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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS April 26, 2016 | 75¢
Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper
Woman held in beating death
New baseball team headed for PA home?
CAITLIN SCHIFFMAN
Jake Scudder runs the bases last season for the West Coast League’s Kitsap BlueJackets. Port Angeles’ Civic Field could become home to a West Coast League team now that BlueJackets owner and general manager Matt Acker, left, is in talks to being a new team that he would own to the city in 2017. “Port Angeles really comes in as one of the best markets you could be in,” Acker, who also was the BlueJackets’ head coach from 2005-2011, said. Acker says the importance of tourism in Port Angeles as well as its location and the city’s industries combine to make it a good fit for the league. The wood bat league, which currently has 11 teams, gives college players the chance to continue to play during the offseason while receiving professional instruction. For the complete story, see Page B1.
Group protests logging project BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — Opposition to a logging project within the boundaries of the Port Ludlow master planned resort drew nearly 70 protesters to Monday’s meeting of the Jefferson County Board of Commissioners. The protesters arrived at the courthouse in a bus, filling the chamber. Half of the chairs were removed to accommodate their number although about 30 people spilled out into the hall.
The group presented a 900-signature petition, calling for an end of all timber harvesting within the boundaries of the CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS master planned resort that is not directly Port Ludlow resident Gil Skinner, at podium, was one of about 70 connected to residential construction. TO
LOGGING/A4
BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — A 45-year-old woman is a suspect in the late-March beating death of Native American master carver George C. David of Neah Bay, whose body was found a month ago at the apartment of an acquaintance, interim Police Chief Brian Smith said Monday. Tina Marie Alcorn, described by police as a transient who has lived in Arkansas, was in the Clallam County jail without bond Monday on an Arkansas Board of Parole abscond warrant for allegedly violating her conditional release. Smith said she will remain in jail pending extra- Alcorn dition to Arkansas. Alcorn can be transported back to Clallam County if a charge related to David’s death is filed against her. The investigation into David’s death is ongoing and when a charging decision might be made was not known Monday. “It’s not an issue for us if someone is removed to another jurisdiction as long as they remain in custody,” Smith said.
Connection in PA
Petition presented
TURN
Charges possible, extradition too
people voicing opposition to logging in Port Ludlow at Monday’s meeting of the Jefferson County Board of Commissioners.
Dina Tyler, a spokeswoman with Arkansas Department of Community Correction, said Alcorn has a relative who lives in Port Angeles. Alcorn was booked into the Clallam County jail April 19 and appeared Wednesday and Thursday in Superior Court, Smith said. Jail Superintendent Ron Sukert said Alcorn is known to Clallam County law enforcement. TURN
TO
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Well-heeled PT event focuses on violence Men to walk in women’s shoes BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — In its seventh year, the Walk a Mile in Her Shoes event continues to raise awareness about sexual violence. “People realize that even in a community like this — a supportive, friendly wonderful place to live — we still have sexual assault,” said Dee Dee Spann, the director of programs and services at Dove House. “We want to educate people as much as we can.” Participants meet beginning at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday at Rotary Park next to the ferry terminal,
Your Peninsula
where they can borrow high heels for the march that begins at 6 p.m and continues down Water Street to the Cotton Building. Once the march ends, Dove House Executive Director Beulah Kingsolver and other elected officials will address the participants. Refreshments will also be served.
Boxes of high heels Dove House is bringing four full boxes of high heels for distribution, although there are no guarantees they will be available to those who show up without registering.
The local event is part of a national campaign in which men wear women’s shoes to encourage empathy for domestic violence victims and is sponsored by Dove House, an advocacy group and shelter located at 1045 10th St. The route is actually a halfmile, but it serves its purpose as a symbolic effort to raise awareness about the crimes and victims. “Rape is painful and sexual assault hurts you emotionally and physically,” Spann said. “High heels are painful to wear, so a guy wearing high heels has to be in pain, so that’s why we use that symbol.” CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Spann said the idea that most sexual assaults are perpetrated Michael Shively, holding the sign, drew more than half of by strangers is incorrect. the 200 participants of the Walk a Mile in Her Shoes TURN TO WALK/A4 event from his fellow high school students in 2014.
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Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Kelly Ripa returning to ‘Live’ today THE FEW MINUTES of their talk show where Kelly Ripa and Michael Strahan engage in the “host chat” segment about the day’s hot stories should be particularly interesting today — Ripa’s first day back after learning Strahan is leaving. Ripa has been off “Live with Kelly and Michael” for four days since the news broke last TuesRipa day that Strahan will leave to join “Good Morning America” fulltime. Friday and Monday’s absence were for a pre-
an offbeat cast for the reboot of the offbeat series “Twin Peaks.” The channel MacLachlan released a complete cast list Monday that includes Naomi Watts, Richard Chamberlain, Jim Belushi, Michael Cera and Amanda Seyfried. They join “Twin Peaks” veterans Kyle MacLachlan, Sherilyn Fenn, David Duchovny and Harry Dean Stanton. The new “Twin Peaks” returns to the scene of the crime, a quaint Northwestern town, 25 years after the murder of homecoming queen Laura Palmer. Showtime said principal photography on “Twin Peaks,” from executive pro‘Peaks’ reboot ducers David Lynch and Showtime is announcing Mark Frost, has wrapped. planned vacation. She hasn’t addressed her absence, which came after she was told shortly after Tuesday’s show about Strahan’s switch. But she’s also made no effort to refute stories that she was angry and felt blindsided about the move, which will force her this fall to likely spend months conducting on-air tryouts with potential successors. Ripa alerted staff members of her return in an email sent late Friday. At least until it was overshadowed by Prince’s death, Ripa’s absence was a hot news topic, with debates raging about whether Walt Disney Corp. officials were being sexist by engineering the change without Ripa’s participation, or whether Ripa’s had responded to it appropriately.
SUNDAY’S QUESTION: Should vaccinations for measles and other diseases be required?
Passings By The Associated Press
BILLY PAUL, 80, a jazz and soul singer best known for the No. 1 hit ballad and “Philadelphia Soul” classic “Me and Mrs. Jones,” died Sunday. Mr. Paul, whose career spanned for more than 60 years, died at his home in Blackwood, N.J., his co-manager, Beverly Gay, told The Associated Press. Mr. Paul had been diagnosed recently with pancreatic cancer, Gay said. Known by his beard and large glasses, Mr. Paul was one of many singers who found success with the writing and producing team of Kenneth Gamble and Leon Huff, whose Philadelphia International Records also released music by the O’Jays, Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes, and Lou Rawls. “Me and Mrs. Jones” was an extramarital confession and a characteristic Gamble and Huff production, setting Mr. Paul’s thick tenor against a lush and sensuous arrangement. Many fans best remember the moment when Mr. Paul’s otherwise subtle vocals jump as they reach the title words, stretching out “Me” and “And” into multiple syllables and repeating “Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Jones.” (Mr. Paul himself was married to the same woman for decades). Mr. Paul’s voice made him “one of the great artists to come out of Philly and to
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be celebrated worldwide,” Gamble and Huff said in a statement late Sunday. “Our proudest moment Mr. Paul in 2008 with Billy was the recording of the salacious smash ‘Me and Mrs. Jones.’ In our view, it is one of the greatest love songs ever recorded,” they said. The song was one of the top singles of 1972 and brought Mr. Paul a Grammy the following year for best male rhythm and blues performance, with runners-up including Ray Charles and Curtis Mayfield. Mr. Paul remained identified with the song for the rest of his life. Mr. Paul continued to perform live until he fell ill and his manager said he had been lining up numerous appearances at the time of his death. Among his favorites in concert was a cover of Prince’s “Purple Rain.” (Prince died last Thursday). He was born Paul Williams but later agreed to his manager’s suggestion that he change his name to Billy Paul to avoid confusion with
Laugh Lines [THURSDAY WAS] NATIONAL High Five Day. Derek Smith claimed he came up with the high five while he was playing for the University of Louisville in 1979. That seems wrong because I’m pretty sure Jesus gave high fives after the loaves and fishes thing. Jimmy Kimmel
songwriter Paul Williams and other musicians with the same name. A Philadelphia native, he sang much of his life, performing with such jazz stars as Charlie Parker and Dinah Washington and was featured on a handful of singles while still in his teens. Mr. Paul was drafted into the military in his early 20s, and found himself on the same base in Germany with a couple of famous show business names, Elvis Presley and Gary Crosby, Bing Crosby’s son. “We said we’re going to start a band, so we didn’t have to do any hard work in the service,” he told bluesandsoul.com in 2015. “We tried to get Elvis to join but he wanted to be a jeep driver. So me and Gary Crosby, we started it and called ourselves the Jazz Blues Symphony Band.” By the mid-1960s, the Beatles had inspired him to incorporate more R&B into his singing and he had found a new home for his recordings after meeting Gamble at a Philadelphia music shop.
Yes
79.3%
No Undecided
17.7% 3.1% Total votes cast: 617
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Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Leah Leach at 360-4173530 or email her at lleach@peninsuladailynews.com.
Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News
1941 (75 years ago)
Lloyd Beebe, Clallam County predatory hunter, has killed 23 cougars this season in the Nooksack River area of Skagit County and was photographed recently with his latest kill, a 230-pound cougar over his shoulder. The picture appeared in a Seattle newspaper this morning. Beebe’s home is in the Seen Around western part of Clallam Peninsula snapshots County, but he went to the Skagit County district late IN PORT ANGELES, a crow scout sitting on elec- last fall and has had great tric line alerts other crows luck running down the cats when man throws out with his pack of hounds. bread pieces on the alley. The state bount is $50 Mob of crows then descend each for cougars. en masse for a free lunch ... 1966 (50 years ago) WANTED! “Seen Around” items recalling things seen on the North Olympic Peninsula. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax 360417-3521; or email news@ peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure you mention where you saw your “Seen Around.”
Sequim Town Council reconvened its recessed meeting Monday morning and approved changes in the sewer ordinances. The council voted approval of moving the site of the sewage treatment plant approximately 1,500
feet west of the original site; and of running the outfall line along the original right of way instead of building a causeway. Council also voted to notify contractors to start construction under the modified contract.
1991 (25 years ago) Port Angeles: With school out because of the teachers’ strike, working parents are dealing with child supervision in many ways, even to the point of losing their jobs. “I can’t afford to pay to go to work,” said Suzanne Wilson, who explained that child care costs for her four children exceeded her parttime pay at Clallam County Superior Court by $12 a day. “When I told them I would not be able to come to work until the strike was over, they said I needed to come in to work tomorrow or they would find somebody that could,” lamented Wilson.
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS TUESDAY, April 26, the 117th day of 2016. There are 249 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On April 26, 1986, a major accident occurred at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine (then part of the Soviet Union) as an explosion and fire caused radioactive fallout to begin spewing into the atmosphere over much of Europe, forcing hundreds of thousands from their homes in the most heavily hit areas. On this date: ■ In 1777, 16-year-old Sybil Ludington, sometimes referred to as “the female Paul Revere,” rode her horse into the night through Putnam and Dutchess counties in
New York to alert militiamen that British troops were sacking Danbury, Conn. ■ In 1865, John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Abraham Lincoln, was surrounded by federal troops near Port Royal, Va., and killed. ■ In 1913, Mary Phagan, a 13-year-old worker at a Georgia pencil factory, was strangled; Leo Frank, the factory superintendent, was convicted of her murder and sentenced to death. Frank’s death sentence was commuted, but he was lynched by an anti-Semitic mob in 1915. ■ In 1952, the destroyer-minesweeper USS Hobson sank in the central Atlantic after colliding
with the aircraft carrier USS Wasp with the loss of 176 crew members. ■ In 1994, voting began in South Africa’s first all-race elections, resulting in victory for the African National Congress and the inauguration of Nelson Mandela as president. ■ In 2000, Vermont Gov. Howard Dean signed the nation’s first bill allowing same-sex couples to form civil unions. ■ Ten years ago: Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld paid a surprise visit to Iraq, where they embraced the country’s fledgling leaders as independent and focused on the future. ■ Five years ago: An 84-year-
old naturalized American from Burundi accused of participating in the 1994 Rwandan genocide went on trial in Wichita, Kan. While Lazare Kobagaya was convicted of making false statements on immigration forms, the jury deadlocked on whether he’d played a role in the genocide. Federal prosecutors later moved to dismiss all the charges because they’d failed to disclose information about a witness who could have benefited the defense. ■ One year ago: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe arrived in Boston for a stop at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and a dinner hosted by Secretary of State John Kerry as he began a weeklong U.S. visit.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, April 26, 2016 P A G E
A3 Briefly: Nation Settlement of $6 million made in shooting case CLEVELAND — The city on Monday reached a $6 million settlement in a lawsuit over the death of Tamir Rice, a 12-yearold black boy shot by a white police officer while playing with a pellet gun outside a recreation center. An order filed in U.S. District Court in Cleveland said the city will pay out $3 million this year and $3 million the next. There was no admission of wrongdoing in the settlement. Family attorney Subodh Chandra called the settlement historic but added: “The resolution is nothing to celebrate because a 12-year-old child needlessly lost his life.” The wrongful death suit filed by his family and estate against the city and officers and dispatchers who were involved alleged police acted recklessly when they confronted the boy Nov. 22, 2014. Video of the encounter shows a cruiser skidding to a stop and rookie patrolman Timothy Loehmann firing within two seconds of opening the car door. Tamir, who lived across the street from the rec center and played there almost every day, wasn’t given first aid until about four minutes later, when an FBI agent trained as a paramedic arrived. The boy died the next day. A grand jury declined to bring charges against the officers, and a federal civil rights investigation is pending.
Obama to send troops AERZEN, Germany — President Barack Obama on Monday announced the deployment to
Syria of an additional 250 U.S. special operations forces to assist local troops who are trying to dislodge Islamic State extremists Obama from their war-torn country, significantly broadening the American presence there. Obama, touting recent gains against the group, said the added troops would help “to keep up this momentum” against ISIS. The move will bring the number of personnel to roughly 300, up from about 50 special operations forces currently there. Obama revealed his decision a week after Defense Secretary Ash Carter announced that more than 200 U.S. troops soon will be headed to Iraq, where local forces are also battling Islamic State militants who control areas of that country. He said the newest insertion of U.S. forces will not be in combat roles.
Marijuana implicated COLUMBUS, Ohio — Marijuana growing operations were discovered at some of the crime scenes where officials said eight family members were killed in a “pre-planned execution,” raising more questions as authorities scrambled to find a suspect or suspects in the slayings in a rural southern Ohio community. The killings at four homes near the small community of Piketon on Friday was “a sophisticated operation,” Attorney General Mike DeWine said at a news conference Sunday. Seven adults and one teenage boy were found shot in the head. The Associated Press
Armed Services chief proposes budget hike BY RICHARD LARDNER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — The chairman of the House Armed Services Committee is proposing an increase in the defense budget by billions of dollars to halt a severe combat readiness problem that he and other Republicans accuse President Barack Obama of ignoring.
More than requested Rep. Mac Thornberry’s annual defense policy bill, released Monday afternoon, would shift $18 billion from the account that finances ongoing war operations to pay for additional ships, jet fighters, helicopters and more that the Pentagon didn’t ask for in its $583 billion request. To make up for the shortfall in war spending, the Texas congressman is counting on Obama’s successor to submit a supplemental budget to Congress in early 2017. Budget experts said Thornberry’s bid is a gamble, especially in the House, where fiscal conserva-
tives in his own party might refuse to go along. Todd Harrison, director of defense budget analysis at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said Democrats might insist on an equal increase in non-military spending if they control the White House and Senate after the November elections. “House Republicans would have a hard time stopping that because it would mean blocking funding for troops in the battlefield,” he said.
Ploy for hawks Kate Blakeley, a research fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, said Thornberry’s approach is a “highrisk, high-reward ploy” for defense hawks on Capitol Hill. Thornberry’s bill authorizes defense spending for the budget year that begins Oct. 1. The full Armed Services Committee is scheduled to consider the legislation Wednesday. The bill would prohibit the
Army from falling below 480,000 active-duty soldiers, add 7,000 service members to the Air Force and Marine Corps, and approve a 2.1 percent pay raise for the troops, according to the legislation and congressional aides familiar with the proposal.
Collision course Thornberry’s legislation also would put Republicans on a collision course with Obama by maintaining a ban on moving prisoners held at the Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, detention facility to the United States. The longstanding congressional prohibition has kept Obama from fulfilling a campaign pledge to shutter the facility. Thornberry’s bill recommends $930 million to train and equip rebel groups in Syria, the Kurdish Peshmerga, and Sunni tribal and government forces in Iraq that are fighting the Islamic State group. But the bill demands greater transparency and oversight of the program.
Briefly: World Ashraf Ghani made the remarks during an address to parliament a week after a Taliban CAIRO — Police fired tear assault on the gas and birdshot Monday to disAfghan capital, perse hundreds of demonstraKabul, killed Ghani tors calling on President AbdelFattah el-Sissi to step down over 64 people and his government’s decision to sur- wounded another 340. Afghan officials have long render control over two strategic accused Pakistan of turning a Red Sea islands to Saudi Arabia. blind eye to the Taliban, the leadThe violence in Mesaha ership of which is widely believed square in Cairo’s Dokki district took place as thousands of police to be based in Pakistan. and soldiers were deployed MonCardinal admits errors day across the Egyptian capital ahead of the planned demonPARIS — A French cardinal strations over the islands, a said his diocese has made “some thorny issue which has already mistakes” in the management sparked the largest protests and nomination of certain priests since el-Sissi assumed power amid allegations that he had covnearly two years ago. ered up child sex abuse cases. Following the arrest of dozCardinal Philippe Barbarin ens of activists and journalists stressed the “importance” for the in recent days, riot police backed victims “to see their right to by armored vehicles Monday truth and justice recognized” in a took up positions in Cairo’s Tah- statement issued Monday followrir Square, the epicenter of ing a meeting with 220 priests. Egypt’s 2011 uprising. Barbarin, the archbishop of Lyon and one of the highestPakistan asked to fight ranking church officials in France, is among six church offiKABUL, Afghanistan — Afghanistan’s president Monday cials targeted by complaints for not reporting child sex abuse called on Pakistan to battle the Taliban rather than try to bring cases to judicial authorities. The Associated Press them into peace talks.
Demonstrators, police clash over Red Sea islands
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CRITICIZED
FOR PRAYERS
Jewish women wear prayer shawls as they pray during the Jewish holiday of Passover in front of the Western Wall, the holiest site where Jews can pray, in Jerusalem’s Old City on Sunday. A liberal women’s group held a special Passover prayer service at a Jerusalem holy site, drawing criticism from the site’s ultra-Orthodox rabbi, who called wearing the shawls a “provocation.”
Friend of Charleston shooting suspect to plead guilty Friday BY MEG KINNARD THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
COLUMBIA, S.C. — A friend of the white man accused of fatally shooting nine black parishioners in Charleston last year is set to plead guilty to two federal charges, according to an agreement signed by federal prosecutors and filed online Monday. The plea would mark the first conviction in a mass killing that stunned the country, reignited discussions about race relations and led to the removal of a Con-
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federate battle flag from the South Carolina Statehouse. Dylann Roof, who is charged with the slayings, had previously posed for photos with a rebel flag. Joey Meek, 21, has agreed to plead guilty to lying to authorities and failure to report a crime, according to the agreement, and a hearing is set for 1 p.m. Friday in Charleston. He could face up to eight years in prison on those charges, although prosecutors note in the agreement they will argue he deserves less time if he’s
helpful in their ongoing case. Authorities have said that Meek failed to tell investigators all he knew about Roof’s plans to shoot the parishioners at Emanuel AME Church last June. Roof, 22, is charged with nine counts of murder in state court and with hate crimes and other charges. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty in his state trial, which has been delayed until next year, and federal authorities haven’t said if they will also seek a death sentence for Roof.
. . . more news to start your day
Nation: Colo. court lets stand ruling against baker
Nation: N.C. rallies seek repeal of state’s LGBT law
World: Gunmen attack police, hotels in Acapulco
World: Assailants stab USAID employee, friend
THE COLORADO SUPREME Court refused Monday to take up the case of a suburban Denver baker who would not make a wedding cake for a same-sex couple, letting stand a lower court’s ruling that the Masterpiece Cakeshop owner cannot cite his Christian beliefs in refusing service. The American Civil Liberties Union applauded the development. “The highest court in Colorado today affirmed that no one should be turned away from a public-facing business because of who they are or who they love,” said Ria Tabacco Mar, staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union’s LGBT Project.
A DAY OF rallies at North Carolina’s statehouse began Monday with the delivery of petitions signed by 180,000 people seeking the repeal of a law that curtails protections for LGBT people. About 200 people gathered on the grounds of the old Capitol building to hear speakers denounce the law known as House Bill 2, or HB2. They then carried two-dozen cardboard boxes of signatures into the Capitol for delivery to Gov. Pat McCrory. “HB2 . . . is an act of violence,” Joaquin Carcano, a transgender man who’s suing over the law, told the crowd.
ARMED MEN LAUNCHED nearsimultaneous assaults on police in the resort of Acapulco, leaving one attacker dead and an officer wounded and terrifying residents in what has become one of the world’s deadliest cities. The attacks Sunday night targeted local federal police headquarters in a beachside tourist quarter and a hotel across town where many of its agents are lodged. The city’s coastal boulevard was temporarily closed due to the firefight, and restaurants, bars and stores sealed their doors with customers inside to avoid getting caught up in the violence.
ASSAILANTS FATALLY STABBED two men in Bangladesh’s capital Monday night, including a gay rights activist who also worked for the U.S. Agency for International Development, police said, in the latest in a series of attacks targeting atheists, moderates and foreigners. Police said they suspected radical Islamists in the attack, which occurred two days after a university professor was hacked to death. There was no immediate claim of responsibility. The victims were identified as USAID employee Xulhaz Mannan, who previously worked as a U.S. Embassy protocol officer, and his friend, Tanay Majumder.
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PeninsulaNorthwest
TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2016 — (J)
Homicide: Body found in March
Ballots due as special elections end today in Jefferson County
CONTINUED FROM A1 found his body. Police would not release “I know who she is when information Monday on I see her because of her how David might have relationship to the jail,” he known Alcorn, where David went while he was in Port said Monday. David, a Port Alberni, Angeles before he died and B.C., native whose daughter, if they had found a weapon Maria David, lives in Neah connected to David’s death. Bay, traveled by bus March 25 from Neah Bay to Port First Nations Angeles. David was a member of His nephew, Makah tribal member Wade Greene the Tla-o-qui-aht First of Neah Bay, said in an ear- Nations based in Tofino, lier interview that his uncle B.C. He carved poles, rattles, had planned to leave for paddles, headdresses and Victoria on March 26 to visit family and attend a large face masks. Sgt. Jason Viada said March 30 funeral. David’s body was found Monday that the Police released March 28 in an apartment Department in the 1100 block of East Alcorn’s name as a suspect in David’s homicide to let Columbia Street. He died of blunt-force the public know that “we trauma to the head, accord- don’t have a murderer on the loose” and to request ing to an autopsy. David’s death was ini- assistance from the public in tially reported to 9-1-1 as a the ongoing investigation. Alcorn was on parole for suicide by the person who
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Two Jefferson County special elections end today, with ballots due to decide items on a Chimacum School District bond and a Quilcene Fire District property tax levy. Ballots must be hand-delivered to drop boxes by 8 p.m. today or postmarked by today to be counted. The $29.1 million bond for Chimacum proposes a property tax levy rate of $1.21 per $1,000 assessed property value. It would be expected to be required for 20 years to finance the bond. Approval of the bond measure would mean that the annual property tax for a $150,000 property would increase by $189, district officials have said. The measure seeks to construct an addition to Chimacum Creek Primary School, making it into a full-fledged elementary school housing preschool through fifth grade, along with some needed capital improvements. The district’s plans can be found at http:// tinyurl.com/PDN-chimacumbond. As a bond issue, the measure requires a supermajority of 60 percent. Attempts to pass a bond measure with 60 percent approval have failed twice.
The proposed Quilcene Fire District six-year property tax levy would begin in 2017 and collect 50 cents per $1,000 assessed property value for an annual revenue of about $165,000, or $100 assessed for a property valued at $200,000. The proposed levy would bring in enough for the district to keep its career personnel, Quilcene Fire Department Chief Larry Karp has said.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
day afternoon, a hospital spokeswoman said. PORT ANGELES — A 49-yearPolice said the abdominal old Port Angeles man was being wound was eviscerated. held in Clallam County jail withGross and witnesses said a man out bond Monday for investigation stabbed the victim at about of first-degree assault after his 40-year-old roommate was stabbed 6:30 a.m. Sunday before fleeing the scene, according to police. early Sunday morning. Port Angeles police, Elwha Police say John Greystoke was tribal police, the Clallam County arrested Sunday for investigation of first-degree assault-domestic vio- Sheriff’s Department and city fire department personnel responded. lence on his roommate, Adam Gross was then transported to Gross, outside their apartment Olympic Medical Center. complex in the 800 block of C Shortly afterward, emergency Street. Gross was in stable condition at services dispatchers received a call Olympic Medical Center on Monthat a male matching Greystoke’s
Ballots As of Monday, the Jefferson County Auditor had received 4,831 votes from 8,981 ballots mailed to Chimacum voters, reflecting a voter turnout of 53.79 percent. In Quilcene, 711 votes had been returned from the 1,431 ballots mailed for a voter turnout of 49.69 percent.
Walk: Assaults
from intimate relationships
George David Native American master carver tives at 360-417-4919 or 360-417-4953.
________ Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 55650, or at pgottlieb@ peninsuladailynews.com.
description had arrived in the area of the 100 block of West Second Street — about a dozen blocks from the incident — and said he stabbed someone. Greystoke was taken into custody at about 7 a.m. A knife believed to be the weapon used in the attack was located near Gross’ and Greystoke’s apartment. Greystoke was on a 72-hour hold Monday morning while the county Prosecuting Attorney’s Office was making a charging decision, Port Angeles Police Sgt. Jason Viada said.
Composites center CEO: Summer opening is expected in Port Angeles BY ARWYN RICE
“It happens in intimate relationships from friends or family members or someone you trust, which is devastating,” she said. “Assault is not just against your will. “It includes coercion, and silence doesn’t always mean consent.” Aside from raising awareness, Dove House raises $2,000 to $3,000 at the event, which has drawn from 90 to 120 participants. To register for the event, visit Dove House or call 360-385-5291, which is also the Dove House 24-hour crisis line.
a theft-of-property conviction when she stopped reporting and left Arkansas without permission, Miranda Mercer, of Arkansas Community Correction, said Monday. Tyler said Alcorn served three years on the theft charge in Miller County, Ark. The Arkansas Board of Parole issued a felony warrant for Alcorn’s arrest March 31. Port Angeles police wanted to question her about David’s death when they learned she was in the Mount Vernon area, according to the case report. She was arrested while sitting at a bus stop on Riverside Drive in Mount Vernon. Anyone with information about David’s death should contact Detective Sgt. Tyler Peninger at 360417-4957 and other detec-
PA man held without bond after roommate is stabbed
Quilcene
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
side from raising awareness, Dove House raises $2,000 to $3,000 at the event, which has drawn from 90 to 120 participants.
A
For more information about the national Walk a Mile in Her Shoes initiative, go to walkamileinher shoes.org.
________ Jefferson County Editor Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360385-2335 or cbermant@peninsula dailynews.com.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — The Composite Recycling Technology Center at the Port of Port Angeles is set for a soft opening in July and a grand opening and ribbon cutting in early August. The nonprofit center is garnering international attention, and the ribbon cutting is expected to attract 40 or 50 high-profile guests, Bob Larsen, CEO of the composites center, told the Port of Port Angeles commissioners during a work session Monday morning. Toray Composites America Inc., a major composites company in Tacoma, has
agreed to supply composite materials for the center to begin research and development for the recycling of these materials, and also agreed to work with the center on technical and marketing developments, Larsen said. “Great things will come from this,” he said. The port began the process of creating the center in 2014, and has received about $10 million in grants to move forward with planning, construction and equipment purchases. The building is expected to be ready to move equipment in July 5, with seven employees, Larsen said. A ribbon-cutting ceremony and grand opening is
tentatively scheduled for Aug. 5, and the beginning of production, with 12 employees, is expected by Oct. 1, he said. Larsen said the composites recycling center is on target to produce positive earnings by April 2017, and is projecting a need for more space by the end of 2018. “That’s pretty remarkable,” he said. Interest in the nonprofit high-tech recycling research program has come from state and federal levels, and from national and international private businesses. Larsen said the composites group was invited to present at a G7 Alliance on Resource Efficiency workshop in early March in
Washington, D.C. While in D.C., they received encouragement from federal agency leadership to apply for more grant funding for the project, he said. The project is being viewed as a good investment in D.C., he said, and added that there have been discussions centered around the construction pad already prepared next to the composites recycling building and the large amount of space nearby available for further composites development. In early April, port employees traveled with a statewide contingent to the JEC world composites trade show in Paris.
Logging: Next mediation meeting set May 20 CONTINUED FROM A1 before the county stopped the process in 2015 due to Port Ludlow Associates, citizen complaints. owner and operator of the Inn at Port Ludlow, sought Finance to clearcut 144 acres within Port Ludlow Associates the boundaries of the resort began the logging operation but harvested about one to finance other projects, quarter of that amount according to company presi-
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dent Diana Smeland. On Monday, several project opponents said that logging violates the covenants under which the resort was established. Bill Dean, a spokesman for the group, said the original 1989 agreement between former owners Pope Resources and the county stated that “all maintenance of landscaping shall be done to enhance the existing character of South Bay. “County planning docu-
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ments in 1993 talk about the permanent open space and in 1995 anticipated a wide greenbelt surrounding Port Ludlow to act as a buffer against logging activity on adjacent lands,” he said. Dean said in 2000 the county ruled that the open space reserve shall be maintained in perpetuity and serve to enhance the aesthetic quality of the master planned resort. “Clear cutting is a lot of things but enhancing aesthetic qualities is not one of them,” he said. “This clear cut will come right down the side of our village,” said Gil Skinner, the president of the South Bay Community Association. “We have been told to let the process work, but it’s not working so it’s time for the community to come out and show that we care.” Skinner asked the commissioners to “start doing your jobs” and asked those present to wave their signs to show their commitment. At that point, District 3 Commissioner Kathleen Kler, the board chair, thanked the group for their enthusiasm but cautioned against further outbursts,
saying “we do know how to with respect.” Morley said the mediaread.” tor is currently studying the situation “to make sure Mediation there is progress and someIn September, the county thing to mediate about.” commissioners voted to enter a mediation agree- Logging suspended ment between the county The logging process has and Port Ludlow Associates, with the next such meeting been suspended until the mediation is complete. scheduled for May 20. If the mediation is About midway into the 30-minute comment period, unsuccessful, it could lead Smeland took the podium to a court action, something and said she had met twice which Kler would like to with project opponent Dean avoid. “The cost of litigation and senior planner David Wayne Johnson to negotiate falls upon all the citizens of the county,” she said. next steps. “I think we have a fidu“We continue to be diligent in our efforts,” she ciary responsibility, and we said. “We are educating our- are being cautious about selves and looking for ways this cost.” Kler said if time elapses to work through this prowith no resolution, it could cess.” After the meeting Sme- be harder to find a solution. “We want this to be land declined further comment, saying “it’s still under solved so we can all move mediation and there isn’t a on,” she said. “But we can’t put the lot I can say.” County Administrator trees back up, and part of Philip Morley commended mediation is to decide how you take care of something Smeland for speaking out. “Being here exhibits a that is damaged.” certain amount of courage ________ on her part,” Morley said. Jefferson County Editor Charlie “And I appreciate Bermant can be reached at 360that all parties have been 385-2335 or cbermant@peninsula able to listen to each other dailynews.com.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2016
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Clallam mulls hearing examiner pick BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — The search for a Clallam County hearing examiner might be shelved until next year. County commissioners said Monday they would consider contract extensions with current hearing examiners Lauren Erickson and William Payne as an alternative to hiring one quasi-judicial officer this spring. “We have a process that’s in place,� Board Chairman Mike Chapman said in the commissioners’ work session. “I wonder if we don’t just extend the contract[s] this year. “It’s only seven more
months,� he added. A an-hoc committee has screened applications from five candidates who are vying to be Clallam County’s primary hearing examiner. Hearing examiners adjudicate land-use matters, including appeals of Department of Community Development decisions and a variety of land-use permits.
Candidates The five candidates are Erickson, Payne, Michael McCarthy of Tacoma-based McCarthy & Causseaux, and Andrew Reeves and Ted Hunter of Seattle-based Sound Law Center. Commissioners Bill Peach and Chapman identi-
fied Erickson and Payne as their top choices. “Personally, I like the ones that demonstrated that they have a connection and understanding of Clallam County,� Peach said. “I do think Clallam County’s land-use issues are quite diverse in what you’re dealing with on the West End and what you’re dealing with on the East End. Hire someone that knows there’s a difference. My bias would be for folks that understand Clallam County.� Erickson, a Port Angeles attorney and Payne, a Sequim attorney, have been rotating hearings for a flat fee of $2,250 per case. Clallam County’s exist-
ing contracts with Erickson and Payne will expire at the end of May. Erickson and Payne are willing to continue the current rotation, County Administrator Jim Jones told commissioners. “Both of them when they talked to me said they were comfortable with the workload and they were comfortable doing it,� Jones said. “Both also said they would be willing to be the primary, anticipating that the flood [of hearings] that we had in the last couple years is slowing down to a trickle.� Commissioners issued a request for proposals from hearing examiner candidates in January after Com-
munity Development Director Mary Ellen Winborn suggested one hearing examiner rather than a split rotation.
Committee Members of the ad hoc committee independently reviewed the applications and provided comments to the board. “We chose not to do any mathematical tabulation on that simply because there was a lot of subjectivity to it,� Human Resources Director Rich Sill said after the work session. Peach said the feedback from the screening committee was “quite helpful.� Commissioners are
expected to discuss the hearing examiner’s position in a work session next Monday. “Why don’t we think about it?� Chapman said. “We could all look one more time.� Clallam County hearing examiners conducted nine hearings in 2011, 11 in 2012, 20 in 2013, a record 22 in 2014 and 18 last year. Officials attributed the spike in hearings in 2013 to conditional-use permits for siting recreational marijuana businesses in the wake of state Initiative 502. “My perception is since the marijuana ordinance was put in place, there was a dramatic decline [in hearings],� Peach said.
Free workshop to explore end-of-life conversations tion, presented by Fiorini. “We want to empower people to have these conversations,� Fiorini SEQUIM — Awkward, uncomsaid. fortable and possibly a bit frightenFiorini has worked with hospice ing — but the conversation is worth organizations for almost seven years. having. He said studies show patients live Paul Fiorini, chaplain/bereavelonger with hospice and that spouses ment coordinator at Assured Hospice of those receiving hospice care report of Clallam and Jefferson Counties, lowered levels of depression. knows there is a disconnect between In addition, he said, the process of what people want to say when they going through the end of someone’s or loved ones are dying and what life can be relationship-building, honactually happens, which is usually oring and, oddly enough, empowersilence. ing. “It’s a basic fear about death and “When people are dying, they are dying,� Fiorini said. losing control of everything,� Fiorini “Both ends of the spectrum don’t said. “We like to give them a little of want the other person to feel uncom- that power back.� fortable. Said Brenda Francis, nurse liai“Plus there may be [a lot of] emo- son/patient care representative for tional content when they have that the company: “We’re really big on conversation.� empowering people in their choices Fiorini and company hope to in health care. break down some of those barriers at “They need to hear it’s OK to talk “Choosing Quality: Caring Conversa- about dying.� tions,� a free workshop that will be hosted by Assured Hospice groups Services and physicians from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Assured Hospice of Clallam and Wednesday in Port Angeles. Jefferson Counties is part of LHC The workshop will be in the LinGroup, a nationwide network of postkletter Room at Olympic Medical acute care partners for hospitals, Center, 939 Caroline St. The event aims to bring together physicians and families. community members and experts in The business offers nursing serend-of-life situations. vices to manage pain and other Topics include: symptoms, certified nursing assis■How to have end-of-life conver- tants or bath aides for hygiene care, sations with your doctor and family, a social worker to help with applying presented by Dr. Paul Cunningham, for Medicare/Medicaid, veterans benmedical director and physician at efits, etc., and a chaplain for spiritual Jamestown Family Health Clinic, and emotional needs. and Dr. Michele Stafford Olympic Assured Hospice also has volunMedical Center. teers who provide massage and ■Advanced directive/living will music therapy. Volunteers do some education, presented by Cunninglight housework and help with jourham and Stafford. naling, videos or picture albums. ■Funeral home conversations “That passing on is important,� with Steve Ford of Drennan & Ford Fiorini said. Funeral Home and Crematory. Assured Hospice charges fees. ■The final end-of-life conversaHospice is covered by Medicare, BY MICHAEL DASHIELL
OLYMPIC PENINSULA NEWS GROUP
Medicaid and most private insurance, the company says. Fiorini said he’s excited to see the promotion of Honoring Choices, a program that encourages doctors to be more apt to have end-of-life conversations. The No. 1 factor in using hospice is the doctor’s recommendation, Fiorini said. As chaplain/bereavement coordinator at Assured Hospice, Fiorini often sees families at their seemingly lowest points. “We deal with a lot of crisis situations,� he said. “[But] I think I’m kind of wired to be in these situations. “We’re trying to love them within the context of our work, our calling.� “Our focus is not about death but about the last stage of life, be it a week, a month a year,� he said. RSVPs for Wednesday’s workshop are welcomed but not required. For more information, call 360582-3796. Clallam County residents also have the option of Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County, which provides free services. Right now, Volunteer Hospice is offering basic training in hospice volunteering through May 6, with free classes open to the public from 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Fridays through May 6 at the Clallam County Public Utility facility at 100 Hooker Road, Sequim. At various times during the year, it hosts workshops of dealing with grief and drop-in support groups in Port Angeles and Sequim. For information, call 360-452-1511.
PENINSULA COLLEGE
Posing with the new reserved parking spot are, from left, Jerrod Brown, Peninsula College veteran navigator; Isaac Chavez, the first student to use the spot; and Luke Robins, president of Peninsula College.
PC adds Purple Heart parking spot to campus BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
________ Michael Dashiell is an editor with the Olympic Peninsula News Group, which is composed of Sound Publishing newspapers Peninsula Daily News, Sequim Gazette and Forks Forum. Reach him at mdashiell@ sequimgazette.com.
Psychiatric hospital fugitive will go to a federal facility for an evaluation BY NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SPOKANE — A man who escaped from a psychiatric hospital in Lakewood where he was sent after being accused of torturing and killing a woman will be sent to a federal mental facility for a competency evaluation, a judge has ordered. Anthony Garver, 28, must be examined at a federal Bureau of Prisons facility to determine if he can understand the allegations against him, U.S. District Court Judge Edward Shea said Thursday. “There is a question if he really has a competency issue,� said Stephanie Van
Marter, an assistant U.S. attorney. Garver, also known as Anthony Burke, escaped April 6 from Western State Hospital, where he was held after authorities said he tortured a 20-year-old Snohomish County woman who was bound with electrical cords and stabbed to death in 2013. Garver was sent to Western State’s locked civil ward after he was ruled not competent to help with his own defense. Criminal charges were dismissed and he was ordered held as a danger to himself or others. Officials were trying to restore his competency. Garver said nothing in court last Thursday. He
wore a white jail jumpsuit and his unruly hair fell into his eyes. He conferred a few times with his lawyer, Peter Schweda. Garver’s case is in federal court because he never completed court-ordered supervision on federal charges of possessing illegal ammunition. Schweda argued that his client should remain in the state and be evaluated by state officials rather than sent to a federal facility elsewhere. But the judge noted that Garver had escaped from state custody.
Shea said. Garver escaped by crawling out a window of a locked, lower-security unit with an accomplice, who was caught the next day. Garver was captured April 8 in a rural part of Spokane County. Garver bought a bus ticket to Spokane, where his parents live. His father called authorities to report his son had stopped for a visit, triggering the manhunt that led to his capture. Garver previously escaped from custody in 2009, 2010 and 2013 while undergoing mental evaluations in other cases. Garver’s last competency evaluation occurred in JanConcern about security uary and a report showed “There is reason to be no progress had been made concerned about security,� in restoring his competency.
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To use the parking spot, veterans must submit a DD-214 form to Brown, documenting a Purple Heart award for combat injuries. ________ Eligible students will be Reporter Arwyn Rice can be issued a student parking reached at 360-452-2345, ext. pass with a Purple Heart 56250, or at arice@peninsuladaily sticker, which is good for the news.com.
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PORT ANGELES — Veterans who were injured in combat now have a special parking spot at Peninsula College. A sign marking the new parking stall has been installed in the former “student of the month� parking spot, adjacent to the school’s handicapped parking area, on the Port Angeles campus at 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd. Isaac Chavez, who was wounded in Afghanistan while serving with the Army from 2008 through 2013, is using the spot now. He has been the only student to apply for it so far. About 150 veterans are registered as students using their Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits at Peninsula College, and many other veterans are attending school without veterans assistance, said Jerrod Brown, veteran navigator at the college. “It is a way to say this college is more of a veteransupportive school than we have been in the past,� Brown said. The school has been inclusive of veterans but is making changes to really give solid support to veterans, he said. The Peninsula College Associated Student Council voted to eliminate the student of the month parking in favor of providing a combat-wounded veteran parking spot.
academic year. The space will be filled on a first-come, first-served basis for all who are eligible. The Purple Heart is a United States military decoration awarded in the name of the president to those wounded or killed while serving with the military. “To get a Purple Heart, something bad had to happen,� Brown said. Combat-wounded veterans might not necessarily have a disability that qualifies them for a handicapped parking permit, but a parking spot 100 feet closer to classrooms might make getting around a bit easier for a less severely injured veteran, he said. More parking spots for combat-wounded veterans at the college will be considered if there is demand and if the pilot parking spot is successful, Brown said. When Peninsula College began the process of converting the parking spot, there were no other colleges with the program, he said. Brown said several other colleges were able to implement Purple Heart parking before the Peninsula College spot was ready. “This space is important for many reasons, the most basic being to say thank you,� he said. He said the Peninsula College veterans support team is also working with Olympic College in Bremerton to create a similar parking program on that campus. For more information on veterans programs at Peninsula College, contact Brown at jbrown2@pencol. edu.
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TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2016
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Old PA school eyed for shelter idea BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Services for the homeless are expanding in Port Angeles and Sequim, and volunteers associated with Serenity House are researching a plan to convert a shuttered school into a campus for homeless families and youth. About 30 people from the Shelter Providers Network of Clallam County met last week to discuss the progress of local organizations to provide shelter and services to the Clallam County homeless population. One of the concepts for additional housing under consideration is the conversion of Fairview Elementary School, 166 Lake Farm Road, east of Port Angeles.
Jean Pratschner, a volunteer with Serenity House, is spearheading the investigation into whether the 9.4acre property, including the 26,568-square-foot main building, can be converted into a shelter for homeless families and teenagers. Fairview, built in 1973 and upgraded in 1978, was closed in 2007 because of declining enrollment in the Port Angeles School District.
Dropped plan In 2014, the district approved an $814,000 offer from a business owner who planned to convert the property into a marijuana farm and processing facility, but after legal challenges from neighbors who opposed the sale, the offer was dropped.
Sequim all-day kindergarten registration set PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
passport or a certified copy of the birth certificate as SEQUIM — Registrawell as a record of immunition for Sequim all-day kinzation dates and proof of dergarten is scheduled May residency. 2 at the district’s two elementary schools. Acceptable forms Registration is planned in the library at Helen Acceptable forms include Haller Elementary at 350 rent or lease agreements or W. Fir St., from 4 p.m. to a current bill with the phys6:30 p.m. ical address listed. Registration is set in the An immunization form gym at Greywolf Elemen- must be filled out and tary at 171 Carlsborg Road signed by a parent or legal from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. guardian. Children will go through A map showing the elea brief screening process mentary school boundary with kindergarten staff and line, and other enrollment visit a classroom while par- and registration informaents and guardians com- tion, can be found on the plete paperwork. district website at www. Children must be 5 years sequim.k12.wa.us. old on or before Aug. 31 to Those who are not sure attend kindergarten in fall which elementary area they 2016. live in can call the district Seventh Avenue is the office at 360-582-3260. dividing line between Helen For more information Haller and Greywolf atten- about kindergarten regisdance areas. tration at Helen Haller, Those who live west of phone 360-582-3200. the dividing line will attend For more about kinderGreywolf. garten registration at Parents and legal guard- Greywolf, phone 360-582ians must bring their child’s 3300.
Raises opposed for leaders in 2 cities THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
VANCOUVER, Wash. — Citizens in Vancouver, Wash., and Spokane are working to undo pay raises recently approved for elected leaders in their cities. Two former Vancouver
mayors and others are weighing a referendum to repeal pay increases after Vancouver’s salary commission hiked the mayor’s salary from $27,600 to $60,000, a 117 percent bump. City councilors got a 50 percent raise, from $21,600 to $32,496 a year.
Each of the nine classrooms would be converted into a hotel-like family suite, with the school kitchen used as a community kitchen, and the gymnasium as a daycare center, indoor play area and classroom and computer lab area, Pratschner said. The plan also includes a homeless youth shelter on the property, using donated RVs and “tiny house” buildings, with a communal bathroom, shower and laundry facility, she said. Youth who choose to live in the two-person RVs or one-person tiny houses would be required to be enrolled in a school or job training program, such as high school, community college or vocational training, Pratschner said. “Often homeless youth
Feb. 20, 1936 — April 22, 2016
Forks resident Eleanor Davis died of age-related causes at Forks Community Hospital. She was 80. Services: A funeral will be held at the Forks Assembly of God, 81 Huckleberry Lane, at 11 a.m. followed by a burial at the Forks Cemetery, Calawah Way Road, Thursday. Pastor Bob Schwartz is the officiant. Drennan-Ford Funeral
Bonnie Rogers November 11, 1930 — April 16, 2016
Port Angeles resident Bonnie Rogers died of agerelated causes in Sequim. She was 85. Services: To be announced. Olympic Cremation Association, Port Angeles, is in charge of arrangements.
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North Olympic Peninsula Death Notices and Death and Memorial Notice obituaries appear online at www.peninsuladailynews.com
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The youth drop-in center from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesdays in Sequim will begin offering initial services this week, she said. The Serenity House office in Sequim is located at 583 W. Washington St. In Sequim, a recent meeting of church leaders has established a new program that designates each church to offer different services to individuals, and to track who is using what services. St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 525 N. Fifth Ave. in Sequim, is central to organizing a database for faithbased services available in Sequim, organizing churches to each provide one service, and referring those in need to the right church for the right services, Leach said.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Selinda Barkhuis will discuss how to make gardens attractive to bees when she speaks at a Green Thumb Gardening Tips presentation at noon Thursday. Barkhuis will speak about “Encouraging Bees in Your Garden” in Room 160, the county commissioners’ meeting room, at the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 E. Fourth St.
Free lecture The lecture is free, although donations to help cover copying costs for handouts will be accepted. Attendees are invited to bring a lunch. Barkhuis, who is also county treasurer, will talk about local bee species, their behaviors and needs,
and simple ways to attract them to the garden, where they serve many important functions. She will end her talk by discussing her new favorite herb, with the first attendee to guess its identity to receive a seed packet of it.
Intensive, organic Barkhuis uses intensive and organic gardening techniques to grow a variety of fruit, vegetables and herbs and to host a variety of pollinators on an urban lot in central Port Angeles. Her garden was featured in the 2012 Master Gardeners’ Petals & Pathways Garden Tour. The series is presented on the second and fourth Thursdays of the month at AMANDA ROSENBERG/CLALLAM COUNTY MASTER GARDENERS the county courthouse. Selinda Barkhuis will talk about bees at noon For more information, Thursday. call 360-417-2279.
Tribal perspectives on environment, health offered at Peninsula College PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Peninsula College Instruction and the House of Learning Longhouse will sponsor a series of free events to “explore the connections between health and the environment through tribal perspectives.” The schedule of Tuesday activities, all at the Port Angeles campus at 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd., through the month of May is: ■ Tuesday, May 3 —
Elaine Grinnell, an elder of the Jamestown S’Klallam tribe, will speak on native perspectives on Grinnell health from 1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. in the J47 conference room at the Pirate Union Building (PUB). ■ Tuesday, May 17 — Valerie Segrest of the Muckleshoot tribe will tell of
health and tribal food sustainability projects f r o m 1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. in the J47 PUB confer- Segrest ence room. ■ Tuesday, May 31 — Robert Elofson, the Elwha River restoration director for the Lower Elwha Klallam tribe, will lead a tour and share tribal perspectives on the restoration at a
site on the river from 1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. Transportation will be available from Penin- Elofson sula College to the site on the river. To reserve a spot on the May 31 field trip, or for more information, contact Sadie Crowe at 360-4177992 or longhouse@pencol. edu.
Death and Memorial Notice
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short-term program to stay during the day to use other services, such as accessing showers, said Kim Leach, executive director of Serenity House. The proximity of the overnight shelter to the longerterm shelter has allowed more people to become familiar with the program, and some have made the transition into longer-term programs and housing, Leach said. A new youth outreach program in Sequim will begin as a Wednesday-only program, with an eye toward expanding to additional days using community partners in Sequim, she said. Leach said the organization defines “youth” as individuals 24 years old or younger.
Talk on encouraging bees in a garden set Thursday
Death Notices Eleanor Davis
don’t come alone. They are boyfriend-girlfriend pairs or best friends,” she said. She said the two-person RVs would be designated for these pairs. The school is adjacent to a Clallam Transit bus stop for transportation, and there is room for a community garden on the property. Pratschner said she has talked to the school district to establish the Port Angeles School District’s asking price and condition of the property. No funding is available at this time, but Serenity House is looking for grants that would fit the project, she said. Services at Serenity House’s individual adult overnight shelter are now allowing the users of its
TRISTAN SMITH August 26, 1976 April 14, 2016 Tristan Smith, 39, died April 14, 2016, at his home in Port Angeles after a twoyear ordeal with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. His wife, Julia, and two of his firefighter brothers were by his side. He was born August 26, 1976, to Norman Smith and Nancy Nell in Seattle. After living in Germany for a few years as a small child, Tristan attended Seattle and Bellevue schools, graduating from Newport High School in 1994. He received an A.S. from Shoreline Community College in 1996. Tristan’s first job at The Fish Gallery and Pets in Bellevue helped instill a lifelong passion for animals; Tristan kept an aquarium, Kermit the dog, and Reggie the cat. In 1996, he worked his first of eight summer seasons for the National Park Service when he volunteered on the Queets River
Mr. Smith in Olympic National Park. He received his commission in 1998 and worked as a Law Enforcement Ranger at Kalaloch and Mora in Olympic National Park and Wonder Lake in Denali National Park. He spent those winters traveling and ski patrolling in Utah and California. In 2004, he left law enforcement to work at Olympic Ambulance as an EMT. Also that same year, he married his long time girlfriend Julia Hubert and
settled in Port Angeles. After supporting Julia through nursing school and completing paramedic school himself, Tristan was hired by the Seattle Fire Department in 2009. He loved everything about being a firefighter — from working as part of a dedicated team to having a schedule that allowed him to pursue his many other interests. Tristan was a renaissance man. With endless curiosity and keen intelligence, he taught himself to be competent, if not an expert, on many subjects. He was a cook and gardener, artist, woodworker, and mandolin player, and approached all of his pursuits with dedication and pleasure. He loved the natural world and learning about native plants, animals and geology. Some of his most precious time in the outdoors was spent surfing with friends across the Peninsula and fishing with friends across the state. He loved being useful and nearly single-handedly remodeled Julia’s and his
first home. With an open mind and an open heart, Tristan was up for anything. He also knew how to relax and enjoyed nothing more than sipping a cocktail in the backyard after a hard day of work or play. Tristan is survived by his wife Julia; father Norman (Ann Kenny) Smith; mother Nancy (Davenport) Nell; sister Lisa Glasford; and numerous aunts, uncles and cousins. Special thanks to those who cared for him at the end of his life — his dear friend Tom Schmidt and his firefighter family: Chris Yob, Bill Lundquist, Jeff Miller, Travis O’Connor and Duane Dennis. A celebration of life will be held Sunday, May 1, 2016, at 2 p.m. at the Northwest Maritime Center, 431 Water St., Port Townsend. In Tristan’s honor, donations may be made to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society at www.lls.org and/ or Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County, 540 E. Eighth St., Port Angeles, WA 98362.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, April 26, 2016 PAGE
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Debunking ‘crooked Hillary’ myth AFTER THE NEW York primary, the betting websites are giving Hillary Clinton about a 94 percent chance of being the Democratic nominee, and Donald Trump a 66 percent chance of ending up as the Republican nominee. But ClinNicholas ton’s big chalKristoff lenge is the trust issue: The share of voters who have negative feelings toward her has soared from 25 percent in early 2013 to 56 percent today, and a reason for that is that they distrust her. Only a bit more than onethird of American voters regard Clinton as “honest and trustworthy.” Indeed, when Gallup asks Americans to say the first word that comes to mind when they hear “Hillary Clinton,” the most common response can be summed up as “dishonest/liar/ don’t trust her/poor character.” Another common category is “criminal/crooked/thief/belongs in jail.” All this is, I think, a mistaken narrative. One of the perils of journalism is the human brain’s penchant for sorting information into narratives.
Even false narratives can take on a life of their own because there is always information arriving that can confirm a narrative. Thus once we in the news media had declared Gerald Ford a klutz (he was actually a graceful athlete), there were always new television clips of him stumbling. Similarly, we unfairly turned Jimmy Carter into a hapless joke, and I fear that the “Crooked Hillary” narrative will drag on much more than the facts warrant. This is a narrative that goes way back and that The New York Times helped establish: My late friend and New York Times colleague William Safire in 1996 dubbed Clinton “a congenital liar.” But I think this narrative goes way too far. One basic test of a politician’s honesty is whether that person tells the truth when on the campaign trail, and by that standard Clinton does well. PolitiFact, the Pulitzer Prizewinning fact-checking site, calculates that of the Clinton statements it has examined, 50 percent are either true or mostly true. That compares to 49 percent for Bernie Sanders’, 9 percent for Trump’s, 22 percent for Ted Cruz’s and 52 percent for John Kasich’s. Here we have a rare metric of integrity among candidates, and
it suggests that contrary to popular impressions, Clinton is relatively honest — by politician standards. It’s true, of course, that Clinton is calculating — all politicians are, but she more than some. She has adjusted her positions on trade and the minimum wage to scrounge for votes, just as Sanders adjusted his position on guns. Sanders’ positions seem less focus-group tested than Clinton’s, and she can be infuriatingly evasive. Partly that’s because she’s more hawkish than some Democrats, and partly that’s because she realizes she’s likely to face general election voters in November and is preserving wiggle room so she can veer back to the center then. Does that make her scheming and unprincipled? Perhaps, but synonyms might be “pragmatic” and “electable.” That’s what presidential candidates do. Then there’s the question of Clinton raking in hundreds of thousands of dollars from speeches to Goldman Sachs and other companies. For a person planning to run for president, this was nuts. It also created potential conflicts of interest, — but there’s no sign of any quid pro quo (in a broader sense, companies write checks to buy access and influ-
Peninsula Voices For Ted Cruz Our country is facing times like no other, between ISIS, domestic terrorism, a tax system that is out of control and open for manipulation, a health care system that, most experts agree, simply fails in most of its lofty goals. We are openly mocked by our enemies. We are seen as weak. We are seen as somebody that is no longer a world power, but rather a world-class apologist. It is time to turn that
around and elect a person who projects the strength that America has. It is time to elect somebody who truly has America’s best interest at heart. It is time to elect somebody who has, time and time again, stood up to the establishment in Washington, D.C., and fought for our values and our principles. It is time that we have a person of such character, of such intestinal fortitude, that we know he will not back down when he knows he is right yet is willing to work out a compro-
OUR
ence, but if that’s corrupt then so is our entire campaign finance system). Bill Clinton, Colin Powell and other prominent figures were speaking for high fees, so she probably thought she could get away with it as well. Jill Abramson, who spent decades as a journalist either investigating Hillary Clinton or overseeing investigations of her, and who certainly isn’t soft on the Clintons, concluded in The Guardian: “Hillary Clinton is fundamentally honest and trustworthy.” Then there are the State Department emails, which are the subject of an FBI investigation. What was she thinking in using a private email server? Why on earth would she do such a stupid thing? Clinton is thin-skinned, private, controlling, wounded by attacks on her and utterly distrustful of the news media. Where Bill Clinton charms, she stews. My bet is that she and her staff wanted to prevent her emails from becoming public through Freedom of Information Act requests. All this is self-inflicted damage, which Hillary Clinton compounded with evasions and halftruths, coming across as lawyerly and shifty. A more gifted politician might have gotten away with it, but
Clinton is not a natural politician. Her warmth can turn to remoteness on the television screen, her caution to slipperiness. As for the fundamental question of whether Clinton risked American national security with her email server, I suspect the problem has been exaggerated. As President Barack Obama put it, “she has not jeopardized America’s national security.” Clinton’s private email server might have been penetrated by the Russians, though we don’t know that. But we do know that the official State Department nonclassified email system was indeed penetrated by the Russians, along with the White House unclassified email system. The bottom line: If she had followed the rules and used her official email address, Vladimir Putin might actually have had a leg up on reading her correspondence. So as we head toward the general election showdown, by all means denounce Clinton’s judgment and policy positions, but let’s focus on the real issues. She’s not a saint but a politician, and to me this notion that she’s fundamentally dishonest is a bogus narrative.
_________ Nicholas Kristof is a columnist for The New York Times.
READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND EMAIL
mise as long as it puts the interests of Americans first. We need somebody who truly understands what is meant by the “American Dream” because they have lived it. We need Ted Cruz. Ted Cruz has proven that he will stand up for us. Ted has proven that he can sit down and reason yet not yield. He will not back down when being bullied but stand firm, safeguarding America and Americans the world over. Matthew Rainwater, Port Angeles
The ‘settled’ consensus du jour AUTHORITARIANISM, ALWAYS LATENT in progressivism, is becoming explicit. Progressivism’s determiGeorge nation to regulate thought by Will regulating speech is apparent in the campaign by 16 states’ attorneys general and those of the District of Columbia and the Virgin Islands, none Republican, to criminalize skepticism about the supposedly “settled” conclusions of climate science. Four core tenets of progressivism are: ■ First, history has a destination. ■ Second, progressives uniquely discern it. (President Barack Obama frequently declares things to be on or opposed to “the right side of history.”) ■ Third, politics should be democratic but peripheral to governance, which is the responsibility of experts scientifically administering the regulatory state.
■ Fourth, enlightened progressives should enforce limits on speech (witness IRS suppression of conservative advocacy groups) in order to prevent thinking unhelpful to history’s progressive unfolding. Progressivism is already enforced on campuses by restrictions on speech that might produce what progressives consider retrograde intellectual diversity. Now, from the so-called party of science, aka Democrats, comes a campaign to criminalize debate about science. “The debate is settled,” says Obama. “Climate change is a fact.” Indeed. The epithet “climate change deniers,” obviously coined to stigmatize skeptics as akin to Holocaust deniers, is designed to obscure something obvious: Of course the climate is changing; it never is not changing — neither before nor after the Medieval Warm Period (end of the 9th century to the 13th) and the Little Ice Age (1640s to 1690s), neither of which was caused by fossil fuels. Today, debatable questions include: To what extent is human activity contributing to climate change? Are climate change models,
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many of which have generated projections refuted by events, suddenly reliable enough to predict the trajectory of change? Is change necessarily ominous because today’s climate is necessarily optimum? Are the costs, in money expended and freedom curtailed, of combating climate change less than the cost of adapting to it? But these questions might not forever be debatable. The initial target of Democratic “scientific” silencers is ExxonMobil, which they hope to demonstrate misled investors and the public about climate change. There is, however, no limiting principle to restrain unprincipled people from punishing research entities, advocacy groups and individuals. But it is difficult to establish what constitutes culpable “misleading” about climate science, of which a 2001 National Academy of Sciences report says: “Because there is considerable uncertainty in current understanding of how the climate system varies naturally and reacts to emissions of greenhouse gases and aerosols, current estimates of the magnitude of future warming should be regarded as tentative and subject to future adjustments (either upward or downward).”
Did Al Gore “mislead” when he said seven years ago that computer modeling projected the Arctic to be ice-free during the summer in as few as five years? The attorney general of the Virgin Islands accuses ExxonMobil with criminal misrepresentation regarding climate change. This, even though before the U.S. government in 2009 first issued an endangerment finding regarding greenhouse gases, ExxonMobil favored a carbon tax to mitigate climate consequences of those gases. This grandstanding attorney general’s contribution to today’s gangster government is the use of law enforcement tools to pursue political goals — wielding prosecutorial weapons to chill debate, including subpoenaing private donor information from the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a Washington think tank. The party of science, busy protecting science from scrutiny, has forgotten Karl Popper (19021994), the philosopher whose The Open Society and Its Enemies warned against people incapable of distinguishing between certainty and certitude. In his essay “Science as Falsification,” Popper explains why “the criterion of a scientific status of a theory is its falsifiability,
NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, managing editor; 360-417-3531 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com ■ LEE HORTON, sports editor; 360-417-3525; lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com ■ General news information: 360-417-3527 From Jefferson County and West End, 800-826-7714, ext. 5250 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com News fax: 360-417-3521 ■ Sequim office: 147 W. Washington St., 98382; 360-681-2390 ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way, 98368; 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com
or refutability, or testability.” America’s party of science seems eager to insulate its scientific theories from the possibility of refutation. The leader of the attorneys general, New York’s Eric Schneiderman, dismisses those who disagree with him as “morally vacant.” His moral content is apparent in his campaign to ban fantasy sports gambling because it competes with the gambling (state lottery, casinos, off-track betting) that enriches his government. Then there is Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., who suggests using the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, written to fight organized crime, to criminalize what he calls the fossil fuel industry’s “climate denial apparatus.” The Justice Department, which has abetted the IRS coverup of its criminal activity, has referred this idea to the FBI. These garden-variety authoritarians are eager to regulate us into conformity with the “settled” consensus du jour, whatever it is. But they are progressives, so it is for our own good.
________ George Will is a Washington Post Writers Group columnist. He can be reached at georgewill@ washpost.com.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, April 26, 2016 SECTION
CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, BUSINESS, WEATHER In this section
B
College baseball in PA?
Mariners
Benoit placed on DL
City could have team next year BY LEE HORTON PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
BY BOB DUTTON MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE
SEATTLE — Joaquin Benoit’s ailing shoulder finally became too much for the Seattle Mariners to continue nursing along on a day-today basis. “We decided he needs to take a step back and regroup,” manager Scott Servais said, “instead of trying to chase it every day. Just Next Game give it some Today time. Let’s get it vs. Astros right. We’ve got at Safeco Field a lot of games ahead of us.” Time: 7 p.m. The Mariners On TV: ROOT placed Benoit, their veteran right-handed setup reliever, on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive to April 22, Monday because of what the team termed shoulder inflammation. The tentative plan is a complete shutdown for Benoit over the next three or four days before having him undergo a reexamination to determine a recovery program. Servais said the Mariners believe it will be “a two-or-three-week thing.”
Guaipe called up The Mariners replaced Benoit by recalling right-hander Mayckol Guaipe from Triple-A Tacoma. Guaipe, 25, had three saves and a 2.16 ERA in 8 1/3 innings over six appearances for the Rainiers. “I’ve been really working hard on keeping the ball down in the zone,” said Guaipe, who compiled a 5.40 ERA last season in 21 big-league games. “I’d had success in the minors and, up here, I was a little inconsistent [last season] with my pitches. I really focused on that at the end of last year and this year as well.” Servais said Guaipe would likely pitch early in games and, with his ability to work multiple innings, the Mariners can shift lefty Mike Montgomery and right-hander Tony Zych to “more prominent roles.” Veteran right-hander Joel Peralta will replace Benoit as the primary set-up reliever for closer Steve Cishek. Peralta blew two one-run leads in the eighth inning earlier in the season when Benoit was unavailable. “We’ll see how the lineup looks,” Servais said. “Depending on what type of hitters we’re facing and what part of the lineup we’re in in the seventh and eighth, we’ll match it up there. Peralta will probably be the guy we’ll lean on.” Benoit, 38, first encountered soreness in his upper back and shoulder in spring training. The ailment initially appeared to improve through rest, and he made five appearances prior to going on the disabled list. “I thought he was going to be fine after we gave him some time down,” Servais said. “He came back and felt good the day after he threw the first day. Then we brought him back again, and he didn’t really respond.” TURN
TO
M’S/B2
PORT ANGELES — The next Chris Davis or Matt Duffy could be swinging at 90-plus mph fastballs thrown from the mound at Civic Field next summer. The West Coast League is close to opening a baseball franchise in Port Angeles in 2017. “Port Angeles really comes in as one of the best markets you could be in,” Matt Acker said. Acker would be the owner and general manager of the Port Angeles team. He is intimately familiar with the West Coast League. He is on the board of directors and is the owner and general manager of the league’s Kitsap BlueJackets. He also was the BlueJackets’ head coach from 20052011. Acker says the importance of tourism in Port Angeles as well as its location and the city’s blue-collar industries, such as timber, combine to make it such a good fit for the league. The wood bat league, which currently has 11 teams, gives college players the chance to continue to play during the offseason while receiving professional instruction. Basically, it helps college players with professional potential keep up with those already drafted players who spend summers working their way through the minor league system. “Kids who go off to college to play, they need to stay at the same level as their counterparts,” Acker said. And many do end up on Major League Baseball rosters. In 2015, there were 25 former West Coast League players who appeared on big league teams, including Davis, a slugger for the Baltimore Orioles, and Duffy, the San Francisco
CAITLIN SCHIFFMAN
Alex Junior of Hendersonville, Tenn., runs the bases last season for Bremertonbased West Coast League team the Kitsap BlueJackets. Giants infielder who finished second in the National League Rookie of the Year voting. Other former West Coast Leaguers include Mariners pitcher James Paxton and New York Yankees outfielder Jacoby Ellsbury. Former North Olympic Peninsula high school baseball standouts such as Landon Cray,
Eric Lane and Chad Wagner played in the league. Port Angeles Parks and Recreation Director Corey Delikat has been leading the city’s side of the process. That includes meetings in Port Angeles last week with Acker that included Mayor Patrick Downey and Jim Swanson, one of the owners of the league’s
Victoria HarbourCats. Wilder Baseball, a Senior Babe Ruth baseball team based in Port Angeles, also has been involved. “Overall, everybody would be totally excited to have the West Coast League come to Port Angeles,” Delikat said. TURN
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Nine Pirates going to next level PC sophomores sign to play at 4-year schools PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
RICK ROSS/PENINSULA COLLEGE ATHLETICS
Peninsula College sophomores Keo Ponce, left, and Manny Medina, right, celebrate signing letters of intent with men’s soccer coach Cale Rodriguez on Monday.
PORT ANGELES — Four Peninsula College men’s soccer players recently signed letters of intent to play at colleges and universities across the country. The four signees brings the Peninsula men’s team’s total of players who have signed letters of intent to nine. “I am really excited for our sophomores moving on to fouryear institutions and programs,” Pirates head coach Cale Rodriguez said. “It’s a testament to their hard work, dedication and what our programs can provide for those who commit themselves to the goals that we set. TURN
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Nkemdiche could test Hawks’ approach to ‘red flags’ BY GREGG BELL MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE
RENTON — Could Robert Nkemdiche’s fall(s) become the best thing to happen to the Seattle Seahawks in this draft? Nkemdiche was thought by many to be on his way to becoming a top-five pick in the NFL draft that begins Thursday in Chicago. Then in December the ultratalented defensive lineman from Mississippi fell out of a fourthfloor window from a hotel room in Atlanta while with teammates. “I was drunk,” Nkemdiche said, flatly, at the league’s scouting combine in Indianapolis
NFL Draft in February. That fall started two others: His plummet from a top pick to perhaps the bottom or even out of the first round of the draft; and the one he says no one else in that hotel room with him was willing to take when he got cited for marijuana possession as part of the same incident. Asked about the inconsistency between him saying he was drunk and being cited by the police for possession of marijuana, Nkemdiche said: “There were more people in my room. The hotel was
under my name. Nobody wanted to take the fall. It had to go under my name. It just happened to play out like that.” He said one of the people in the room that night was Laremy Tunsil. His Ole Miss teammate is considered the best offensive tackle in this draft and a likely top-five pick. “It was a rash decision by me,” Nkemdiche said. “Uncharacteristic. That’s not who I am. That’s not what I stand for. That’s not what my family stands for. “It was embarrassing for me and my whole family, the Ole Miss family.” TURN
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Mississippi defensive tackle Robert Nkemdiche’s (5) draft
HAWKS/B3 stock plummeted after a December incident at a hotel.
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TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2016
Today’s
Latest sports headlines can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.
Scoreboard Calendar Today Softball: Quilcene at Muckleshoot, doubleheader, 3 p.m.; Olympic at Sequim, 4 p.m.; Forks at Elma, 4 p.m. Baseball: Forks at Elma, 4 p.m.; Olympic at Sequim, 4:15 p.m. Boys Golf: Port Angeles, Port Townsend, Sequim at Port Ludlow Invite, 1 p.m. Boys Soccer: Bremerton at Port Angeles, 6:45 p.m.; Chimacum at Port Townsend, 6:45 p.m.; North Mason at Sequim, 6:45 p.m. Girls Tennis: Sequim at North Kitsap, 4 p.m.; Chimacum/Port Townsend at Coupeville, 4 p.m.
Wednesday Baseball: Port Townsend at Chimacum, 4:15 p.m.; Sequim at Port Angeles, 6:15 p.m.; Quilcene at Seattle Lutheran, 6:30 p.m. Softball: Port Angeles at Sequim, 4 p.m.; Chimacum at Port Townsend, 4:15 p.m.
Thursday Softball: Elma at Forks, 4 p.m. Baseball: Elma at Forks, 4 p.m. Boys Golf: Sequim, Port Townsend, Chimacum at Tim Higgins Memorial at Kitsap Golf and Country Club, 12:15 p.m. Boys Soccer: Chimacum at Klahowya, 4 p.m.; Olympic at Port Angeles, 6:45 p.m.; Coupeville at Port Townsend, 6:45 p.m.; North Kitsap at Sequim, 6:45 p.m.; Forks at Aberdeen, 7 p.m. Girls Tennis: Port Angeles at Sequim, 4 p.m. Track and Field: Port Angeles, Clallam Bay, Neah Bay, Coupeville, Olympic at Kingston, 3:15 p.m.; Chimacum, Sequim, North Mason at Bremerton, 3:15 p.m.; Port Townsend, North Kitsap at Klahowya, 3:15 p.m.; Forks, Aberdeen, Rochester at Elma, 3:30 p.m.
Friday Softball: Rainier Christian at Quilcene, 3:45 p.m.; Port Angeles at Bremerton, 4 p.m. Kingston at Sequim, 4 p.m.; Port Townsend at Coupeville, 4 p.m.; Chimacum at Klahowya, 4 p.m. Baseball: Port Angeles at Bremerton,
4:15 p.m.; Kingston at Sequim, 4:15 p.m.; Port Townsend at Coupeville, 4:15 p.m.; Chimacum at Klahowya, 4:15 p.m. Boys Golf: Port Townsend, Sequim, Chimacum, Port Angeles at Duke Streeter Invite, at Peninsula Golf Club, noon.
Basketball NBA Playoff Glance FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE Cleveland 4, Detroit 0 Sunday, April 17: Cleveland 106, Detroit 101 Wednesday, April 20: Cleveland 107, Detroit 90 Friday, April 22: Cleveland 101, Detroit 91 Sunday, April 24: Cleveland 100, Detroit 98 Toronto 2, Indiana 2 Saturday, April 16: Indiana 100, Toronto 90 Monday, April 18: Toronto 98, Indiana 87 Thursday, April 21: Toronto 101, Indiana 85 Saturday, April 23: Indiana 100, Toronto 83 Tuesday: Indiana at Toronto, 3 p.m. Friday: Toronto at Indiana, TBA x-Sunday, May 1: Indiana at Toronto, TBA Miami 2, Charlotte 1 Sunday, April 17: Miami 123, Charlotte 91 Wednesday, April 20: Miami 115, Charlotte 103 Saturday, April 23: Charlotte 96, Miami 80 Monday: Miami at Charlotte, late. Wednesday: Charlotte at Miami, 5 p.m. x-Friday: Miami at Charlotte, TBA x-Sunday, May 1: Charlotte at Miami, TBA Atlanta 2, Boston 2 Saturday, April 16: Atlanta 102, Boston 101 Tuesday, April 19: Atlanta 89, Boston 72 Friday, April 22: Boston 111, Atlanta 103 Sunday, April 24: Boston 104, Atlanta 95, OT Tuesday: Boston at Atlanta, 5:30 p.m. Thursday: Atlanta at Boston, 4 or 5 p.m. x-Saturday: Boston at Atlanta, TBA WESTERN CONFERENCE Golden State 3, Houston 1 Saturday, April 16: Golden State 104, Houston 78 Monday, April 18: Golden State 115, Houston 106 Thursday, April 21: Houston 97, Golden State 96
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”
Sunday, April 24: Golden State 121, Houston 94 Wednesday: Houston at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. x-Friday: Golden State at Houston, TBA x-Sunday, May 1: Houston at Golden State, TBA San Antonio 4, Memphis 0 Sunday, April 17: San Antonio 106, Memphis 74 Tuesday, April 19: San Antonio 94, Memphis 68 Friday, April 22: San Antonio 96, Memphis 87 Sunday, April 24: San Antonio 116, Memphis 95 Oklahoma City 3, Dallas 1 Saturday, April 16: Oklahoma City 108, Dallas 70 Monday, April 18: Dallas 85, Oklahoma City 84 Thursday, April 21: Oklahoma City 131, Dallas 102 Saturday, April 23: Oklahoma City 119, Dallas 108 Monday: Dallas at Oklahoma City, late. x-Thursday: Oklahoma City at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. x-Saturday: Dallas at Oklahoma City, TBA L.A. Clippers 2, Portland 1 Sunday, April 17: L.A. Clippers 115, Portland 95 Wednesday, April 20: L.A. Clippers 102, Portland 81 Saturday, April 23: Portland 96, L.A. Clippers 88 Monday: L.A. Clippers at Portland, late. Wednesday: Portland at L.A. Clippers, 7 p.m. x-Friday: L.A. Clippers at Portland, TBA x-Sunday, May 1: Portland at L.A. Clippers, TBA
Hockey NHL Playoff Glance FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7) (x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE N.Y. Islanders 4, Florida 2 Thursday, April 14: N.Y. Islanders 5, Florida 4 Friday, April 15: Florida 3, N.Y. Islanders 1 Sunday, April 17: N.Y. Islanders 4, Florida 3, OT Wednesday, April 20: Florida 2, N.Y. Islanders 1 Friday, April 22: N.Y. Islanders 2, Florida 1, 2OT Sunday, April 24: N.Y. Islanders 2, Florida 1, 2OT Tampa Bay 4, Detroit 1 Wednesday, April 13: Tampa Bay 3, Detroit 2 Friday, April 15: Tampa Bay 5, Detroit 2
Sunday, April 17: Detroit 2, Tampa Bay 0 Tuesday, April 19: Tampa Bay 3, Detroit 2 Thursday, April 21: Tampa Bay 1, Detroit 0 Washington 4, Philadelphia 2 Thursday, April 14: Washington 2, Philadelphia 0 Saturday, April 16: Washington 4, Philadelphia 1 Monday, April 18: Washington 6, Philadelphia 1 Wednesday, April 20: Philadelphia 2, Washington 1 Friday, April 22: Philadelphia 2, Washington 0 Sunday, April 24: Washington 1, Philadelphia 0 Pittsburgh 4, N.Y. Rangers 1 Wednesday, April 13: Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Rangers 2 Saturday, April 16: N.Y. Rangers 4, Pittsburgh 2 Tuesday, April 19: Pittsburgh 3, N.Y. Rangers 1 Thursday, April 21: Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Rangers 0 Saturday, April 23: Pittsburgh 6, N.Y. Rangers 3 WESTERN CONFERENCE Dallas 4, Minnesota 2 Thursday, April 14: Dallas 4, Minnesota 0 Saturday, April 16: Dallas 2, Minnesota 1 Monday, April 18: Minnesota 5, Dallas 3 Wednesday, April 20: Dallas 3, Minnesota 2 Friday, April 22: Minnesota 5, Dallas 4, OT Sunday, April 24: Dallas 5, Minnesota 4 St. Louis 3, Chicago 3 Wednesday, April 13: St. Louis 1, Chicago 0, OT Friday, April 15: Chicago 3, St. Louis 2 Sunday, April 17: St. Louis 3, Chicago 2 Tuesday, April 19: St. Louis 4, Chicago 3 Thursday, April 21: Chicago 4, St. Louis 3, 2OT Saturday, April 23: Chicago 6, St. Louis 3 Monday: Chicago at St. Louis, late. Anaheim 3, Nashville 2 Friday, April 15: Nashville 3, Anaheim 2 Sunday, April 17: Nashville 3, Anaheim 2 Tuesday, April 19: Anaheim 3, Nashville 0 Thursday, April 21: Anaheim 4, Nashville 1 Saturday, April 23: Anaheim 5, Nashville 2 Monday: Anaheim at Nashville, late. x-Wednesday: Nashville at Anaheim, TBA San Jose 4, Los Angeles 1 Thursday, April 14: San Jose 4, Los Angeles 3 Saturday, April 16: San Jose 2, Los Angeles 1 Monday, April 18: Los Angeles 2, San Jose 1, OT Wednesday, April 20: San Jose 3, Los Angeles 2 Friday, April 22: San Jose 6, Los Angeles 3
SPORTS ON TV
Today 11:30 a.m. (306) FS1 Soccer UEFA, Real Madrid vs. Manchester City, Champions League, Semifinal, Leg 1 (Live) 3 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA, Indiana Pacers at Toronto Rapters, Playoffs, Game 5 (Live) 4 p.m. (313) CBSSD Baseball NCAA, Louisiana State University at Tulane (Live) 5 p.m. (320) PAC12WA Baseball NCAA, Seattle vs. Washington (Live) 5:30 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA, Boston Celtics at Atlanta Hawks, Playoffs, Game 5 (Live) 6:30 p.m. (306) FS1 Baseball MLB, St. Louis Cardinals at Arizona Diamondbacks (Live) 7 p.m. (319) PAC12 Baseball NCAA, Arizona vs. Arizona State (Live) 7 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Houston Astros at Seattle Mariners (Live) 7:30 p.m. (311) ESPNU Baseball NCAA, UCLA at Cal State-Fullerton (Live)
Transactions BASEBALL American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Optioned RHP Erik Johnson to Charlotte (IL). Selected the contract of RHP Miguel Gonzalez from Charlotte. CLEVELAND INDIANS — Placed RHP Carlos Carrasco on the 15-day DL. Activated OF RHP Michael Brantley from the 15-day DL. MINNESOTA TWINS — Reinstated INF/OF Danny Santana from the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Alex Meyer from Rochester (IL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Recalled RHP Andrew Triggs from Nashville (PCL). Optioned LHP Eric Surkamp to Nashville. SEATTLE MARINERS — Recalled RHP Mayckol Guaipe from Tacoma (PCL). Placed RHP Joaquin Benoit on the 15-day DL, retroactive to April 22.
Curry out at least 2 weeks with sprained knee BY JOSH DUBOW THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OAKLAND, Calif. — Stephen Curry will miss at least two weeks for Golden State with a sprained ligament in his right knee, dealing a blow to the Warriors’ hopes of following a record-breaking season with a second straight championship. The Warriors said an MRI on Curry’s knee Monday determined he had a Grade 1 sprain of the MCL and will be re-evaluated in two weeks. “From our perspective, it’s relatively good news,” general manager Bob Myers said Monday. “Clearly we don’t want to be here getting MRIs at this point of the season, especially someone of Steph’s stature. “But mechanically the knee is intact, so that’s good.” Myers said the two-week estimate is an educated guess based on how players typically respond to similar injuries, but cautioned the absence could be three weeks or possibly slightly shorter. The team will have a better handle on how long Curry will be out after about a week, but Curry will miss the rest of the first round of the playoffs and almost assuredly the start of the second round if the Warriors advance. Golden State leads Houston 3-1 heading into Game 5 at home on Wednesday night. “If it’s not two weeks, don’t go crazy,” Myers said. “If it’s before
5.4 rebounds and a league-leading 2.1 steals as well. Curry made a record 402 3-pointers, eclipsing his own previous mark by 116. While backup point guard Shaun Livingston and do-everything power forward Draymond Green can shoulder much of the playmaking load and Klay Thompson is the second-best 3-point shooter in the league, the Warriors go from a historically great team that won a record 73 games in the regular season with Curry in the lineup to a vulnerable one if he misses significant time.
NBA Playoffs that, great. If it’s after, it’s after.” Curry was injured on the final play of the first half of Sunday’s 121-94 win in Houston when he slid awkwardly on a wet spot on the court and fell. He immediately grabbed his knee and jogged with a limp to the locker room. “Nobody is to blame here,” Myers said. “If you play basketball, that stuff happens unfortunately.” Curry came out with the team after halftime, but sat on the bench for most of the warmup time. After talking with coaches, he returned to the locker room with his second injury of the series. Curry had missed the previous two games with a sprained right ankle.
Could be trouble ahead
Did well without Curry The Warriors thrived without Curry on Sunday, hitting eight 3-pointers in the third quarter alone to turn a tie game into a 21-point lead on the way to the easy win. But doing that without the reigning MVP for a longer period of time figures to be more problematic. The Warriors have gone 3-2 this season without Curry playing, including wins against the Rockets on New Year’s Eve and at
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Golden State’s Stephen Curry, center, is fouled on his way to the basket by Houston’s Patrick Beverley on Sunday. home in Game 2. Golden State also lost Game 3 in Houston by one point while Curry sat with the ankle injury. Replacing everything Curry does is almost impossible because no one has ever had the collection of skills he has with the ability to
spread the defense with longrange shooting, the ballhandling to create his own shot and the playmaking that leads to easy baskets for his teammates. Curry led the NBA this season by averaging 30.1 points per game, while averaging 6.7 assists,
With a 3-1 series lead and two potential games at home against the eighth-seeded Rockets, Golden State is still primed to advance to the second round without Curry. But a second-round series against either the Los Angeles Clippers or Portland would be much more problematic. The second round of the playoffs won’t start until this weekend at the earliest. No matter when the second round starts, Game 4 would likely be either May 8 or 9, which will be in two weeks. That would make Curry’s earliest possible return in Game 5, but Golden State could be forced to go the entire round without him, which could open a path for teams like San Antonio, Oklahoma City, the Clippers or Cleveland to win the title.
M’s: Martin needs to show more consistency CONTINUED FROM B1 the time. Three American League players are actually worse: RusThe Mariners acquired Benoit sell Martin, Justin Upton and on Nov. 12, 2015, from San Diego Michael Sano. Actually . . . that’s not bad in a trade for two minor-league company — and it’s still a relaplayers: right-handed pitcher tively small sample size — but Enyel De Los Santos and the Mariners are concerned. infielder Nelson Ward. Martin continues to get extra Martin’s contact sessions with hitting coach Edgar Martinez. Center fielder Leonys Martin “When I go to home plate,” is on pace for 27 doubles and 27 said Martin, who is batting just homers through the first one.200, “I try to fight on every sinninth of the season and, without gle pitch. Hit the ball hard. question, the Mariners will take “That’s all I can do. Just hit that. the ball hard. I’m not trying to “He’s got some lightning in hit homers. Nothing like that.” the bat,” manager Scott Servais A little luck would help, too. said. Martin has a .265 average on “There’s no doubt. He’s got some pull power. But he needs to balls in play. The league average is .289, which suggests he has be a little more consistent with been unlucky. (That’s a club-wide the contact. That’s what we’re issue. The Mariners have an shooting for.” overall .253 BABIP, which ranks That’s the rub. next-to-last among AL clubs.) Martin entered Monday’s Despite the numbers, Martin series opener against Houston believes he is getting better with 24 strikeouts in 60 at-bats — he is striking out 40 percent of swings than a year ago, when a
disappointing season cost him his starting job at Texas and, consequently, increased the Rangers’ willingness to trade him. “Yeah, for sure,” he insisted. “That’s a good thing and what I keep in my mind. Every single day, I try to hit the ball hard at least twice. I’m usually doing that, and that’s a good sign. “If I hit the ball hard, what happens [next], I can’t do anything about it. Just hit the ball hard and put it in play. That’s all I can do.” That should be enough . . . provided he puts the ball in play more often. So the sessions with Martinez continue. “The one thing about Leonys.” Servais said, “is he will stay aggressive. He will let it fly.”
Defensive shifts It’s no surprise that the Mariners, with their increased emphasis on analytics, rank near the upper end among all clubs in terms of employing defensive
shifts. It also seems that’s the new norm for life in the American League West Division. A FoxSports.com report citing statistics compiled by Stats LLC through last Saturday, shows the Mariners employed 163 defensive shifts in 669 opponents’ plate appearances. That is a 24.4 percentage that ranks seventh among the 30 clubs. Stats LLC defines a shift as an alignment in which three infielders are positioned on one side of second base. AL West-rival Houston led all clubs through Saturday at 41.0 percent. Two other AL West clubs ranked in the top eight: Los Angeles, fifth at 27.2; and Oakland, eighth at 23.6. Defending division champion Texas ranked 18th at 12.8 percent. World Series-champion Kansas City, which is often draws raves for its defense, ranked 25th in defensive shifts at 9.3 percent. The Royals arrive Friday for a three-game weekend series at
Safeco Field.
Looking back It was 26 years ago today — April 26, 1990 — that center fielder Ken Griffey Jr. delivered one of the signature moments of his career when he ran down a drive by Jesse Barfield at Yankee Stadium. Griffey made a leaping catch at the wall that snatched back a home run. It is 89 days, as of today, before Griffey will be inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y.
On tap The Mariners and Astros continue their three-game series at 7:10 p.m. Tuesday at Safeco Field when right-hander Nathan Karns (1-1 with a 5.28 ERA) faces Houston lefty Dallas Keuchel (1-3, 7.56). Keuchel is the American League’s reigning Cy Young Award winner.
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TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2016
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Baseball: Should be wrapped up in a month CONTINUED FROM B1 “It’s kind of an exciting thing that could happen to a community. “Baseball has a huge history in Port Angeles. It’s at a down-peak, but I think it’s time for it to come back.” T h e unnamed Port Angeles franchise isn’t a done deal yet, though. Delikat said the idea still needs to be officially b r o u g h t Acker before the parks commission, which will happened at its next meeting, which Acker will attend, Thursday, May 19. There also has to be more discussions regarding a facility-use contract for Civic Field between Acker and the city. That contract would then need to be approved by the city council. “There’s a few more steps, but I feel very confident that this is going to take place,” Delikat said. Acker said he would need to know by the end of May if Port Angeles is on board. Delikat said that with the way everything is lining up, that shouldn’t be a problem. “I don’t think there is anything that could hamper them being here,” Delikat said. One thing that doesn’t appear to be the obstacle Delikat and Acker anticipated is getting approval to sell alcohol at Civic Field. “I thought it might be, but I don’t think so far we’ve had anybody had even blink an eye,” Delikat said. The city also has been mindful of Wilder Baseball throughout the process. “We just want to make sure that a team that’s been here since 1979 doesn’t feel like it’s being kicked to the curb,” Delikat said.
“From all the conversations with Matt, he just wants to make sure that [the teams] coexist.” Wilder coach Mike Politika said he would like to see the West Coast League come to Port Angeles. “Well, I think we’re on board with the concept, for sure,” Politika said. “I think it would be good for the community to have a highlevel team come in, sort of a pro baseball team. “The big challenge for us is dialling in the schedule right now.”
Scheduling practices The West Coast League plays 64 games over 70 days from the beginning of June to the beginning of August. That means the Port Angeles team will have more than 30 home dates at Civic Field. Wilder only plays between 10 and 20 homes games in the summer, so the main potential scheduling conflict is practice time for the two teams. “‘Can it work?’ was the main question,” Wilder coach Mike Politika said, “and the main response was, ‘Let’s see if it can.’ “We’ll put it on paper and see how it all plays out. Hopefully, in the end, something will work out.” Acker is no stranger to scheduling multiple teams on one field. He is the president of the Puget Sound Collegiate League in Lacey, where six teams play on one field. The BlueJackets share the field at Kitsap County Fairgrounds in Bremerton, which, like Civic Field, has a grass surface, with three other teams. It hasn’t been discussed yet, but Acker said there should be time for the Olympic Crosscutters, the North Olympic Peninsula’s second-year American Legion team, to also use Civic Field. Acker’s background is in training young baseball players — he owns PSCL Baseball LCC and MACK Athletics, which create curriculums for teaching baseball — and he wants to bring more baseball opportunities to
Appeals court rules Brady must serve ‘Deflategate’ penalty BY LARRY NEUMEISTER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Fairness questioned In a dissent, Chief Judge Robert Katzmann said Goodell failed to even consider a “highly relevant” alternative penalty. “I am troubled by the Commissioner’s decision to uphold the unprecedented four-game suspension,” Katzmann said. “It is ironic that a process designed to ensure fairness to all players has been used unfairly against one player.” The NFL Players Association said in a statement it was disappointed. “We fought Roger Goodell’s suspension of Tom Brady because we know he did not serve as a fair arbitrator and that players’ rights were violated under our collective bargaining agreement,” the statement said.
Like parents who spend months thinking of names for their unborn child, it’s time to If a West Coast League start coming up with nickname team comes to Port Angeles in ideas for Port Angeles’ unoffi2017, its owner said he would cial baseball team. let the community choose the Port Angeles Mayor Patrick team’s nickname and the colDownie has already started ors. thinking of possible names. “I want what my fans want,” Some examples: Rivercats, Matt Acker said. Timberdogs, Timbercats, HurriAcker anticipates there will canes, Wild, Salmon Kings or be some kind of contest to Kings and even Marmots. select the nickname. Another possible name he’s “We’re just going to come up heard is Banana Sluggers, with three of four pretty good though it isn’t high on his list. ones,” he said. With the Strait of Juan de “We’ll show how they tie Fuca and the mountains of into the community. [It will be] Olympic National Park only a something that’s strong and few miles apart, Port Angeles marketable.” shouldn’t have any shortage of A nickname can make or possible nicknames. break not only the marketing Downie said it should be but also the pride that the com- something “that won’t settle for anything but a win.” munity takes in the team. BY LEE HORTON
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
the Peninsula. That includes making his team’s coaches and players available to help teach fundamentals to Wilder players and others. He also wants to work with area businesses to set up camps and leagues for younger players to participate in following the seasons of their current leagues. For instance, at the end of the Cal Ripken League season, a small fraction move on to play on all-star teams. That leaves a large majority without a baseball team for the remainder of the summer. “People are worried we’re going to take kids out of Cal Ripken,” Acker said. “No, no, no. Your season is over. We’ll keep it going.” Acker also hopes to make the game cheaper for kids, with corporate sponsorships and using his contacts to purchase gear at a cheaper price. “I’m just so worried about baseball becoming a country club
sport,” Acker said. “Instead of complain about it, I’ve come up with a model.” For Port Angeles’ West Coast League team, Acker has a model he wants to follow: the Walla Walla Sweets, one of the league’s 11 franchises. Like the Sweets, Acker wants to put in a storefront in downtown Port Angeles to sell team merchandise. He also wants have a team name that identifies with Port Angeles and come up with a logo that will be associated with the city. Walla Walla has done this and sold more than 9,000 hats, and Acker has seen those hats throughout the Pacific Northwest. “They’re really marketing the town,” Acker said. “For whatever reason, there’s 9,000 hats, and I would say 90 percent of them didn’t go to a Walla Walla Sweets game. “I want to form that kind of
What about Hooks (in reference to Ediz Hook)? Or Straits? Olympians? Hogbacks? Rainshadows or Shadows? The Undammed (nod to the Elwha)? Angels? Send other nickname ideas to sports@peninsuladailynews. com with “WCL name” in the subject line. Acker said that he is leaning toward using “Port Angeles” as the first part of the team name, rather than something like “Olympic.” Here are the names of the other 11 West Coast League teams: Bend Elks, Corvallis Knights, Cowlitz Black Bears, Gresham Greywolves, Kitsap BlueJackets, Yakima Valley Pippins, Bellingham Bells, Kelowna Falcons, Victoria Harbourcats, Walla Walla Sweets and Wenatchee Applesox.
partnership with [Port Angeles] where we can help market the town.” Acker said the team could boost tourism, bringing other teams and their fans to Port Angeles. For instance, Acker said the Victoria HarbourCats are thrilled at the idea of a rivalry with Port Angeles. Hence Swanson’s attendance at last week’s meetings. “They are so excited about it, it’s almost scary,” Acker said. For Downie, the tourism boost is great, but the most important aspect of a West Coast League team is what it could bring to Port Angeles. “I don’t consider this baseball team playing in the summer to be just a visitor thing,” Downie said. “They could become part of the fabric of our community.”
________ Sports Editor Lee Horton can be reached at 360-417-3525 or at lhorton@ peninsuladailynews.com.
Hawks: Irvin, Clark had pasts CONTINUED FROM B1 The Seahawks and many other teams are weighing right now his decision in that hotel room weeks before the biggest job interviews of his life began against the facts he is 6-foot-3, 293 pounds with a sculpted physique and freakish athleticism. Nkemdiche has been deemed NFL-ready almost since he arrived at Ole Miss in 2013 as the top defensive lineman recruit in college football. But his production in the SEC never matched his apparent physical skills, or his hype. Last season he had just 2½ sacks for a team that won Mississippi’s first Sugar Bowl since 1970. Nkemdiche was suspended from that Jan. 2 game because of his arrest for marijuana possession. He also spoke candidly at the combine how “there are times I didn’t finish. I was lazy on some plays at times.”
General manager John Schneider and head coach Pete Carroll have made socalled “red-flag” players their first pick twice in their first six years running the Seahawks — in which Seattle went to two Super Bowls, won the franchise’s first NFL title and made the playoffs four straight seasons. In 2012 Seattle selected pass rusher Bruce Irvin 15th overall five years after he’d been arrested for breaking into a drug dealer’s house and spending two weeks incarcerated. Last year the Seahawks unexpectedly used their first pick, in the second round, on defensive end Frank Clark. He had obvious skills as a fast pass rusher. But he’d been kicked out of his college program at Michigan in November 2014 following an arrest and brief jailing on suspicion of domestic violence, plus a case when he was a freshman of stealing a laptop computer from a dorm room. In each case, Schneider
Pirates: Sign CONTINUED FROM B1 chez will also go Division II, playing at Montana State “I think it is very evi- Billings. Vitor Maia signed to dent, based off of this group of players, the opportunities play at Central Methodist that can result from being a University, an NAIA unipart of the soccer programs versity in Fayette, Missouri. Signing in March were here at Peninsula College.” The Peninsula sopho- Eddie Benito (University of mores who recently signed California Riverside, NCAA Division I); Nick Johnson NCAA letters of intent join (University of New Hampfive who signed in March. shire, NCAA Division I); Manny Medina will con- Trevan Estrellado (Cal tinue his collegiate soccer State San Bernardino, career at Cal State Los NCAA Division II); Micah Angeles, a Division II pro- Weller (Whitworth Univergram; Keo Ponce will see sity, NCAA Division III); his next action at Division and Santiago Sierra (CenII Cal State San Ber- tral Methodist University, nardino; and Victor San- NAIA).
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and Carroll said they did extra investigating and interviewing to get to thoroughly know each player and each story. “We want these guys coming in with a chip on their shoulder and something to prove,” Carroll said. Noah Spence is another mega-skilled defensive end with “red flags” that may — or not — keep him out of the first round. He failed two drug tests, got treatment for Ecstasy addiction and got kicked out of Big Ten football. He transferred from Ohio State to Eastern Kentucky. How Seattle views Nkemdiche and Spence is different than how many other teams — or people, in general — do. “Different general managers have different philosophies,” ESPN draft analyst Todd McShay said last week during a teleconference. “At the end of the day, do you trust him? I think that’s really the whole thing with Robert Nkemdiche. And my answer is no, I don’t.
“And we can get into all the reasons, but you’re asking me my opinion. I have to hit on a first-round pick. “You look over the history of the draft, and organizations that continually build through the draft and have success, they don’t miss on very many firstround picks. So you have to go into it with the mentality that you’re going to hit. “And yes, it’s enticing. And I certainly think there are some teams — you look at Seattle late in the first, Arizona late in the first, they’re teams that, traditionally, have taken chances on guys that have some character baggage and backgrounds. “And if they wind up doing it, who knows? You can hit. “But I think there’s enough risk there that I would want to wait, probably, at least until the second round, before I drafted him and, in all likelihood, I’m putting him in a position on my board where I’m pretty sure he’s not going to be available.”
Got sports news or a score? Phone the sports desk at 360-417-3525 (include your phone number in case we need to get more info) or email: sports@peninsuladailynews.com
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NEW YORK — New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady must serve a four-game “Deflategate” suspension imposed by the NFL, a federal appeals court ruled Monday, overturning a lower judge and siding with the league in a battle with the players union. A three-judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan ruled 2-to-1 that Commissioner Roger Goodell did not deprive Brady of “fundamental fairness” with his procedural rulings. The split decision may end the legal debate over the scandal that led to months of football fans arguing over air pressure and the reputation of one of the league’s top teams. It also fuels a fresh round of debate over what role, if any, the quarterback and top NFL star played in using underinflated footballs at the AFC championship game in January 2015. The Patriots won the contest over the Indianapolis Colts, 45-7, and then beat the Seattle Seahawks in the Super Bowl. Soon after the ruling, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump opened a campaign rally in Rhode Island by sticking up for Brady, a longtime friend and golfing buddy. “First of all let’s start by saying leave Tom Brady alone. Leave him alone. Leave him alone he’s a great guy,” Trump said. “It’s enough. It’s enough.” The ruling can be appealed to the full 2nd Circuit or to the U.S. Supreme Court, but it would likely be a steep and time-consuming climb even if the courts took the unusual step to consider it. In a majority opinion written by Judge Barrington D. Parker, the 2nd Circuit said its review of
labor arbitration awards “is narrowly circumscribed and highly deferential — indeed, among the most deferential in the law.” “Our role is not to determine for ourselves whether Brady participated in a scheme to deflate footballs or whether the suspension imposed by the Commissioner should have been for three games or five games or none at all. Nor is it our role to second-guess the arbitrator’s procedural rulings,” the opinion said. “Our obligation is limited to determining whether the arbitration proceedings and award met the minimum legal standards established by the Labor Management Relations Act.” The 2nd Circuit said the contract between players and the NFL gave the commissioner authority that was “especially broad.” “Even if an arbitrator makes mistakes of fact or law, we may not disturb an award so long as he acted within the bounds of his bargained-for authority,” the court said.
Name, name, name the home team
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, April 26, 2016 PAGE
B4 $ Briefly . . . U.S. home sales fall for third month
MARC ABSHIRE
The Port Angeles Ambassadors recently attended the grand opening of Jones Party and Gift in Port Angeles. The Port Angeles Ambassadors are, from left, Howard Fisher, Beth Halady, Donna Pacheco, Johnetta Bindas and Mary Anderson; owners Jeff and Jen Jones with scissors; and Ambassadors Alan Barnard, Sharon Oppenheimer, Leslie Fisher, Marnie DeWees, Debbie Mangano and Jeri Bawden.
Party and gift store now open for businesses in PA PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Owners Jeff and Jen Jones offer a variety of balloons, party decorations, PORT ANGELES — Jones Party paper and plastic tableware, piñatas and Gift kicked off its grand opening and gifts to “Celebrate Life.” recently with a ribbon cutting at 230 Special orders and balloon orders W. Eighth St. are welcome.
Local artists and crafters are encouraged to sell their creations on consignment. For more information, visit www. facebook.com/JonesPartySupply or call 360-389-2853.
Dubai pushes the pedal for driverless vehicles by 2030 BY JON GAMBRELL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Already home to the world’s biggest skyscraper, Dubai has another tall order to fill: By 2030, its leader wants 25 percent of all trips on its roads to be done by driverless vehicles. Monday’s announcement by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum came without warning and with few details, as is sometimes the case with the many aspirations of the leadership of the United Arab Emirates. In this car-crazed citystate of more than 1.5 million registered vehicles, it’s not unusual to see Ferraris idling alongside Lamborghinis at traffic lights. And Dubai already is home to a driverless Metro rail system, which carried 178 million riders in 2015. Smart-car technology is being used in some of the world’s luxury vehicles, and it is advancing rapidly enough for the plan to become a reality — or a nightmare for the thousands of taxi drivers now plying the streets among the sleek skyscrapers in the UAE’s commercial capital.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A 10-seater driverless car being test run Monday during the second Middle East and North Africa (MENA) Transport Congress Exhibition in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Cut costs, accidents In a statement carried by the state-run WAM news agency, Sheikh Mohammed said the plan would cut down on costs and traffic accidents. The project would be a joint venture by Dubai’s Roads and Transport Authority and the Dubai Future Foundation, he said, without offering how it would be funded in the oilrich nation.
“Today, we lay down a clear strategy with specific goals for smart transportation to form one of the key drivers for achieving sustainable economy in the UAE,” said Sheikh Mohammed, who can be seen driving himself around Dubai in his white Mercedes-Benz G-Class SUV, license plate No. 1. Dubai boasts the world’s tallest building with the 2,717-foot Burj Khalifa, which opened in 2010. In 2020, it will host the World Expo, a world’s fair that is held every five years. Mattar al-Tayer, the director-general and chairman of the Roads and Transport Authority, said his agency has contacted a number of driverless vehicle sellers and “plans to conduct live test-runs for these vehicles in Dubai.” His agency already has signed a deal with Toulouse, France-based driverless vehicle manufacturer EasyMile to conduct tests on their box-shaped EZ10,
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WASHINGTON — The U.S. job market is healthy. The stock market is up.
peninsuladailynews.com
Market watch April 25, 2016
-26.51
Dow Jones industrials
17,977.24
Nasdaq composite
4,895.79
Standard & Poor’s 500
2,087.79
Russell 2000
-10.44 -3.79
-8.59 1,138.10
NYSE diary Advanced:
1,014
Declined:
2,054
Unchanged: Volume:
88 3.3 b
Nasdaq diary Advanced:
1,028
Declined:
1,746
Unchanged: Volume:
177 1.5 b AP
Home prices are rising. Yet as the Federal Reserve prepares to meet this week, it seems in no mood to resume raising interest rates from ultralows. With the global economy struggling and U.S. inflation still below the Fed’s target rate, many economists see little likelihood of a rate increase even before the second half of the year. The outlook for the world economy was downgraded this month by the International Monetary Fund, which warned of the risk of another international recession. Any major global slump would, in turn, hinder U.S. growth. A sharp economic slowdown in China — the world’s second-largest economy after the United States — has already hurt much of the developing world.
Gold and silver Gold for June rose $10.20, or 0.8 percent, to settle at $1,240.20 an ounce Monday. May silver gained 11 cents to $17.009 an ounce. The Associated Press
Gannett makes bid for Tribune Publishing deal THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Google said in a statement that it has seen a lot of interest for self-driving cars and has talked to organizations and communities all over the world, without specifically addressing questions about Dubai. The goal of 2030 is a “realistic timeline” for such an effort like Dubai’s, said Jeremy Carlson, a senior analyst in autonomous driving at research firm IHS. Dubai’s top-down government also will help push through such an effort, he said. “By and large, technology is not going to be the bottleneck for bringing this to market,” Carlson said.
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which carries up to 10 passengers, according to a statement from al-Tayer. EasyMile referred questions to its Emirati partner Omnix, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment. For now, Dubai and EasyMile haven’t made any financial commitment to each other, said Ahmed Bahrozyan, the CEO of the Roads and Transport Authority’s licensing agency. Instead, EasyMile is using the opportunity to test its battery life and air conditioners against Dubai’s summertime heat, which goes easily beyond 104 degrees Fahrenheit, he said. “Our strategy is not only looking at private cars, but looking at taxis, looking at buses, looking at . . . cable car systems,” Bahrozyan told The Associated Press. While still a nascent field, many big names are looking at entering the driverless market.
Google began developing driverless cars in 2010. Traditional automakers such as Mercedes-Benz, General Motors and Toyota are working to gradually automate functions until vehicles potentially become fully capable of driving themselves. Dubai might prove to be a good test site. It sees little rainfall and has a nearly new road system crowned by the E11 highway known as Sheikh Zayed Road, the country’s longest thoroughfare that is a dozen lanes at its widest. But there are also highspeed traffic crashes and massive collisions caused by seasonal fog in Dubai and the rest of the Emirates. Bahrozyan said Dubai has contacted Mountain View, Calif.,-based Google about its self-driving car, which he added had artificial intelligence far beyond the EZ10.
WASHINGTON — Americans stepped back from buying new homes in March, the third straight monthly decline as sales plunged sharply in the Western states. New-home sales slipped 1.5 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 511,000, the Commerce Department said Monday. That rate has steadily dropped from 519,000 in February and 521,000 in January. Sales plummeted 23.6 percent in the West, which has been prone to volatile swings in sales as one of the nation’s priciest housing markets. The market for new housing developments has gotten off to a rocky start. Sales are still running slightly ahead of the yearto-date pace in 2015, yet supplies of new construction are mounting in a possible sign that demand is lower than many builders had hoped. Still, some economists see the low mortgage rates and improving job market as strong enough to boost sales in the coming months. “While new home sales have lost some luster in recent months, we believe they will re-accelerate as we head into [the] spring season,” said Gregory Daco, head of U.S. macroeconomics at Oxford Economics, a forecasting firm. Sales were flat in the Northeast and rose in the Midwest and South. Prices dipped with sales declining in Western states where land often commands a higher premium. The median new-home sales price fell 1.8 percent from a year ago to $288,000.
Real-time stock quotations at
NEW YORK — Newspaper publisher Gannett wants to buy Tribune Publishing for more than $388 million, in a deal that would give the owner of USA Today control of the Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune and several other newspapers. But Gannett said Monday that Tribune has refused to start “constructive discussions” about a deal since it first offered to buy its rival earlier this month. Tribune confirmed Monday that it received the unsolicited offer and said it “will respond to Gannett as quickly as feasible.” Gannett wants Tribune so that it can expand its USA Today Network, an effort it launched late last year to unite its national brand USA Today with its more than 100 local daily newspapers. The network allows the company to share stories more easily between USA Today and its smaller papers, which include the Detroit Free Press, The Des Moines Register and the Asbury Park Press. Earlier this year, the company remade the logos on all its local newspaper front pages and websites to say that they are “a part of the USA Today Network.” Buying Tribune would
give Gannett 11 more daily newspapers, including the Orlando Sentinel, The Baltimore Sun and the Hartford Courant. As more people get their news online, print media companies have been buying up newspapers and websites to fight falling advertising revenue and to reduce costs. Earlier this month, Gannett completed a $280 million deal to buy the Journal Media Group, adding 15 newspapers to its portfolio, including the Knoxville News Sentinel and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Both Gannett and Tribune were spun off from larger media companies, which owned TV stations, to protect the accelerating growth of broadcast advertising from the falling fortunes of newspapers. A Gannett takeover of Tribune could mean costcutting, shedding jobs and adding USA Today inserts into papers instead of national news sections, said media analyst Ken Doctor. Gannett, which is based in McLean, Va., said it offered $12.25 in cash for each Tribune share. That’s a 63 percent premium to Tribune’s Friday closing price of $7.52. Gannett valued the total deal at about $815 million, which includes about $390 million of debt.
Fun ’n’ Advice
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Dilbert
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Classic Doonesbury (1986)
Frank & Ernest
Garfield
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DEAR ABBY: For the past five months I have been talking to a guy I met via a dating app. We live a few states apart and have yet to meet in person, but we communicate regularly. With my tax refund this year, I’d like to do something for me. He suggested that I visit him. I don’t get any red flags from him, and I’m sure I’d be 100 percent safe while I’m there. However, I’m anxious about taking a trip by myself to visit a guy I’ve developed a massive crush on. I have thought about offering to pay his way here instead, or simply not going at all. I asked my friends and family for their opinions. Some of them think I should go, while others say I should pay his way here. I need advice from an outsider’s perspective. Confused and Crushing
by Lynn Johnston
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Rose is Rose
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❘
by Bob and Tom Thaves
should be consequences for misbeVan Buren havior, and they should be explained to the boy. He should also understand there will be more severe consequences for lying to cover it up. Because you know the boy cannot be trusted, put a lock on the closet or cupboard where you stow your stash, or on your bedroom door.
Abigail
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.
Dear Chocolate Lover: There
by Brian Basset
The Last Word in Astrology ❘
by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer
ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
❘
by Hank Ketcham
Pickles
❘
by Brian Crane
by Eugenia Last
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Travel will entice you. Whether you visit an unfamiliar destination in your vicinity or travel a great distance, the experience and the encounters you have will affect you positively. Romance is encouraged. 5 stars
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You’ll be eager to bring about changes and to engage in pastimes that are challenging and exciting. Romance is in the stars, and taking affirmative steps will lead to a promise that you’ll be happy to uphold. Enjoy the ride. 5 stars
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Don’t give in or give up. You can make a difference if you stand up for your rights. Instead of getting angry, focus on the positive changes that you can make. Say little and do a lot. Be an instigator, not an observer. 3 stars
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Look for alternative career options. If you feel you need a change, explore a past interest to see if you can turn it into a side business. Self-awareness and personal improvement will bring good results. 3 stars
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Make changes at home that will free up your time. You are advised to keep a safe distance from anyone who is asking for too much from you. Learning and expanding your awareness will give you the strength to say “no.” 2 stars
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Don’t worry about what everyone else is doing. Take care of your responsibilities. Strive to take the steps to make your personal life more comfortable. Use your imagination and you’ll find a way to keep your costs low. 3 stars
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don’t let anyone make you feel guilty or put demands on you. Getting involved in dubious schemes or picking up a bad habit will slow you down and play havoc with your emotional well-being. Focus on being the best you can be. 3 stars
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Keep your money in a safe place and think twice before you spend. Put more time and effort into your relationships with children, friends or your loved ones. You don’t need to spend money in order to prove how much you care. 4 stars
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): It’s up to you to bring about changes. Don’t wait for someone else to make a move or tell you what to do. Discipline, innovation and imagination will help you stand out and make a difference. Romance is encouraged. 4 stars
CANCER (June 21-July 22): You’ll come up with an interesting idea or concept that will get a good response from a friend or relative who wants to be a part of your plan. Conversations and collaboration will get you one step closer to your objective. 3 stars
Dennis the Menace
DEAR ABBY
Dear Abby: My husband and I have been happily married for 38 years. Almost everything is great, except that the wife of his best friend, “Ted,” has the hots for my husband. We all get along well, but it’s obvious her interest is mostly in my husDear Confused: I vote for havband, not me. ing your friend come and visit you Ted has no idea his wife feels this the first time you meet. That way your family and friends way, but several people have pointed it out, and I have observed the way can meet him, and if your massive crush doesn’t live up to your expecta- she acts. I have talked to my husband tions, you won’t be alone in a strange about it. city and at a disadvantage. He in no way is interested in her. I would never want to jeopardize Dear Abby: I live in a house with my husband, his 11-year-old son and my husband’s friendship with Ted, and I enjoy being friends with them my husband’s father. I am pregnant with my first child both, but I’m uncomfortable about her feelings for my husband. and I get cravings for chocolate. Can I say something to her and I sometimes hide my special choclet her know how I feel without ruinolates in my armoire so I don’t have ing the friendship with her or the to worry about my sugar-crazed son one my husband has with Ted? getting to them. Situation in Austin, Texas However, I have recently found out that he goes through my things Dear Situation: Probably not. to find the goodies and helps himself. I feel he has stepped over the line While it wouldn’t change the relaand violated my privacy. tionship your husband has with Ted, My husband and I have conif you address this with his wife and fronted him about it more than once, tell her you know she has been lustand each time he lies and argues ing after your husband, it’s sure to before he eventually admits it. cause embarrassment. We have talked to him about priAnd that’s not conducive to a vacy and make sure to give him his close friendship. privacy in his room. ________ How can we turn his behavior Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, around and make him see that he is also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was being disrespectful toward me? founded by her mother, the late Pauline PhilPregnant Chocolate Lover lips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O.
by G.B. Trudeau
by Jim Davis
Red and Rover
B5
Meet online crush on familiar ground
by Scott Adams
For Better or For Worse
TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2016
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Make a change at home that will be conducive to starting a new enterprise in a field you enjoy to help bring in extra cash. Use your imagination and market what you have to offer. Someone who loves you will offer you incentives. 3 stars
The Family Circus
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PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Keep track of your expenditures and what you owe to others. It’s important to know where you stand financially when dealing with joint ventures and partnerships. Don’t overpay or try to buy love or popularity. 2 stars
by Bil and Jeff Keane
Classified
Peninsula
B6 Tuesday, April 26, 2016
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Baby Grand Piano Shafer Sons model SS51 baby grand piano 42” high and 4’9” long. H i g h g l o s s bl a ck . I n cludes bench piano light. Like new condition. $2,500 obo. (360)582-9898
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PHARMACY ASSISTANT Mon.-Fri. rotating weekend shifts. Exceptional customer service skills, multi-tasking and high school diploma required. Pharmacy assistant license preferred. Apply at Jim’s Pharmacy, 424 E. 2nd St., P.A. EOE.
Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 3010 Announcements 4026 General General General Caregivers: Sherwood Assisted Living is looking for caring and compassionate caregivers to become a par t of our team and join our mission of enhancing the l i ve s o f a g i n g a d u l t s throughout our community. We have a variety of shifts available with c o m p e t i t i v e p ay a n d benefits. Find out more about this fulfilling career opportunity. Apply at 550 W Hendrickson Road or call Casey, (360)683-3348
Forester Position: The Makah Tribe is seeking to hire a Forester with BS degree or comparable knowledge & experience. Responsible for timber sale preparation, preparing related documents including NEPA, and other forestry/natural resource dut i e s. Fo r f u r t h e r i n fo please contact Makah Tribal Council/Personnel Office (360) 645-2055, E - m a i l : Ta b i t h a . h e r da@makah.com
CARRIER ROUTE AVAILABLE Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Is looking for an individual interested in a Por t Townsend area route. Interested parties must be 18 yrs. of age, have a valid Washington State Drivers License, proof of insurance and reliable vehicle. Early morning delivery Monday through Fr i d a y a n d S u n d a y. . Email Jasmine at jbirkland@ peninsuladailynews.com No phone calls please
CDL Drivers wanted at our Port Angeles location! Must have CDL and clean driving record. Day shift MonFr i w i t h we e k l y OT, b e n e f i t s, 4 0 1 K a n d paid time off. Apply today at www.wasteconnec tions.com Center Valley Animal Rescue accepting resumes for P/T Volunteer Coordinator. Job desc: (www.centervalley animalrescue.org) or email (info@centervalleyanimalrescue.org) to request a copy. No phone or FB inquiries. Resume & cover letter to CVAR, 11900 Center Rd, Quilcene, WA 98376 or to info@centervalleyanimalr e s c u e . o r g . Po s i t i o n open until filled.
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CUSTOMER SERVICE / INSIDE SALES If you have an outgoi n g p e r s o n a l i t y, a sense of humor, can multi-task, and handle the pressure of deadlines, this is the job for you! This full-time job is located in our Port Angeles office, includes an hourly wage plus commission, medical benefits, life insurance, paid vacation, sick pay and a 401k with a company match. You will work Mon.-Fri., 8-5 p.m. in a t e a m o r i e n t e d , fa s t p a c e d e nv i r o n m e n t . The r ight candidate should have excellent telephone manners and sales skills, have great spelling, grammar and writing skills. Please email resume and cover letter with 3 references to: careers@soundpublishing.com. No phone calls, please The Peninsula Daily News is par t of the largest community news organization in Wa s h i n g t o n S t a t e. Check us out at www.soundpublishing.com
C E RT I F I E D p e r s o n a l trainer/class instructors. Bring your personality. (360)457-3200
Continually rated #1 on Tr ip Advisor, the Olympic Lodge is now h i r i n g “ Fr o n t D e s k Agents” to continue our tradition of personalized, attentive guest service. Wage $11-14 per hr. DOE. Please apply in person at 140 Del Guzzi Drive, Port Angeles. CUSTOMER SERVICE/ INSIDE SALES If you have an outgoi n g p e r s o n a l i t y, a sense of humor, can multi-task, and handle the pressure of deadlines, this is the job for you! Hourly wage plus commission, benefits, paid vacation, sick pay a n d 4 0 1 K . Yo u w i l l wo r k M o n . - Fr i . , 8 - 5 p.m. in a team oriented, fast paced environment. The r ight candidate should have excellent telephone manners and sales skills, have great spelling, grammar and writing skills. Please email resume and cover letter with 3 references to: careers@ soundpublishing.com No phone calls, please. North Olympic News Group, Peninsula Daily News, Sequim Gazette, Forks Forum REPORTER sought for Port Angeles staff opening with the Peninsula Daily News, a six-day a.m. newspaper on Washington’s beautiful North Olympic Peninsula, which includes the cities of Por t Angeles, Sequim, Port Townsend and Forks. Bring your experience from a weekly or small daily - - from the first day, you’ll be able to show off the writing and photography skills you’ve already acquired while shar pening your talent with the help of veteran newsroom leaders. This is a general assignment reporter position in which being a self-starter is required. Our circulation area covers two counties, including the Victorian seaport of Por t Townsend, the sunshine town of Seq u i m , t h e “ Tw i l i g h t ” countr y of For ks, five Native American tribes plus wild rivers and the “mountains to the sea” city of Port Angeles. We are located at the gateway to million-acre Olympic National Park and across the Strait of Juan de Fuca from Vancouver Island and spectacular Victoria, British Columbia. Port Angeles was named by “New Rating Guide to Life in America’s Small Cities” as one of the best U.S. small cities. Plus we get half the rainfall of Seattle! Compensation includes medical, vision, life insurance, 401(k) and paid vacation. The PDN, nearly a century old, is a c o m mu n i t y - m i n d e d , family - focused local newspaper and Web enterprise that is the main news provider for the North Olympic Peninsula. Check us out at www.peninsuladailynews.com. T h e Pe n i n s u l a D a i l y News is part of Washington state’s largest newspaper group, Sound Publishing Inc. If you meet the above qualifications, email your resume and cover letter addressing how you fit our requirements, to careers@soundpublishing.com. No phone calls, please.
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5000900
ACCEPTING APPLICAT I O N S fo r C A R R I E R RO UT E Por t Ange les Area. Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Interested parties must 3023 Lost be 18 yrs of age, have valid Washington State Driver’s License, proof of LOST: Dog, in Agnew, insurance, and reliable 04/20, Patches, 9 yrs, vehicle. Early morning B/W female shepherd/ delivery Monday-Friday black lab. (360)775-5154 and Sunday. Apply in person 305 W 1st St, or LONG DISTANCE send resume to No Problem! tsorensen@ soundpublishing.com Peninsula Classified NO PHONE CALLS 1-800-826-7714 PLEASE. CHURCH OF CHRIST (360)797-1536 or (360)417-6980
AC C O U N TA N T - F i nancial Analyst / Cost Accountant. Accountant wanted for composite manufacturing facility in Port Angeles, WA. This accountant performs technical and administrative accounting work maintaining the fiscal records and accounting systems. They perform general cost accounting, maintain accounting records and perpetual inventories as well as support other accounting personnel with AP and AR duties. They also ensure the accuracy of Work-In-Process and Raw Materials inventory and monthly statements and balance sheets. The Financial Analyst / Cost Accountant reports to the Accounting Manager or Controller. Drug free, EEO/AA. Send resume, cover letter and salary requirements to HR@acti.aero. Company info at www.acti.aero.
4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4080 Employment General General Wanted DAYS INN Fr o n t d e s k c u s t o m e r service rep. Must have customer service experience. Apply in person at Days Inn, 1510 E. Front St., Port Angeles. No calls. D E L I V E RY D R I V E R : Angeles Millwork & Lumber Co. is hiring a delivery driver. Great attitude, great customer service, and Class B CDL w/Air Brake Endorsement required. Full time with benefits. Drug testing required. See full listing at http://angelesmillwork.com/employmentoppor tunities/ or call 457-8581 and ask for Chan McManus D E L I V E RY D R I V E R : Hartnagel Building Supply is hiring a delivery driver/roof top loader. Great attitude, great customer service, and Class B CDL w/Air Brake Endorsement required. Full time with benefits. Drug testing required. See full listing at http://har tnagels.com/employmentoppor tunities/ or call 452-8933 and ask for Dave Dornbush ENGINEERS: Jefferson County Public Works is hiring! For job information, description & application visit www.co.jefferson.wa.us or call 360/385-1900. First review Fri, May 13, 2016. EOE HOUSEKEEPER Experienced apply in person at Sportsman Motel 2909 E. Hwy 101 Port Angeles, WA. LOOKING for reliable dedicated caregivers to help people at home. Small friendly agency. Our staff love working for us. (360)681-6206 PERFORMING ARTS: B u s i n e s s M g r P / T. QuickBooks, MS Office ex p. r e q u i r e d , n e e d s good people skills, organized. Resume to: resumes4mgrs@gmail. com
T H E S E Q U I M DA I RY QUEEN IS NOW HIRING part-time positions for the summer and bey o n d . F I N D U S AT FACEBOOK.COM/SEQUIMDAIRYQUEEN for a link to all job descriptions and detailed requirements plus an application Or call/stop by the store for more info 720 W WASHINGTON STREET IN SEQUIM Phone: 360-681-0250 Email: Sequim.DQ@gmail.com
OFFICE ASSISTANT Management position, must have skills in Excel, Microsoft word, have good people skills, multitasking a must, attention to detail. Wage dependent on exper ience. Must pass a background c l e a r a n c e. ( 3 6 0 ) 3 7 4 9340. Pick up applications at 945 S. For ks Ave. Office / Assistant Manager Hearing Health Practice seeking the right indiv i d u a l fo r a f u l l - t i m e Front Office/Assistant M a n a g e r. M u s t h ave : Culture of Caring, Detail Oriented, Team Player, Phones and Microsoft Office Experience. Pay commensurate with experience. Email resumes to: jdiottavio@ahaanet.com
ADEPT YARD CARE Mowing, weed eating (360)797-1025 Alterations and Sewing. Alterations, mending, hemming and some heavyweight s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o you from me. Call (360)531-2353 ask for B.B.
Andrew’s Lawn Services. Mowing, Edging, Tr i m m i n g a n d M o r e . Friendly, Efficient Service. (360)912-2291
Elite Clean: Interior boat cleaning, several different packages. The best, c a l l t o d a y, A m i e (360)500-3272
ENVIOUS GREENS Currently accepting NEW lawn mowing acc o u n t s. S e q u i m bu s i ness since 2010 (Licensed & Insured). Booked solid in other Depts. Call for a MOWING bid today Owner / Operator 360*808*9638
PAYROLL/HR Manual calculation. Experience pref. Multi-task, team player. Apply in person or fax resume to (360)457-7186. Caregiv- FRUIT TREE EXPERT ers, 622 E. Front St. PA. Ornamental and shrubs too. Book now for year long lawn services also. PAYROLL Established, many referSPECIALIST W i t h We s t p o r t L L C. ences, best rates and Ensures accurate pro- senior discounts P. A. cessing and recording area only. Local. (360)808-2146 of company’s payroll, provide timely and acLAWN MOWING curate financial infor- Openings for maintemation, participate in nance mwing and edgdaily data entry Payroll ing. (360)461-0794 processing. At least 2 years Payroll experi- Licensed CAREGIVER, ence required. CPP private for PA/Sequim preferred. Go to area, good local referwestportyachts.com ences. (360)797-1247 to apply. Young Couple Early 60’s available for seasonal PHARMACY cleanup, weeding, trimASSISTANT Mon.-Fri. rotating week- ming, mulching & moss end shifts. Exceptional removal. We specialize customer service skills, in complete garden resmulti-tasking and high torations. Excellent refschool diploma required. erences. 457-1213 Pharmacy assistant li- Chip & Sunny’s Garden cense preferred. Apply Tr a n s f o r m a t i o n s . L i # C C at Jim’s Pharmacy, 424 c e n s e CHIPSSG850LB. E. 2nd St., P.A. EOE. RESIDENTIAL AIDE Par t-Time, Req. H.S./ GED and work experience with chronic mental illness/substance abuse preferred. $10.80-$12.75 h r. D O E . R e s u m e t o : PBH, 118 E. 8th St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. peninsulabehavioral.org EOE Retail Sales: Part time, exper ience preferred. Basic knowledge in hardware, plumbing and electrical. Flexible work schedule required. Must be able to work weekends. Wages, d.o.e. Apply in person at The Coop Far m and Garden, Sequim. (360)683-4111. VETERINARY HOSPITAL Vet technician and part time receptionist positions open. Accepting application at: Sequim Animal Hospital 202 N. 7th Ave. Sequim
105 Homes for Sale Clallam County
A Gorgeous Classic 2 story, 4 bed / 3 bath 3,405 sq ft Tudor Home with a separate guest home in desirable Historical Sunrise Heights on E. 2nd St. This distinctive Tudor Home has been tastefully updated including plumbing, electrical, heat system without diminishing any of the or iginal 1930 Era Elegance. Home is full of yester year char m including original Mahogany Wood Panels in the Foyer and Parlor Room, original South American Tile flooring, hardwood floors, 14 ft beamed ceiling, detached garage/storage and a separate guest home! MLS#300600 $429,000 Holly Locke COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY (360)809-3520
Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle — horizontally, vertically, diagonally and even backward. Find them, circle each letter of the word and strike it off the list. The leftover letters spell the WONDERWORD. METALLOIDS Solution: 13 letters
A G E N T S B E R Y L L I U M
50 acres in Joyce! Two large level parcels available in Joyce with great mountain views! An 18+ acre parcel mostly wooded withsome pasture land and an adjoining 32+ acre parcel that is mostly open pasture. PUD at the road and mobile homes allowed. No CC&Rs. Zoned Urban Residential High. Zoning allows for potential to subdivide parcel. Buy both to own 50 acres of level land! Septic and Crescent water share needed. MLS#300650 $120,000 MLS#300653 $195,000 Kelly Johnson Windermere Port Angeles (360) 457-5876
L R F U U I L A R S E N I C R
O U L M I R I T Y O A Z I N C
R T U I R S C E E M N U O O P
I X O N U T O M R D I R B Y H
N E I M R I U M L L E P N G E C G Y B B ګ O D ګ N C ګ D D ګ N O O S
N N N K E F A S O L I D I M P
I O E C T H A L L I U M U I H
D B R O M I N E L B A T Q T O
O R U L A N O G A I D T I N R
I A P B I O L O G I C A L A U
Delightful Privacy 3 bed, 2 bath, 1584 sq ft plus big family room, ½ a c r e o f a l l fe n c e d i n beautiful yard with fruit trees, raspberry & blueberry bushes. Home with nice updates inside & out. MLS#300509 $215,000 Ania Pendergrass Remax Evergreen (360)461-3973
FSBO: 3 br plus den, 2 ba., over 1,800 sf on 1.93 acres, oversized garage, shed and gazeb o, l a r g e l a n d s c a p e d yard, lots of space. $235,000. (360)460-2542
Monday’s Puzzle Solved
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
CEENH ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
GLOMU ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
33 Oak-to-be 34 Sandbar 36 Lewis Carroll specialty 37 Security issue 39 Time and again, to a bard 43 “Honest!” 44 Kremlin rejection 45 Passionate 46 R-rated, perhaps 50 Thin cookies 53 Sharp-eyed flier
FSBO: 4 bedroom, 2 1/2 baths; 1,900 sq ft. 9,000 sq ft lot. Corner lot on a quiet cul-de-sac.Fenced back yard, adjacent to playground for little kids. Heat pump, A/C; cable ready, attached 2 car g a ra g e. D o u bl e p a n e windows. Built in 2002. $245,000. Call Mike 360-461-9616 or Shaila 360-461-0917 High Quality Throughout 3br / 2ba home featuring gourmet kitchen, Quartz countertops, contemporary LED lighting, tile backslashes, and grand butler pantry. Indoor / outdoor living area with optional fireplace. MLS#282095 Alan Burwell Lic# 17663 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360)460-0790
Newest to see! Cute older 2 br, 2 ba cottage home in a park like setting near Sequim. Beautifully landscaped, level, fenced 1.91 acres with raised-bed garden area, mature fruit trees, plus irrigation. Large trees, multiple outbuildings, and a convenient location close to shopping make this a must see property! $199,900 Mike Echternkamp (206)550-4660 SEQUIM HOME IN Blue Sky Real Estate SUNLAND (FOR SALE Sequim BY OWNER) $269,000. 106 Victoria Ct., Sequim WESTSIDE Q TEE OPEN HOUSE: APRIL 9 T H , 1 6 T H , & 2 3 R D Really neat 3br. / 2ba w i t h elegant hand1919 SqFt, Cul-de-sac. 2-3 Bed/2 Bath (Bonus s c ra p e d a c a c i a wo o d R m w i t h b u i l t - i n flooring and eye-popping desk/shelves) Mstr bdrm Black Galaxy Granite w/Lg walk-in closet/built- counter tops and matchins;Lg Bath w/jetted tub. ing appliances. Private 2nd Bdrm w/Bath. Sun- d e c k f o r t h o s e B B Q room. Cntrl Vac. Laun- evenings. Don’t miss the dry Room. Multiple up- super “man cave” game grades. Skylights. Wood room with wet bar. A Burning Fireplace. New nice home in a nice locaRoof. Oversized 2-car tion at a nice price. MLS#300660 $235,000 Garage. Outdoor Gated DICK PILLING Storage. 360-775-5391 o r 3 6 0 - 6 8 1 - 2 5 8 7 . COLDWELL BANKER (www.FSBO.com/17834 UPTOWN REALTY 0 for more info) (360)417-2811 FSBO: 3 br plus den, 2 ba., over 1,800 sf on 1.93 acres, oversized garage, shed and gazeb o, l a r g e l a n d s c a p e d yard, lots of space. $235,000. (360)460-2542
4/26
Agents, Alloy, Aluminum, Antimony, Arsenic, Beryllium, Biological, Bond, Boron, Bromine, Carbon, Chlorine, Diagonal, Fluorine, Form, Gallium, Germanium, Grey, Hybrid, Iodine, Liquid, Metal, Mixtures, P-Block, Phosphorus, Polonium, Pure, Safe, Selenium, Silicon, Solid, Stair Step, Sulfur, Table, Tellurium, Thallium, Zinc Yesterday’s Answer: Plaza
4/26/16
54 Rx, for short 56 Skin lotion brand 57 Collect incrementally 58 Sounds from a kennel 59 Sacred chests 60 Hole up 61 Librarian’s warning 62 Confucian “path” 63 Go public with
RELAXING OUTDOOR SPACES Spacious 4 bd, 2.5 ba, 2,606 sf in Sunland, den and office, family room, vaulted ceiling, great room, mtn. and golf course views, large kitchen, dining room, built-in vacuum, 2 car garage with car por t, front and back patios MLS# 928764/300721 $349,500 Tyler Conkle lic# 112797 (360) 683-6880 (360) 359-8823 1-800-359-8823 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
Large Shop Beautiful flowering fruit trees: apple, peach, c h e r r y, y o u n a m e i t . South facing glass French doors, vaulted living room with woodstove. Tiled dining room and kitchen with breakfast bar and stainless appliances. Master Suite with 2 closets, dual sinks, walk-in shower and skylight. Guest bath and 2nd br w/walk-in closet. MLS#300663/925400 $389,000 Carol Dana lic# 109151 Windermere Real Estate SEQUIM BAY HOME Sequim East Low Bank, Stunning (360)461-0914 Views! Large Craftsman home built in 1940 from 308 For Sale the lumber on the land Lots & Acreage and lovingly restored from the bottom up starting in 2011. The 1st and View Lot For Sale By 2nd floors have retained O w n e r . Po r t A n g e l e s t h e o r i g i n a l b e a u t i f u l High School area, newly d o o r s a n d t h e h a n d - cleared building lot. Exmade hardware. All of cellent views of the Strait this equals a must see of Juan de Fuca, and rustic/elegant home that Olympic Mountains. 1.5 has maintained the origi- C i t y L o t s i n a g r e a t nal basic design and neighborhood. Within character. blocks of High School, MLS#300513/917476 Library, Bus lines, gro$1,100,000 c e r y s t o r e s, a n d j u s t Jeff Biles minutes from downtown. 360-477-6706 Come see at 218 Lopez TOWN & COUNTRY Avenue. 585-437-2535 o r Spacious 3 jbstrauss68@gmail.com Story Home 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath. 311 For Sale Master, kitchen, laundry, living and dining on main Manufactured Homes level. 100% yard maintenance. Green park with S E Q : 2 B r. a n d 1 B a . garden community room. New paint, new roof, 55 Paved walking. Even a plus, $39000. 681-8818 dog park! SEQUIM: Spacious 2 Br, MLS#292318/877431 2 ba., beautifully updat$365,000 ed, with all new appliCarol Dana ances, granite counters, lic# 109151 wood cabinets, with soft Windermere close hinges, large Real Estate 8’X42’ covered porch, Sequim East raised garden beds, (360)460-9014 herb garden, greenhouse, and 2 workWater View Acreage! 22 Acres Consisting of 4 shops. All this and more! Separate Lots, Unob- $74,500 by owner. str ucted Water Views (509)366-4353. From Each Lot, Power Along Hwy 101 E, Legal A c c e s s R o a d E s t a b - 505 Rental Houses Clallam County lished, Near Sequim Bay State Park. MLS#300382 $187,500 SEQUIM: Nice, single wide, 2 Br., 1 ba, in quiet Team Thomsen mobile home park. $725 COLDWELL BANKER mo., last, deposit. UPTOWN REALTY (360)477-8180 (360)809-0879
DOSTED
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
DOWN 1 Old way to place a collect call 2 Creepy admirer 3 Signal silently to 4 Sculptured, as an image 5 Kabul native 6 Wee one’s word 7 __ steak 8 Tropical fruit 9 Political debate topic 10 “Fear of Flying” author Erica 11 Antlered animal 12 Two-time 1500meter gold medalist Sebastian 13 Give it a whirl 21 “My stars!” 22 Maker of NORDLI furniture 25 Texas tourist spot 26 Fix a green 27 Revise 29 Shoreline protection gp. 31 Discreetly send a dupe email to 32 Chef’s flavorings
4/26/16
S C I P O L O N I U M R O F S
DANPRO Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
“ Yesterday’s
❘
”
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: EMCEE DODGE ABACUS BODILY Answer: The beavers’ home had been there for years, but now it was — DAM-AGED
by Mell Lazarus
505 Rental Houses Clallam County
(360)
417-2810
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Peninsula Daily News Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 305 West 1st St., Port Angeles Port Angeles, WA 98362 Sequim Gazette/Peninsula Daily News 147 W. Washington, Sequim or FAX to: (360) 417-3507 NO PHONE CALLS
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Views Of Mountains, Pond & Greenbelt Beautifully upgraded 1,900 sf. Condo in Sherwood Village with southern exposure. Features include Hardwood flooring through out. Kitchen with granite counters, Cherry cabinets and upgraded appliances. Living room with stone faced propane fireplace. Large Den/office. Master sutie with double sinks and tiled walk in shower. Laundry with Cherry cabinets and Corian counter. Fenced private patio with 4 level water feature. Heat pump and 3 car garage. MLS#300590 Tom Blore 360-683-4116 PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE
H E M L M A I L G A L L I U M
© 2016 Universal Uclick www.wonderword.com Download the Wonderword Game App!
By Gail Grabowski and Bruce Venzke
105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Momma Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County 1 acre with water view home on Bell Hill. Beautiful yard with waterfall, pond and low maintenance turf. Main level master suite and office / bonus room. Kitchen has granite counters and lrg view window, wall oven and center island with range top. Lrg living rm offers grand view windows, gas fireplace and a bright, open floorplan. 2 view decks to enjoy the landscaping and water views. MLS#291853 $400,000 Deborah Norman Brokers Group Real Estate Professionals (360)460-9961
C S E A U T S S E L E N I U M
-
ACROSS 1 Doorbell sound 5 Radio switch 9 Pop out of the CD player 14 “Young Frankenstein” helper 15 “Deck the Halls” syllables 16 Use crayons 17 “The West Wing” actor Alan 18 Fed. agent 19 Best way to sing 20 Keep in suspense 23 Maker of Fiesta Flats taco shells 24 Gorilla who learned sign language 25 “__ you for real?” 28 Half a Mork-toOrson farewell 30 Symbol 32 Suffers from 35 Department store fixture 38 Tunnel effect 40 Actor’s prompt 41 “We gotta move!” 42 Shingle securer 47 Roulette bet 48 Like a spoiled child 49 Didn’t need to guess 51 Weekly NBC offering since 1975, briefly 52 Takes notice of 55 Like some country songs 59 It may be affixed to an email ... and, literally, what the last word of 20-, 35and 42-Across can have 61 Drummer Ringo 64 Sheepish smile 65 First name in bike stunts 66 Japanese verse 67 Tupperware tops 68 Harvest 69 Kentucky Derby racer 70 Sporting weapon 71 Lacking, in Lorraine
TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2016 B7
91190150
ATTENTION ADVERTISERS: No cancellations or corrections can be made on the day of publication. It is the Advertiser’s responsibility to check their ad on the first day of publication and notify the Classified department if it is not correct. Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., is responsible for only one incorrect insertion. All advertising, whether paid for or not, whether initially accepted or published, is subject to approval or rescission of approval by Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc. The position, subject matter, form, size, wording, illustrations, and typography of an advertisement are subject to approval of Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., which reserves the right to classify, edit, reject, position, or cancel any advertisement at any time, before or after insertion. Neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., investigates statements made directly or indirectly in any advertisement and neither makes any representations regarding the advertisers, their products, or their services or the legitimacy or value of the advertisers or their products or services. In consideration of publication of an advertisement, the Advertiser and any advertising agency that it may employ, jointly and severally, will indemnify and hold harmless Black Press Ltd./ Sound Publishing, Inc., their officers, agents, and employees against expenses (including all legal fees), liabilities, and losses resulting from the publication or distribution of advertising, including, without limitation, claims or suits for libel, violation of privacy, copyright or trademark infringement, deception, or other violations of law. Except as provided in this paragraph, neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall be liable for any damages resulting from error in or non-publication of ads, whether paid for or not, including but not limited to, incidental, consequential, special, general, presumed, or punitive damages or lost profits. The sole and exclusive remedy against Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., for any error in, or non-publication of, an ad shall be a refund of the cost of the ad or the printing of one make-good insertion, at the discretion of the Publisher; provided that Advertiser and/or its agency has paid for the ad containing the error or which was not published; otherwise, the sole remedy shall be one make-good insertion. No claim for repetition shall be allowed. No allowance shall be made for imperfect printing or minor errors. Neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall be liable for failure to print, publish, or circulate all or any portion of an advertisement or of advertising linage contracted for, if such failure is due to acts of God, strikes, accidents, or other circumstances beyond the control of Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc. Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall not be liable for errors in or non-publication of advertisements submitted after normal deadlines. Any legal action arising from these terms and conditions or relating to the publication of, or payment for, advertising shall, if filed, be commenced and maintained in any court. Other terms and conditions, stated on our Advertising Rate Cards and Contracts, may apply. This service is not to be used to defraud or otherwise harm users or others, and Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., reserves the right to disclose a user’s identity where deemed necessary to protect Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., or others or to respond to subpoenas or other lawful demands for information. All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Classified
B8 TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2016
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 641493673 4-24
SERVICE D •I •R •E •C •T •O •R •Y
LANDSCAPING
ND New Dungeness Nursery .com Landscape Design & Construction.
LAWN CARE
No job too small!
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EXCAVATING/SEPTIC GEORGE E. DICKINSON
APPLIANCE SERVICE INC. 457-9875 914 S. Eunice St. Port Angeles
CONSTRUCTION, INC.
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Specializing in home repairs, remodel projects, and superior customer care. (360) 808-3631
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2015 EXHIBITORS GUIDE
FEBRUARY 2016
SPRING 2016
Eroding climate apathy ‘Taming Bigfoot’ challenges residents to confront, cut carbon emissions
Lifelong Journey
Landscape connectivity and climate change ‘Adapt, go extinct or move’
Nonprofits teach about the issues Volunteer opportunities offered
Olympic Mountain glaciers
A SENIOR-ORIENTED PUBLICATION FOR THE NORTH OLYMPIC PENINSULA
Barometers on a changing climate
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allgone1274@gmail.com Port Angeles, WA 360-775-9597
EDUCATION Veteran soars after making a career change
Supplement to Sequim Gazette and Port Townsend and Jefferson County Leader
Complete information and rules about how to enter your items into the Clallam County Fair.
ACTIVITY Class at YMCA brings active adults together
SKINCARE Just as the body changes, so do the needs of skin
An advertising supplement produced by Peninsula Daily News and Sequim Gazette
A supplement to the Peninsula Daily News produced by the Advertising Department
360-452-2345
“Cowboy Boots & Country Roots” is the theme for this year’s Clallam County Fair. Don’t miss this Exhibitor’s Guide geared to fair exhibitors, 4-H’ers and Fairgoers.
PUBLISHES Sequim Gazette: Wednesday, June 8 June Topic: Olympic National Park
PUBLISHES Peninsula Daily News Friday, June 17
Advertising Deadline: Monday, May 9, 2016
Advertising Deadline: Friday, May 13, 2016
A senior resource guide for the North Olympic Peninsula. Features include education activivites and lifetyle articles for those over 50. PUBLISHES Peninsula Daily News & Sequim Gazette Wednesday, June 29
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Advertising Deadline: Thursday, May 19, 2016
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2016 B9 9050 Marine Miscellaneous
9180 Automobiles 9434 Pickup Trucks Classics & Collect. Others C H E V Y: ‘ 7 7 1 / 2 To n pickup. 350, Auto. Camper shell, 46K original miles. Ex. Cond. $3,800. (360)460-0615 FORD: ‘60 F-100 BBW. All original survivor, runs strong, rusty. Many extras and new par ts. $2,000. (360)681-2382
A I R C O M P R E S S O R : CHARGER: Ryobi one+, Powermatic, 115V, 2.7 18-volt, dual chemistry, Gal. $150. 681-3147 IntelliPort charger. $25. (949)232-3392 AMPLIFIER: T x 15 Quartz tuner. $145. CHOP SAW: Delta, 10”, (360)775-1624 with stand. $35. (360)461-6101 A RT: Fra m e d , S k a g i t Va l l ey Tu l i p Fe s t i va l , CIGARETTE BOX: Old, posters. $20/each. pewter, fox terrier finial. (360)681-7579 $40. (360)683-9295 AUDIO SYSTEM: Polk C O M P U T E R D E S K : A u d i o M o m o C 5 2 5 0 $20. (360)640-2155 5.25”. New in box. CRIB: New, Graco, dark $100. (360)301-4232 wood, top quality bed, AXE: Vintage, ice climb- easy assembly. $100. ing, made in Austria, by (360)670-3310 STUB.IA, wood handle. DEACONS BENCH: $50. (360)457-5051 $200. (360)683-4491 BAR STOOLS: (4) matching, hardwood, like DESKS: (4) Wood, small and medium, nice condinew condition. $125. tion. $10 each. (360)681-7579 (360)582-6302 BBQ GRILL: Propane DODGE: Spirit. Needs and tank. $35. work. $100. (360)683-7161 (360)477-2345 BEAM: 20’ long, 6 x 12”, D R E S S E R : 3 D r aw e r $125. (360)460-9226 with mirror, 40”x18”x31”, B E D : F u l l s i z e , b o x good conditon. $75. frame, like new. $20. (360)457-1019 (360)452-8430 DRYING CENTER: B O O K S H E LV E S : ( 6 ) Maytag, Neptune, Wood, small, medium, works perfect. $200. large, nice condition. (360)457-5026 $20 each. 582-6302 EXERCISE CYCLE: ReBOOK: Thomas Aldwell, e b o k , m o d e l 3 6 5 T R . “ C o n q u e r i n g t h e l o s t good condition. $30. Frontier,” first edition. (360)681-7568 $75/obo. (360)452-6842 F I X T U R E : O u t d o o r, B O OT S : N ew i n b ox , hanging, electric light fixbrown, lace up, size 8. ture. $35. (949)241-0371 $30. (360)301-4392 FLY ROD: Betts, 8 foot, BOOTS: Women’s size this is a beauty, never 8, black/white polka dot, used. $40. 460-6720 new in box, nice. $50. F R E E : D i s h w a s h e r, (360)301-4392 Kenmore, built-in, black. BOXES: Banker boxes, you haul. (360)417-6663 clean, used once. $1 FREE: High chair, fits each. (360)979-8842 onto kitchen chair. C A N O P Y: F i b e r g l a s s (360)477-9962 t r u ck c a n o py, f i t s 9 5 FREE: Hundreds of Chevy pick-up. $150. DV D m o v i e s a n d T V (360)808-6810 p r o gra m s t a p e d f r o m CHAIR: IKEA, Poang, home. (360)582-0191 w i t h fo o t s t o o l , l i g h t birch, custom leather. F R E E : L a d i e s , k n e e high, compression hose, $100. (208)720-2335 medium. (360)452-6907 CHAIR: Large, red upholstered, clean, like FREE: Upr ight Grand piano. Made in 1911 by new. $175. Marshall Wendel. You (360)460-8768 haul. (360)452-5679 CHAIRS: (2) rarely used, maroon, swivel FREE: Wooden desk, rocking, you haul. $100 large, with chair. (360)457-7366 each. (360)582-3101
FREEZER: 22 cu, ft., MEAT SLICER: , Rival Whirlpool, chest style. Professional Style, SS blade, used twice. $50. $125. (360)461-6088 (360)301-4232 FREEZER: Igloo, almost new, upright, 6.5cf, 55.5” M I R R O R S : ( 6 ) A l l X 22”. $160. 683-4063 framed, various styles and sizes. $10-$20 G A R D E N W A G O N : each. (360)452-9685 Green, hardly used, 20” X 42”. $89. 775-8005 MIRROR: Solid oak frame, large, heavy bevG L I D E R : 2 p e r s o n el glass, 30x50. $100. bench, outdoor, weath(360)504-3309 ered, sturdy. $65. (360)460-8768 MOWER: Snapper 18” push with HiVac rearGREENHOUSE: 6’x10’, bag. #213576. $95. you haul, $25. (985)290-5769 (360)683-3887 NET: Vintage, trout net, G R O O M I N G TA B L E : unrestored. $50. Professional, excellent (360)457-5051 condition. $60. (360)504-2641 N I G H T S TA N D : B l u e with wood top, 20.5”x18” GUITAR: Yamaha 6 x 23”. $35. string, full size acoustic, (360)457-1019 $125. (360)457-4383. P I C T U R E : Fra m e d , HALL TREE: Bamboo, 5/100, Rayonier Mill, PA, v i n t a g e , w i t h m i r r o r. b y D o l o r e s S t e w a r t . $100. (360)452-9106 $60/obo. (360)452-6842 H E AT E R : 6 f t b a s e - PLANT STAND: Wickboard. Never used. Ex. e r / m e t a l , w i t h s h e l f, cond. $50. 24”x12”x31”. $20. (360)457-0283 (360)683-9295 HITCH: 5th wheel. $100. (360)631-9211
PLATE: Bergsma collectors unicorn plate, HITCH: 5th wheel, com- #1698/7500, excellent. $15/obo. (360)460-9811 plete with rails. $100. (360)460-6720 POTTY CHAIR: Older, ICE CHEST: Rubber- antique, wooden. $15. (360)301-2653 maid, 12” X 20” X 14”, perfect. $15. 683-7161 POWER STRIP: New, J E A N S : L e v i 5 0 1 ’s , Trickle Star, 7 outlets. new, over 20 pr, pre- $20. (360)683-4063 shrunk, size 40/36. $100 POWER WINCH: Boat for all. (360)504-2649 model 712-A, 2000 lbs. KITE: 52”, 3D nylon, single pull, 3500 lbs. double. $100. 504-2649 new in box. $15. (949)232-3392 PRINTER: Canon Pixma LIFT CHAIR: New con- MP160, All-In-One Inkjet Printer. $25. trols, Blue. $150. (949)241-0371 (360)457-8616 M AT T R E S S : a n d b ox RECLINER: Like new, spring, Simmons, exc. L a z y b oy, S a g e c o l o r. $150. (360)457-8616 cond. $50 for set. (360)477-9962 REFRIGERATOR: Bar, M AT T R E S S : a n d b ox 3 3 ” , S e a r s, l i ke n ew. springs, king size, excel- $85. (360)683-7435 lent condition. $200.00. REFRIGERATOR (360)683.2383 Whirlpool, 19 cu. ft. M / C B O OT S : C o r b i n , white, with ice maker, brown leather, like new. good condition. $135. (360)457-7589 $85. (360)681-4505.
RUG: Octagon, 50” diameter, brown, floral, multi color. $69. (360)775-8005
TIRES: (3) 31 x 10.5R x 16.5, on mag wheels, wheel caps, lug nuts. $75. (360)457-0259
SEEDLINGS: White Fir, TOOL BOX: Kennedy, approx. 3 dozen 6”-24”. full of vintage machinist tools. $175. Free, you dig. (360)808-6275 (360)457-9484 S E W I N G M A C H I N E : TOOL BOX: Locking, for S i n g e r S l a n t - O - M a t i c small truck. $50. (360)385-3659 500, in cabinet. $150. (360)460-4859 TOTA L G Y M : Po w e r platinum, with accessoS H R I M P P OT S : ( 2 ) ries. $50. (360)582-9220 Hood Canal legal. $60. (360)683-7874 TREADMILL: Sears, 585 Pro form. $50. SINK: Utility, pull out (360)460-9164 sprayer, arc faucet. $55. (360)452-9106 TRELLIS: Approx. 7’x7’, 1”x2” cedar. $10. SOFA: 7’, light color, 3 (360)457-9484 cushions. $75/obo. (360)681-3339 TRUCK LOCKBOX: Full size, all diamond plate, SONY: 400 disc player, lock and keys. $200. (360)631-9211 CD/DVD, Model # ovpcx995v. $200. TV: Color, small 13”, (360)797-2114 Magnovox, manual and Speaker system, Zenith remote. $20. (360)504-3309 Allegro 3000. $150. (360)477-3834 TV: Flat screen, 32”, LG, S T A N D : f o r W o o d LCD, black glass, 2 tier L a t h e, S e a r s, d o u bl e table and DVD player. $175. (360)683-7435 pedestal, cast iron. $75. (360)582-9533 T V: V i z i o 1 9 ” , L C D, LED, HDTV, excellent STOCK RIMS: off ‘87 condition. $50. Toyota 4x4. $10 each. (360)565-5533 (360)385-3659 U.S. NAVY UNIFORM: SURGER: Juki, barely Shore Patrol, summer used, instructions, ac- whites, small size. $125. cessor ies and books. (360)379-4134 $100. (360)582-9220 VACUUM: Bissell, powTA B L E : D i n i n g , w i t h er force, good condition. leaf, wrought iron base. $20. (360)452-8430 $150. (360)797-2114 V I O L I N C A S E : N i c e, TABLE SAW: Delta, 10” broken zipper. $45. with stand. $100. (360)301-2653 (360)461-6101 WA D E R S : C a b e l a ’s , TA B L E S AW : R y o b i m e n ’s s i ze 1 3 , gr e a t BT300, with cab stand. condition. $30/obo. (360)460-9811 $175/obo. 681-3339 TA B L E S : C o f fe e a n d WEIGHTS: Downrigger, end tables, glass inlay, 1 4 l b , f i s h s h a p e d , creates less drag. $39. shelf and drawer. $125 (360)319-1894 (360)457-0283 WHEELS: Polished, aluTA B L E S : C o f fe e a n d minum, 16x8”, 6x5.5 bolt end tables, nice. $200. pattern. $100. (360)640-2155 (360)582-0009
TABLES: Ornate, metal WOOD LATHE, Rockand wood coffee and 2 well (Delta), 12” x 36”. m a t c h i n g e n d t a bl e s. $200. (360)582-9533 $60. (360)670-3310 M/C JACKET: Grey, 42 RIMS: (3) VW, with tires, WOOD SEALER: Prelong, leather, zipper air 5 lug, 15” with hubcaps, TIRES: (2) 265/75R x serva-wood stain, 5 gal16, 60% tread. $20. $50 for all. vents, like new. $90. lon, never opened. $60. (360)457-0259 (360)452-9685 (360)681-4505 (360)504-2641
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505 Rental Houses 1163 Commercial Clallam County Rentals
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683 Rooms to Rent Roomshares R O O M M AT E : F u r n . room, utilities included. $475. (360)457-9006. ROOMMATE WANTED 85 yr old gentleman looking for female live in companinion, no rent just food costs. (360)457-3712
6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
6010 Appliances
Quadra Fire, Sante Fe, With pad and accessor ies, excel. condition. $1,200 firm. (360)457-0283
6065 Food & Farmer’s Market EGGS: Farm fresh egg overrun: 1 dozen, $4.25 3 or more dozen $4.00 each. Call week days. (360)417-7685
6075 Heavy Equipment DUMP TRUCK: ‘85, Mack cab over, 5yd double cylinder with loading ramps. $5000/obo or trade (253)348-1755.
6080 Home Furnishings
BED: King mattress set W A S H E R / D R Y E R : and frame. TempurpedStacked, Kenmore, new i c , l i k e n e w . $ 5 0 0 . in January, barely used. (360)452-3535 $800/obo. FURNITURE: Antique (360)681-8863 (1,800’s) Armoire, good text (206)799-0184 condition, asking $400. (360)477-4838
6035 Cemetery Plots BURIAL PLOTS: Twin burial lot in beautiful old Dungeness Cemeter y. $1,000 ea. or $1,800 for both. (360)379-0190 C RY P T: M t . A n g e l e s M e m o r i a l Pa r k c r y p t . Mausoleum 1, north inside, Tier A, cr ypt 6. Asking $4000 and seller will pay transfer fees. Call 206-498-5515
6050 Firearms & Ammunition SPRINGFIELD: XDS -9mm 3.3 barell $500. XDM-9mm 3.8 barrell $500. NEVER BEEN Fired. (360)460-8149
6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
MISC: Glass dining table, 4 chairs, $110. Broyhill bedroom suite, mirrored headboard, $625. Oak bedroom suite with queen set, $475. Bar stools, $40. Posturpedic full mattress set, $400. (360)797-1094 ROCKER: Recliner, XL L a z y b o y, c l e a n , n o tares, Reclines flat for good naps. $275. (360)452-2118
6100 Misc. Merchandise EASEL: Large Manhattan Easel by Richeson Company, model # 8 8 7 1 2 0 “ H .” U n boxed, brand new. Retail price $2,100. Asking just $1,400. James, (360)582-6905
MISC: Johnson: 15hp L o n g s h o t , ve r y g o o d c o n d . $ 4 0 0 o b o. 4 h p FIREWOOD: $179 deliv- E v i n r u d e , ve r y g o o d ered Sequim-P.A. True cond. $150 obo. Comc o r d . 3 c o r d s p e c i a l mercial lumber rack for $499. (360)582-7910 short box, fits over canowww.portangelesfire py, $500 obo. wood.com (360)774-1003
or FA X to: (360)417-3507 Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com
NO PHONE CALLS
9817 Motorcycles
MERCURY: ‘84 Station Wa g o n . 2 n d o w n e r, $1,000 obo. (360)808-3160 SATURN: Sedan, ‘97, ve r y c l e a n , r u n s bu t needs engine work, many new parts, great tires. $800/obo. (360)460-4723
NISSAN: ‘85 4x4, Z24 4 c y l , 5 s p, m a t c h i n g canopy, new tires, runs great!. 203k, new head at 200k. VERY low VIN (ends in 000008!) third a d u l t o w n e r, a l l n o n smokers. Very straight body. $3,950/obo. (360)477-1716
NISSAN: ‘89 4x4 pickup. TOYOTA : ‘ 0 7 C a r o l l a $800 with extra parts. CE, 119K miles, good (360)452-5803. cond., CD player, $7000 obo. (805)636-5562 SCION: ‘06 xB Wagon. 1.5L 4 Cylinder, 5 Speed manual, good tires, tinted windows, keyless entry, power windows, door locks, and mirrors, A/C Pioneer CD stereo, dual front airbags. Only 85K HARLEY: ‘04 Low-Ridmiles. er. 4,000 mi. Tricked out, $7,995 extras, leathers and hel- VOLVO: ‘02 S-40, Safe VIN# ments. $7,800. clean, 30mpg/hwy., exJTLKT334850196796 (360)460-6780 cellent cond., new tires, Gray Motors a l way s s e r v i c e d w i t h 457-4901 high miles. $4,995. graymotors.com (360)670-3345 2 0 0 8 S u z u k i V- S t r o m 650. Pr ime condition. 11,800 miles. Original owner. Service records. Ju s t s e r v i c e d . N e e d s nothing. Many extras, including: center stand and gel seat. $5,200 OBO. Scott at (360)461-7051.
VW: ‘71 Super beetle, 9556 SUVs needs work, new upholOthers stery, tires and wheels. $600 worth of new acCHEVY: ‘94 Blazer S10. cessories. $1,500. 4 d r. n e e d V 6 m o t o r. (360)374-2500 H A R L E Y: ‘ 0 5 D y n a 2wd. $500 obo. Glide. 40K mi. Lots of (360)457-1615 VW: ‘86 Wolfberg, Cabextras. $8,500 obo. riolet, excellent condion. (360)461-4189 CHEVY: ‘98 Suburban, $4,000. (360)477-3725. 4 W D. 8 s e a t s , g o o d HONDA: ‘04, VTX 1800 VW: ‘99 Beetle. 185K cond., $4,000. CC road bike, 9,535 mil. ml., manual transmis(360)683-7711 speedometer 150. sion, sunroof, heated $5,500. (360)797-3328. leather seats, well main- FORD: ‘92 Explorer XLT tained and regular oil 4x4, very clean. $1,500. changes, excellent con- ( 3 6 0 ) 4 5 7 - 8 1 1 4 o r dition, second owner has (360)460-4955 owned it for 16 years. $3,500. (360)775-5790. FORD: ‘98 Explorer XLT. 191K mi. looks and $3,000. 9434 Pickup Trucks runs great. (360)460-1201
Others
HONDA: ‘98 VFR800, 23K ml., fast reliable, ext ra s, gr e a t c o n d i t i o n . $3,800. (360)385-5694
5A246724
S D A E E E FR FRE
E E R F
For items $200 and under
C-DORY ANGLER: ‘91 with ‘08 Yamaha 50HP 4 s t r o k e , ‘ 1 5 Ya m a h a 9.9HP High Thrust, G P S - f l a s h e r, e l e c t r i c C a n n o n d ow n r i g g e r s, 9292 Automobiles EZ-Load trailer with Others power winch. Stored InFORD: ‘95 F150, 4x4, doors $13,500. 43K ml., needs body CHEVY: ‘06 HHR, LT. (360)461-5719 work. $500. Red w/silver pinstripe. (360)327-3586 KAYAKS: (2) Eddyline, E x c e l l e n t c o n d . 6 4 K Equinox, 14’, paddles, m i l e s , o n e o w n e r . FORD: Ranger, ‘03, spray skirt, Nighthawk, $8,000. (360)681-3126 Red, single cab 17.5’, paddles, spray JAGUAR: ‘87 XJ6 Se$3,000. (360)385-5573 skirt. $1200 each. ries 3. Long wheel base, (360)504-2783 or ver y good cond. $76K (805)709-4646 mi. $9,000. (360)460-2789 S A I L B OAT : ‘ 0 4 M a c Gregor, 26’. Good condi- MAZDA: ‘90 Miata, cont i o n , bu t n e e d s T L C. ver tible, red. 120K ml. 70hp Suzuki. $15,000 e x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n , obo. (360)-797-3516. $4,500 (360)670-9674
HONDA: ‘87 Aspencade, loaded with extras. 60K miles. With gear. $3,750. (360)582-3065.
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FORD: ‘92 F150 XLT. Regular cab, long bed 2WD, 5.0L (302) V8, automatic, new tires, bedliner, rear sliding window, dual tanks, A/C, cassette stereo. Only 106K miles. $3,995 VIN# 2FTEF15N8NCB19395 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com
HONDA: CRF250R, ‘09, excellent condition, ramps and extras. $3,500. (208)704-8886
YA M A H A : ‘ 0 4 , 6 5 0 V Star Classic. 7,500 original miles, shaft drive, ex6105 Musical 7045 Tack, Feed & 9832 Tents & cellent condition, inInstruments Supplies cludes saddle bags and Travel Trailers sissy bars. $4,800/obo. HAY: Local hay, $5 ea. TRAILER: ‘96 18’ Aljo. (253)414-8928 Baby Grand Piano S h a f e r S o n s m o d e l round bales. Alder fire- Sleeps 4, no leaks, new tires, top and awning. SS51 baby grand piano wood also. 9180 Automobiles (360)477-1706 $6,700. (360)477-6719. 42” high and 4’9” long. Classics & Collect. H i g h g l o s s bl a ck . I n cludes bench piano light. L i k e n e w c o n d i t i o n . 9820 Motorhomes 9802 5th Wheels C H E V: ‘ 6 9 C o r ve t t e , coupe conver tible 350 $2,500 obo. small block, 500 hp, 125 (360)582-9898 2 0 0 0 R O A D T R E K : 5 t h W h e e l : ‘ 0 2 A r t i c miles on rebuilt motor, PIANO: Baldwin con- Model 200, 20’ Class B, Fox, 30’, Excellent con- matching numbers, nicepaint! And much more. s o l e . ex c . c o n d i t i o n . 9 5 K m i l e s o n C h ev y dition. $18,000. Asking $22,000, room to (360)374-5534 $999/obo (308)870-6347 C h a s i s . S o l a r r e a d y. $20,000. (360)457-1597 negotiate. 5th WHEEL: ‘95, 22’, (360)912-4231 6140 Wanted M O T O R H O M E : A l f a , very clean and dry. New ‘ 0 5 , 3 7 ’ , 3 5 0 C a t , 2 CHEV: ‘83 El Camino, & Trades roof, vents. $6,800. slides, 4 T.V.’s, 33K ml. local stock vehicle, (360)582-9179 champagne bronze. WANTED: Riding lawn- $51,000. (360)670-6589 $3900 firm. 775-4431 mowers, working or not. or (360)457-5601 ALPENLITE: ‘83 5th Will pickup for free. wheel, 24’. Remodeled S P R I T E : ‘ 6 7 A u s t i n MOTORHOME: SouthKenny (360)775-9779 wind Stor m, ‘96, 30’, on inside. $6,000. Healey, parts car or pro(360)452-2705 ject car. $3,500. 928WANTED: Sawdust for 51K, great condition, lots of extras. $17,500. 9774 or 461-7252. animal bedding. Sequim HOLIDAY RAMBLER: (360)681-7824 Po r t A n g e l e s, Po r t ‘94 33’ Aluminilite. UpTo w n s e n d a r e a , c a l l PACE AREO: ‘89, 34’, d a t e d fe a t u r e s, g o o d weekdays. 417-7685 needs works, new tires, w o r k i n g c o n d i t i o n s . refrigerator, new seal on $8,700. (360)477-1863 6135 Yard & roof, generator. $2,000/obo. Garden 9808 Campers & (253)380-8303 Canopies BLOOMING RHODOP O N T I AC : ‘ 0 6 S o l DENDRONS: Large, W I N N E B AG O : ‘ 8 9 , stice, 5sp. conv., 8K WOLFPUP: 2014 s o m e f r a g r a n t , n o n e Class C, 23’ Ford 350, miles, Blk/Blk, $1500 Toyhauler RV, 17’ over $35. Other beauti- 5 2 K m l . , w e l l m a i n c u s t o m w h e e l s, d r y $9,999. ful plants. 151 D. St., t a i n e d , g e n e r a t o r , cleaned only, heated $7,500. (360)460-3347 (360)461-4189 Port Hadlock. Tues.-Sat. g a ra g e, d r i ve n c a r (360)302-0239. shows only, like new. W I N N E BAG O : ‘ 9 2 , $16,950. 681-2268 9050 Marine Toyota 21’, low miles, L A W N T R A C T O R : new tires, good condiMiscellaneous Vintage. Montgomery tion. $7,000. 9935 General Ward 1950s with (360)477-4838 BELLBOY: ‘68, 21’, CalLegals blade, snow blade, rokin 91, 150hp Blackmax. totiller, new batter y, $2,500. (360)912-1783 9832 Tents & electr ic star t, 8 HP, Legal Notice Travel Trailers B OAT : 1 2 ’ A l u m i n u m Sealed proposals will be original books. $4,000. with trailer. $795. (360)374-6409 received at the office of P ROW L E R : ‘ 7 8 , 1 8 ’ , (360)461-4189 Pacific Forest Managegood tires. $2,000. ment, Inc. located at 440 MISC: Weed eater, high (360)460-8742 BOAT: 19’ Fiberglass, N Forks Ave, Forks WA wheel, gas. $250. Sickle with trailer, 140 hp motor 98331, until 12;00 p.m. bar mower, 4’, self pro(needs work). $1650/obo on May 2,2016. For mapelled. $500. (360)683-3577 terials necessary to (360)461-0255 complete the project BOATHOUSE: P.A., 16’ known as Project 15X 29’, lots of upgrades, 1083 Trib to Sooes Riv7030 Horses nice condition. $1,500. er Culvert Replacement (360)681-8556 project. This solicitation Quarter Horse: Breedis for a 164” X 105” X 60’ ing paint mare, 19 years T E N T T R A I L E R : ‘ 0 8 G A R M I N : R a d a r a n d culvert, including delivG P S , G P S M A P 7 4 0 S old, for sale or lease, call R o c k w o o d Fr e e d o m . ery to the job site. Confor details. Serious in- Sleeps 8, tip out, stove, and GMR18HD, new in t r a c t d o c u m e n t s, b i d gas/elec. fridge, furnace, box, $1,000. quires only please. sheets, and specifica(360)457-7827 toilet with shower, king (360)417-7685 tions can be obtained at and queen beds with Pacific Forest ManageG L A S T R O N : ‘ 7 8 1 5 ’ heated mattresses. Outments office located at EZLDR 84, 70hp John7035 General Pets side gas bbq and show- son, won’t start. $1,250. 440 N Forks Ave, Forks er. Great cond. $5,895. WA 98331. Each propo(360)912-1783 (360)452-6304 sal must contain the full FISH: Japanese Koi for name of the party or parUniFlyte Flybridge: 31’, sale, beautiful colors, T R A I L E R : ‘ 9 5 2 4 A ties submitting the prosizes from 8” to 16” long. Nash. Sleeps 5. Limited 1971, great, well loved, posal. The culvert deliv$50 and up. Please Call use. Needs mattress, b e a u t i f u l b o a t . Tw i n ery can be no later than ( 3 6 0 ) 8 0 8 - 0 3 1 4 o r small tear in awning. Chryslers, a great deal. July 15, 2016. Pacific Large fr idge, hitch, 2 A steal at $14,500. (360)417-2654 Forest Management re(360)797-3904 batteries, 2 propane serves the right to reject PUPPIES: Collie pup, tanks, AC, furnace, mi- LUND: 16ft, 20” trans- any and or all bids. fe m a l e, $ 4 0 0 . L a s s i e crowave, oven. $6000. om, 2 older Evinrude en- PUB: April 24, 25, 26, look-alike, sweet and Text/leave message: gines and lots of extras. 27, 28, 29, May 1, 2016 playful. (360)865-7497 (360)-461-9309 Legal No.695167 $600. (360)683-0988
JEEP: ‘09, Wrangler X, C H E V: ‘ 0 4 C o l o r a d o soft top, 59K ml., 4x4, 5 truck, 4X4. $4200. speed manual, Tuffy se(360)417-2056 curity, SmittyBuilt bumpers, steel flat fenders, CHEV: ‘77 Heavy 3/4 complete LED upgrade, t o n , r u n s . $ 8 5 0 . more....$26,500. (360)477-9789 (360)808-0841 C H E V Y: ‘ 8 1 1 / 2 To n P i c k u p . R u n s g o o d . JEEP: ‘11 Wrangler Rubicon. 9500 miles, as $1,500. (360)808-3160 new, never off road, auDODGE: ‘00 Dakota, 2 to, A.C., nav., hard top, wheel drive, short bed, power windows, steering a l l p o w e r, t o w p k g . and locks. Always garaged. $28,500 $5900. (360)582-9769 (360)681-0151 FORD: ‘01 Ranger 3.0 V6, 5 sp. with canopy. 9730 Vans & Minivans 100K miles. $2,995. (360)452-6599 Others F O R D : ‘ 0 3 Fo c u s S E Sedan. 2.0L Zetec 4 Cyl- D O D G E : ‘ 0 2 G r a n d inder, automatic, alloy Caravan, 200K miles, w h e e l s , k e y l e s s e n - good cond., $1500 obo. (360)808-2898 tr y/alar m, power windows, door locks, and mirrors, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, CD Stereo, dual front airbags. Only 65k miles. $6,495 VIN# 1FAFP34303W336346 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com FORD: ‘06 Escape XLT. 4X4 Spor t Utility 3.0L V 6 , a u t o m a t i c , a l l oy wheels, good tires, running boards, roof rack, tow package, keyless e n t r y, p r i va c y g l a s s , p owe r w i n d ow s, d o o r locks, mirrors, and drivers seat, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, 6 CD Stereo, dual front airbags. Only 62K Miles $9,995 VIN# 1FMCU93166KD11578 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com FORD: ‘72 F250. $2000. (360)452-4336. FORD: ‘93, F153, 4x4, 5.8 L , power every thing with two many extras to list. 129K ml. or iginal owner. $2,500. (360)301-6291
9931 Legal Notices Clallam County
FORD: ‘06 E450 14’ Box Truck. ALL RECORDS, W E L L M A I N T ’ D, 7 6 K miles, Good tires, Service done Feb 7.TITLE IN HAND! Asking $20,000 Willing to negotiate.(202)257-6469
9931 Legal Notices Clallam County
CLALLAM COUNTY FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT 3 Clallam County Fire Protection District 3 is updating its vendor list and small works roster. If you are interested in bei n g o n t h e ve n d o r o r s m a l l w o r k s r o s t e r, please visit our website www.clallamfire3.org, or call (360) 683-4242 Pub: April 26, 2016 Legal No: 695656
IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF ROBERT T. SIMMONDS Deceased No. 16-4-00038-6 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030.
The individual named below has been appointed as personal representative of the 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 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 four months after the date of first publication of this 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: 4/19/16
Personal Representative: Raymond Harker. Address for Mailing/Service: Faber Feinson PLLC, 210 Polk Street #1, Port Townsend, WA 98368. Court of probate proceedings and cause number: Jefferson County Superior Court Cause No.: 16-4-00035-6 Pub: April 19, 26, May 3, 2016 Legal No.694534
marketplace.peninsuladailynews.com
B10
WeatherWatch
TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2016 Neah Bay 50/43
Bellingham 57/43 g
➡
Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 55/45
Port Angeles 55/43
Olympics Snow level: 3,500 feet
Forks 57/41
Sequim 55/42
Port Ludlow 59/45
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
National forecast Nation TODAY
Yesterday Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 57 44 0.04 13.84 Forks 55 36 0.06 50.55 Seattle 55 44 0.23 20.74 Sequim 59 44 0.00 5.77 Hoquiam 80 59 0.00 40.20 Victoria 56 46 0.03 15.27 Port Townsend 54 45 **0.10 9.17
Forecast highs for Tuesday, April 26
➡
Aberdeen 59/44
TONIGHT
Low 43 Could rain fall tonight?
Last
New
First
Billings 48° | 36°
San Francisco 64° | 50°
Minneapolis 55° | 44°
Denver 60° | 40°
Chicago 51° | 55°
Atlanta 85° | 59°
El Paso 75° | 54° Houston 87° | 71°
Miami 82° | 71°
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
58/44 57/45 57/44 59/44 Showers keep The sun returns Before showers But indecisive sun clouds in sight for a bit once again hit brings back light
Cold
May 6
8:21 p.m. 6:01 a.m. 9:09 a.m. 12:35 a.m.
-10s
Casper 39 Charleston, S.C. 77 Lo Prc Otlk Charleston, W.Va. 79 Albany, N.Y. 45 Cldy Charlotte, N.C. 77 CANADA Albuquerque 50 Clr Cheyenne 50 Victoria Amarillo 44 Clr Chicago 78 58° | 42° Anchorage 44 Cldy Cincinnati 75 Asheville 46 PCldy Cleveland 66 Seattle Atlanta 62 Cldy Columbia, S.C. 81 Spokane Ocean: S morning wind 5 to 15 Atlantic City 41 PCldy Columbus, Ohio 71 61° | 44° 64° | 39° kt. Wind waves 1 or 2 ft. W swell 7 ft Austin 68 Cldy Concord, N.H. 58 Tacoma Baltimore 44 PCldy Dallas-Ft Worth 79 at 11 seconds. Chance of rain. SE Olympia 60° | 41° 73 Billings 35 .01 Cldy Dayton evening wind 5 to 15 kt. Wind 61° | 37° 67 Birmingham 61 PCldy Denver waves 1 or 2 ft. W swell 9 ft at 11 Yakima 81 Bismarck 40 2.25 Rain Des Moines seconds. 63° | 36° 66 Boise 45 Clr Detroit Astoria Duluth 37 Boston 44 Cldy 56° | 42° 86 Brownsville 74 PCldy El Paso ORE. © 2016 Wunderground.com 77 Buffalo 45 Cldy Evansville 65 Burlington, Vt. 30 PCldy Fairbanks Fargo 60 Flagstaff 63 TODAY TOMORROW THURSDAY Grand Rapids 71 High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht Great Falls 50 Greensboro, N.C. 74 La Push 3:07 a.m. 8.1’ 10:05 a.m. -0.1’ 3:43 a.m. 7.8’ 10:48 a.m. 0.1’ 4:27 a.m. 7.5’ 11:37 a.m. 0.4’ Spgfld 64 4:33 p.m. 6.8’ 10:01 p.m. 3.2’ 5:22 p.m. 6.5’ 10:47 p.m. 3.5’ 6:18 p.m. 6.4’ 11:45 p.m. 3.6’ Hartford Helena 55 Honolulu 84 Port Angeles 5:05 a.m. 5.8’ 12:20 a.m. 5.2’ 5:40 a.m. 5.6’ 1:16 a.m. 5.4’ 6:21 a.m. 5.3’ 2:25 a.m. 5.5’ Houston 77 7:46 p.m. 6.6’ 12:12 p.m. -0.3’ 8:39 p.m. 6.5’ 12:56 p.m. -0.2’ 9:34 p.m. 6.5’ 1:45 p.m. 0.1’ Indianapolis 76 Jackson, Miss. 83 81 Port Townsend 6:42 a.m. 7.2’ 1:33 a.m. 5.8’ 7:17 a.m. 6.9’ 2:29 a.m. 6.0’ 7:58 a.m. 6.6’ 3:38 a.m. 6.1’ Jacksonville 46 9:23 p.m. 8.1’ 1:25 p.m. -0.3’ 10:16 p.m. 8.0’ 2:09 p.m. -0.2’ 11:11 p.m. 8.0’ 2:58 p.m. 0.1’ Juneau Kansas City 80 Key West 82 6:23 a.m. 6.2’ 1:51 a.m. 5.4’ 7:04 a.m. 5.9’ 3:00 a.m. 5.5’ Las Vegas Dungeness Bay* 5:48 a.m. 6.5’ 12:55 a.m. 5.2’ 81 8:29 p.m. 7.3’ 12:47 p.m. -0.3’ 9:22 p.m. 7.2’ 1:31 p.m. -0.2’ 10:17 p.m. 7.2’ 2:20 p.m. 0.1’ Little Rock 82 *To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide. Los Angeles 75
Nation/World
Washington TODAY
Marine Conditions
Hi 58 72 83 57 76 79 62 78 70 46 82 48 61 50 84 59 53
Strait of Juan de Fuca: Variable morning wind to 10 kt. Wind waves 1 ft. Chance of afternoon rain. W evening wind 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 1 or 2 ft.
Pressure
Warm Stationary
Low
High
May 13 May 21
Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonset today Moonrise tomorrow
Tides
-0s
0s
10s
20s 30s 40s
Imperial and El Centro Nas, Calif. Ä 12 in Mount Washington, N.H.
Washington D.C. 86° | 62°
Los Angeles 70° | 53°
Full
à 94 in
New York 63° | 55°
Detroit 59° | 52°
Fronts
Friday
The Lower 48
Cloudy
TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:
Cartography by Keith Thorpe / © Peninsula Daily News
WEDNESDAY
Pt. Cloudy
Seattle 61° | 44°
Almanac Brinnon 57/43
Sunny
50s 60s
70s
80s 90s 100s 110s
Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press
32 1.06 Rain Louisville 55 Clr Lubbock 46 PCldy Memphis 55 PCldy Miami Beach 36 .02 Cldy Midland-Odessa 58 Cldy Milwaukee 53 PCldy Mpls-St Paul 46 Cldy Nashville 58 PCldy New Orleans 47 PCldy New York City 26 Cldy Norfolk, Va. 68 Cldy North Platte 52 PCldy Oklahoma City 41 PCldy Omaha 59 .07 PCldy Orlando 46 Cldy Pendleton 35 1.20 Rain Philadelphia 67 Cldy Phoenix 54 PCldy Pittsburgh 40 Cldy Portland, Maine 42 1.17 Rain Portland, Ore. 42 Snow Providence 49 Rain Raleigh-Durham 36 .01 Rain Rapid City 53 Clr Reno 45 Cldy Richmond 43 Cldy Sacramento 75 Clr St Louis 67 .32 Cldy St Petersburg 57 PCldy Salt Lake City 58 PCldy San Antonio 58 PCldy San Diego 40 .33 Cldy San Francisco 59 .56 PCldy San Juan, P.R. 72 Cldy Santa Fe 59 Rain St Ste Marie 59 Cldy Shreveport 55 Clr Sioux Falls
80 87 82 86 90 61 58 83 82 68 62 74 79 82 88 64 70 88 70 57 57 63 74 58 59 70 75 83 87 61 80 68 64 92 70 41 81 74
58 51 61 73 61 48 51 59 65 50 47 36 65 55 66 41 49 72 41 28 40 44 53 40 38 48 51 64 72 49 71 60 48 80 34 35 62 54
.46
.34 .01
.04
.11 .52
PCldy Clr PCldy PCldy Clr Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Clr Clr PCldy Clr PCldy Cldy PCldy Clr PCldy Clr Cldy Cldy Clr Cldy Cldy PCldy Clr PCldy Cldy Rain Cldy Cldy Clr Cldy Clr Rain Cldy Cldy
GLOSSARY of abbreviations used on this page: Clr clear, sunny; PCldy partly cloudy; Cldy cloudy; Sh showers; Ts thunderstorms; Prc precipitation; Otlk outlook; M data missing; Ht tidal height; YTD year to date; kt knots; ft or ’ feet
Syracuse Tampa Topeka Tucson Tulsa Washington, D.C. Wichita Wilkes-Barre Wilmington, Del.
55 85 80 87 81 67 82 64 68
42 72 60 65 65 51 63 47 47
Cldy .03 Rain .82 PCldy Clr Cldy PCldy Cldy Cldy PCldy
_______ Hi Lo Otlk Auckland 68 53 AM Sh/Clr Beijing 68 50 PCldy Berlin 48 36 Ts Brussels 45 37 Sh Cairo 104 66 PCldy Calgary 55 29 Cldy Guadalajara 86 51 PCldy Hong Kong 79 71 PM Sh Jerusalem 85 59 Clr Johannesburg 79 48 Ts Kabul 71 47 PCldy/Ts London 48 35 PM Sh Mexico City 82 47 PCldy Montreal 45 27 PCldy Moscow 60 50 Cldy/Sh New Delhi 107 77 Hazy Paris 49 35 Sh Rio de Janeiro 92 79 PCldy Rome 64 52 PM Ts San Jose, CRica 85 64 Sh/Ts Sydney 74 60 Clr Tokyo 69 56 Cldy Toronto 45 34 AM Sh Vancouver 57 42 Cldy
Clallam County STINKYDOGUBATHE.COM
Mallory
Lyle
Harris
LOCATION: OPHS
LOCATION: OPHS
LOCATION: OPHS
A Self-Service Dog Wash
641589961
These pets and many more are available for adoption. All pets adopted at these shelters have had their first vaccination and a vet health check.
HOURLY KENNEL OPTIONS
360-477-2883 Between Sequim & Port Angeles on Hwy 101 and Lake Farm Road
Peninsula Friends of Animals www.safehavenpfoa.org email:pfoa@olypen.com V E T E R I N A R Y H O S P I TA L
Ollie
Tabitha
Emmet
LOCATION: PFOA
LOCATION: PFOA
LOCATION: PFOA
COMPANION ANIMAL PRACTICE
Olympic Peninsula Humane Society www.cchumane.com email: info@cc.humane.com
Welfare for Animals Guild Billie
Nova
Onyx
LOCATION: WAG
LOCATION: WAG
LOCATION: WAG
PURR-FECT ARTS EVENT!
A donorͲsupported, non-ƉƌŽĮƚ͕ ŶŽ-Ŭŝůů ŽƌŐĂŶŝnjĂƟŽŶ
for more information call: 360-460-6258
;ϯϲϬͿ ϰϱϮͲϬϰϭϰ ĞŵĂŝů͗ ƉĨŽĂΛŽůLJƉĞŶ͘ĐŽŵ ǁǁǁ͘ƐĂĨĞŚĂǀĞŶƉĨŽĂ͘ŽƌŐ
1 2
Temporary foster care needed. We supply all food, vet services, adoption services, all you provide is a Loving, Safe environment, before an adopted family can be found.
PH
Olympic Peninsula
www.pacificnwvet.com
Adopt a friend for life! 63 years of helping orphaned and abused animals on the Olympic Peninsula.
Humane Society
• Adoptions • Receiving • Lost and Found Assistance • Spay and Neuter Assistance • Animal Licensing • Microchip Clinics 360.457.8206 • www.CCHUMANE.com
641589966
30% OF SALES DONATED TO
PENINSULA FRIENDS OF ANIMALS
641589963
ADMISSION $10.00
641589964
We need foster homes for dogs!
MAY 21, 5:30-9:00 pm at
289 West Bell St. Sequim
www.welfareforanimalsguild.org email: jmlngn@yahoo.com
Welfare for Animals Guild
ART SHOW - PENINSULA ARTISTS FIDDLING - “OLD TIME FIDDLERS” STORYTELLING - INGRID NIXON ROCK & ROLL BY “THE CROCS”
(360) 681-3368
641589965
Linda Allen, DVM & Staff
2105 W. Hwy 101, Port Angeles, WA 93863
Your Ad Here
Pet Lovers Read This Advertisement! Market Your Business to over 35,000 Potential Customers. Help Find Loving Homes for Homeless Pets on the Peninsula. 641589968
Call Jeanette 417-7685 or 1-800-826-7714
Sharon Jensen, DVM Lindsy Bevins, DVM Nicole Wagnon, DVM 641589971
641589962
Now Offering Orthopedic Surgery 2972 Old Olympic Highway, Port Angeles Office and Emergencies, Call (360) 457-3842 www.bluemountainvet.com