100K! Always popular V6 and 5 speed combination! Stop by Gray Motors today! $6,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com NISSAN: ‘08 Frontier King Cab. V6 4x4, 24K mi., silver ext. matching canopy, bedliner, auto windows-locks, remote ent, cruise, CD, oversize tires, below KBB val of $20,425. Records avail., no accidents. Very clean. $19,000. Call 360-670-1400 TOYOTA ‘06 TUNDRA DOUBLE CAB 4X4 4.7 V8, auto, SR5 package, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, locks, and mirrors, AM/FM CD and cassette, TRD, off road package, power sliding rear window, alloy wheels, tube running boards, remote entry, and more! Expires 10-23-10. $17,995 We Finance Dave Barnier Auto Sales 452-6599 davebarnier.com
TOYOTA: ‘94 4Runner. Sunroof, lifted, big tires, power windows and seats, leather interior, good shape. Needs tranny work. $2,800. 452-9693 TOYOTA: ‘01 Tacoma SR5. 4x4 extra cab, brand new 3.4 V6 engine installed by Toyota dealer, auto, PW, PDL, CD, tow pkg. with air bags and electric trailer brakes, canopy. $13,000. Call Bill at 460-3429
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Pickups/Vans
BOX TRUCK: ‘00 GMC. 12’ box, runs great. $10,500/obo. 582-9006 CHEV: ‘00 Silverado. $10,000. 808-1731 or 360-477-7864. CHEV: ‘05 Suburban. Excellent, 1/2 ton. $16,800. 681-5403 CHEV: ‘89 1/2 ton. ‘350’ V8, auto, nice. $2,000. 681-7632. CHEV: ‘38 Pickup. All original, garaged, needs rear end. $15,000. Only serious buyers please. 457-3990, 775-1139 DODGE ‘06 CARAVAN SXT 3.3 liter V6, auto, air, cruise, tilt, AM/FM cassette and CD, power windows, locks, and seat, keyless entry, 7 passenger, quad seating, privacy glass, luggage rack, alloy wheels, 62,000 miles, very, very clean 1 owner corporate lease return, non-smoker, detailed service history, spotless Carfax report. $10,695 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com DODGE ‘07 GRAND CARAVAN SXT 3.8 liter V6, auto, alloy wheels, privacy glass, roof rack, keyless entry, power windows, locks, and mirrors, dual power sliding doors, power rear hatch, power heated leather seats, rear captain’s chairs, front and rear stown-go, auto climate control, rear air, cruise, tilt, DVD video system, CD/cassette, information center, dual front airbags. Kelley Blue Book value of $19,215! Only 37,000 miles! Carfax certified one-owner, no accidents! This grand caravan is loaded with all the options! Stop by Gray Motors today! $14,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com DODGE: ‘05 Grand Caravan SE. 86K, good condition. Trailer hitch. $7,725. 460-0351 DODGE: ‘69 Flat bed. Strait 6, needs tune up. $285. 683-6597. DODGE: ‘95 Grand Caravan SE. 43K with lift and scooter. $5,000. 457-4837 leave message. DODGE: ‘96 Caravan. Great condition, gold color. $2,100. 683-3851 DODGE: ‘75 1/2 ton pickup. 318, 8’ bed with shell, 87,500 actual miles, good tires, brakes, runs well. $900/obo. 683-4021 DODGE: ‘91 Cargo Van. Runs excellent, dependable. $850/ obo. 360-683-7103. FORD ‘02 E350 SUPERDUTY EXTENDED CARGO VAN 5.4 liter V8, auto, air, cruise, tilt, AM/FM cassette, power windows and locks, safety bulkhead, nice BIN package, heavy, heavy duty 1-ton chassis, nearly new tires, very, very clean 1 owner corporate lease return, nonsmoker, very nice cargo van. $8,995 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com FORD ‘03 F450 SUPERDUTY EXTRA CAB LB DUALLY 2WD 70K original miles, 6.0 liter powerstroke diesel, auto, loaded! Gray metallic exterior in great condition! Gray cloth interior in excellent shape! CD/cassette, power heated mirrors, Fontaine Classic Traveler 5th wheel bed, auto leveling air suspension, aux fuel tanks, diamond plate tool boxes, spray-in bed liner, on board air, spotless 1 owner Carfax! This is a whole lot of tow pig at our no haggle price of only $18,995
Carpenter Auto Center 681-5090
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Legals Clallam Co.
No. 10 4 00291 0 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM Estate of MARGARET S. PLASKETT, 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. 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(3): 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: Oct. 14, 2010 Personal Representative: MAUREEN E. McDONALD Attorney for Estate: Robert W. Strohmeyer ROBERT W. STROHMEYER, P.S. Address for Mailing or Service: 1125 E. First Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362 Telephone: (360) 457-9525 Pub: Oct. 14, 21, 28, 2010
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Pickups/Vans
FORD ‘04 E350 SUPERDUTY 11 PASSENGER VAN 55K original miles! 5.4 liter Triton V8, auto, loaded! White exterior in great condition! Gray cloth interior in excellent shape! Power drivers seat, CD, cruise, tilt, rear air, air, dual airbags, running boards, tow, privacy glass, spotless Carfax! Very nice, very well kept 11 passenger at our no haggle price of only $10,995
Carpenter Auto Center 681-5090 FORD: ‘70 heavy duty 3/4 ton. Runs great, new tow pkg. $900/ obo. 417-3959. FORD: ‘78 F350. Super cab, trailer special, 460 C6, 3 speed auto. Call for added features. Best offer over $2,000. 360-302-0844 FORD: ‘79 Flatbed. Runs good. $2,000/ obo. 683-0940. FORD: ‘90 F250. Ext. cab, long box, 48,660 mi., new HD service brakes, set up for 5th wheel, excellent condition. $5,500. 796-4929. GM: ’92 Gladiator conversion van. 350, auto, 140K, runs/ looks good! $3,500. 452-5522 GMC: ‘95 Short bed. V6, 1500 Sierra, 5 speed, 130K. $3,500. 452-5427. KIA ‘08 RONDO LX V6 MINIVAN 2.7 liter V6, auto, air, cruise, tilt, AM/FM CD, power windows and locks, keyless entry, 7-passenger seating, alloy wheels, 38,000 miles, balance of factory 5/60 warranty, very clean 1 owner, non-smoker. $12,695 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com
MAGIC RAINBOW HAPPY BUS 1973 Volkswagon Transporter $1,500/obo Not Camper Style Runs, Some Rust. Call: 360-797-3951 MAZDA: ‘88 B2200. Runs good. $1,000/ obo. 582-7486. NISSAN: ‘86 EX cab. 2.4L eng., good mpg, auto w/over drive, power steer., Pioneer stereo, rear jump seats, dark tint, 95,354 orig. mi., good tires/shocks, well taken care of, senior owned, bought locally. Must see to appreciate. $3,800 firm. 461-2709
NISSAN: ‘86 Kingcab. 4 cyl, 5 sp, new batt, alt, tires. 27 mpg. $1,600. 452-7439. PLUMBING VAN: ‘02 Ford, job site ready, plus extra plumbing parts, 28K orginial mi. $20,000/obo. 360-385-2773 PLYMOUTH: ‘94 Voyager. Auto, seats 7, 128K. $800. 460-4693 WANTED: Looking for a VW Eurovan Weekender edition. 360-379-3341
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Cars
BE APPROVED IN MINUTES! Lowest in house financing guaranteed! Buy here! Pay here! Jeep ‘99 Grand Cherokee Laredo Limited, green, stock#3813, black leather, heated seats, sunroof, info center, auto, 4x4, too much to list! 126K. $7,995. The Other Guys Auto and Truck Center 360-417-3788
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Legals Clallam Co.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2010
99
Cars
BUICK ‘03 LESABRE CUSTOM 3.8 liter V6, auto, alloy wheels, power windows, door locks, and drivers seat, keyless entry, CD stereo, cruise control, tilt, air, information center, dual front airbags. Priced under Kelley Blue Book! Only 44,000 miles! Extra nice and clean! Stop by Gray Motors today! $6,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com BUICK: ‘97 LaSabre. Excellent codntion, 1 owner. $4,700. 683-6051 after 4 p.m. CADILLAC: ’92 Sedan Deville. 144K, 4.9L, auto, runs/ looks good. $2,750/ obo. 452-5522. CADILLAC: ‘92 SeVille. Exc. shape, good mpg, new tires. $3,000/obo. 452-5406 CADILLAC: 1951 Coupe DeVille. 46,600 original miles, powerful, great driving car. Nice chrome, paint & upholstery, WW tires, Auto, V8, Sequim, $27,900. 360-683-3385 Rrobert169@Qwest. net CADILLAC: ‘38 LaSalle 91K miles. Calif V8 “Harley Earl” design, needs new restore. $9,500/obo. James 360-460-3467 CADILLAC: ‘85 Eldorado Commemorative Edition. Excellent condition, spoke wheels, loaded, no rust, always garaged, beautiful blue, 30K miles on new motor; 112K total miles. $2,900. 360-477-4817 CHEV: ‘68 Camaro Z28. 302, 4 speed, stock. $29,999/obo or trade. 683-7965.
CHEV: ‘78 Corvette Silver Anniversary Edition. Fully restored interior and exterior. Silver twotone paint with sport striping. L48 automatic. Runs excellent. $18,500. 425-888-4306 or 425-941-4246 CHEV: ‘84 Corvette. Silver, 5.7 liter V8. $5,800. 437-7649. CHEV: ‘02 Monte Carlo SS. White with leather interior, sunroof, and all the extras. 27K orig. miles. $14,500. 360-301-1854 or magiejt@yahoo.com CHEV: ‘64 Chevelle. 427, auto, PS, PDB, must sell. $6,000. 457-3184 CHEV: ’70 Chevelle. Big block wagon, new paint, tires, more. $6,995/obo. No reasonable offer refused. 417-1896. CHEV: ‘88 Camaro. Project car, running, licensed, with ‘90 Camaro parts car. $1,200/obo. 928-3863 CHRYSLER ‘01 PT CRUISER LIMITED EDITION 4 cylinder, auto, air, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, locks, mirrors, and seat, AM/FM CD and cassette, power sunroof, leather interior with heated seats, trip computer, front and side airbags, 4 wheel ABS and electronic traction control, roof rack, privacy glass, chrome wheels, remote entry and low, low, miles. Expires 10-23-10. $6,995 We Finance Dave Barnier Auto Sales 452-6599 davebarnier.com
WHY PAY SHIPPING ON INTERNET PURCHASES? SHOP LOCAL peninsula dailynews.com
101
Legals Clallam Co.
NO. 10 4 00283 9 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM In the Matter of the Estate of: ELIZABETH B. ASSUMPCAO, 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. 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(3); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and non probate assets. Date of First Publication: October 14, 2010 Personal Representative: William D. Assumpcao Attorney for Personal Representative: Lane J. Wolfley Address for Mailing or Service: 713 E First St, Port Angeles WA 98362 Dated: Sept. 30, 2010 William D. Assumpcao, Personal Representative Lane J. Wolfley, WSBA #9609 Attorney for Petitioner Pub: Oct. 14, 21, 28, 2010
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Cars
CHRYSLER ‘02 300M Only 34,000 miles and loaded, including 3.5 V8, auto, air, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, locks, mirrors, and dual power heated seats, leather interior, power sunroof, 4 wheel ABS and electronic traction control, AM/FM CD stacker, trip computer, premium alloy wheels, remote entry, and more! Expires 10-23-10. $7,995 We Finance Dave Barnier Auto Sales 452-6599 davebarnier.com CHRYSLER: ‘04 Sebring LXI Convertible. Gold, leather, beautiful condition. 74K mi. $6,000 firm. 360-457-4020 CHRYSLER: ‘06 300C Hemi, 63K, super clean, every option, silver, leather, must see and drive, sold new for $39,000. $13,900. 582-0696. CHRYSLER: ‘86 LeBaron. 4 cyl eng., auto, new head gasket, front and rear brakes, rear brake cylinders, right front caliper, outer boot. $450. 385-2304. CLASSIC: ‘59 Cadillac model 62, 4 door hard top, red, good shape. $14,000. 360-683-7640 DAEWOO: ‘01 Lanos S . 60,780 orig. mi., 2 door hatchback, burgundy/gray, 4 cylinder, auto, 32+mpg, tabs July ‘11, newer tires plus windshield, A/C, heat, radio cassette. $2,700. 681-5326. DODGE: 93 Stealth RT. Great condition, only 2 owners, no accidents, 129K mi., AWD, 5 sp., all power, awesome stereo, CD changer and battery. $3,000. Chris 360-732-4514 FORD ‘07 TAURUS SEL 3.0 liter V6, auto, air, cruise, tilt, AM/FM CD, power windows, locks, and seat, full leather, power moon roof, keyless entry, alloy wheel, 45,000 miles, very clean trade in, non-smoker. $9,995 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com
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HONDA: ‘90 Accord LX. 1 owner, needs work $800. 460-7442 LINCOLN: ‘87 Towncar Signature Series. Leather interior, power doors, windows, sunroof, low miles, grandpa car, excellent condition. $3,950. 452-9693 eves. MAZDA: ‘07 3. 5 sp., low hwy mi., charcoal/black interior, Thule roof rack, GPS, call for questions/test drive. $12,000/obo 206-375-5204
MERCEDES: ‘29 Replica Gazelle. 10K miles, immaculate. $12,500/obo. 681-3339 MERCEDES: ‘99 230 SLK. 70K, blk/blk, compressor, S/C, HT convert. $11,900. 452-6677 MERCEDES: ‘74 280. Runs well. $500. 683-2436 MERCURY: ‘89 Cougar. Hobby stock race car, fully loaded, seat belts, window net, ready to race. $1,000/obo. 477-9602
MINI COOPER: ‘05. White, 103,000 miles, Runs/drives great, no accidents, has had all scheduled tune-ups & oil changes, very clean interior, 2 new tires, highway miles, GREAT MPG. $9,995. Call Angela. 360-460-4802 OLDS: ‘90. Runs great. Looks great. $1,200. 460-1183. PONTIAC: ‘’04 Grand Prix. Low mi., 52K, very clean, must see. $8,000/obo. 457-9332 PORSCHE: ‘02 Boxter S. 56K miles, 6 spd, black on black. $21,500. 461-9635. SAAB: ‘94 900si. Must see. $900/obo. 477-4865 SUBARU: ‘05 Forester. Mint condition, 30K mi. $16,000. 457-9183
FORD: ‘05 Focus ZX4. Auto, 73K, new tires, all power. $8,000/obo. 460-4693 FORD: ’62 Thunderbird Coupe. Mostly all restored, approx. $30,000 put into it. $15,900/obo. 460-0401, 582-9597 FORD: ‘98 Mustang convertible. 3.8 V6, 73,000 mi., power locks-trunk-left front seat, power top, leather seats, sharp car! $8,500/ obo. 457-6156. FORD: 1929 Model “A”. Roadster, 10 footer. $17,500 firm. 681-5403 FORD: ‘92 Crown Victoria. Runs and looks great, 83K. $3,000/ obo. 683-2542. GEO: ‘93 Storm. Runs great. $2,500/obo. 775-9612 GMC: ‘97 Suburban. Maroon, 4x4, studded tires and rims. Good condition. $2,800. 681-7032. HONDA: ‘06 Civic. 67,000 mi., 2 door coupe, clean, white with black/ gray interior. $10,000/obo 460-0845 HONDA: ‘08 Civic EX. Silver, sedan, sunroof, 5 spd manual, CD, 43K, exc. cond. $13,400. 643-1410.
HONDA: ‘08 Fit-Sport. Auto, low miles, 35 mpg, A/C, cruise, CD/MP3, side airbags, alloy wheels. $14,495. 683-1044. LINCOLN: ‘63 Continental. Partially restored, suicide doors, runs. $2,750. 457-0272
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Legals General
SUBARU: ‘05 STI Black STI with tinted windows and silver BBS wheels. Stock except for headers, down pipe and complete stainless steel exhaust and muffler. Manual boost controller and front and rear alum skid plates. Tuned on a 4 wheel dyno and produced 300 hp and 364 ft/lb torque at the wheels. A fantastic daily driver with 65,000 miles. Adult owned and maintained. $14,900/ obo. Call Tim at 360-912-1467 SUBARU: ‘07 Forester. 25,000 mi., perfect condition, under warranty. $16,750. 452-6014 SUZUKI: ‘00 Grand Vitara. Exc. cond., 87K mi., very clean. $3,950. 775-1132. TOYOTA: ‘05 Prius Hybrid. Black, new tires, under, 67K mi. $11,085. 928-9527. TOYOTA: ‘10 Prius. As new, save $4,000. $20,000. 452-7273.
TOYOTA: ‘03 Camry LE One owner, no accidents, well maintained, 4 cyl, auto trans, 95,000 mi. $7,250. 477-2183. TOYOTA: ‘89 Camry. $1,200. 928-9774. VW: ‘75 Super Beetle. Fuel injected, runs good, 30+ mpg, nice paint, good tires, new floor pan, Pioneer stereo, CD player. Price reduced! $3,295/obo. 775-9648
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Legals General
No. 10-4-00168-2 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR GRAYS HARBOR COUNTY In Re the Estate of KENNETH D. MILLER, 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. The claim must be presented within the latter of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under *RCW 11.40.020(3); 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. Publication: October 14, 2010 Personal Representative: Lauretta T. Miller Attorney for the Personal Representative: Frank M. Franciscovich Address for Mailing or Service: 341 West Wishkah Street Aberdeen, WA 98520 FRANK M.FRANCISCOVICH/led FRANK M. FRANCISCOVICH, WSBA #12025 Pub: Oct. 14, 21, 28, 2010
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WeatherNorthwest
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Peninsula Five-Day Forecast Today
TonighT
Friday
SaTurday
Yesterday
Sunday
Monday
High 57
Low 45
56/41
55/47
54/41
50/39
Sun and some clouds.
Increasing clouds with latenight rain.
Occasional rain and drizzle.
Mostly cloudy, rain possible; breezy.
Windy with rain.
Cloudy with a chance of rain.
The Peninsula We will have another nice day across the region. It will start with patches of fog. There will be a mix of clouds and sunshine during the afternoon with highs in the upper 50s. However, big changes are coming. A little rain will move into the region Friday as Neah Bay Port a weakening storm moves in, then a big Pacific storm will 56/48 Townsend approach Saturday. Rain will hold off most of the day, but Port Angeles 57/48 strong winds will develop during the evening. Winds will 57/45 be howling Saturday night into Sunday with pouring Sequim rain. Cold with showers early next week.
Victoria 58/47
58/46
Forks 60/46
Olympia 65/45
Seattle 60/51
Spokane 62/39
Yakima Kennewick 66/35 66/39
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. © 2010
Marine Forecast
Cloudy to partly sunny today. Wind west 4-8 knots. Waves 1-2 feet. Visibility clear. Increasing clouds tonight with periods of rain late. Wind northeast 6-12 knots. Waves 1-2 feet. Visibility under 3 miles at times. On-and-off rain and drizzle tomorrow. Wind west 6-12 knots. Waves 1-2 feet. Visibility under 4 miles at times. Saturday: Mainly cloudy with a chance of rain. Wind east 10-20 knots. Waves 1-3 feet.
LaPush
11:50 a.m. ----Port Angeles 3:01 a.m. 1:45 p.m. Port Townsend 4:46 a.m. 3:30 p.m. Sequim Bay* 4:07 a.m. 2:51 p.m.
Today
Moon Phases Last
New
Seattle 60/51 Billings 71/39
Tomorrow
SaTurday
Ht
Low Tide
Ht
High Tide Ht
Low Tide Ht
High Tide Ht
Low Tide Ht
8.2’ --6.0’ 6.6’ 7.2’ 8.0’ 6.8’ 7.5’
5:44 a.m. 6:21 p.m. 8:16 a.m. 8:46 p.m. 9:30 a.m. 10:00 p.m. 9:23 a.m. 9:53 p.m.
1.7’ 0.2’ 3.4’ 0.5’ 4.4’ 0.6’ 4.1’ 0.6’
12:32 a.m. 12:22 p.m. 3:44 a.m. 2:05 p.m. 5:29 a.m. 3:50 p.m. 4:50 a.m. 3:11 p.m.
6:23 a.m. 7:00 p.m. 8:53 a.m. 9:13 p.m. 10:07 a.m. 10:27 p.m. 10:00 a.m. 10:20 p.m.
1:17 a.m. 12:53 p.m. 4:26 a.m. 2:28 p.m. 6:11 a.m. 4:13 p.m. 5:32 a.m. 3:34 p.m.
7:01 a.m. 7:39 p.m. 9:31 a.m. 9:44 p.m. 10:45 a.m. 10:58 p.m. 10:38 a.m. 10:51 p.m.
7.4’ 8.5’ 6.4’ 6.6’ 7.7’ 8.0’ 7.2’ 7.5’
*To correct for Dungeness Bay subtract 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
1.8’ -0.2’ 3.8’ -0.1’ 5.0’ -0.1’ 4.7’ -0.1’
7.4’ 8.6’ 6.7’ 6.6’ 8.1’ 8.0’ 7.6’ 7.5’
2.1’ -0.3’ 4.3’ -0.5’ 5.6’ -0.7’ 5.3’ -0.7’
Oct 30
Nov 5
Minneapolis 57/40
First
Nov 13
World Cities Today City Hi Lo W Athens 79 62 s Baghdad 102 66 s Beijing 55 47 s Brussels 44 33 s Cairo 90 72 pc Calgary 69 30 s Edmonton 64 30 s Hong Kong 81 73 pc Jerusalem 82 67 s Johannesburg 86 55 s Kabul 78 31 s London 52 45 s Mexico City 79 50 pc Montreal 48 34 sh Moscow 48 38 r New Delhi 94 64 s Paris 48 37 s Rio de Janeiro 73 64 s Rome 68 52 s Stockholm 41 40 pc Sydney 75 58 s Tokyo 66 62 sh Toronto 48 36 c Vancouver 60 48 pc Weather (W): prcp-precipitation, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, r-rain, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Detroit 56/37
Chicago 60/38
San Francisco 64/55 Denver 70/41 Los Angeles 69/58
Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice 0s
City Albuquerque Anchorage Astoria Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Bend Billings Bismarck Boise Boston Buffalo Charleston, SC Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Coeur d’Alene Corvallis Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit Eugene Fairbanks Helena Honolulu Houston Juneau
New York 62/44
Washington 67/43
Kansas City 70/54 El Paso 72/48
Sunset today ................... 6:14 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow ............ 7:44 a.m. Moonrise today ................ 5:16 p.m. Moonset today ................. 6:27 a.m.
Oct 22
Everett 62/50
Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Table Location High Tide
Sun & Moon
Thursday, October 21, 2010
-10s -0s
Shown is today’s weather.
Tide
National Forecast
Statistics are for the 24-hour period ending at 5 p.m. yesterday High Low Prcp YTD P. Angeles 59 39 0.00 7.84 Forks 68 40 0.00 88.17 Seattle 65 44 0.00 30.20 Sequim 63 44 0.00 8.36 Hoquiam 67 43 0.00 46.48 Victoria 62 42 0.00 23.52 P. Townsend* 66 44 0.00 11.03 *Data from www.ptguide.com
Full
Port Ludlow 59/47 Bellingham 60/44
Aberdeen 63/51
Peninsula Daily News
Atlanta 78/50
Houston 87/65
Fronts Cold Warm
Miami 86/72
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities.
Stationary 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s
National Cities Today Hi 65 44 62 78 67 66 67 71 65 66 60 52 82 68 60 66 59 70 89 70 65 56 66 31 69 85 87 45
Lo W 45 t 36 c 50 c 50 s 41 pc 38 pc 36 s 39 s 30 s 44 s 41 t 37 sh 54 s 36 pc 38 s 36 s 36 s 48 pc 68 pc 41 pc 44 s 37 c 45 pc 12 pc 34 s 72 pc 65 pc 33 c
City Kansas City Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Philadelphia Phoenix Portland, OR Raleigh Reno Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Sioux Falls Sun Valley Washington, DC
Hi 70 78 84 69 86 56 57 74 83 62 82 70 87 81 65 78 67 78 69 73 70 68 86 67 64 67 61 67
Lo W 54 s 60 pc 55 pc 58 pc 72 t 39 pc 40 s 40 s 61 s 44 t 59 pc 47 s 63 s 59 pc 43 pc 60 t 49 pc 42 s 42 pc 50 s 43 s 43 pc 69 pc 59 pc 55 pc 42 s 36 s 43 pc
National Extremes Yesterday (For the 48 contiguous states)
High: 92 at Edinburg, TX
Low: 15 at Pleasant Valley, MT
Hearing loss group
telephones, watching television, listening to car radios and attending church services. The Port Townsend Senior Association provides hearing devices to help attendees at chapter meetings, and Bergsbaken will use slides to illustrate his presentation. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, phone Emily Mandelbaum at 360-531-2247 or e-mail mandelbaum@olympus.net. Peninsula Daily News
Briefly . . . Harvest Gold Ball set for Oct. 30 in PT PORT TOWNSEND — The Rotary Club of East Jefferson County will hold a Harvest Gold Ball at the Port Townsend Elks Lodge, 555 Otto St., on Saturday, Oct. 30. Tickets are $30 per person and must be reserved no later than Wednesday. Doors open at 6 p.m.,
and dinner will be served at 7 p.m. Musical entertainment will be provided by the Airstream Travellers band. After dinner, the band will provide some quick instructions and then lead attendees in several contra dances until 9 p.m. for the drawing for the club’s Pot of Gold grand prize. Five hundred raffle tickets for the Pot of Gold are being sold at $100 each. The grand prize is $10,000, second prize is $1,500 in groceries at the
Port Hadlock QFC or $1,000 in cash, and the third prize is $500. Pot of Gold raffle tickets can be purchased from any Rotary member or by phoning 360-774-6892. Ticket buyers need not be present to win. Harvest Ball ticket reservations can be made by e-mail to info@fairwind swinery.com or via phone at 360-385-6899.
Accreditation visit PORT ANGELES — The
Peninsula College Nursing Program will host a site review for continuing accreditation of its associate degree program from Tuesday to Thursday, Oct. 28. The review will be conducted by the National League for Nursing Accrediting Commission Inc. The public is invited to meet the team and share comments about the program at a meeting in the Pirate Union Building conference room, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd., from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday.
Attic insulating just got easier!
PORT TOWNSEND — Joel Bergsbaken of the nonprofit Hearing, Speech & Deafness Center will address the East Jefferson Chapter of the Hearing Loss Association on Monday. The meeting will be held at the Port Townsend Community Center, 620 Tyler St., at 1 p.m. Bergsbaken will explain the Hearing, Speech & Deafness Center store, whose inventory includes things that help with using
See For Yourself AttiCat Demo Day on
Wed., October 27 Drop in anytime from 8-11 am at Angeles Millwork or 1-4 pm at Hartnagel Come and see how the AttiCat Blow-In System makes it easy and affordable to add insulation to your attic.
Quick & Easy
No MEss
• Complete entire attic in approximately 1.5 hours (1,000 sq. ft. attic at R-30) • Self-feeding system • Puts Fiberglas™ insulation where you want it • Integrated AUTOCUTTER
• Fiberglas insulation releases and expands completely inside machine • Provides easy cleanup because the machine does the work for you • Low dust system
No sEttliNg
• Fiberglas insulation will not settle • Keeps its energy-saving R-value over time
saFE & REliaBlE • Optimized process for minimal handling • Fully enclosed blowing system • Hose-mounted remote control
Insulate now. Save up to 20% on energy bills*. Do it yourself or ask a contractor to add extra attic insulation and save on energy costs all year long.
Celebrating 50 Years
3111 Hwy 101 E, Port Angeles 452-8933 • hartnagels.com
Thank you for shopping locally at our employee owned and operated Lumber Traders stores.
0A5101026
1601 S “C” St., Port Angeles 457-8581 • angelesmillwork.com
*Savings will vary depending on your location and weather conditions. THE PINK PANTHERTM & ©1964-2007 Metro-GoldwynMayer Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved. The color PINK is a registered trademmark of Owens Corning ©2007 Owens Corning.