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THURSDAY EDITION JUNE 27, 2019
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Find it, Fido
HPD gets city approval for a narcotics-detecting canine. By Dan Hammock Grays Harbor News Group
The Hoquiam Police Department wants to add a narcoticsdetecting dog to the force and got the approval of the Hoquiam City Council on Monday. Hoquiam Police Chief Jeff Myers told the council the department would cover the cost of the program — a little more than $85,000 — using drug forfeiture funds. “The majority of the actual expense would be for the canine patrol vehicle and related equipment,” read Myers’ report to the Council. “Given the unique assignment of the vehicle specific to the narcotic canine program, this allows the department to use drug forfeiture funds to make this purchase.” A canine vehicle has specific requirements, including a special prisoner screen, dog compartment and air conditioning, Myers told the Council. The cost of a 2020 Ford Interceptor SUV with the necessary equipment would make up the bulk of the total cost of the program at $66,860. “I believe we have more than sufficient funds from Operation Green Jade to support all these expenses and it would be a positive use of the forfeited assets seized from these international
drug cartels,” read Myers’ report to the Council. Operation Green Jade was the large-scale illegal marijuana growing operations bust conducted by the Drug Task Force starting in late 2017. The operation seized about $400,000 in cash and gold, along with homes, vehicles, jewelry and guns, along with $80 million in marijuana plants from the Chinese nationals participating in the grow operations. Other one-time costs include the Department of Corrections Narcotic Dog Academy, which includes the dog, $1,500; and 240 hours of patrol coverage while the officer attends the academy, $7,500. Ongoing costs amounting to a little less than $10,000 go toward monthly training coverage, food and veterinary expenses, and dog-related gear, toys and training aids. The program requires a significant commitment from the officer assigned to the dog. That officer will essentially be the dog’s owner, taking the dog home, on vacations and doing everything any other pet owner would be responsible for on a daily basis. Myers said Officer Jared Spaur has stepped up to take on the responsibility. Officers attend the training and are matched up with a dog. It can be just about any breed, said Myers. Myers told the Council the dog could be used at the jail to stem the flow of illegal drugs into the See DOG, Page A5
Portion of beach closed to motorized vehicles July 3-5 A 4-mile stretch of beach — from Warrenton Cannery Road to Cranberry Beach Road — in Grayland will be closed to motorized vehicles between midnight July 3 and midnight July 5, according to the State Parks and Recreation Commission. The temporary closure includes the beach at Grayland Beach State Park, though the beach will still be accessible to park visitors via footpaths from
the campground and day-use area, according to a statement from Meryl Delena Lassen with the state Parks and Recreation Commission. “Much of the area is currently closed for personal use to protect the nesting areas of the snowy plover,” said Lassen. “The closure to motorized vehicles during the Fourth of July fireworks will provide additional protection for this already endangered species.”
Delma Gilroy, left and John Gilroy, right, walk toward the front of the chapel to take a family photo with all their blood relatives in attendance at the couple’s 70-year anniversary at Quinault Valley Chapel on Saturday.
Celebrating 70 years
John and Delma Gilroy observed their anniversary Saturday ... and they had plenty of help from the Lake Quinault community By Hasani Grayson Grays Harbor News Group
A couple considered parental figures to many in the Lake Quinault area got to celebrate their 70th wedding anniversary with a lot of people who view them as family. John and Delma Gilroy celebrated their anniversary on Saturday at Quinault Valley Chapel, the church where the couple has pastored since its construction in 1986. The Gilroys both went to Bible college and graduated in 1956 before moving to the Lake Quinault area in 1964, where he worked in the logging industry. The shake mills he once owned and operated are gone now, but those who worked and worshiped with John made their presence felt last Saturday at the chapel, filling the rows of the church as if it were a Sunday service. John and Delma’s daughter, Toni Steinhauer, said John wasn’t even sure people would want to attend his anniversary celebration. “Earlier this week my dad was like, ‘Nobody’s is going to come. I don’t know why you girls are doing this,’” she said. “I told him that a lot of people are going to come because he has touched so many lives. Back in the ’70s the hippies were coming through and he gave them jobs. There have been five or six of them that have come back and thanked him. He doesn’t realize how many lives he touched, but today I think he kind of got an idea.” Delma Gilroy said she can’t take credit for all the positive things she and her husband are credited for, but she felt blessed to have an outpouring of support from the community on the anniversary of her nuptials. “It feels great but undeserving. Really, you think, ‘I didn’t have anything to do with that. It just
John Gilroy thanks the people who came out to his and Delma Gilroy’s 70-year anniversary.
happened,’” she said. “We love people and the Lord has taken care of us and led us. We would never have been where we are unless we served the Lord.” The centerpiece of the celebration was the collection of old family photos that were arranged in a slide show and projected on a screen in the back of the church. Delma Gilroy The photos came from a collection of old pictures stored away in the Gilroy house and ranged from the late 1940s, when the couple first got married, to more recent photos of the extended family they built after See GILROYS, Page A5
Mueller to testify publicly before Congress on July 17 By Chris Megerian and Jennifer Haberkorn Los Angeles Times
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Former special counsel Robert S. Mueller III, who spent nearly two years leading the Russia investigation, has agreed to testify publicly before Congress on July 17, setting the stage for what will probably be the most anticipated day on Capitol Hill in recent memory. The announcement was made Tuesday evening by Rep. Jerrold
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Nadler, D-N.Y., chair of the House Judiciary Committee, and Rep. Adam B. Schiff, D-Calif., chair of the House Intelligence Committee. They said the agreement was reached after they issued Mueller a subpoena. “Americans have demanded to hear directly from the special counsel so they can understand what he and his team examined, uncovered and determined about Russia’s attack on our democracy, the Trump campaign’s acceptance and use of that help, and
INSIDE ■ Trump on Mueller testifying before House committees: “It never ends.” Page A5 President Trump and his associates’ obstruction of the investigation into that attack,” they said in a statement. Mueller had been reluctant to appear on Capitol Hill. During his only public statement before stepping down as special counsel last month, he said he hoped it would
not be necessary. “The report is my testimony,” Mueller said. “I would not provide information beyond that which is already public in any appearance before Congress.” But Democrats were adamant that the former special counsel publicly describe his findings and answer questions after leading an investigation that was the subject of intense scrutiny. They hope his testimony will refocus attention on what his team’s investigation uncovered.
See TESTIFY, Page A5
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In the report, Mueller said there was not enough evidence to establish a criminal conspiracy between Donald Trump’s campaign and Moscow. He found that Russian operatives tried to boost the president’s candidacy by spreading divisive disinformation on social media and releasing hacked Democratic Party emails at key moments. But the report did show that Trump’s team welcomed Russia’s
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The Daily World
Thursday, June 27, 2019
WORLD GONE BY
OBITUARIES
In 1944, Lt. Emmick sends letter to parents from Nazi prison camp
David A. Rhodes
75 years ago June 27, 1944 A brief glimpse of life in a Nazi prison camp has been received by Mr. and Mrs. E.F. Emmick in a letter from their son, Lieutenant Robert E. Emmick. “Reading and sports fill in our spare time,” he wrote. “The Red Cross gives us enough extra food to eat so that we get along all right. Razor blades, toothbrushes, toothpaste, shaving cream and cigarettes seem to be the articles most needed here. Paper and pencils are also scarce. “You might save newspapers so that I can catch up with the world when I am again free. Am still in good health and good spirits.” The letter was dated Feb. 20. June 28, 1944 With the apprehension of four juveniles, police have solved six local burglaries and recovered a quantity of loot, Police Chief W. Brice Shaw said today. Four boys, two 13, one 14 and one 16, were turned over to juvenile authorities. They admitted to six
David Alan Rhodes (Bruffett}, age 33, longtime resident of Hoquiam, died June 16, 2019. He was born Jan. 28, 1986, in Seattle, Washington, to Debra Kounkel and Marvin Rhodes. Around the age of 5, David moved with his mother and stepfather, Wade Bruffett, to Hoquiam. David attended schools in Hoquiam with honor roll credits. He was involved in many sports through his school years: football, baseball and basketball. Other sports he enjoyed were bowling and skating. He was also a longtime member of the Boy Scouts. In 2005, David joined the Labor Union 252 and 276 and about the same time he met Kim Gilbert, and they had a beautiful daughter, Riley. David continued his education, taking classes in psychology and physiology. David later attended GHC in computer and business. David enjoyed fishing, fast cars and motorcycles. He loved animals and the Seahawks. David’s proudest accomplishment was his beautiful daughter, Riley, who he was always so proud of. David is survived by his daughter, Riley; his four sisters, Ariel, Rikki, Crystal and Lisa; his mother, Debra, and stepfather, Wade. David’s family will be hosting a celebration of life on July 12 at Fern Hill Funeral Home at 1 p.m. A message of condolence or of a memory can be sent to the family at www.fernhillfuneral.com Arrangements are entrusted to Twibell’s Fern Hill Funeral Home in Aberdeen. A father and a son who had a spirit that could never be tamed.
By Jack Heffernan The Columbian
WASHOUGAL — Two people died Tuesday after a Jeep tore through a Washougal swimming hole, striking them as they lay on the beach. A Jeep with damage to the front end was located a few hours later, and a man was being held for questioning, according to Washougal police. Shortly before 5 p.m., a red or maroon Jeep Grand Cherokee drove through
Elfriede D. Falani, 81, a recent resident of Aberdeen, died Tuesday, June 11, 2019, at Grays Harbor Community Hospital in Aberdeen, Washington. Elfriede was born on May 14, 1938, in Beibesheim, Germany, to Heinrich and Anna (Wedel) Daum. She came to the America, living in Newport News, Virginia, and Charlotte, North Carolina, before moving to Dallas, Texas, where she worked for Centennial Liquors as a store manager for many years before retiring. Elfriede met and married Joe Falani on May 15, 1989, in Ft. Worth, Texas. They moved to Aberdeen a couple of years ago. Joe passed away on Jan. 7, 2019, in Aberdeen. Elfriede is survived by her son, David Voth, daughter-in-law, Maria Delourdes Santos of Gastonia, North Carolina; two sisters: Ursula in Germany and Marianna of Austria. Per her request, there will be no services. Cremation was entrusted to Twibell’s Fern Hill Funeral Home in Aberdeen.
Aberdeen
Beyond Survival, a community sexual assault program, offers support to victims of sexual assault, including advocacy, one-on-one therapy and support groups. All services are available at no charge. For information or to make an appointment call 360-533-9751. TOPS, No. WA 65 has weigh-in at 6 p.m. every Monday in the ground floor coffee shop area at
Phyllis Davidson
Darwin E. Oblad
OLYMPIA — Phyllis Davidson, a longtime resident of Elma, died in Olympia on June 14, 2019. She was 89. A memorial service will be held at 11 a.m Friday, July 19, at the Elma Church of God. Donations may be made to the Aberdeen Union Gospel Mission, Disabled Veterans and the Daystar Television Network.
TOKELAND — Darwin Eldon Oblad, of Tokeland, died on Saturday, June 22, 2019, in Tokeland. He was 76. Services are being planned and will be announced when details become available. Arrangements are by Harrison Family Mortuary of Aberdeen.
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SUBSCRIPTIONS
Compiled from the archives of The Daily World by Karen Barkstrom
headed east on Shepherd Road away from the park and located by police later Tuesday night. The man and woman were taken to the hospital in critical condition, but both soon died of their injuries, according to the release. Authorities have yet to identify them, citing a need to notify next of kin. According to the Associated press, authorities have identified the two German tourists who were killed as Rudolf Hohstadt, 61, and Regina Hohstadt,
62. The Hohstadts were visiting family in the Portland area and authorities say they had been in the United States for a few days. It is not known if the Jeep driver knew the man and woman, according to the release. The Jeep has extensive front-end damage and is missing the front grill, the release says. The driver was described as a white male with brown, thinning hair and between ages 40 and 50.
Grays Harbor Community Hospital East Campus. A meeting follows at 6:30. Harbor Harriers Running Club members invite interested persons to run with them at 6 p.m. every Monday, rain or shine; meet at 205 W 3rd. For more information, call Brian and Joy McGregor at 360-532-5165. Grays Harbor Fire District No. 10 will meet at 6 p.m. Monday in Station No. 1. Crime Victims Advocacy Network, offering free advocacy and support for victims of general crimes, is available 24-hours a day at 866-711-2826 or visit www.cvan11.org Pinochle players will meet at 1 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Aberdeen Senior Center. Everyone is invited. Look Good, Feel Better volunteers will provide a free make over including a wig and cosmetics to chemotherapy patients. To schedule an appointment, call 360-532-5858 or 360-493-5616.
720 K Street. Pinochle players will meet at 1 p.m. Mondays and Fridays at the Hoquiam Senior Center. Everyone is invited. Used Book Sale, sponsored by Friends of the Hoquiam Timberland Library, will be held from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at the library. Proceeds benefit the Children’s Library.
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Hoquiam
Elma East County Food Bank will distribute food from 1 to 4 p.m. every Monday and from 1 to 7 p.m. the second Monday of each month at 106 W. Main. Use the alley entrance.
Ocean Shores North Beach Senior Thrift Store is open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Saturday at 885 Ocean Shores Blvd. N.W. North Beach Senior Resource Center is open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday at Ocean Shores United Methodist Church, 557 Point Brown Ave. NW. Pick-up information and/ or service referrals 24-hour hotline is 289-3352.
Crime Victims Advocacy Network offers free and confidential services for victims of crime in Grays Harbor and Pacific counties. Call 866-711-2826.
Self-Help Groups Support groups for people with addictions meet throughout Grays Harbor and Pacific counties. For more information, call the number in your area: Alano Club, 823 W. Heron, Aberdeen hosts numerous 12-step program meetings and has space for more programs. For more information, call 360-532-5971. Adult Children of Alcoholics & Dysfunctional Families — 360-589-0898 Al-Anon — 360-532-3009 Alcoholics Anonymous — 360-532-2691/www. aa21.org Celebrate Recovery — 360-581-5135 Gamblers Anonymous — 425-336-1996 Narcotics Anonymous — 360-589-8620/www.gha-na. org Nar-Anon (Grays Harbor) for family and friends of addicts — email ghnaranon@gmail.com Overeaters Anonymous — 805-260-6471
3-car crash injures four on 101 near Long Beach
Amy Husted 360.537.3910 ahusted@thedailyworld.com
NEWSROOM
June 27, 1994 Forty years ago, a teenaged Jean Bonney took a call in the middle of the night saying her family’s laundry business was going up in smoke. “I remember that night like it was yesterday,” she said last week while discussing the history of Hoquiam’s Most Western Laundry. In a cruel twist of fate, history repeated itself Sunday as an early-morning phone call jolted Mrs. Bonney from her sleep — again with the news that the family business was on fire. The Bonneys were just a few days shy of a 50th anniversary celebration to mark the date the family bought the business. This time, the laundry that has been in
a chain-link fence on the west side of Sandy Swimming Hole Park, 550 N. Shepherd Road, according to a Washougal Police Department news release. The car continued down to the beach and struck a man and woman who were lying down. The Jeep exited the park on the east side by driving up a berm and through a park sign, according to the release. Witnesses reported that the Jeep did not slow down while in the park. It was last seen
Hoquiam Food & Clothing Bank is open from noon to 2 p.m. every Monday and Wednesday in the Masonic building at
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June 27, 1969 Firemen donned gas masks early this morning to clear a Hoquiam apartment house of “riot gas” that filled the dwelling minutes after pranksters lobbed a canister of the potent gas against the building’s front porch. The 40 tenants of Harbor House at 700 L St. were evacuated at 1:20 a.m., Fire Chief Kenneth Mitchell reported. Several persons narrowly escaped injury in their haste to flee the choking, irritating fumes. “We’ve got some good
25 years ago
the family for three generations was reduced to a pile of ashes. June 28, 1994 Central Park veterinarian Michael Bergey took his first day of vacation in more than a year-and-a-half last week. Since purchasing the Blue Cross Veterinary Clinic, Bergey’s business burgeoned to the point that he just didn’t feel comfortable leaving town for a few days — until Brian Dowling arrived to care for the practice. Dowling, 31, is the newest vet in town after coming to Bergey two weeks ago from a clinic in Belfair. Bergey said his Clarke Road clinic is growing at “very flattering” rate, even though it is off the beaten path. When constructed 62 years ago, he said the building was on the main highway between Aberdeen and Olympia, but even on a side-street, “it’s a wonderful spot.”
HAPPENINGS
DEATH NOTICES An urn committal with military honors for lifelong Hoquiam resident Charles Sidney “Sid” Perry, who died June 19, in Elma, will be held at 11:30 a.m. Monday, July 15, at the Tahoma National Cemetery in Kent. Cremation arrangements are by the Coleman Mortuary in Hoquiam.
50 years ago
leads on the culprits (some young people),” Mitchell said. “All of us in the department are really upset about this.” June 28, 1969 Saturday, no newspaper published
Driver tears through swimming hole, kills 2
Elfriede D. Falani
Charles S. “Sid” Perry
burglaries during the past few weeks, which included theft of $13.50 in cash from the Aberdeen Recreation Center; theft of a wristwatch, $20 in cash, candy and cigarettes from the U and I lunch; prowling of four fishing boats in South Aberdeen, robbery of the Washington school, where sports equipment was taken and damage caused by squirting fire extinguishers around the interior; robbery of Ed’s cafe, and the Three Star market.
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Four people were injured in a three-car crash Tuesday afternoon on Highway 101 a mile south of Long Beach, according to the State Patrol. According to the State Patrol report, a 42-year-old Ocean Park man was driving northbound near 30th Avenue when his Jeep Grand Cherokee struck a Ford Edge SUV driven by a 64-year-old Silverdale woman as she was stopped attempting to make a left turn. The Grand Cherokee then continued into the southbound lane where it struck a Subaru Forester driven by a 70-year-old Oysterville driver
head-on. All three drivers were injured, according to the report, with the Silverdale woman and Oysterville man transported to Ocean Beach Hospital. Passengers in the Grand Cherokee and the Ford Edge were not injured. A passenger in the Forester was injured and also transported to the hospital, according to the report. The condition and nature of injuries to the individuals transported to the hospital were not immediately available. The investigation into the accident is ongoing, according to the State Patrol.
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THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 2019
HIT THE BEACH
TODAY IS ...
National Ice Cream Cake Day
TOMORROW IS ... Paul Bunyan Day
Pirate Daze, Sand & Sawdust bringing crowds to area beaches Westport will be crawling with pirates June 28-30 when the city hosts the 18th annual Rusty Scupper’s Pirate Daze celebration. The event is appropriate for all ages and includes musical acts, belly dancers, fire dancers, black powder displays and vendors selling all your pirate needs. Tall ship Lady Washington will be at the Westport Marina throughout the event, available for tours and pirate sails, where pirates take over the ship for a two-hour adventure. This year’s Pirate Daze Grand Marshals are Brooke and Jarl Priest. Jarl is the owner of Westport’s Aloha Alabama Barbecue restaurant and Vacations by the Sea, and the two are very active in Pirate Daze and many other activities in the community. “They make our community a better place to live,” said Rosie Litterer, Pirate Daze president. “They donate and help out with most of the events and festivals we have in our community, they have worked with our school on many different events from field trips to food, for the children they have helped with family fun night fundraisers and much more. That is why The Rusty Scupper’s Pirate Daze board nominated them as our Grand Marshals.” Litterer continued, “They stand out among us in our community and go above and beyond to help others in need. They give back when they are able.” Entertainers will be working the length of Westhaven Drive throughout the event. Musical and other acts will split time between two stages: the Tackle Box at the north end of Westhaven Drive, and the Rusty Stage at Float 10, where the Lady Washington will be moored. Bounce houses and a giant slide will be set up for the kids, and a radio control boat pond. Actor Maxie Santillan, who has appeared in the Pirates of the Caribbean movie franchise, will be signing autographs and meeting fans at the Doce Blant booth. Friday, there will be a meet and greet with authors Marti Melville, Teresa Carol, Barnacle Bill Bedlam, Austin Highsmith Garces and Ron Cummins at the Tokeland Hotel at 7 p.m. Authors will also be spending time at the Doce Blant Publishing booth. Carol, also a paranormal investigator and psychic medium, will host ghost tours at the Tokeland Hotel June 28 at 2 p.m., June 29 at 2 p.m. and June 30 at 10 a.m. Tickets are limited and can be purchased at store.doceblant. com, type Tokeland into the search box and get your $20 nonrefundable tickets while they last.
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9 DAYS OUT 28 Friday
COURTESY DOMINIKFOTO
The Fire Light Circus fire troupe will light up Rusty Scupper’s Pirate Daze in Westport this weekend.
Pirate Daze schedule Friday 12:15 p.m., Arden Goldberg performs on the Rusty Stage 1:30 p.m., Riona Abhainn, Celtic/fantasy singer from Portland, performs on the Rusty Stage 1:30 p.m., Mini brig battle in the marina 2:30 p.m., Treasure chest drawing, Rusty Stage 3:30 p.m., Arden Goldberg performs on the Rusty Stage 4 p.m., Black powder by the tower 4:15 p.m., Riona Abhainn performs on the Rusty Stage 5 p.m., Arden Goldberg performs on the Rusty Stage 6 p.m., Barnacle Bill Bedlam Saturday 10 a.m., Welcome 10:10 am., Grand marshal dedication and special awards at the Rusty Stage 11 a.m., Captain’s Daughter performs on the Rusty Stage 11 a.m., Dred Ship Outrageous Fortune black powder demonstrations by tower Noon, Arden Goldberg on the Tackle Box stage Noon, Mini brig battle in the marina 1 p.m., All In Band on the Tackle Box stage 1:30 p.m., Treasure chest drawing on the Rusty Stage 2 p.m., Costume contest 2:30 p.m., Riona Burnett
performs on the Tackle Box stage 3:15 p.m., All In Band performs on the Tackle Box stage 4 p.m., Dred Ship Outrageous Fortune black powder demonstrations by the tower 4:15 p.m., Captain’s Daughter performs on the Rusty Stage 4:30 p.m., Twisted Nickers performs on the Tackle Box stage 5 p.m., Treasure chest drawing on the Rusty Stage 5:30 p.m., Barnacle Bill on the Tackle Box stage 6 p.m., Starboard Watch on the Rusty Stage 6 p.m., Dred Ship Outrageous Fortune black powder demonstrations by the tower 6 p.m., Mini brig battle in the marina 7 p.m., Captain Dark Owl magic show 8:15 p.m., Belly dancing Sunday 10 a.m., Captain’s Daughter performs on the Tackle Box stage 10:10 a.m., Arden Goldberg performs on the Rusty Stage 10:30 a.m., Mini brig battles in the marina 10:30 a.m., Dred Ship Outrageous Fortune black powder demonstrations by the tower 11 a.m., Sally Pet Costume Contest on the Tackle Box stage 11:10 a.m., Treasure chest drawing on the Rusty Stage 11:30 a.m., Starboard Watch band performs on the Tackle Box
stage 11:45 a.m., All In Band on the Rusty Stage 12:30 p.m., Kids Pirate Olympics on the Tackle Box stage 12:30 p.m., Dred Ship Outrageous Fortune black powder demonstrations by the tower 12:45 p.m., Twisted Knickers performs on the Rusty Stage 1 p.m., Mini brig battles in the marina 1:45 p.m., All In Band performs on the Rusty Stage 1:45 p.m., Treasure chest contest on the Rusty Stage 2:30 p.m., Captain’s Daughter performs on the Tackle Box stage 3 p.m., Parade at the Rusty Stage 3:45 p.m., Treasure chest drawing on the Rusty Stage 4:30 p.m., Starboard Watch performs on the Tackle Box stage 4:30 p.m., Parade award ceremony Breakfast options are limited but the following will be available all three days of the event. Pine Tree: 21 and older only inside but food can be ordered and tents, tables and chairs will be set up outside for all ages. 101 W. Ocean Ave. VFW: Breakfast for all ages at 211 E. Pacific Ave. Inn of the Westwind: Open for breakfast and lunch. 2119 Nyhus St. N. See DAZE, Page A9
Riverside Run Revival car show hits Levee Street on Saturday Hoquiam’s Levee Street will be lined with classic cars for the annual Hoquiam Push Rods Riverside Run Revival car show Saturday. The event at the 8th Street Landing features muscle cars, classics, roadsters, Beetles — just about everything on four wheels imaginable. “This is the only show of the three we do where Push Rods members can bring their own cars,” said club Vice President Tony Halekakis, as the other two shows don’t have the available space to include cars that aren’t in competition. “So we’ve got close to 100 members, if 75 bring a car, that’s another really nice bunch of cars to look at.” The show is free to the public and runs from 8 a.m. to about 3 p.m., but to get the best look at the most cars it’s best to get there before the awards ceremony starts at 1:30 p.m. The popular “trash and treasures” auction runs from 1-2 p.m. The auction was started a few years ago, when the club
TODAY’S LIFESTYLE:
FILE PHOTO
Classic cars will line Levee Street in Hoquiam Saturday for the annual Hoquiam Push Rods Riverside Run Revival car show. Last year, this 1934 Ford Henry owned by Joe and Beth Pavletich of Montesano was among the dozens of entries.
asked members to “go through their attics and basements and garages and come up with stuff they wanted to get rid of,” said Halekakis. “The first year it was kind of more trash than treasure, but the thing has really taken on a life of its own and, my
gosh, now it’s more treasure than trash.” Items are set up across from the registration table, and tickets are $2 a pop. “It runs from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. and when we call your number you have 30 seconds to come up
and get your prize,” said Halekakis. “It’s a lot of fun and it’s just amazing the quality of stuff we have.” There will also be a 50/50 raffle, food vendors and music, and door prizes awarded every 10-15 minutes. All proceeds from the show go toward a number of local charities. The Hoquiam Push Rods were founded by a group of friends in 1953. That group included Paul Love, who was guitarist for the original lineup of the Hoquiam rock and roll band The Beachcombers. If you want to enter a car, the registration booth at the show opens at 8 a.m. Registration is $20 the day of the event, but preregistration is available online at a cost of $15. To pre-register visit pushrods.org/registration.html. Registered participants will get a goodie bag while they last and dash plaques, and car numbers are drawn during the event for a Quinault Beach Resort Casino “staycation,” a $100 bill and other prizes.
OCEAN SHORES Sand & Sawdust Festival — Friday through Sunday at the Convention Center. WESTPORT Rusty Scupper’s Pirate Daze — Friday through Sunday at the Marina. ABERDEEN Actress Austin Highsmith Garces (Dolphin Tale, Scream) will sign her new children’s book The Miracle Tree at Harbor Books Friday from 3 to 5 p.m. Steampunk pirate author Ren Cummins will sign in the store Saturday from 3 to 5 and one of the pirates from the “Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl,” Maxie Santillan Jr. will sign autographs at the store’s Sunday market booth 1:30 p.m. until the market closes.
29 Saturday ABERDEEN The sixth annual Founder’s Day Parade takes place in downtown Aberdeen. The parade starts at 11 a.m. and runs on Market Street — from Franklin Field east to L Street. The festivities are expected to run through 4 p.m., with the street fair taking place on Broadway Street between Wishkah and Market streets.
July 3 Wednesday SEABROOK Porch Illumination Walk — 6 to 10 p.m., centered on Crescent Park. TAHOLAH Chief Taholah Days — Wednesday through Sunday at various locations.
4 Thursday ABERDEEN Splash Festival — Noon until late evening at Morrison Park and the Grays Harbor Historical Seaport Landing. Free. SEABROOK Flag Presentation and Porch Illumination awards — 11 a.m. at Front Street Amphitheater. WESTPORT Old-Fashioned 4th — All day at the Maritime Museum, ending with Booming Bay Fireworks Display at dusk over the Marina.
5 Friday ABERDEEN First Friday Art Walk — 5 to 8 p.m. at the Aberdeen Art Center.
6 Saturday SATSOP Swap Meet — 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday at the Satsop Grange. TOKELAND Old Fashioned 4th of July Parade & Picnic — Parade begins at 11 a.m., with picnic to follow at the Tokeland Hotel.
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Trump on Mueller testifying: ‘It never ends’ By John T. Bennett CQ-Roll Call
WASHINGTON, D.C. — President Donald Trump on Wednesday described former Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller’s upcoming testimony before two Democratic-led House panels as merely part of a phony probe that “never ends.” The House Judiciary and Intelligence committees announced Tuesday night that the former FBI director will testify during a joint
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illegal assistance. In addition, Mueller said his report “does not exonerate” the president on the question of whether he broke the law by trying to obstruct the investigation. The
July 17 hearing in what will be one of the biggest moments in Washington in some time. “My reaction is it never ends. We had no obstruction … no collusion,” he told Fox Business. “It’s hard to have obstruction when you have no crime.” Trump repeated that claim even though Mueller, in his final report, said there was evidence of obstruction of justice but he lacked the authority to recommend indicting a sitting president due to decadesold Justice Department guidelines.
Mueller found no criminal-level coordination between Trump’s 2016 campaign and Russia, but he did not exonerate the president on obstruction —and a growing list of House Democrats want to start impeach proceedings as Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California continues trying to hold them off. The president, who will hold trade talks at a G-20 summit in Japan later this week with Chinese President Xi Jinping, signaled a final pact on trade with China is unlikely by the time he heads to
South Korea for the second half of his Asia swing. “It’s possible we’ll make a deal, but I’m also happy where we are. We’re taking in a fortune,” he said of tariffs he slapped on over $200 billion worth of goods made in China. “We have to get a good deal.” He repeated his claim that many companies are moving production operations out of China due to his tariffs on goods made there. But, as always, he did not name any. Trump is scheduled to leave
the White House to start his trip to the G-20 in Japan then to South Korea for talks about North Korea’s nuclear program around 12:40 p.m. EDT. The president dismissed a Fox Business anchor’s contention that his tariffs are hurting the U.S economy and sidestepped her question about whether he actually believes Xi will agree to make it law in his country that China cannot, as the White House contends, steal U.S. companies’ intellectual properties.
report included detailed evidence that Trump tried to limit the inquiry “to prevent further investigative scrutiny of the president’s and his campaign’s conduct.” Mueller declined to say whether Trump committed a crime in that regard, citing Justice Department guidelines that prevent bringing charges against a sitting president. House Democrats have said they need a noteworthy event like
Mueller’s testimony to jump-start their own investigations. They hope that despite his reluctance to speak publicly Mueller can help elucidate his findings for Americans who didn’t follow every twist and turn of his investigation. “If we’re expecting the average member of Congress to do their job and read it themselves or the American people to read a 450-page report, that just isn’t
going to happen,” said Rep. Ron Kind, D-Wis. Trump has also recognized the attention — and television coverage — that Mueller’s testimony would generate. “Bob Mueller should not testify. No redos for the Dems!” he tweeted on May 5. Republicans immediately moved to criticize the hearing as a desperate public relations
exercise. “Democrats subpoena Mueller. 2 years of investigating not enough. They want more,” Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., tweeted shortly after the announcement. “This was never going to end at a ‘no collusion’ verdict. Dems were always going to drag it out. This isn’t a fact finding mission. It’s an attempt at a PR operation. Nothing more.”
Embattled NRA loses its power broker on eve of 2020 By Polly Mosendz, Neil Weinberg and David Voreacos Bloomberg News
NEW YORK — As the National Rifle Association’s chief lobbyist, Chris Cox pumped more money into the unlikely election of Donald Trump than anyone else. Now, Cox won’t be around to oversee its effort to re-elect him. Until his resignation was made public on Wednesday, Cox had spent 17 years as the executive director of the NRA’s Institute for Legislative Action. He headed its political action committee and was the NRA’s power broker and liaison with Congress, the White House and federal agencies, and he oversaw the rewarding of reliable conservative politicians with “A” ratings for fortifying the Second Amendment. The Tennessee-bred lobbyist also ran NRA Country, the group’s marketing link to the music industry. Cox’s many roles gave him extraordinary influence on U.S. firearms regulation and Republican politics writ large. Cox was placed on administrative leave on June 20, along with his deputy, after being accused of helping former NRA President Oliver North plot to overthrow Wayne LaPierre, the NRA’s longtime leader and public face. The group is also in
a messy public divorce with its longtime advertising agency, Ackerman McQueen Inc., which produced NRATV and helped transform the NRA into a lobbying powerhouse and cultural force. All told, the NRA is entering the 2020 race with Trump lagging in polls and without the marketing or lobbying power that made it such an effective force for Trump in 2016. It’s not clear who inside the NRA could take Cox’s place, and recruiting an outsider could be especially difficult because of the financial turmoil and political bloodletting roiling the group, some insiders say. With Cox running the NRA’s political activities, the group rolled to legislative and electoral successes: the repeal of an assault weapons ban; the passage of a law barring charges against gun-makers and dealers who sell firearms used in crimes; and the blocking of expanded background checks for gun buyers championed by a Democratic Congress and the Obama administration. His lobbying was also effective at the local level. Between December 2012 and March 2018, most of the 600 new gun laws passed at the state level were backed by the NRA, according to the Pew Charitable Trusts. Cox was the NRA operative behind Trump’s path to the White
House, spending a record $30.3 million from the NRA’s political action committee to support him. When Trump spoke at NRA events, he was introduced by Cox rather than LaPierre. Cox conferred with Trump after the Parkland, Fla., school shooting set off renewed calls for gun safety legislation, which the president briefly advocated in the wake of the attack. After Trump tweeted that he had a “great” meeting with the group, Cox announced that the president had dropped his support for such legislation. But those successes have been drowned out in recent weeks by the NRA’s internal battles. The group filed an explosive lawsuit last week saying that Cox had betrayed LaPierre by joining North in a coup attempt. That followed accusations against LaPierre of lavish spending. The NRA has said that LaPierre’s spending was proper. Representatives for the NRA, LaPierre and Cox didn’t have immediate comments. Losing Cox, North and Ackerman McQueen will severely test LaPierre’s leadership. Even if the NRA rushed to set up the logistics for a successful 2020 race, the ongoing drama could harm it even further financially, said Richard Feldman, a former NRA marketing executive. “Some people are looking for an excuse not to contribute. They’ve
got it,” he said. Another former NRA consultant who spoke on the condition of anonymity said, “There’s a moment happening at NRA leadership that is disconnected from what drives NRA-centric voters.” LaPierre drew criticism after revelations that he received $270,000 of clothes from Ackerman McQueen, the firm that produced NRATV and spent several decades creating much of the modern-day NRA brand, as well as $240,000 in travel expenses reimbursed by the gun group. In April, the NRA sued Ackerman McQueen, claiming it didn’t provide details about an employment contract that the firm extended to North after he left Fox News to take the unpaid, ceremonial post atop the gun association. The leadership struggle came to a head on April 24, when North threatened to reveal unflattering details about LaPierre’s spending unless he resigned and supported North’s continued tenure, according to the NRA. Instead, LaPierre pushed back, and North was shoved out. The NRA claims that Ackerman McQueen and Cox joined North in the failed coup attempt. Ackerman McQueen has countersued, and the fallout has doomed NRATV, which was produced by the firm. Late
Tuesday, the NRA notified Ackerman McQueen that it was immediately terminating its contract with the firm. The NRA won a legal victory in Virginia state court on Wednesday when a judge denied a bid by Ackerman McQueen to force the gun association to post a $3 million letter of credit. The agency sought that money to cover $1.6 million in bills it submitted to the NRA that have gone unpaid. It said it would have to furlough or lay off as many as 60 employees within a week if it couldn’t recover the money owed. Given Cox’s influence and the number of favors he has curried with Republican politicians, he could open his own lobbying shop, the former NRA consultant said. “Those voters are going to be out there,” the consultant said. “They’re highly motivated. I’ve seen them in election after election come out. They’re going to coalesce very quickly, whether it’s around the NRA or not.” Some members who have criticized the NRA say they might be able to continue their support if someone else were at the helm. “I think there comes a point when the board says, ‘To protect the NRA we have to get rid of Wayne,’” Feldman said. “I don’t know who they’d bring in, but it’d be someone who pays for his own $200,000 in suits.”
Suspect in vehicle prowl arrested after chase Dog Aberdeen Police officers arrested a Hoquiam man, who attempted to flee an officer early Tuesday morning and is suspected of multiple vehicle prowls in Aberdeen. The 36-year-old Hoquiam man was arrested following a foot chase a little after 3:30 a.m. The officer was in the area looking for juvenile youths involved in a separate incident at Q Mart. As the officer patrolled up F Street, he observed a man on his bicycle cutting across the Aberdeen High School parking lot while not wearing a helmet, according to the police department in a press
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living in the area for three generations. For the Gilroys, family goes far beyond blood relation. Many who have met John and Delma joke that just meeting them can get someone included as part of the family. That sentiment is shared by church member Hollie Nelson who has lived in the Lake Quinault area for most of her life. She considers the couple an important part of her life. “I’ve lived in Quinault almost my entire life, and I can’t imagine this area without John and Delma. They’re family. Even though they’re not blood-related, they’re family,” she said. “I think I speak for so many different people that have met them. Once you meet John and Delma you become part of
release. Lt. C.J. Chastain said because the man had no helmet, was wearing dark clothing and had no bicycle light, the officer tried to confront him. When the officer turned his spotlight on the man, the rider jumped up on the pedals and took off, the release states. The officer observed several bags hanging from the handlebars of the bicycle. As the man turned in the alley south of the Aberdeen School District office, the officer drove around to cut him off on G Street with emergency lights flashing. The rider eventually
the Gilroy family.” John and Delma’s work through the church has allowed them to reach out to many in the community, and Delma considers it something of a miracle John has been able to preach despite a speech impediment. Delma joked that John’s speech issues made their first date a little awkward. “It’s a miracle he’s able to preach because he had such a speech impediment. I couldn’t understand him the very first date we went on,” he said. “I was afraid to say yes and afraid to say no because I didn’t know what he was saying.” The then-young couple also survived a first date that included a little deception from family members and horse back riding. “Neither one of liked to ride horses. Her cousin was sweet on my brother so she said that Delma wanted to go horse back riding with
wiped out in some loose gravel and attempted to run on foot, police say. After falling again, the man was taken into custody without incident. Backup officers located the bags discarded by the suspect, which contained “a variety of personal effects” linked to a residence in the 400 Block of Bland Street, where a ehicle’s window was broken out. Chastain said there were at least two additional cars that were broken into in the area around that time. Police say a search of the suspect’s clothing turned up suspected heroin, and the man was found to have
me,” John Gilroy said. “And my cousin told Delma that I wanted to go horse back riding with her. So, our first date we went horse back riding on the same horse.” John found success in the logging industry and ran up to three shake mills at a time when the industry was at its height in the region. Quinault Valley Chapel pastor Gery West worked with John as a logger and as a pastor and noted that John’s demeanor is different from the average logger. “John is a man of extreme integrity. I’ve been around loggers and I know how they are: John’s been a good logger, he owned a shake mill and I have never heard him swear,” he said. “I’ve
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outstanding arrest warrants from a variety of courts in the area. The suspect was booked into the Aberdeen jail under suspicion of vehicle prowl, attempted vehicle prowl, obstructing a public servant, resisting arrest, violation of the uniform controlled substance act, and the previous warrants. The release says residents in that area are encouraged to contact the Aberdeen Police Department if they were a victim of a vehicle prowl and had not reported it, or if it appeared someone attempted to get in their vehicle.
been with that guy many hours of the day for many days and weeks at a time. He can get angry, but he never shows it against a person.” Though his eyesight has made it difficult for him to pastor as much as he once did, Gilroy still stays involved in the church and the community.
As family and friends came up to pay their regards, John couldn’t help but give credit to Delma, the woman who has been so instrumental to his spiritual development. “Through meeting her I became a Christian. She helped me serve the Lord,” he said.
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facility. He said it would be a deterrent; once it’s known there is a dog there that can sniff out contraband. The dog would be used to sniff out drugs during routine patrols, assist in drug search warrants by the department and the Drug Task Force, and be available to conduct random school drug sweeps when requested by the school district. Council President Paul McMillan said the city’s Public Safety Committee strongly supported Myers’ proposal. Hoquiam has not had a narcotic detection canine since its previous dualtrained canine, Enno, passed away from cancer in 2013. Myers said the department hopes to have the program “in full operation by the start of 2020.”
Buck Electric / Ace Hardware
would like to thank all the people who made our Grand Opening such a huge success.
We would like to thank the Ocean Shores Elks Lodge #2581, VFW Post #8956 North Beach Ocean Shores, Ocean Shores Pirates, North Beach High School athletes and cheerleaders, Paul Bouma, Kevin Traer, and especially our customers for their continued support.
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Thursday, June 27, 2019
The Daily World
Asian countries take a stand against plastic waste By Shashank Bengali Los Angeles Times
MANILA, Philippines — When the MV Bavaria cargo ship chugged out of a Philippine port one morning last month carrying 69 containers of rotted Canadian garbage, it didn’t just end a messy diplomatic spat between the two countries. It also signaled a sea change in the global recycling system. After years of pressure, Canada had agreed to take back the waste, which had been exported to the Philippines beginning in 2013 falsely labeled as plastic scrap. The shipments were part of a decadesold practice in which rich countries including the United States sent used plastic to Asia to be recycled. Often, the shipments included contaminated waste that couldn’t be recycled but made it past customs checks anyway, and countries had few legal avenues to send it back. That began to change 18 months ago, when China, the biggest consumer of discarded plastics, banned nearly all waste imports to stop the smuggling of non-recyclable scrap. The trade in plastics quickly rerouted to neighboring Southeast Asian countries that lacked effective recycling plants and disposal laws, leaving much of the waste to be burned or dumped in fields and waterways, creating health and environmental hazards. Now those countries are also closing their doors.
Outright bans Amid a growing global movement against non-recyclable plastic, Vietnam and Thailand have said they will block all imported plastic waste in the next few years. Taiwan announced it would only accept plastic scrap if sorted into a single type, making it easier to recycle. The Philippines and Malaysia are also considering outright bans and have led the way in demanding that exporting countries take back containers of waste that entered its ports illegally, often with improper documentation. Indonesia said last week it had sent five containers of Canadian scrap paper back to Seattle, the transshipment point, after discovering that used plastic, wood, diapers and shoes were also packed inside. “Countries in this region are bucking this whole idea that they should be dumping grounds for the world’s waste,” said Lea Guerrero, a campaigner with Greenpeace in the Philippines.
Loophole for plastic The outcry over plastic has echoes of three decades ago, when the United States routinely shipped dead car batteries, mercury-laced concrete and other toxic materials to the lightly regulated shores of Southeast Asia. A 1989 global treaty known as the Basel Convention placed significant restrictions on the shipment of hazardous waste to poor countries but left open a loophole for materials — mainly plastic — that were designated for recycling.
MOHD RASFAN/GETTY IMAGES
Amid a growing global movement against non-recyclable plastic, a growing number of Asian countries have said they will block all imported plastic waste in the next few years.
The U.S., as one of the few countries that has not ratified the treaty, can export hazardous wastes only under bilateral agreements, one of which it has with the Philippines. In May, at a meeting in Geneva, representatives of more than 180 countries agreed to expand the treaty to include most plastic waste, placing it under the same trade restrictions as toxic substances. It was a belated acknowledgment that although plastic has long been marketed as a reusable material, much of it cannot be recycled because it is dyed, contains food or liquid residue, or is mixed with other non-recyclable waste. “Ever since the Basel Convention was developed, there was always an eye toward addressing plastics, but the biggest challenge was the political will of countries to take that on,” said Richard Gutierrez, founder of BAN Toxics, an environmental action group in the Philippines.
China changes landscape As long as China was buying more than half the world’s plastic waste — it imported 6.4 million tons in 2017, before the ban was enacted — much of the industrialized world was blind to the fate of its cast-off soda bottles, grocery bags, yogurt tubs and other trash. As global plastic consumption soared to 400 million tons annually —an amount that is projected to double over the next 15 years — no country could match China’s relatively efficient domestic recycling plants or its massive industrial base that repurposed old plastic into new products. “China’s ban really changed the landscape,” Gutierrez said. “Once they stopped taking in all this plastic, it got people to realize we have a big problem.” The Basel amendment, which takes effect in January 2021,
requires shippers of plastic scrap to obtain prior consent from the destination country, and gives countries the legal authority to refuse unwanted or unmanageable waste. The case of the Canadian trash in the Philippines shows how countries often have little recourse under existing trade rules to send back illicit plastic shipments. The roughly 100 total containers that arrived starting in June 2013 were described by Philippine importers as plastic scraps for recycling, but upon customs inspection were found to contain household waste including plastic bottles, plastic bags, newspapers, household garbage and used adult diapers. Local laws classify those as hazardous materials, and the Philippine government asked Canada to take the shipment back. But for years Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau maintained his government could not intervene because the shipments represented private commercial transactions between Canadian and Philippine companies. The containers sat in Philippine ports, their contents leaking fluids while festering in the tropical heat. Greenpeace, BAN Toxics and other groups picketed the Canadian Embassy in Manila, while some officials called for abandoning the dispute to preserve diplomatic ties. In 2015, over strong protests from activists, Philippine authorities dumped the contents of more than two dozen of the containers into a landfill north of Manila. “For us it was the poster child of the waste trade in Asia,” said Guerrero of Greenpeace. “It just illustrated the disparity between rich and poor countries, and how when rich countries don’t want to take back their trash, poor countries are practically helpless.” In April, the Philippines’ toughtalking President Rodrigo Duterte
threatened to “declare war” over the issue. He recalled his ambassador to Ottawa, banned Philippine officials from traveling to Canada and set a May 15 deadline for the trash to be removed. The diplomatic offensive worked. Trudeau hired a shipping company to retrieve the remaining 69 containers, which set off across the Pacific on May 30. Duterte’s equally colorful foreign secretary, Teodoro Locsin, tweeted a picture of the ship and the message, “Baaaaaaaaa bye.”
Shipped back to B.C. Canadian officials say the roughly 1,500 tons of trash in the containers, due to reach the Vancouver port at the end of June, will be burned at a waste-to-energy facility in British Columbia. Philippine activists believe many more illicit shipments have gotten through undetected across the vast archipelago of more than 7,000 islands and dozens of ports. In recent months, customs officials have intercepted waste shipments from Australia, Hong Kong and South Korea that were mislabeled as recyclable goods. In January, South Korea paid to have the first batch of a 6,000-ton shipment —containing household trash including batteries, light bulbs and diapers —returned from the Philippines. “We think this is just the tip of the iceberg,” said Beau Baconguis, a Philippine campaigner with the Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives, a nonprofit advocacy group. “With so many islands, it’s almost impossible to check every port properly. These scandals were exposed by spot checks. I don’t think we have enough trained personnel to determine whether something is recyclable material or just waste.” Environmental groups are
urging Duterte’s government, which supported the Basel amendment, to ratify the change to ensure it is enforced in the Philippines. Officials also are reportedly considering a total ban on waste imports that could close off one of the main remaining outlets for U.S. plastic scrap. In Malaysia, which last year became the world’s top destination for discarded plastic, officials have closed down 150 unlicensed waste importers. The government announced in May that it would send back more than 3,000 tons of contaminated plastic waste to countries including the U.S., Canada, Britain and Australia, although details of the shipments —including who will foot the bill —have not been worked out. Malaysia’s environment minister, Yeo Bee Yin, inspected one of the Australian containers recently and found old milk bottles filled with dead maggots. “This is rubbish that you know cannot be recycled, and it makes me really angry that our country has to endure this,” she said in an interview. Yeo has called for a ban on all waste imports but faces opposition from others in the government who want to support a small but growing recycling industry. She said that regional countries should send a message to the industrialized world that waste should be disposed of in the country of origin. “I believe that low-quality domestic plastics should not be exported, and each country must take care of their own rubbish on their own,” she said. “When we first discovered this problem in Malaysia, we talked about it as a global problem, and we recognized that we should be a voice for developing countries. If they don’t dump it in my country, they’ll dump it somewhere else. And that has to stop.”
Cap-and-trade clash reflects hard path of carbon pricing By Hal Bernton The Seattle Times
PORTLAND — Washington state lawmakers are very familiar with the type of cap-and-trade bill to combat climate change that in Oregon led 11 Republican state senators to walk out and leave the state in a dramatic effort to block a vote. During the past decade, two Washington Democratic governors — Christine Gregoire and Jay Inslee — pushed unsuccessfully to pass similar legislation that would create a tightening cap on carbon emissions and then auction off pollution permits. And a veteran state Democratic senator from Seattle who introduced a cap-andtrade bill during the last session is poised to resubmit a proposal in 2020 when the Legislature reconvenes in Olympia. “We are in the battle now, and it will take time,” state Sen. Reuven Carlyle said. “But I am absolutely committed to the bill.” Carlyle next year is expected to face determined opposition from Washington Republican lawmakers as the two major parties — nationally and at the state level — continue to be largely at odds
over the need for government action to crack down on carbon and other fossil-fuel emissions that drive climate change. But Carlyle will not have to contend with an Oregon-style walkout to thwart a vote. Washington is one of 44 states to mandate that a majority of senators be on hand for a vote, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures — rather than the two-thirds majority that Oregon requires to be present for a vote on Senate legislation. But even without such tactics, actions such as cap-and-trade, which attempts to clamp down on fossil-fuel use by putting a price on carbon pollution, have been a political hurdle in the Pacific Northwest. Inslee’s 2015 cap-and-trade bill never got floor votes in the House or Senate. Since then, Washington has twice rejected carbon pricing in the form of a tax or fee on pollution, and that double-dose of defeat on the ballot has helped make some Democratic legislators wary of that pricing approach to reducing carbon pollution. Inslee, who is now running for president on a climate-change platform, focused during the 2019
session on regulatory measures, such as the successful passage of a law to phase out fossil fuels in power production. In Oregon, cap-and-trade legislation, House Bill 2020, has been a focal point of the Democrats’ action plan to combat climate change through carbon pricing. But on Tuesday, Sen. Peter Courtney, the Oregon state Senate president, said the House bill did not have enough support to pass during the session that ends June 30, and that dynamic would not change in the days ahead. His statement implied that some Senate Democrats would join Republicans in voting against House Bill 2020. That could set the stage for an end tothe Republican walkout that began last Thursday. And Courtney, in his remarks to Democratic senators, talked passionately about the need to move forward with votes on other pending legislation involving education, public safety, and “dealing with those in our society who need help.” But Republicans, as of Tuesday evening, appeared wary, and bitter about the war-of- words that has resulted from their walkout. Responding to Courtney’s
remarks, Oregon state Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend, told Oregon Public Broadcasting that he wanted more clarification about the fate of the cap and trade legislation. “Does it mean it’s dead until the 2020 session? Is the governor going to take it up in a special session?” Courtney also is facing backlash from the bill’s supporters. Some environmental advocates dispute Courtney’s assessment of the votes. They want a Senate vote on cap-and-trade to be called should Republicans return. “Make them vote and answer to their voters, and Oregon’s children,” said Tera Hurst, executive director of Renew Oregon, a group pushing for the bill. If the legislation dies, it will represent yet another setback for carbon pricing in the Pacific Northwest. Carbon pricing is intended to accelerate the shift to cleaner forms of energy by making it increasingly expensive to continue relying on fossil fuels. The Oregon legislation sets a target of reducing carbon emissions by 80 percent, by 2050. That would take emissions down to 1990 levels. Some of the usual players in combating carbon pricing
— oil-industry groups — have stayed in the background this year in Oregon. “While our members had concerns about specific elements of this cap-and-trade bill, we did not actively oppose the legislation,” said Catherine ReheisBoyd, president of the Western States Petroleum Association in a statement to The Seattle Times. Oregon Democrats, meanwhile, sought to blunt the criticism from rural Oregon, the timber industry and other industry groups with measures to ease the bite on low-income residents and some industries. But the concessions did not go far enough to forestall the Republican walkout, which underscored the deep political divide over climate change and quickly gained national attention. Reached Monday, Carlyle remained confident that capand-trade will take hold in the Northwest. Meanwhile, Washington Republican Sen. Doug Ericksen, of Ferndale, applauded the walk out by Oregon Republicans. ” I think you need to have people who will say we need to slow this down, take a look at what it’s doing to the economy. And that’s what they are doing,” Ericksen said.
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THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 2019
Why ‘maximum pressure’ on Iran could backfire By David Fickling Bloomberg News
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iddle East policymakers in Washington these days should take some advice from that noted diplomat, Bob Dylan. His adage “When you ain’t got nothing, you got nothing to lose” is getting tested with the Trump administration’s “maximum pressure” sanctions regime on Iran. The outcome of this particular experiment could well determine the direction of oil prices as the U.S. heads toward presidential elections next year. As the recent attacks on oil tankers and a U.S. unmanned drone demonstrate, in military terms it would be relatively easy for Iran to cause disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, a bottleneck through which about a third of the world’s seaborne oil passes. The narrowest gap between Omani and Iranian territory in the Strait isn’t much wider than the Strait of Dover. One wargames simulation of a U.S.-Iranian-style conflict in 2002, the Millennium Challenge, resulted in the near-destruction of the “home side” U.S. fleet by an array of guerrilla tactics, such as flotillas of small boats and motorcycle couriers deployed by the “enemy” Iranian team. Even with President Donald Trump’s latest sanctions on Iran’s leaders and their response Tuesday promising an end to diplomatic engagement, full-blown conflict or a blockade in the Strait is an unlikely outcome. But the relative simplicity of such disruption is a reminder that Tehran’s tenuous investment in the global political and economic order, rather than its military capacity, is the major factor preventing the situation from deteriorating further. That makes Washington’s attempts to erode Iran’s political and economic standing a high-risk game. This dynamic is most obvious in trade. A key reason that Iran needs the Strait of Hormuz open is because its own crude and natural gas goes through the same passage as the barrels coming from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Qatar and Iraq. That particular fail-safe is almost gone. Traditionally the U.S. has mostly imposed primary sanctions that only limit American companies from doing business with Iran. As a result, large volumes of Iranian crude tend to keep flowing to importers in Asia and the Middle East. That’s changed over the past decade as Washington’s Office of Foreign Assets Control has become more aggressive in prosecuting foreign businesses for doing business with sanctioned parties.
When sanctions were first re-imposed by the U.S. last year, Washington initially issued a series of waivers that kept the crude flowing. Since these lapsed at the start of May, Asian importers have turned off the spigots altogether to avoid running afoul of the U.S. government: The 225,000 barrels a day shipped during May was the lowest volume in Bloombergcompiled figures dating back to 2015. The average pace of export shipments so far this year has come to about 993,000 barrels, comparable to the record-low figures for total exports recorded in the immediate wake of the 1979 Iranian revolution. (1) Killing Iran’s key oil-export market is certainly imposing a great deal of pain on its economy. Real gross domestic product will fall by 6% this year and consumer price inflation will hit 37%, according to the International Monetary Fund. Yet that’s unlikely to bend Tehran to Washington’s will, and in the meantime it’s actually increased the risks around Hormuz. With barely any Iranian oil flowing anyway, the
further economic pain Tehran would suffer from disrupting traffic through the Strait would be trivial. At this point, the key factor preventing Tehran from striking back harder is primarily its desire to win the game of public perception. Currently, the rogue regime in the Gulf is the U.S., which blew up the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action on Iran’s nuclear program when the Trump administration pulled out of it a year ago. Iran’s behavior to date has been carefully calibrated: just aggressive enough to keep a tit-for-tat game going with the U.S., but not so combative that it loses the support of Russia, China and Europe. “Up until the point they pull out of JCPOA they have moral authority in their favor,” said Rodger Shanahan, a research fellow on Middle East issues at the Lowy Institute in Sydney. “If they threaten to close the Strait and increase their attacks, that goes away.” The more likely outcome is further attempts by Tehran to push the boundaries of the JCPOA, said Shanahan, such
as Iran’s announcement last week that it would exceed a cap on its stockpiles of low-grade uranium. Such actions can create new facts on the ground that can be traded away in any future negotiation with Washington, so as to ensure the resulting agreement is substantially the same as the one the Trump administration pulled out of.That’s hardly comforting. Indeed, it more or less guarantees that the current game of provocation and counter-provocation will continue until both parties reach a stalemate. With the safety nets preventing this from deteriorating into a crisis growing so threadbare, the risks of a miscalculation will only increase. (1) The Bloomberg figures are derived from ship movements and don’t take piped exports into account, so the most recent numbers may understate things a bit. David Fickling is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering commodities, as well as industrial and consumer companies. He has been a reporter for Bloomberg News, Dow Jones, the Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times and the Guardian.
Don’t claim to be inclusive of ‘everyone’ if you don’t want Trump supporters By Jon Healey Los Angeles Times
O
ur society is sharply polarized for a bunch of reasons, but one that sticks out in my mind is the prevailing sense of righteousness. You see it all the time in online debates —the other side isn’t just mistaken, it’s deficient, or venal, or immoral, or even evil. Exhibit A is the new policy announced this week by Ravelry, which appears to be the top site for craftsy people who like to make things with yarn. Ravelry users upload patterns and projects, then share them with other users. On Sunday, Ravelry said it was banning all content (projects, patterns and comments) that supported President Donald Trump and his administration. The statement included this remarkable bit of pretzel logic: “We cannot provide a space that is inclusive of all and also allow support for open white supremacy. Support of the Trump administration is undeniably support for white supremacy.” Honestly, I don’t know why people even aspire to be “inclusive of all,” because “all” means everyone, including folks no one
wants to run into at the punch bowl — serial killers, necrophiliacs, telemarketers, your aunt’s creepy ex-husband, the list goes on and on. But I digress. Ravelry’s founders (who have been publicly mum since Sunday) tried to distinguish in their announcement between Trump supporters and Trump support. The former remains welcome, the latter does not, ostensibly because it makes the site feel like a hostile environment to some users. The statement that supporting Trump is undeniably supporting white supremacy is absurdly reductive. It’s akin to claiming that support for the Obama administration was undeniably support for illegal immigration, or that support for the George W. Bush administration was undeniably support for making prescription drugs more affordable for senior citizens. Don’t get me wrong —I’m not defending Trump. What bothers me is the way Ravelry’s founders imputed all of his sins on everyone who might consider Trump a better choice next year than, say, Bernie Sanders.
Trump’s signature issue may well be the real and metaphorical border wall —his battle to stop people from crossing the southern border legally in search of asylum, or illegally in search of a better life here. Critics certainly see Trump’s xenophobia as a manifestation of white supremacy. To his allies on that issue, however, it’s not about race, it’s about an influx of people who will be a drag on the economy, public schools and the healthcare system. Those supposedly dire consequences are debatable; even some Republicans with a traditional view of trade and economics see immigration as a net boon, not a burden. But those same Republicans would rather have the country led by an anti-migrant conservative who will cut tax rates and regulations than a migrantfriendly Democrat eager to bury the country in taxes and red tape. With two parties exerting a stranglehold on elected offices, We the People don’t have the luxury of supporting leaders who share every one of our core beliefs. We all have to hold our noses to some degree — and Republicans more than Democrats these days. The president who embraced
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trickle-down economics and gave them two conservative Supreme Court justices is also the guy detaining migrant children in deplorable conditions, trying to speed global warming and threatening the economy with a trade war (which some Democrats are cheering on). That’s not to say every president is equally flawed (ahem, Richard Nixon) or that some Trump supporters aren’t white supremacists —some clearly are. But again, one brush does not paint them all. Few people would have complained had the founders of Ravelry —a rich source of pink pussyhat designs —banned all partisan flexing during the protracted campaign season. But instead, they decided to bar content that was offensive to them, implicitly endorsing content that’s offensive just to other people. It’s their site, they can do as they wish. But ham-handed moves like this only encourage those who want Congress to require online platforms to be neutral in order to be shielded from liability for their users’ posts. That would be a big step backward for the internet, not just for Ravelry and the knitters whose sensibilities it is so eager to protect.
A8
Thursday, June 27, 2019
The Daily World
PEANUTS
GARFIELD
FRANK ’N’ ERNEST
THE BORN LOSER
F MINUS
DRABBLE
ZITS
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
BEETLE BAILEY
PICKLES
RHYMES WITH ORANGE
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
DILBERT
BLONDIE
GET FUZZY
B.C.
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
BIZARRO
WIZARD OF ID
DENNIS THE MENACE
The Daily World
Daughter betrayed by mother struggles with reconnection Dear Abby: I have an extensive history of childhood trauma. I was sexually abused by my stepfather for 15 years. When I turned him in, my family turned their backs on me. I was told it could have been handled within the family, and they blamed me for acting “sexy.” My stepfather spent 10 years in prison and died a few years later. I suffer from chronic mental health issues including PTSD, anxiety and suicide ideation, which have landed me in the hospital 10 times in the last two years. My mother wants to have a relationship with me, but she refuses to apologize or acknowledge the abuse even happened. In some ways, the betrayal by my mother has hurt me more than the abuse. I feel guilty for not trying to work on a relationship with her, but on the other hand, I don’t feel my heart can handle any more rejection from her. We live states apart. What should
JEANNE PHILLIPS DEAR ABBY I do?
Survivor in Wisconsiin
Dear Survivor: If you haven’t talked about this with a licensed psychotherapist, please do it before making a decision about something this important. I’m not a therapist, but I think it would be healthier for you to keep your distance from someone who prefers living in denial rather than facing reality. At the very least, YOU are owed an apology for the way you were treated by “the family.” You did nothing wrong. The person who should feel guilty is your
mother. Blowing the whistle on the child molester she married was the right thing to do. (“Handle it within the family”?!) I can only wonder how many other young family members your stepfather may have abused in addition to you. Dear Abby: My three sons are all engaged and plan on being married over the next three years. Their mother and I are separated and will be splitting the cost of the rehearsal dinner. I told the first one to be engaged that while I will pay for the rehearsal DINNER, I will not pay for a bartender or alcoholic drinks. I have been in emergency services for more than 35 years and have seen firsthand the effects of alcohol too many times. I no longer drink socially because of it. Although I explained this to my sons as they grew up, they have chosen to drink socially as adults. It is their choice, and I accept it. The fiancee of my second
Thursday, June 27, 2019
A9
SUDOKU How to Play: Each Row, Column and set of 3-by-3 boxes must contain the numbers 1 through 9 without repetition
son to be married has sent us a price quote from a venue that includes costs for a bartender. (The total is more than twice that of the first son’s.) I plan to discuss this with him, but I’d like your opinion: Am I wrong to make this stipulation, given the fact that this is “their” event? Teetotaler in the South Dear Teetotaler: You are not wrong. You made that stipulation to Son No. 1, and in fairness, you should do the same with Son No. 2. While it will be his and his fiancee’s event, and you are generously paying for the dinner, you are under no obligation to pay for their booze.
FAMILY CIRCUS
Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www. DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Authors, actors featured at local book store’s Buccaneer Book Days will sign in the store Saturday from 3 to 5 p.m. Harbor Book’s co-owner and children’s book author Gregory Zschomler will also be on hand to sign his books over the weekend. “Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl” actor Maxie Santillan Jr. will
sign autographs and pose for photographs at Harbor Book’s Sunday Market booth in downtown Aberdeen on from about 1:30 p.m. until the market closes. Pirate author/enactor Barnacle Bill Bedlam and pirate author and screenwriter Marti Melville are
Daze
9:30 a.m.-10:30 a.m. Amateur sandcastle contest on the beach, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Chainsaw carving, 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. Chainsaw art auction — Oyhut Bay Tent, 5 p.m.
From Page A3
Lady Washington schedule Friday Vessel Tours: Noon-1 p.m., $5 donation Adventure Sail: 2-4 p.m., $49-$55 Saturday Vessel Tours: 10 a.m.-1 p.m., $5 donation Pirate Sail: 2-4 p.m., $59-$65 Sunday Vessel Tours: 10 a.m.-1 p.m., $5 donation Pirate Sail: 2-4 p.m., $59-$65 Order tickets online at historicalseaport. org/public-tours-sails/ sailing-schedule/ westport-washington/.
Sand & Sawdust Festival — Ocean Shores The Five Star Dealership Sand and Sawdust Festival runs Friday through Saturday this weekend, with most of the activities in and a round the Convention Center, and at the beach nearby. For a detailed list of events go to sandandsawdust.org. Here are some of the highlights. Location
also expected to make appearances (times TBD) and sign their books. There will be sales on all pirate books in stock, snacks, prizes, pirate games and booty (“jewels” and “doubloons”) for all. Harbor Books is located at 510 W. First St. in Aberdeen.
Inside the Convention Center, the center parking lot and at the beach. On the Beach To access the beach, use the Chance a La Mer entrance next to the Shiloh. Once on the beach, the activities are to the left of the poles (south). Cars are not allowed past that area, but cars allowed to the right (north). Friday Sand drawing workshop
with Justin the Circler from 11 a.m. to noon at the beach. Experts build a sandcastle at the beach, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Chainsaw carving, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. at the Convention Center. Chainsaw art auction — Oyhut Bay Tent, 5 p.m. Saturday Sandcastle building workshop on the beach,
Sunday Chainsaw carving, 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. Chainsaw art auction, 2 p.m. Oyhut Bay Tent Inside Convention Center — every day! Associated Arts of Ocean Shores Juried Fine Arts, 3D & Photography Show Crafts, merchants, nonprofit and sponsor booths Ride the mechanical Shark! How long can you last? Tables and chairs for general seating Information and Amateur Sandcastle Contest registration (Saturday event) Convention Center Parking Lot — every day! Food booths Giant sand box for the kids Rock climbing wall and strength test for family fun Bennett’s Fish Shack Stage — live music and DJ’s Festival beer garden and bar. Check the festival web site for musical performances Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME By David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
SUFHL
ENOYH DARTIE FESYAL ©2019 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
Get the free JUST JUMBLE app • Follow us on Twitter @PlayJumble
Hollywood actress Austin Highsmith Garces (“Dolphin Tale,” “Scream”and numerous television roles) will be signing her new children’s book, The Miracle Tree, at Harbor Books on Friday from 3 to 5 p.m. Steampunk pirate author Ren Cummins
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: BRAVE PORCH RARELY MIRROR Yesterday’s TODAY’S CROSSWORD Answer: It was hard to choose which new socks to buy
ACROSS 1 Break in 4 Droplet 8 Office notes 13 Muchacho 14 “Mack the Knife” singer 15 The upper crust 16 Low voice 17 Sense 18 “Divine Comedy” poet 19 Tasty legume 20 Protective shot 22 Paving material 24 Henri’s aits 25 Be under the weather 26 Apparel 28 RV haven 31 Violinist’s aid 34 Vincent van - 35 Does target practice 36 Be next to 37 Hoopsters’ venue 38 Legal document 39 French Legion headgear 40 Rochester’s Jane 41 Page or LuPone 42 Observe 43 Melodramatic cry
because they were so — “COM-PAIR-ABLE”
44 45 47 51 55 56
Bad-mouth Four-star review Writers “Round File” Pedro’s river Performer on stage 57 Slammer 58 Likelihood 59 Mine cars 60 Penny - 61 Engineering toy 62 Not wordy 63 Consult a book 64 Previously
DOWN 1 Irritates 2 Tavern sign (2 wds.) 3 Ghost’s hello 4 Happen to 5 Go to the polls 6 Baldwin of films 7 Surrealist painter 8 Olympic goals 9 Please greatly 10 Mary Quant creation 11 Herr von Bismarck 12 Discovered 13 Vineyard valley
2 0 Self-centered 2 1 Astronomer’s prime time 2 3 Cuba neighbor 2 6 Vacation trips 2 7 Monstrous giant 2 9 Leave out 3 0 -- Spumante 3 1 Gather leaves 3 2 Not resist 3 3 Matinee idol 3 4 “Naked Maja” artist 3 5 Flooded 3 7 People person? 41 Brad of the movies 4 3 Reluctant 4 4 Fenced 4 6 Proton places 4 7 Japanese canine 48 Buy by mail 4 9 Narrow crest 5 0 Fair (hyph.) 5 1 Light-bulb unit 5 2 Farm unit 5 3 Barely open 5 4 Rational 58 Bravo, in Spain
LAST WORD IN ASTROLOGY by Eugenia Last Happy Birthday: Pay attention to what everyone else is doing. Being prepared will help you make better decisions when someone throws a curveball. If you let anger step in, it will be difficult to backtrack. Take your time, think matters through and give others a chance to reveal motives and concerns. The art of listening will be your secret weapon for maintaining control. Your numbers are 8, 14, 23, 29, 31, 42, 47. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Take nothing and no one for granted. If you want something done, do it yourself. Go easy when making changes. Think your plans through to the end before you begin. An old flame will come to mind or try to reconnect. 3 stars TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Change should start within. If you demand too much of others without giving back, you will end up getting little. Work in unison with those who are heading down a similar path. Go with the current, not against it. 3 stars
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You need time to rejuvenate. Get some rest. Take time to digest what’s going on around you, and gather facts that could influence how you move forward. Be secretive about your personal affairs. A moderate lifestyle will promote less stress. 4 stars CANCER (June 21-July 22): Breathe deep and release. Take a moment to rethink what’s transpired and how to move forward. Do things right the first time, and you’ll have nothing to worry about. Walk away from inconsistent or unreliable people. 2 stars LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Play for keeps. Refuse to let an unexpected change throw you off guard. Keep your emotions in check, and remain confident that if you do your best, you will come out on top. Love and romance are on the rise. 5 stars VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Think about what you want and how best to make it happen. Emotions will surface,
giving rise to an incident that can push you in a different direction. Don’t hesitate to see what’s available. Letting go of the past will be liberating. 3 stars LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Don’t worry about what others do or think. Change begins within, and recognizing what makes you happy will be an excellent place to set sail. Love who you are, and follow your heart. Romance is on the rise. 3 stars SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Experience all you can. Traveling, interacting with people from different backgrounds or just trying something new will motivate you to make a lifestyle change. Aim to lower your overhead, ease your stress and live life your way. 3 stars SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Listen carefully and fact-check. Not everyone will be looking out for your best interest. A personal assessment will help you recognize what and who you need in your life. Don’t be fooled
by someone who has ulterior motives. 3 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Address an issue that you are dealing with at home. How you handle a relationship will make a difference in the outcome. If a problem exists, face facts and get help. Put negativity behind you so you can move forward lovingly. 5 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Don’t feel pressured to do too much for others. Reciprocate what’s fair, and move on to something that will make you happy. Doing your part to keep meaningful relationships equal will help you avoid resentment. Do what’s appropriate. 2 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Don’t stop until you are satisfied. Live up to your expectations as well as your promises. Walk away from temptation and those who try to take advantage of you. Suggest what you will do and what you want in return. 3 stars
For today’s puzzle solutions, visit the weather page
A10
The Daily World
Thursday, June 27, 2019
Today
Fri.
64
Sat.
64 52
52
Mostly cloudy with showers
Sun.
66 51
Morning showers, then a shower
A morning shower or two
70 52
67 54
An a.m. shower; periods of sun
Sun and clouds
Almanac
Marine Report
Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday
Wind from the south-southwest at 6-12 knots today. Seas 2-4 feet. Visibility less than 2 miles in a shower. Wind from the Taholah south at 6-12 knots tonight. Seas 2-4 feet. A shower. Wind 61/52 from the south-southeast at 8-16 knots tomorrow. Seas 2-4 feet. Visibility clear. Saturday: Wind from the south-southeast at 6-12 knots. Seas 2-4 feet. Visibility clear. Sunday: Wind from the west at 6-12 knots. Seas 2-4 feet. Visibility clear.
Temperature High/low .............................. 65/52 Normal high/low .................. 65/52 Record high ................ 84 in 2006 Record low .................. 40 in 1971 Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 3 p.m. yest. ... 0.00" Month to date ....................... 0.65" Normal month to date .......... 2.03" Year to date ........................ 20.38" Normal year to date ........... 34.95" Last year to date ................ 34.93" Aberdeen 24 hrs. ending 3 p.m. yest. ... 0.00" Year to date ........................ 24.10" Raymond 24 hrs. ending 3 p.m. yest. ... 0.00" Year to date ........................ 24.73" Quinault 24 hrs. ending 3 p.m. yest. .. Trace Year to date ........................ 36.14"
New
Jul 2
First
5:22 a.m. 9:14 p.m. 2:20 a.m. 3:45 p.m.
Full
Jul 9
Yesterday
Willapa River near Willapa Chehalis River at Centralia Chehalis River at Porter Satsop River near Satsop Wynoochee R. above Black Creek Humptulips River near Humptulips Quinault River at Lake Quinault Queets River near Clearwater
Last
Jul 16
First
Aberdeen Ocean Shores
Regional Weather
9:38a 9:29a
Low Tides First
Aberdeen Ocean Shores
Jul 24
3.02 152.07 30.90 28.28 26.94 9.69 2.49 7.15
24 hr Change
Moclips 61/52
-0.02 -0.01 -0.05 +0.03 -0.01 none -0.03 -0.05
Pacific Beach 62/53
Flood Stage
21 168.5 48 38 42.5 –– –– ––
3:34a 3:21a
Today (ft) Second
7.1 5.9
9:52p 9:38p
Today (ft) Second
2.1 1.7
3:25p 2:52p
(ft)
First
9.4 8.5
10:45a 10:37a
Copalis Crossing 63/51
Tomorrow (ft) Second
(ft)
7.4 6.1
9.9 8.9
(ft)
First
Tomorrow (ft) Second
2.6 2.2
4:30a 4:17a
1.2 0.9
4:21p 3:47p
2.9 2.6
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019
National Weather Today
City
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Aberdeen Anchorage, AK Astoria, OR Bellingham Bremerton Central Park Chehalis Coeur d'Alene, ID Everett Hoquiam Kelso Lebam Moses Lake Nome, AK Olympia Pasco Port Angeles Portland Pullman Seatac Seattle Shelton Spokane Vancouver, WA Vancouver, BC Victoria, BC Wenatchee Yakima
64 75 63 64 66 63 66 68 65 63 64 63 75 62 64 77 60 67 66 68 67 66 69 65 66 63 71 73
64 77 63 68 66 64 66 70 66 63 66 64 76 60 66 78 62 70 68 69 67 67 70 68 68 65 71 74
110s
52 sh 62 s 54 c 52 c 49 c 52 sh 52 c 46 pc 52 c 52 sh 53 sh 52 sh 51 pc 47 c 55 c 52 c 50 sh 55 c 44 pc 53 c 53 c 50 c 49 pc 54 c 54 pc 54 pc 53 c 49 c
100s 90s 80s 70s 60s 50s 40s 30s 20s 10s 0s -0 -10s Cold
Warm
Stationary
Showers
T-Storms
Rain
Low
Flurries
Snow
High
Ice
McCleary 64/50
Brady 64/50 Aberdeen 64/52 Cosmopolis Montesano 64/52 63/51
Hoquiam 63/51
Elma 64/50 Oakville 65/47
Artic 63/51
Markham 62/54 Grayland 62/54
(ft)
Fri. Hi Lo W
Matlock 64/50
Wishkah 63/51
Westport 62/54
Today Hi Lo W
52 sh 59 pc 52 sh 53 sh 48 sh 52 sh 50 sh 47 t 52 c 51 sh 52 sh 51 sh 50 pc 53 c 48 sh 53 pc 46 sh 54 sh 44 t 53 c 54 sh 49 sh 47 t 53 sh 54 r 53 sh 53 pc 47 c
Humptulips 63/51
Ocean Shores 63/53
10:38p 10:21p
are today's highs and tonight's lows.
Neilton 59/48
Tides High Tides
Sun and Moon Sunrise today .............. Sunset tonight ............. Moonrise today ............ Moonset today .............
River
Today’s Weather Sponsored by weather. Temperatures Shown is today's
Quinault 61/51
Rivers Statistics are through 7 a.m. yesterday
Twin Harbors Harbors Twin Forecast Forecast
Mon.
Tokeland 62/54 Bay South Bend Center 63/51 62/54
Brooklyn 63/50
Raymond 63/50 Menlo 63/51
City
Today Hi Lo W
Fri. Hi Lo W
City
Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Buffalo Charleston, S.C. Charlotte Cheyenne Cleveland Columbia, S.C. Columbus, Ohio Concord Dallas Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit Fargo Greensboro, N.C. Helena Honolulu
87 91 84 93 93 85 92 82 80 75 84 92 93 86 87 95 88 85 91 88 93 91 89 79 91 76 86
86 90 84 95 94 80 92 85 76 87 84 90 92 91 89 94 90 88 95 89 96 91 89 85 90 74 86
Houston 94 Indianapolis 88 Jackson 76 Kansas City 90 Key West 88 Las Vegas 100 Los Angeles 77 Memphis 90 Miami 91 Milwaukee 84 Minneapolis 90 Nashville 92 New Orleans 94 New York City 88 Norfolk 89 Philadelphia 91 Phoenix 106 Pittsburgh 85 Providence 84 St. Louis 90 Salt Lake City 92 San Diego 71 San Francisco 69 Tampa 94 Topeka 92 Tulsa 92 Washington, D.C. 94
61 c 72 pc 70 s 69 t 72 s 61 t 70 c 63 c 53 pc 66 c 65 pc 70 s 71 pc 56 pc 70 pc 68 pc 70 pc 57 pc 74 pc 70 pc 61 pc 74 c 70 pc 63 t 69 pc 53 t 76 c
62 t 70 pc 73 pc 68 pc 73 s 61 c 69 t 70 t 54 c 71 s 68 t 69 pc 70 pc 58 pc 71 t 68 pc 72 s 61 s 74 s 71 s 63 pc 75 pc 70 t 70 c 68 pc 53 c 76 pc
Today Hi Lo W
71 t 70 pc 43 pc 72 pc 80 pc 78 s 62 pc 74 c 79 pc 71 t 68 t 70 pc 76 pc 71 s 74 s 72 s 80 s 66 s 65 pc 73 pc 67 s 62 pc 56 s 77 t 75 pc 73 pc 74 s
Fri. Hi Lo W
95 88 78 92 88 102 80 90 90 85 89 92 92 89 90 93 108 88 89 92 93 72 70 91 96 94 93
71 t 70 s 42 pc 73 pc 80 sh 78 s 61 pc 73 t 78 t 64 t 71 pc 72 c 75 pc 74 pc 75 pc 75 pc 85 s 70 t 69 s 74 pc 63 s 63 pc 54 s 78 t 75 pc 74 pc 76 s
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, i-ice, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow
Northwest Collision says... congratulations to all of the area graduates.
1000 S. West Blvd. Aberdeen 360-538-0679
EPA rule lets officials block FOIA document requests CQ-Roll Call
WASHINGTON, D.C. — A new EPA rule would allow political appointees to review and withhold documents requested by the public under the Freedom of Information Act. The final rule, published Wednesday in the Federal Register, was signed by EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler on June 14 and takes effect July 25. It was not preceded by a public comment period. It comes one week after a similar policy was reported by CQ Roll Call at the Department of the Interior. The practice drew criticism from lawmakers and
advocates of public access are responsive or not.” to records. According to Moulton, Wheeler and political that will limit the requestor’s appointees will be able to ability to take turned-down “issue final determinations FOIA requests to court. “If something is responwhether to release or withhold a record or a portion sive and withheld for of a record on the basis of national security, you can responsiveness or under one go to court and argue as to or more exemptions under whether or not you can get the FOIA, and to issue ‘no records,” Moulton said. With records’ responses.” a “no response” or unre“ The unresponsive sponsive reply from the records aspect is particu- EPA, it would be impossible larly troubling,” said Sean to take those requests to a Moulton, a senior policy courtroom, he said. The absence of a comment analyst at the Project on Government Oversight. period was particularly “When records are deemed alarming, Moulton said. unresponsive, the requestor “In my 20 years of workisn’t even informed that ing on FOIA policy I’ve never they exist. And so it’s a very seen an agency do a FOIA important authority to be regulation change without able to sayTHAT which records public comment,” Moulton SCRAMBLED WORD GAME By David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Sudoku Solution CANKK TIHDC
PLUCEO BOLTEG
Get the free JUST JUMBLE app • Follow us on Twitter @PlayJumble
TODAY’S PUZZLE ANSWERS Unscramble these Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
©2019 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
“
”
Jumble Answers
Yesterday’s
said. “In terms of the process, that’s incredibly troubling. They are inviting and accepting no public input.” The EPA has not responded to request for comment. A previous EPA rule change related to oversight of FOIA requests said that the head of the administrator or their delegate may oversee FOIA requests. This rule specifies additional specific positions which may now review requests. Those include the administrator, deputy administrators, assistant administrators, deputy assistant administrators, regional administrators, deputy regional administrators, general counsel, deputy general counsels,
Crossword Solution
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: FLUSH HONEY TIRADE SAFELY Answer: The bookcase wasn’t made very well and had a — SHORT SHELF LIFE
DOONESBURY
By Meg Cunningham
regional counsels, deputy regional counsels and inspector general or those individuals’ delegates, according to the rule. Additionally, the rule changed the process for filing FOIA requests to regional offices. Previously, regional officials were able to fulfill requests coming into their offices. Under the new rule, requests must be sent to headquarters in Washington, which will then send them to regional offices. Any request sent to regional offices by members of the press or the public will be discarded, according to the rule. CQ Roll Call previously reported that political officials within the Department
of Interior were allowed to look over records releases before they were sent, and in some cases documents were held back after the reviews. Republican Texas Sen. John Cornyn said DOI’s “awareness reviews” appear to undermine what Congress wanted when it wrote the law. “That sounds like it’s inconsistent with congressional intent,” Cornyn told CQ Roll Call. “I’ve heard of people trying to game the system for a long time.” Cornyn said he had not heard of instances when documents were held back after political appointees interceded, adding that practice should be halted if true. In another FOIA-related matter, the Supreme Court ruled Monday that companies sharing information with the government will no longer have to show “substantial competitive harm” in order to keep the information confidential. The decision was in a case involving food stamp sales data. The decision is likely to make it tougher for reporters and the public to use FOIA to discover how the government, businesses and private contractors make decisions, said Aaron Mackey, senior staff attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation. The privacy claim could make it difficult to dig into government decisions such as Federal Trade Commission settlements with companies, he said.
Sports B1
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THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 2019
NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
‘I wish she was here’ Former Husky and new Sixer Matisse Thybulle lost his mother at 17, now he carries her legacy with him to the NBA By Sarah Todd The Philadelphia Inquirer
PHILADELPHIA — When Matisse Thybulle crossed the stage at the Barclays Center on Thursday and shook the NBA commissioner’s hand after being drafted, one of the first things he thought of was his mother. “I wish she was here to see it,” he told ESPN through tears, moments after hearing his name announced as the 20th pick in the draft. Thybulle’s mother, Elizabeth, died on Feb. 2, 2015, after battling acute myeloid leukemia. Thybulle was just 17 when his mother died. What the Thybulle family will tell you is that there were two pairs within the family of four. Chloe, his sister, and Greg, his father, are
Baseball managers can only do so much
mirrors of each other’s personalities. They are lively, extroverted, and bursting with energy that is fed from humor. Thybulle and his mother were the other pair. Reserved, caretakers, who were always able to take on more than anyone else thought they could. “Life changed for us on a dime,” Greg said of his wife’s passing. “She did not want them spending time in the hospital. So she gave me direct orders.” The first order was for Greg to make sure Chloe and Matisse lived their lives. Elizabeth did not want them to have to worry about fighting cancer —it was not their fight. She wanted them to go to school, take part in their extracurricular activities, and spend time with friends.
It became clear over the next four years, through Thybulle’s time at the University of Washington and leading up to the NBA draft, that he was becoming more and more like his mother. During his time with the Huskies, Thybulle always had more gear than he needed. He kept the surplus of sweaters, sneakers, and T-shirts in his car. When he saw someone on the street in need, he gave his extra gear away. “That’s Matisse,” Chloe said. “He wouldn’t talk about it. He didn’t do it for attention. He just did it because it felt right. People will always tell me as I get older that I look like my mom, but Matisse is my mom, they are so much alike.” In 2010, when a 7.0 magnitude earthquake hit Haiti, Greg’s native country, Elizabeth, a naturopathic doctor, volunteered her time helping the Haitian people. On the anniversary of her
SARAH STIER | GETTY IMAGES/TNS
Matisse Thybulle (right) poses with NBA Commissioner Adam Silver after being drafted with the 20th overall pick by the Philadelphia 76ers during the 2019 NBA Draft at the Barclays Center on June 20 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.
passing, Matisse would go to the hospital, to the cancer ward, and bring gifts and thank-you cards for the nurses who cared for Elizabeth. “Elizabeth was unique,” Greg said. “She was a kind and gentle soul. Matisse has the same soul. He
Little Leaguers take center stage
Is it fair to blame Scott Servais for the Mariners’ struggles during this “stepback” season?
See CALKINS, Page B6
See THYBULLE, Page B3
WORLD CUP SOCCER
Coach Ellis on schedules: ‘It is what it is’ U.S. isn’t sweating short break before playing France in the quarterfinals on Friday
B
o Porter never got to crack any champagne. His two years as the Astros’ manager were miserable, as the team went 110-190 under his watch while trudging through a very transparent rebuild. The fruits of that teardown manifested a year later, when Houston won 86 games, but A.J. Hinch had already taken over as skipper before winning a World Series two seasons later. Rick Renteria didn’t pop any bubbly, either. He went 73-89 in his sole season MATT as the manager of the Cubs, who CALKINS also endured a five-year reconstruction. But like a starter with Mariano Rivera in the bullpen, Renteria was replaced by Joe Maddon just as Chicago found its form in 2015. Maddon and the Cubbies won a World Series the next year. Baseball-reference.com predicted 81 wins for Paul Molitor in his first year as the Twins’ manager, 66 in his second, 83 in his third and 77 in his fourth. He exceeded expectations in three of those seasons. Before this year, baseball-reference.com predicted 101 wins for the Twins, for which they’re ahead of pace — but Rocco Baldelli had already taken Molitor’s job. Imagine driving a Datsun as your company car for years, then being let go just as they upgrade to Teslas. This is often the fate of an MLB manager forced to brave the rugged terrain of a rebuild. Some, like Kansas City skipper Ned Yost, survive and eventually thrive — but most get fired before their team catches fire. So what might this mean for Mariners manager Scott Servais? There hasn’t been a hallmark achievement for Servais since he arrived in Seattle four seasons ago. The Mariners finished 10 games above .500 in 2016, six games below. 500 in 2017, 16 games above .500 last season, and are 11 games below .500 now. On one hand, you could say that last year’s team finished 12 games better than projection models predicted, and would have been good enough for the playoffs in each of the previous four seasons. But on the
will give all of himself like that. All that patience and kindness comes from his mother.” The morning after the draft, Matisse and his family were at the
By Kevin Baxter Los Angeles Times
year, which is fine. I’m fine with that. But the key is, particularly with some other contracts rolling off, the way I view the world — the value of our flexibility is greater than the dollars that we have to pay. “I personally love Robbie Cano, but having a 40-year old second baseman or probably DH by that time isn’t ideal, and even though I think Robbie will be better than any other 40-yearold at that time, we needed to do something.” Projecting the committed dollars to the 40-man roster, Seattle sits above $80 million in 2020, $43 million in 2021 and not a single dollar in guaranteed MLB contracts for 2022. “It puts us in a very good position to compete for a championship,” Stanton said. “We had our dollars spread out over a longer period of time. We bunched up some salary dollars now and probably overpaid some salary dollars in some respects, but then we’ve freed ourselves up so that we if he need another starting pitcher — and I’m not saying
PARIS — The U.S. national team took a two-hour bus trip from Reims to Paris on Tuesday, giving the players only two days on the field to prepare for their Women’s World Cup quarterfinal with France on Friday. They followed a similar schedule between group play and the round of 16, riding from Le Havre on the English Channel to champagne country and arriving three days after Spain, their first knockoutstage opponent, reached Reims. Those are the vagaries of a tournament schedule in which everything is supposed to be equal, but few things truly are. “Yeah, it seems at times a big discrepancy,” said U.S. coach Jill Ellis, whose team was the last to play in the group stage. “When you enter a tournament and (you’re) the last team to play, there’s going to be certain differences in the windows. “At this point, it is what it is.” And what it is, is uneven. In a tournament where teams will have to play seven games in a month to reach the final, rest and recovery are all important. And for the U.S., the oldest team in the Women’s World Cup with a roster that averages 29 years of age, that’s vital. That is especially true after the physical game played in saunalike conditions Monday against Spain. Yet the U.S. will have only three rest days before its quarterfinal, one fewer than France. The hosts also had two more rest days between the group stage and the knockout rounds than the U.S. Germany will have six days before its round-of-16 game and quarterfinal, two more days than its opponent, Sweden. And while Ellis didn’t see the World Cup schedule until December, she has been planning for it for years. After the 2015 World Cup, Ellis helped U.S. Soccer set up the SheBelieves Cup and the Tournament of Nations, U.S.-based invitational events involving countries ranked in the top 10. Teams generally had no more than two days’ rest between games. “We’re very used to a three-day rhythm. It’s what we’ve done in certain tournaments specifically for this purpose,” she said. “We
See MARINERS, Page B6
See WORLD CUP, Page B2
RYAN SPARKS | GRAYS HARBOR NEWS GROUP
Montesano Little League’s Carter Aames (3) gets a high five from teammate Nathan Dowler after scoring Monte’s only run in a 5-1 loss to Chehalis at the District 3 Tournament on Tuesday at Failor Field in Aberdeen. The tournament’s championship game(s) will take place at 6 p.m. Thursday and Friday (if necessary).
M’s owner: Flexibility is more important than money spent unloading contracts By Ryan Divish The Seattle Times
June 26— Jun. 26—If one thing bothers Mariners chairman John Stanton about the whole “stepback” plan, it’s the name “step back.” He’s never liked it, but he also hasn’t been able to come up with a new moniker. He won’t use “rebuild” or “tear down.” “It’s kind of stuck,” he said. But he said this process has gone as expected, with decreased attendance and more losses than wins — that’s all accepted collateral damage. Continuing to remove veteran players on guaranteed contracts is part of the plan. The recent Jay Bruce and Edwin Encarnacion trades didn’t fetch as much of a return as some expected. The Mariners received minimal salary relief ($3 million) and an unheralded prospect in return for Bruce. Encarnacion brought back a prospect they once had in the system and $8 million in salary relief. Stanton is irritated at the report of money being the ultimate factor in deciding to trade Encarnacion to the Yankees
instead of the Rays, who offered less salary relief. “I will tell you categorically that situation was not about the money,” he said. “It was about the pitching prospect we got. He was a guy that we felt really good about and were really excited to get back. We wanted that kid back.” If the Mariners do trade veterans Dee Gordon and Mike Leake, both signed through the 2020 season, before the July 31 trade deadline, they will have to eat more money on their contracts. Paying salary for other teams’ players doesn’t bother Stanton — it’s an inevitable part of committing to this rebuild. “We knew it was a strong possibility,” he said. “I’m probably more academic about that than some other people.” Part of that outlook is knowing what was paid in the past and the relief gained — specifically longterm commitments to Robinson Cano ($120 million owed) and Jean Segura ($40-plus million owed from 2020-2022). “We spent money,” he said. “We are paying part of Jay and Encarnacion’s salary for next
B2
Thursday, June 27, 2019
The Daily World
World Cup From Page B1
can’t control what our opponent has. So everything is about us.”
Record-setter With a win over France, the U.S. would match Germany’s Women’s World Cup record of 15 consecutive games without a loss, set between 2003-2011. The U.S. is 11-0-3 since losing to Sweden in the group stage of the 2011 tournament. The U.S. officialy played Japan to a draw in the final that year, with Japan winning the title on penalty kicks.
Physical adjustment Spain’s defensive game plan Monday focused heavily on
Alex Morgan, who was beaten, battered and belted every time she touched the ball before Ellis mercifully ended her night in the 85th by subbing in Carli Lloyd. But with the U.S. winning, Morgan was able to joke about it afterward. “Our chiropractor’s here, but I don’t think we need him anymore,” she said. “I got a good crack.” At that she fared better than Spanish midfielder Vicky Losada, who came off the field with her right eye spotting a fresh shiner. Asked who gave it to her, Losada declined to say. “I can’t remember actually,” she said.
ON THE SCHEDULE TODAY No events scheduled
FRIDAY Auto Racing 7 p.m., Fred Brownfield
Classic at Grays Harbor Raceway
SATURDAY Auto Racing 7 p.m., Fred Brownfield Classic at Grays Harbor Raceway
ON THE AIR TODAY Golf 7 a.m., European Tour, Andalucia Masters, Golf Channel 12 p.m., PGA Tour Champions, U.S. Senior Open, Golf Channel 3 p.m., Web.com Tour, Utah Championship, Golf Channel 3 a.m. (Friday), European Tour, Andalucia Masters, Golf Channel MLB 11:10 a.m., Mariners at Brewers, ROOT and KXRO (1320 AM) 4 p.m., All-Star Election Night, ESPN Men’s Soccer 8:45 a.m., UEFA U-21, teams TBD, ESPNU 11:45 a.m., UEFA U-21, teams TBD, ESPNU Women’s Soccer 12 p.m., World Cup: Norway vs. England, KCPQ and KPTV Prep Baseball 4 p.m., National Championship Series: Teams TBD, ESPNU Basketball 5:30 p.m., Big3: Trilogy vs. 3 Headed Monsters, CBSSN 6:30 p.m., Big3: Ball Hogs vs. Ghost Ballers, CBSSN 7:30 p.m., WNBA: Las Vegas Aces at Los Angeles Sparks, CBSSN Football 5:30 p.m., CFL: Edmonton Eskimos at Winnipeg Blue Bombers, ESPN2 Auto Racing 1:55 a.m. (Friday), Formula One, Austrian Grand Prix practice, ESPN2
FRIDAY Auto Racing 5:55 a.m., Formula One, Austrian Grand Prix practice, ESPNU 1 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series, practice, NBCSN 2 p.m., NASCAR Truck Series, qualifying, FS1 4 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series, practice, NBCSN 2:55 a.m. (Saturday), Formula One, Austrian Grand Prix, practice, ESPN2 Golf 7 a.m., European Tour, Andalucia Masters, Golf Channel 9 a.m., LPGA Tour, Arkansas Championship, Golf Channel 12 p.m., PGA Tour Champions, U.S. Senior Open, FS1 12 p.m., PGA Tour, The Rocket Mortgage Classic, Golf Channel 3 p.m., Korn Ferry Tour, Utah Championship, Golf Channel Beach Volleyball 9 a.m., FIVB World Championships, NBCSN Women’s Soccer 12 p.m., World Cup: France vs. United States, KCPQ and KPTV Football 4:30 p.m., CFL: Montreal Alouettes at Hamilton TigerCats, ESPN2 Lacrosse 5 p.m., Premier League: Archers vs. Atlas, NBCSN MLB 5:10 p.m., Mariners at Astros, ROOT and KXRO (1320 AM) WNBA 7 p.m., Chicago Sky at Seattle Storm, KZJO
7 p.m., Indiana Fever at Phoenix Mercury, CBSSN Boxing 7 p.m., Top Rank Boxing: Commey vs. Beltran, ESPN Australian Rules Football 8:30 p.m., West Coast at Hawthorn, CBSSN
SATURDAY Golf 5 a.m., European Tour, Andalucia Masters, Golf Channel 10 a.m., PGA Tour, The Rocket Mortgage Classic, Golf Channel 12 p.m., PGA Tour, The Rocket Mortgage Classic, KIRO 12 p.m., PGA Tour Champions, U.S. Senior Open, FS1 12 p.m., LPGA Tour, Arkansas Championship, Golf Channel 1 p.m., PGA Tour Champions, U.S. Senior Open, KCPQ and KPTV 3 p.m., Korn Ferry Tour, Utah Championship, Golf Channel Auto Racing 5:55 a.m., Formula One, Austrian Grand Prix, qualifying, ESPN2 8 a.m., NASCAR Monster Series, practice, NBCSN 9 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series, qualifying, NBCSN 11 a.m., NASCAR Monster Series, practice, NBCSN 12:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series, The Overton’s 300, NBCSN 3:30 p.m., NASCAR Monster Series, qualifying, NBCSN Women’s Soccer 6 a.m., World Cup: Teams TBD, FS1 9:30 a.m., World Cup: Teams TBD, FS1 Basketball 9 a.m., Big3, Week 2, KIRO 11 a.m., Big3: 3’s Company vs. Killer 3’s, CBSSN MLB 10 a.m., Yankees vs. Red Sox, at London, KCPQ and KPTV 1 p.m., Nationals at Tigers, FS1 WNBA 11 a.m., Connecticut Sun at Washington Mystics, ESPN 7:30 p.m., Indiana Fever at Las Vegas Aces, CBSSN Men’s Soccer 1 p.m., MLS: FC Cincinnati at Minnesota United, ESPN 4 p.m., CONCACAF: Teams TBD, FS1 7 p.m., MLS: Vancouver Whitecaps at Seattle Sounders, KZJO 7 p.m., CONCACAF: Teams TBD, FS1 Volleyball 1 p.m., FIVB Nations League: Italy vs. Canada, CBUT College Lacrosse 2:30 p.m., Teams TBD, ESPNU 5 p.m., Teams TBD, ESPNU Mixed Martial Arts 3 p.m., UFC Fight Night, prelims, ESPN 6 p.m., UFC Fight Night: Ngannou vs. Dos Santos, ESPN College Baseball 5 p.m., College Home Run Derby, ESPN2 MLB 5:15 p.m., Mariners at Astros, KCPQ, KPTV and KXRO (1320 AM)
The Daily World
Thursday, June 27, 2019
B3
NCAA threat shouldn’t keep players from endorsement cash By Michael Cunningham The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
NCAA athletes who generate nearly $1 billion in television revenue don’t earn their market value because no one in power advocates for their interests. That’s changing in California, where state lawmakers are considering a bill that would allow athletes to own the rights to their names, image and likeness (NIL) beginning in 2023. This worries NCAA president Mark Emmert, whose job is to ensure athletes don’t earn their true monetary value so people like him can keep making unearned money off their labor and marketing power. So Emmert sent a letter to committee chairs in the California Assembly asking them to “postpone further consideration” of the bill while the NCAA studies how to throw players a bone for NIL while not fundamentally changing the NCAA’s exploitative model. Emmert wrote that the bill “threatens to alter materially the principles of intercollegiate athletics and create local differences that would make it impossible to host fair national championships.” In other words, if California makes it the law that the state’s NCAA athletes can be paid for their NIL, then the state won’t get to host championships. Emmert’s letter further implied that all athletes at the state’s NCAA schools could be ruled ineligible if the NIL law comes to pass.
Emmert clearly is bluffing. California lawmakers should call him on it if they really are looking out for the interests of athletes. The NCAA won’t ban California schools from hosting championships or prevent its schools from competing. The Rose Bowl is scheduled to host the College Football Playoff Championship game in 2023. The Pac-12 has two schools in Los Angeles (USC and UCLA) and two in the San Francisco Bay Area (Stanford and Cal). You think the NCAA would ever tell its television partners that it won’t play big games or have Power Five schools in the country’s second- and eighth-largest media markets, respectively? Emmert’s empty threats reek of desperation. The NCAA is worried that if California passes its NIL law, other states will follow suit. The first time a coveted recruit rejects a program in a football-mad state and heads West for endorsement cash, legislatures from those states would quickly pass NIL laws to match California’s. Remember when the Georgia legislature rushed to change the state’s open-records laws after Bulldogs coach Kirby Smart claimed, without evidence, that the old law put his program at a competitive disadvantage? California’s NIL law would be just the beginning. Next thing you know a state would pass a law allowing NCAA schools to pay athletes market salaries, then
The NCAA is trying to delay the inevitable. It’s been in trouble on this issue since its 2014 loss in the antitrust case filed by former UCLA basketball player Ed O’Bannon on behalf of Division I football and basketball players. He was angry that his likeness was used in a video game without his permission while the NCAA made millions in licensing fees. other states would match it. The NCAA also must fend off federal intervention: in March, U.S. Rep Mark Walker (R-N.C.) introduced a bipartisan bill that would end NCAA restrictions on player compensation for NIL. In his letter to California lawmakers Emmert wrote that there are “complex issues” for the NCAA to consider with NIL. But his problem is that this matter is simple to grasp. Everyone can see why it’s unfair that athletes don’t control their NIL and aren’t compensated for its commercial use. Emmert knows NIL is the issue most likely to lead to serious reforms for the NCAA’s sham “amateur” model. The NCAA is trying to delay the inevitable. It’s been in trouble on this issue since its 2014 loss in the antitrust case filed by former UCLA basketball player Ed O’Bannon on behalf of Division
I football and basketball players. He was angry that his likeness was used in a video game without his permission while the NCAA made millions in licensing fees. It would have been very profitable for NCAA schools to make a deal with players regarding their NIL for the video games. They made millions in licensing fees from the basketball and (especially) football games. Electronic Arts indicated that it was willing to continue paying fees, with players getting a cut. But the NCAA stopped licensing the video games altogether. Its schools forfeited millions in profit rather than allow players to earn a dime of licensing fees from video games. That’s because doing so could be the first step toward the NCAA’s nightmare: athletes earning their true worth and leaving less money for Emmert (2017 salary: $2.9 million) and the
various other administrators who freeload off the work and entertainment draw of athletes. The NCAA’s opposition to the California bill also exposes the dishonesty of its main arguments against paying players. It claims that fans would reject its product if players are paid because “amateurism is an essential component of college sports.” The Supreme Court bought that argument in a 1984 case, with the majority writing: “To preserve the character and quality of the ‘product,’ athletes must not be paid.” But big-time NCAA programs got a lot greedier over the past 35 years and polling now shows that most of the public support college players earning money for their NIL. Two-thirds of respondents to a 2017 Washington Post-UMass Lowell poll agreed that college athletes should be paid “when their name or image is used in video games or to sell merchandise” with 36% against it. The NCAA could allow players to sign endorsement deals with little backlash from consumers, who already see NCAA players heavily commercialized in marketing by schools and television partners. This change in public sentiment is prompting California lawmakers to push the issue on NIL. They should dismiss Emmert’s amateurish attempt to threaten them and give basketball and football athletes back what the NCAA takes away: the rights to their names, image and likeness.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Four-star receiver commits to Huskies By Lauren Kirschman The News Tribune
Four-star wide receiver Jalen McMillan committed to Washington on Tuesday, becoming the highest-rated recruit in the Huskies’ 2020 class. McMillan is also the highest-rated of any high school prospect UW has signed in the Chris Petersen era. McMillan (6-2, 181), out of San Joaquin Memorial in Fresno, Calif., is considered by 247Sports to be the No. 45 player and No. 9 wide receiver in the country. He’s also ranked as the No. 8 player in California. He picked UW over offers from Notre Dame, Oklahoma, Alabama, USC, Cal, Georgia, LSU, Ohio State and Oregon, among others. McMillan has a 247Sports composite ranking of .9752. Safety Budda Baker (.9741) was the highest-rated signee of the Petersen era, followed by current redshirt freshman wide receiver
Marquis Spiker (.9703). Five-star 2021 quarterback Sam Huard (.9962) is the only current commit ranked higher than McMillan. According to MaxPreps, McMillan caught 73 passes for 1,401 yards and 19 touchdowns last season, an average of 93.4 yards per game and 19.2 yards per catch. He caught 78 passes for 1,810 yards and 21 touchdowns as a sophomore, which is an average of 139.2 yards per game and 23.2 yards per catch. McMillan made his announcement less than 48 hours after visiting UW. He’s the Huskies’ eighth recruit in the Class of 2020 and the second wide receiver, although three-star Sawyer Racanelli was recruited as an athlete. The class is now now ranked No. 3 in the Pac-12 and No. 41 in the country by 247Sports. UW brought in two wide receivers in the 2019 class: Four-star Puka Nacua and three-star Taj Davis.
MLS
Delem returns to Sounders By Jayda Evans The Seattle Times
COURTNEY PEDROZA |SEATTLE TIMES/TNS
Washington Huskies guard Matisse Thybulle passes the ball against Washington State Cougar forward Drick Bernstine during the first half of a Pac-12 game Jan 28, 2018, at Alaska Airlines Arena in Seattle.
Thybulle From Page B1
Sixers’ facility in Camden for his introductory news conference. After a long and event-filled night, full of photo ops, interviews, and being pulled in every direction, the next day was more of the same. “I couldn’t do this if I was Matisse, I would have folded a long time ago,” Greg said. Chloe echoed that sentiment. “He’s handling all of this like it’s nothing,” she said. “That’s how my mom was, too. Just calm.” Greg recalled the orders Elizabeth gave to him and he said he couldn’t be more proud of what his son has accomplished. It could have ended up so differently. Grief can stall things. Matisse could have decided to delay going to college. He could have taken time away from basketball. But that’s not what Elizabeth would have wanted.
The insistence that their children should be given every chance to fulfill their dreams kept Greg going on most days. Sometimes, it wasn’t as easy. He felt as if he needed to be lifted up more often than Chloe or Matisse. But on Thursday and Friday, watching his son realize his dream, and take on everything that came with it, he knew he had done right by his wife. “Matisse had two bills that needed to be paid to his mother and I,” Greg said. “No. 1 was paid on June 15 during his commencement ceremony, when he graduated from UW. That was the cake. The icing on the cake was getting to the NBA. His commitment to achieving his dreams paid the second bill.” On the evening of Elizabeth’s memorial, in the same Eastside Catholic gymnasium where the service had been held, Matisse played basketball. He scored 31 points. He often feels as if his mother is with him when he plays basketball. Thybulle’s games will be on a bigger stage, in NBA arenas filled with tens of thousands of people, but his family is certain Elizabeth will continue to guide him.
TUKWILA — Jordy Delem was the talk of Sounders practice Tuesday. The midfielder had an impressive header for his Martinique national team against Mexico on Sunday in pool play of the CONCACAF Gold Cup. The score in the 84th minute put his country a goal behind the powerhouse and Martinique still lost 3-2. “I was in the perfect spot in the right moment,” Delem said of his score, jumping to connect with the ball and snapping his head toward the near post with enough force to ricochet the ball into the goal. Martinique was knocked out of the tournament with the defeat, with Mexico and Canada finishing ahead of it in Group A. Fortunately for the Sounders, Sunday’s match against Mexico was played in North Carolina, allowing Delem to return to his Major League Soccer team in time for practice Tuesday. Sounders coach Brian Schmetzer, who watched Delem’s match, said assistant Gonzalo Pineda was particularly proud of Delem. Pineda, a former center midfielder, works with defensive players and helps them to become scoring threats. Delem started for his national team’s three tournament games. The minutes he played could pose a problem when the
Sounders resume MLS play on Saturday against Vancouver. “We’ll assess him Thursday and Friday,” said Schmetzer of Delem, who has started the past eight Sounders MLS games. “We’re happy to have him back. Happy to have another body.” The Sounders are also expecting Joevin Jones (Trinidad and Tobago) and Xavier Arreaga (Ecuador) to return within the week. Their countries also didn’t advance past pool play, with Ecuador competing in the Copa America in Brazil. As for other Sounders, U.S. players Jordan Morris and Cristian Roldan face Panamanian defender Roman Torres on Wednesday in Gold Cup group play. Uruguayan midfielder Nicolas Lodeiro, named Monday to the MLS All-Star team, and Peruvian forward Raul Ruidiaz play against each other on Saturday in the Copa America quarterfinals. Because of the continuing absences, forward Justin Dhillon joined the Sounders at practice this week. He signed a USL contract with the Tacoma Defiance in March and could snag a short-term deal with the first team should first-choice forwards Ruidiaz and Morris advance with their national teams in the international tournaments. Seattle is also hampered at the forward position because of Will Bruin’s season-ending knee injury suffered last week.
B4 THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 2019 Thursday, June 27, 2019 The Daily World
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Grays Harbor County Management Services has an opening for a Benefits Coordinator with a beginning monthly salary of $3,840 $4,509 DOQ plus benefits. This position ensures the accurate and expedient processing of all benefit functions for the County. Performs backup to payroll accounting functions, administers employee benefit programs, and maintains technical benefits accounting records for the County. QUALIFICATIONS: Required High school diploma or GED; twoyear accounting or business certificate; two years of experience may be substituted for each college year; at least two years’ experience in payroll preparation OR an equivalent combination of education and experience, which would provide the required knowledge and skills to perform this major functions of this position. Preferred - Three (3) years of experience in benefits administration for a public entity; at least two years’ experience in governmental accounting to include payroll, budgeting, accounts payable or general ledger. Valid Washington State Driver’s license. Background check will be performed. Go to https://www.governmentjobs.com/careers/graysharbor to apply. OPEN UNTIL FILLED. GRAYS HARBOR COUNTY IS AN EOE.
OFFICE MANAGER The Chehalis Basin Fisheries Task Force, a Regional Fisheries Enhancement Group that works to restore and enhance salmon populations in the Chehalis Basin, is looking for a motivated individual that has the ability to work independently, take initiative and work effectively without close supervision to manage our office located at 2090 W. Beerbower Rd., Elma, WA 98541. This is an hourly permanent part-time position requiring 20 to 30 flexible hours a week with multi-faceted job responsibilities. Responsibilities include, but are not limited to, office management, accounting, payroll, state and federal taxes, administrative duties, state and federal grant administration, representing the Task Force at meetings with other organizations/groups, and project bid processes. Basic computer skills are required along with a working knowledge of QuickBooks, Microsoft Excel, Word and Power Point. The preferred candidate would be someone with at least two years of college with an emphasis on business/accounting and four years’ work experience in a related field. Salary is dependent on experience ranging between $20.00 to $30.00 an hour. Benefits include paid sick leave, vacation, and holidays. For a full job description or more information, please contact the Task Force at cbftf@reachone.com or at 360 482 2347. Job listing closes on July 15, 2019.
Part Time Patient Accounts Rep Knowledge of an automated billing system is preferred. Duties will include reports, working directly with the public, collecting payments, phone duties, deposits, collections, insurance and cross training in other office functions. For an application, please contact Dustie Franks at dfranks@willapa.net or go to www.willapaharborhospital.com. EOE
TWIN HARBOR CLASSIFIEDS POLICIES Classified: Please check your ad the first day it appears. Although we make every effort to publish your ad correctly, errors do occur. If you do find an error in your ad, please notify us before the correction deadline. The Daily World assumes no responsibility for errors after the first insertion. The Daily World reserves the right to properly classify, edit, reject or revise all advertising copy. All advertising shall be in good taste and may not be used as a means to defraud the public. It is the responsibility of the reader to closely examine any offer which promises or guarantees income from opportunities with exaggerated claims. For a reliability report on a specific opportunity, check first with your local Better Business Bureau or Consumerline 420 at (800) 692-5082. All licensed businesses must so signify by use of company name or the words “dealer” or “broker.” Help Wanted ads must contain either the type of job to be performed or the name of the company offering employment. Advertiser represents that all advertising copy is truthful and not misleading. Advertiser shall indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from any claim against Publisher arising out of or in connection with publication of advertising (except formodifications made by Publisher without Advertiser’s approval) including, but not limited to claims for libel, invasion of privacy, commercial appropriation of one’s
name or likeness, copyright infringement, trademark, trade name or patent infringement, commercial defamation, false advertising, or any other claim whether based in tort or contract, on on account of any other state of federal statute, including state and federal deceptive trade practice acts.If Advertiser claims copyright ownership in any of the advertising published, Advertiser must include proper notice of its copyright claim in the body of the advertisement. otherwise copyright owners shall remain in Publisher. FEDERAL FAIR HOUSING ACT: All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, family status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations 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. All classified liner “specials“ are limited to private party, items for sale ads only. Garage & House sales excluded. All advertising that shows the contractor’s name or address shall show the contractor’s current registration number.
MECHANIC Full-time Union Position Salary Range 31 $4534-$5567 per month The City of Ocean Shores is accepting applications for a full time Mechanic. For a complete job description and application, visit www.osgov.com, or contact dasmith@osgov.com. Applications are due by 4:00 p.m. on Friday 07/12/19. EOE
General (Misc)
State licensed Cannabis Edibles Processor located in Raymond/South Bend area, is looking for self-driven individuals to augment our teams. Must be at least 21 years of age to apply to any position. No prior experience in the industry required. PRODUCTION MANAGER Prior experience in management and/or production preferred. Good organizational skills, fluent in Excel and general email communication. Able to create production schedule and manage overall end-to-end production. KITCHEN ASSISTANT/ KITCHEN LEAD Has prior experience in food industry kitchen, preferably confections with chocolate. Can provide references from food industry work history.
PROGRAM ASSISTANT II (PA) Olympic Area Agency on Aging (O3A) seeks PA based in Aberdeen. 30 hrs./wk, $15.37/hr., Non-exempt; medical benefits package, pension plan. PA provides routine office & IT dept. support including clerical, data entry, supply orders, equipment inventory. Reports to IT Director. REQUIRED: HS diploma, AA degree preferred; 1 year office admin. experience. Basic computer skills, good communication, ability to work as team member. WDL, autoins. For job description & application visit www.o3a.org; or call Carol Ann 866-720-4863. Open until filled, applications received by 4:00 p.m. on Monday, July 1, 2019 in first review. O3A is an EOE.
Healthcare
Can work flexible hours/shifts in a fast-paced environment.
Coastal Interpretive Center is adding to its Team Great opportunity to share your love of nature with the public. Ocean Shores, WA- The Coastal Interpretive Center is looking for a dedicated, experienced Manager to run the operation of the Center. The successful candidate must possess the experienced abilities to organize and prioritize the work needed to be done, supervise staff and volunteers to promote teamwork, handle financial responsibilities, and promote the smooth operations of the Center. Full time salary is $37,000 annually. Over a hundred people, on average, visit our center daily in the summer. Are you excited about nature and the wonders of the coast? Are you a self-starter and a team leader? Would you enjoy working with great people for an awesome organization? If so, then you are the perfect candidate to take advantage of this exciting opportunity. Position closes on July 19, 2019. If you are interested, please call Nancy Eldridge for details, 360589-7189.
GRAYS HARBOR COUNTY has an opening for an Engineer Tech IV with the Grays Harbor County Engineering Division with a mo. salary of $3,939 - $4,792 DOQ plus benefits. This position performs project related technical tasks under general supervision in one or more public works functions such as traffic engineering and operations, transportation planning/development review, surveying, design, materials testing, construction inspection, and road maintenance. Minimum Qualifications: High school diploma or GED equivalent; valid Washington State driver’s license and acceptable driving record. One of the following qualifications: 1) Three years of experience as an Engineering Technician III or equivalent 2) Five years of increasingly responsible engineering experience 3) Engineer-inTraining Certification 4) Engineering Technician Certification or 5) Land Surveyor-in-Training Certification.
For questions or to apply, send resume to HR Dept. at Info@GreenLabsLLC.com. HOQUIAM PLYWOOD PRODUCTS
Now accepting applications for ENTRY LEVEL MILL WORKERS
FULL TIME REGISTERED NURSE VOTED BEST IN GRAYS HARBOR!
Must be at least 18. We are a drug free work place. Must be able to work all shifts with overtime as needed. Great benefit package, health benefits, retirement contribution plan, paid vacation.
Harbors Home Health & Hospice is seeking dependable and dedicated Full Time Registered Nurses to join the #1 team on the Harbor!
Must apply in person at: 1000 Woodlawn St., Hoquiam Monday-Friday 7am-4pm No phone calls please We are an Equal Opportunity Employer
LABORER SIERRA PACIFIC INDUSTRIES Our Aberdeen division is hiring for full-time entry level positions with great opportunity for advancement. We provide an excellent benefit package including a full Health Benefits Plan with low cost premiums, a 401(k) with Company Match, Retirement Contributions, and company paid Life Insurance. There are opportunities to learn and explore many jobs within the plant site including production, equipment maintenance, and supervision. Applicants must have at least one year of recent good work history and verifiable references. Must be at least age 18. Work is fast paced and can, at times, be demanding. If you are qualified and would like to join our team, please apply in person at: Sierra Pacific Industries 301 Hagara Street Aberdeen, WA 98520 (360) 532-2323 Wednesday, June 26th and Thursday, June 27th from 8:00am to 12:00pm and 1:00pm to 4:00pm. Sierra Pacific is an (EOE) Equal Opportunity Employer, including those with a disability and veterans. We promote a safe workplace - tobacco and drug-free work environment.
For complete job description and to apply for this position go to: https://w w w.governmentjobs.com/careers/graysharbor. The County requires a physical examination, hearing examination, alcohol and drug test. Any offer of employment is contingent upon those results. Applications accepted until 5:00 p.m. July 9, 2019. GRAYS HARBOR COUNTY IS AN EOE.
Responsible for working with a team of health care providers in coordination of skilled nursing care in a home setting. Providing Grays Harbor and Pacific County with the best in skilled nursing care, including assessing patient needs, developing individual care plans, and coordinating care within a team. •
Must have a positive attitude and be a team player!
•
Possess a current Washington State RN license.
•
Current Washington State Drivers License with vehicle insurance.
•
Ability to make independent clinical decisions.
•
Must be able to triage, prioritize and manage time appropriately.
NEW GRADS WELCOME!! $4000 SIGN ON BONUS! Sign on bonus paid out on a retention schedule. If you are looking to make a difference in your community, give us a call! 360-532-5454 melissad@myhhhh.org
Job Openings: Certified Medical Assistant, Clinic(s) – Full-time Days *sign-on bonus eligible* Certified OR Tech, Surgery – Half-time Physical Therapist – Full-time Days RN, ED/Relief Charge – Full-time Nights *sign-on bonus eligible* Benefits: Our medical, dental, vision, life, and supplementary insurance benefits are hard to beat and all full-time and half-time employees + families are eligible! With a very generous paid time off program that starts at 200 hours in your first year, you’ll have time to enjoy the numerous activities here on the peninsula. *We also have many irregular/on-call positions posted on our website oceanbeachhospital.com. eds
Maintenance III/Control System Specialist Full-time Union Position Salary Range 33 $4776-$5862 per month The City of Ocean Shores is accepting applications for a full time Maintenance III/Control System Specialist. For a complete job description and application, visit www.osgov.com, or contact dasmith@osgov.com. Applications are due by 4:00 p.m. on Friday 07/05/19. EOE
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THURSDAY, 27,2019 2019 B5 The Daily World Thursday, JUNE June 27, B5
TWIN HARBOR CLASSIFIEDS
Healthcare
Professional
Employment - Legal
Professional
Transport Drivers
Homes for Sale
SCHABEN & WESTLING, INC.
TRUCK DRIVERS WANTED Average $55-$60k per yr!
53’ FLATBED EXPERIENCE WA/OR. Home most every night
WILLAPA HARBOR HOSPITAL Full Time Night RN WA State licensed RN needed with acute care, ER & Med/Surg experience. Part Time Lab Tech Days/Evenings, rotate weekends and on call. Previous micro & hospital experience. Must have current MA Phlebotomist Certification. Per Diem Mammographer Must be WA State licensed, ARRT certified, with mammography certification. Requires keeping accurate records and working with minimum supervision. For application please go to www.willapaharborhospital.com or email Dustie Franks at dfranks@willapa.net. EOE.
Hospitality
GuestHouse Inn & Suites Now hiring for Experiened parttime Housekeeping positions. Apply in person with resume and WorkSource job application to 616 W. Heron St., Aberdeen.
POLICE OFFICER
THE GRAYS HARBOR COUNTY PROSECUTOR’S OFFICE has an opening for a full time Paralegal with a mo. salary of $3,619 plus benefits. This position performs highly skilled, confidential, and technical legal administrative functions on behalf of the Grays Harbor County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office; provides litigation support to assigned attorneys; conducts legal research; drafts, prepares, and files legal documents; schedules and coordinates attorney calendars; prepares for trials; interviews witnesses.
The Westport Police Department is accepting applications for entry and lateral Police Officer in order to form a hiring list. At least one vacancy is expected by year’s end. Starting salary: Lateral - $5110, Entry level - $4915 per current collective bargaining unit agreement. A competitive benefit package, including but not limited to, medical, dental, vision and disability coverage is also offered. Take home vehicle is also provided to officers that live within 35 miles of city limits. Applications for Lateral applicants are available on the city website at www.ci.westport.wa.us/jobs.html and due with a resume no later than July 24th at 1700. Entry level candidates will need to test through Public Safety Testing at www.publicsafetytesting.com. All Entry level testing to be completed no later than July 27, 2019. Oral boards are tentatively scheduled for August 12th in Westport, Washington.
MIN. QUAL.: High school diploma or GED; at least two (2) years’ experience as a paralegal or legal assistant or graduate of an accredited two-year paralegal or legal assistant course or graduate of an accredited four-year college and completion of a nine-month legal assistant or paralegal program or one (1) year paralegal or legal assistant experience; four (4) years’ experience as a legal secretary in a legal office or prosecuting attorney’s office; valid Washington State driver’s license and acceptable driving record; must be bondable.
THE CITY OF MONTESANO has an opening for a CFO/City Clerk/Special Advisor to the Mayor with a salary range of $87,500-$110,000 DOQ. This is not a Civil Service position. Under general supervision, the position is expected to perform a variety of work related to accounting, human resources, grant management, budgeting and related duties as assigned. Qualifications: Bachelor’s Degree, Five years accounting and supervisory experience, CPA Certification is preferred. Candidates must possess a valid Washington State Driver’s. See job description for a detailed list of qualifications. A complete job description and application are available at City Hall in Montesano or at www.cityofmontesano.com. Applications should be sent to: City of Montesano Attn: Vini Samuel 112 N. Main Street Montesano, WA 98563 CITY OF MONTESANO IS AN EOE. TDD 1-800-833-6388
The City of Westport is an Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) employer and does not discriminate in any employer/employee relations based on race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, national origin, age, marital status, disability, genetic information, veteran’s status or any other basis protected by applicable discrimination laws.
Professional
Full-time Exempt/ Non-represented Salary $8,404.67 per month The City of Ocean Shores Police Department is accepting applications for Deputy Chief of Police. For a complete job description and required application materials, visit www.osgov.com, or contact dasmith@osgov.com. Applications are due by 4:00 p.m. on Friday 07/12/19. EOE
Shop the Classifieds for gifts to give yourself and others!
The Daily World www.thedailyworld.com/classifieds
Please join me, Rikki Roberts, for an open house. There will be cupcakes and refreshments.
Wanted: Mule train driver. Brand new Peterbilt short logger. Top wages & benefits.
Saturday June 29th, Noon-3pm. 444 Karr Ave Hoquiam, Wa 98550.
Also, experienced Yarder Engineer. Fax resumes 360-249-0523 or call 360-470-2151.
You will be amazed by this adorable three bedroom cottage with a kitchen you will fall in love with! Butcher block counter tops, new cabinets, a gorgeous handmade island, and to finish it off a marble mosaic backsplash.
Financial, General DID YOU KNOW 7 IN 10 Americans or 158 million U.S. Adults read content from newspaper media each week? Discover the Power of the Pacific Northwest Newspaper Advertising. For a free brochure call 916-288-6011 or email cecelia@cnpa.com (PNDC)
Don’t miss the opportunity to see this beautiful home. Swing by say hi and grab a cupcake! Olympic Realty 2000, Inc. 216 East First Street Aberdeen, WA 98520 Office: 360-538-6777 Cell: 360-589-3649 www.gh4sale.com
Homes for Sale
Lots and Acreage Parcels in Humptulips: Zoned residential & commercial. 7 & 8 acres. Water, Electricity and landscaped with large fir, spruce, maple, apple & cherry trees. Starting at $120,000. Other lots available.
Restaurant **OPEN HOUSE**
FISHIN HOLE FAMILY RESTAURANT Montesano
920sf house & setarate shop on Kirkpatrick Rd. in Humptulips. $240,000. 360-289-3963, 360-5808788.
325 State Route 107 Montesano, WA
Now taking applications for Experienced Line Cooks. Must be able to cook breakfast, lunch & dinner. Apply in person.
Saturday June 29th & Sunday June 30th, 10am-2pm
Manufactured Homes 1965 Columbia trailer in nice park. 60x12’, 2bd/1ba. In great shape, everything works. For appointment to see inside and fill out application, call (360)537-6761
Appointment needed for other dates
Transport Drivers
Asking Price - $409,900
ELMA: Maple Wood Resort. 400sf Park Model w/extra lot and (2) 10’ square sheds, shaded area. Partially furnished. W/S/G included. (509)552-6300
Beautifully restored 1920s home sitting on 7.7 ac w/creek! 3 beds 2 baths w/2,384sf. RV parking, gazebo, marketable timber & an abundance of wildlife. This is a must see!
Find What You’re Looking for in a Snap! DEPUTY CHIEF OF POLICE
***OPEN HOUSE***
Elma, WA. 360-482-6500
Position is open until filled
A current collective bargaining unit agreement is available upon request.
Go to https://www.governmentjobs.com/careers/graysharbor to apply. Resume, cover letter and documentation to substantiate typing skills must be attached. Closing: July 1, 2019 at 5:00 pm. GRAYS HARBOR COUNTY IS AN EOE.
WEEKENDS OFF!!
Paid Holidays & Vacation Pack
Income Property OWNER RETIRING Hardware store for sale, downtown Hoquiam. Building, inventory, shelving, POS computer system security cameras and more included. Priced to move call Stephen (360)289-2888 Serious Inquiries Only
Cody Abbott – 253.432.9882 Zion Real Estate
Hometown Sanitation, LLC is seeking a qualified individual for the position of Driver/Equipment Maintenance. Duties to include route truck driving and shop work. Applicant must have working knowledge of general truck maintenance and hydraulic systems. CDL Class B required. Retirement, paid holidays, vacation and family medical plan. Please send resume to Hometown Sanitation, PO Box 508, Hoquiam, WA 98550.
Apartments ABER: 1116 E. 1st. Downstairs 1bd. $500/mo., 1st/last/deposit. 360-556-8996 ABER: 209 1/2 East Wishkah. $425/mo. Minimum Deposit $300. (360)533-8992
TWIN HARBORS CLASSIFIEDS
BUSINESS & SERVICE DIRECTORY Adult Family Home
Dental Care
Dolphin Cove
Adult Family Home
Now taking seniors & Alzheimer residents at our beautiful Tokeland location.
360-268-7135
Car Services
Gravel & Topsoil
South Beach Dental Clinic Family Dentistry Duane W. Pegg DMD Westport
Raymond
360-268-6225 509 S. Montesano Westport
360-942-5773 518 Duryea St. Raymond
Mon., Wed. & Thur.
Crowell Bros. Inc.
Tires • Wheels • Breaks • Mufflers Front End Specialties Complete Automotive Service Stereos & Speakers Custom Installation Cruise Controls Installed
360-532-4840 Cleaning Services
HOMEWORK
Commercial & Residential
360-581-0724
Licensed & Bonded
Bath
Licensed & Insured #603280767
RJ • • CONSTRUCTION LICENSED • BONDED • INSURED Lic# RJCONC*894BQ
FOUNDATIONS SIDEWALKS & DECKS DECORATIVE BRICK • KITCHEN & BATH CABINETS / CERAMIC TILE
Design Work & Ideas 35 Years Local Experience
360-580-9723
“as always, free estimates”
360-532-7402
BillSellTrucking.com
BILLSTE205DD
DELIVERIES
BONNELL • RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL PROPANE DELIVERY • TANKS FOR LEASE/SALE • ON-SITE DISPENSER • FREE STANDING STOVES AND FIREPLACE INSERTS Propae*955RN 6 HORIZON LN • ABERDEEN, WA 98520 LOCATED AT THE CORNER OF HWY 12 & KARJALA RD.
360-533-7337 Roofing
TREE TECHNICIANS
Hazard Tree Removal Brush/Limb Chipping & Stump Grinding • Boom Truck Available Any Tree • Any Location No Job Too Small!!
Free Estimates • Fast Service Licensed & Insured • Senior Discount References Available • Insurance Work Twin County’s Only WCLA State Accredited Tree Service WCLA016343
360-532-8027 or 360-590-2416
Landscape Supply Land Management • Trucking Equipment Operation
QUALITY CUTTING
Quality workmanship since 1967.
Call for a Free Estimate!
Gravel & Topsoil
Sea Watch Services
Even the smallest job matters! • Tree Removal • Storm & Property Cleanup • Will Buy Trees
SPRADLIN ROCK
Serving Ocean Shores since 2005
360-268-3549 • 360-612-3691
Dump Trucks • Trailers • Cats Excavators • Graders • Loaders
Cont# SEAWAWS949D1
Mark Hock
Reg# HOMEW**813J4
360-591-1327
QUARRY ROCK & GRAVEL
Hoquiam, WA 98550 SPRADRI887LL
“We Deliver All Types of Rock” Grays Harbor’s #1 Rock Supplier!
360-590-0992 Construction
Screened topsoil • Landscape bark Crushed rock & gravel • Fill dirt Septic system installation • Demolition Complete home site prep • Excavating
Decks
CLEAN TIME 360-532-1485 Garden Maintenance, Lawn Mowing & Cleanup Free Estimates!
Tree Services
BILL SELL
TRUCKING & EXCAVATING
Contact for Scheduling: Allen (360) 580-0604
General Contractor
Kitchen
HEIDI’S CLEANING SERVICES
Tue.
Propane
Handyman
A1ROOI*111PR
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
360-533-3050 LIC# NORTHR1-33NO
FREE ESTIMATES
Licensed - Bonded - Insured
Serving the Harbor Since 1999
360-289-8080
Licensed & Bonded
Ring Sizing ◆ Jewelry Repair ◆ Diamond Setting ◆ We Buy Gold
GRAYS HARBOR
◆
Stullick Jewelry Shoppes at Riverside 360-533-3848
Landscaping
HUGO LAWN SERVICE LICENSED, BONDED, INSURED 360-591-4868 112 EAST CUSHING ST., ABERDEEN WA 98520
LIC# QUALIC1894QD
Vision
Jewelry
ALL ON PREMISES Rock For Any Job • Sand & Gravel • Quarry Rock • Rip Rap • We Deliver or You-Haul
360-532-7335 1-800-251-2194
Promote your Business or Services in FIVE newspapers across the Twin Harbors! 360-537-3907
VISION CLINIC Dr. Scott Berken Dr. Craig Mehlhoff Complete Family Vision Care
Accepting New Patients We accept Care Credit Se Habla Español
EXTENDED OFFICE HOURS 7am - 5:15pm • Mon - Thur 9am - 5:15pm • Fri
301 N. Broadway • Aberdeen
360-533-1880
Visit us on the web: ghvisionclinic.com
B6
Thursday, June 27, 2019
The Daily World
MLB
It’s gone: Yankees break MLB home-run record By Sean Farrell The Record
NEW YORK — The Yankees went out of the park and into the record books. DJ LeMahieu’s leadoff home run in the first inning gave the Yankees a home run in their 28th consecutive game and set a new major league record. The Yankees passed the Texas Rangers, who went deep in 27 straight games in 2002. Thirteen different Yankees have homered during this run, which began on May 26 in Kansas City. Catcher Gary Sanchez has led the charge with eight blasts, and 23 for the season. “There’s elite offensive players up and down the order, guys that as a whole, get on base and generally hit for power as well,” manager Aaron Boone said before Tuesday’s game. “It doesn’t take the whole offense to get hot at once to score a bunch of runs.” The Yankees showed that last year when they set a single-season record with 267 home runs. But the team has called on some
unexpected heroes in their unprecedented power surge. LeMahieu has provided seven home runs during the streak in his first season in the Bronx. Four apiece have from Luke Voit, Gio Urshela and Cameron Maybin, players who’ve earned bigger roles with their hot play. “If we do the job that we expect our guys to do as far as controlling the zone, it allows them to get on base even when they’re maybe not swinging the best, which is going to happen throughout the course of the year,” Boone said. “Guys up and down the lineup can hurt you if you make a mistake.” The Yankees have also scored at least one run in 161 games in a row, dating back to a shutout loss on June 30, 2018. That’s the sixthlongest stretch since 1900 and the second best in club history. They set the league record in 1933 by going 308 games without being shut out. “We’re making it very difficult on the pitcher,” Boone said. “The more and more you have to work, eventually usually they’ll get to you.”
Mariners From Page B1
we will — but if we need an additional starting pitcher in 2021 then we are giving Jerry the budget to be able to get the best guy he can.”
The Mariners’ home attendance is down, which shouldn’t be surprising. They are averaging just over 21,000 fans per game. They
B6 THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 2019 Apartments DUNE GRASS APTS
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS
* Rent based on income at 30% * Subsidizing available 1&2bd * Currently a 2bd available * Close to services & beach * Onsite laundry facility * Professional onsite mgmt 807 Anchor Ave. Ocean Shores (360)289-3168
Garage Sales CENTRAL PARK ESTATE/GARAGE SALE Fri-Sat June 28th & 29th, 8am-4pm 23 Joshua Lane. Tractor counter weight, John Deere rider/lawn equipment, fishing equipment, tires, shovels, air compressor, power tools, lumber, generator, antiques, many hand tools, saws, axes, icebox, chains, hay hooks, quality clothes, shoes & hats
Calkins From Page B1
other hand, you could say the Mariners are three months away from missing the postseason for a major-Americansports-leading 18th straight year. So what happens if the M’s struggle again in 2020 and fans grow more impatient? Is Servais a built-in scapegoat whose ouster would appease the angry masses? It’s possible. Tensions boil when a team is drowning in L’s, regardless of whether that was part of a long-term plan. But I also get this feeling that, as long as general manager Jerry Dipoto is around, Servais will be, too. Fact: Dipoto put the future of the franchise on himself when he declared the Mariners were going to “step back” in 2019. He tore down most the team in the offseason, has taken out of a few walls since opening day, and is relying on his prospects’ development and chairman John Stanton’s checkbook to resurrect the franchise. If this team doesn’t improve over the next couple of years, few are going to blame it on in-game decisions by the manager. They’re going to blame it on the GM’s misguided vision or ownership’s parsimony.
Fact: Servais isn’t a typical skipper. After his playing career ended, he spent 10 years in the Rangers’ and Angels’ front offices before putting on a uniform in Seattle. He isn’t a get-off-mylawn grump defying new-wave thinking. He seems to be a guy Dipoto trusts to help carry out his vision, which was evidenced by the contract extension he received last year. What this likely will come down to is clubhouse control and team-wide buy-in. A manager’s job in 2019 is different than what it was 20, or even 10 years ago. They still fill out the lineup cards and man the between-the-lines strategy, but the front office seems to wield more influence than before. What Servais must do is manage frustrations and egos while the Mariners get through the slog. And he has to make sure younger players such as J.P. Crawford, Shed Long or whoever gets called up fosters an environment where winning is the expectation — even it isn’t the norm. Scott had a strong connection with Nelson Cruz when he was here, and seems to have the same with other key players such as Mitch Haniger. If he continues to form productive bonds, he’ll likely be on board if this rebuild comes to fruition over the next few years. But if he somehow loses the clubhouse, the team will likely lose him.
averaged 28,388 fans per game in 81 home games last season. “I worry about the fans in the ballpark and I worry about the fans that are watching us on TV,” he said. “I want to deliver a quality product to them every game.” Telling everyone it was going to be a step-back season doesn’t generate preseason excitement or ticket commitments. The recent run of losing hurts impulse buyers and walkup sales. “I don’t want to say we expected that, but we certainly knew it was a strong possibility when we announced the step-back policy,” Stanton said. “The alternative was we didn’t say it was a step back, did a bunch of things that were baffling to people and then lost credibility. Credibility is really important to me with our fans. “Some number of fans are passionate and they will be
here through thick and thin and have been for 30 years. But others won’t. I want the fans to believe this is going to be a championship team in the next few years. And to be here or watching it on television when we are.” Stanton remains relentlessly positive about the situation. He mentions J.P. Crawford’s play since being called up and Jake Fraley’s recent promotion to Tacoma. He references the six prospects in the MLB pipeline — Jarred Kelenic, Evan White, Justus Sheffield, Julio Rodriguez, Justin Dunn and Logan Gilbert. And then he mentions one of his favorites, who’s also a fan favorite. “Is there anybody in this building that doesn’t love Vogey?” he said, referring to Daniel Vogelbach. “To see him emerge and be able get him more reps. … He’s proven that he’s a major-league player and maybe even an All-Star. He’s brought excitement
and energy.” Dipoto has often referenced the end of 2020 and the 2021 season as a time frame for this plan to come together. That seems a little overly optimistic — and Stanton hedges it a little. “Jerry keeps on his computer a schedule of what players will be controlled by our team in what years and that projects where players may end up playing,” he said. “We also track pretty carefully in analytics what we think other teams’ performances on the field will be like. Like Houston has a lot of their really good players becoming free agents in the 2021-2022 time frame. “I think we have said we believe we will be a playoff team in that 2021-2022 time frame. But I’m resistant to being too specific on it. I think the intent is for us to get better and be more in control of players. There will be signs that we believe it’s time when you’ll see us step up on a free agent to fill
Appliances
Miscellaneous
Vehicles Wanted
Vehicles Wanted
DONATE YOUR CAR FOR BREAST CANCER! Help United Breast Foundation education, prevention, & support programs. FAST FREE PICKUP - 24 HR RESPONSE -TAX DEDUCTION. 1-855-385-2819. (PNDC)
WANTED! Old Porsche 356/911/912 for restoration by hobbyist 1948-1973 Only. Any condition, top $ paid! PLEASE LEAVE MESSAGE (707) 965-9546. Email: porscherestoration@yahoo.com. (PNDC)
**APPLIANCE PRO** 512 E. Market St., Aberdeen
360-580-6137
Firearms & Ammo
HANDYMAN Have tools will travel No job too small!
A man’s dreams come true!
DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care Of. CALL 1-844493-7877. (PNDC)
a gap. That’s a pretty good indication.” Does he have any regrets for making this decision? “No,” he said flatly and with a quick shake of the head. “I have to confess it’s probably not in my nature to have a lot of regrets. I’m trying to say this poetically. I think of several 90-year-olds that are big fans, including my 95-year-old mother. It’s easier to focus on 2021 and 2022 when you are 63 years old or younger.” Still, Stanton wants those 90-year-old fans, including his mother, to see some real success in the coming years. “I’m impatient,” he said. “I’m tired. I’m impatient about getting this team into the playoffs and into the World Series. I will be focused on making sure that everyone in this organization feels the same way. This is about this game being competitive on a sustainable basis and to have that happen as quick as possible.”
TWIN HARBOR CLASSIFIEDS
Got an older car, boat or RV? Do the humane thing. Donate it to the Humane Society. Call 1-866-2701180. (PNDC)
Reasonable Rates-Senior Discounts
(360)591-1010
This institution is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
**RIVERSIDE PARK APTS** 1&2 bedrooms. Deposit/credit check, coin-op. 360-580-3980
Rentals - Misc. 27’ Travel Trailer. $450/mo, $300 cleaning & damage deposit. All utilities & cable paid. Ocean City (360)289-2272 ask for Stan
**ELMA RV PARK**
Daily, Weekly, Monthly RV Sites. 360-482-4053*1-866-211-3939 www.elmarvpark.com
Rental Homes HOQ: 3bd/2ba, $1125/mo. SOUTH ABER: 3bd/1ba, $1075/mo Serious parties only. 360-538-6041 HOQ: 455 Ocean Beach Rd. 4bd country cottage on 3 wooded acres. Updated. W/S, washer/dryer included. Smoke free. Pets+ $1,395/mo. 800-463-4704
Mobile Home Lots (12) new mobile spaces in Harbor Estates 55+ section in Cosmopolis. $350/mo. 360-590-3008
Storage/Grg-WA Rentals
LICENSED DEALER Buying Guns, Ammo & Reload 360-580-2622
Central Park
FAIRWAY TERRACE NEIGHBORHOOD GARAGE SALE Furniture, estate items, golf balls, vintage magazines, home decor, toys, brand-name clothing-mens, women’s Jrs & toddlers, tools, fishing gear, car parts, kitchen, holiday stuff, crafts, sewing supplies & machines. You need it, we’ve got it!
Saturday only June 29th, 9am-4pm MONTE: 19 Poplar Rd. (1 mile East of town). Friday/Saturday 8-4pm. New John Deere trike and wagon, household items, cookbooks & games. MONTE: 448 Wynooche Valley Rd. Saturday June 29th, 7:45am-4pm. Antiques, collectibles, hunting/loading, fishing gear, craft supplies and lots of misc. MONTE: 77 Clemons Rd. #102. Fri-Sat, June 28th & 29th, 8:30am-5pm. Fishing poles, hunting clothing, camping, cast iron, LuLaRoe, Nike, furniture, misc. household items & much more.
Ocean Shores: 627 Weatherwax Loop NE. June 29th-July 2nd. 9am5pm. Furniture, linens, dishes, plants, antiques and books. WESTPORT: THREE FAMILY SALE. 605 S. Montesano St. Friday Noon-6pm, Saturday 9-5pm.
ABER: 309 S. Clark St. Garage/shop/storage. Updated multiuse building in town. 26’x32’ concrete foundation, insulated and more. Call for details. $450/mo. 800-463-4704.
Bunn & Kurig coffee makers, bi-fold doors, crab buoys, large assortment of household items, Chev tailgate,
Garage Sales
General Pets
CENTRAL PARK: 914 Garden Rd. Saturday/Sunday June 29th & 30th, 8am-4pm. Guy stuff, RV supplies, housewares, dishes, pans, crib, books, canning jars, vintage items & more.
LOOKING TO ADOPT A CAT OR DOG? Call your local Animal Shelter! Hoquiam (360)532-0892 Aberdeen (360)537-3382 Paws (360)533-1141 Ocean Shores (360)289-3331 X106 North Beach Paws (360)289-4350 HAVA (360)942-4716
Food & Farmers Market
Wanted/Trade **TOP CASH PAID FOR** 1964 & Older US Coins
**SHAFFNER FARMS** Beautiful Hanging Basket & Flower Tubs Monday-Saturday 9am-5pm Sunday 11am-4pm Bing Cherries, Granny Smith, Pink Lady & Galla Apples. Fresh Yakima Asparagus, Fresh Rhubarb. Large variety of vegetable & herb starts. New shipment of Dressings, Jams, Jellies, Pickled items, Hot sauces, etc. We accept WIC Like us on Facebook (360)249-6722
Bargain Box (Bargain Corner)
Aberdeen’s Coin Experts Gold, Silver, Platinum, Coins, Diamonds & High Grade Watches-Hamilton, Rolex, Patek Phillippe, Omega LOANS ON MOST ANYTHING OF VALUE
BRYAN & SON JEWELERS Diamond Broker Since 1947 313 W. Wishkah St. Aberdeen (360)532-6141 bryanandsonjewelers.com
Wanting to buy a motor home. Must run. No dealers. (425)518-0515
Autos - Miscellaneous ‘02 Saturn L300. All electric. V6. Runs like new. Very quiet. (360)532-7334 ‘10 Hyundai Elantra, blue, $2,200. ‘06 PT Cruiser Touring, $1,750. (360)249-4832 leave message 2014 Honda Civic. Burgundy. Excellent road car. 78K miles.
PLACE YOUR AD HERE IN THE BARGAIN COLUMN!
2010 Chevy Silverado pickup. 107K miles.
1 week, $15 items totaling $350 or under
360-223-0899
OR 1 week, $20 items totaling $351-$500 Up to 20 words. 75¢ a word after Ads will publish 1 week in The Daily World, East County News, Montesano Vidette, South Beach Bulletin and the North Coast News www.thedailyworld.com (360)532-4000 Sorry, firewood and pet ads excluded.
Pickups-Others ‘96 GMC extra cab. Short, wide box, 4wd, V6, 5spd. Good tires & brakes. Runs good. Economical. $2,400 obo. (360)581-6988
VAN-Others ‘99 Chev G25 Van. Handicap equipped. Power lift, raised roof. 6 way electric seat. Front & rear a/c. $9,800. (360)249-4617
RV Spaces/Store I have 8 new monthly RV spots in Cosmopolis. Power & W/S/G. $375/mo. 360-590-3008
Legals IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR GRAYS HARBOR COUNTY In Re the Estate of:
) ) CYNTHIA POWELL NELSON, ) ) Deceased. ) __________________________ )
Case No. 19-4-00124-14 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030
Ralph Copan named below has been appointed as personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present their claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and file the original of the claim with the court. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(3); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. Date of Death: Date of first publication: Personal Representative: Attorney for Personal Representative:
May 19, 2019 June 13, 2019 Ralph Copan C. Scott Sage
Address for mailing and service: VALDEZ and SAGE, P.S. Attorneys at Law P.O. Box 160 Ocean Shores, WA 98569 (360) 289-2411 Publish June 13, 20 & 27, 2019. The Daily World 860658 LEGAL NOTICE The Quinault Child Support Services Program hereby notifies the Respondent, Shelby Noel, that their presence is required on August 07, 2019 at 1:00 p.m., for a hearing in the Quinault Tribal Court in Taholah, Grays Harbor County, Washington. Failure to appear or respond within 45 days, from the first date of Publication, may result in a default. For more information, please call (360) 276-8211 ext. 2222. Publish June 20, 27 & July 4, 2019 The Daily World 861724
The Grays Harbor Conservation District is issuing a Request for Qualifications (RFQ) for the “Grays Harbor/Willapa Bay Phase 2 Sediment Dynamics and Mitigation Measures Study”. The overall objective is to conduct mapping, modelling, and documentation of sediment and erosion dynamics in Grays Harbor and Willapa Bay and identify preferred mitigation measures. The RFQ can be requested from Brandon Carman at cdfishtech@gmail.com or (360) 2498532. Submissions are due by July 5th, 2019 at 2:00pm. Any questions can be directed to Brandon at the above contact information. Publish June 19, 20, 22, 26, 27, 29, 2019. The Daily World 861549