Grab the Money Tree
Tuesday Showers to wet things down A8
Great discounts on local dining, services A4
Peninsula Daily News July 2, 2019 | $1
Port Angeles-Sequim-West End
County, PA port eye EOC lease
Canada Day trek
Dispatch could be in equation BY JESSE MAJOR
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
About 30 hardy cyclists from the Victoria area came across on the early Coho ferry Monday to ride up to the top of Hurricane Ridge on Canada Day, the anniversary of the 1867 effective date of the country’s constitution. The cyclists made the round trip in about 4 hours in time for the return ferry ride back home, including this group on First Street in Port Angeles. The yearly trek has been happening for about 20 years and is organized by word of mouth through various cycle shops in the greater Victoria area.
Judge stays course on order in lawsuit against Game Farm Sequim attraction sought dismissal of parts of litigation BY JESSE MAJOR
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TACOMA — A federal judge will not reverse his order denying Olympic Game Farm’s motion to dismiss portions of the Animal Legal Defense Fund lawsuit against the Sequim attraction. In part of the game farm’s motion to reconsider, the game farm argued that the judge and the Animal Legal Defense
Fund (ALDF) have erroneously said that the game farm admitted to unlawfully possessing Roosevelt elk. The game farm had sought to remove public nuisance elements from the lawsuit, but U.S. District Judge Ronald Leighton has ruled the lawsuit can move forward in whole. “The public nuisance claim is plausibly pled at this stage, whether or not it will ultimately succeed,” Leighton wrote in an order June 24. The ALDF sued Olympic Game Farm in December, alleging that the Sequimarea business is in violation of the Endangered Species Act and asking the court to require the game farm to give up its endangered or threatened species to
a sanctuary. In May, Leighton denied the game farm’s motion to dismiss certain elements of the lawsuit, calling the game farm’s motion “an attempt to prune this ‘Bonsai tree’ with tweezers and fingernail clippers.” The game farm filed a motion in March to dismiss the state public nuisance and animal cruelty claims, saying state law does not recognize private cause of action to enforce cruelty laws. A five-day non-jury trial is currently scheduled for May 4, 2020.
________ Reporter Jesse Major can be reached at 360452-2345, ext. 56250, or at jmajor@peninsuladaily news.com.
PORT ANGELES — Clallam County is negotiating a 50-year lease with the Port of Port Angeles to move the Emergency Operations Center to a building adjacent to Fairchild International Airport, and is looking for a “definite commitment” from the city of Port Angeles in co-locating the city’s dispatch center there. During a work session Monday, county and port officials said they are now negotiating a lease for 15,000 square feet of space at the port’s 10.10 building near the airport. The current draft of the lease shows the cost of renting the area starting at $7,500 per month with adjustments annually and includes two 10-year renewal options. The county and city have been exploring ways to move the county’s Emergency Operations Center out of the basement of the courthouse and co-locating it with the city’s 9-1-1 dispatch center in an area that is more resistant to earthquakes and soil liquefaction within close proximity to the airport. The details of the lease are still being discussed, but it has a projected commencement date of Sept. 1. Attorneys from the county have reviewed the draft and have made suggestions. Commissioner Randy Johnson said he also has some parts of the lease he wants looked at closer, but didn’t mention specifics. “There are some other business kinds of issues relative to that contract,” Johnson said. Sheriff Bill Benedict said that he wants to move forward quickly and that he doesn’t want to get into a situation of “paralysis by analysis.” “We see the need and we have an awesome opportunity to move,” Benedict said. “What I would like to do is get clarification from the city in their participation.” Benedict suggested the county should take action this month during a joint meeting with the Port of Port Angeles, but officials said that might be too quick. TURN
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Shop destroyed in wind could be replaced PA council mulls donation deal BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — A city maintenance shop that was destroyed in a December windstorm will be replaced with a prefabricated metal building pending City Council action today. The council will consider today a $160,436 purchase agreement with Platypus Marine Inc. for an unassembled General Steel structure that was originally intended for the Platypus property at 102 N. Cedar St. After securing another location for its expanded operations, Platy-
pus agreed to sell the prefabricated building to the city for 50 cents on the dollar, city officials said. The city Parks and Recreation Department maintenance shop at the northeast corner of Lincoln Park was destroyed by a fallen tree in a historic windstorm last Dec. 14. If the council agrees to purchase the General Steel building, it will eventually be assembled at 1310 W. 16th St. where the badly damaged shop sits today. “The city has the opportunity to purchase an unassembled new metal building from Platypus
Marine, Inc., only made possible by their generous donation and offer to let the city buy the building for half of the purchase price,” Aubry Bright of the Port Angeles Parks and Recreation Department said in a memo to the council. Platypus no longer needs the prefabricated structure because it is expanding into the former Sunset Do It Best Hardware building at 518 Marine Drive, city officials said. The hardware store space was transferred to Platypus as part of a three-business transaction involving Lumber Traders Inc., Platypus Marine and Sunset Wire KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Rope Co. Inc., that was announced A fallen tree lies across a Port Angeles Parks and in February. Recreation Department maintenance building at the
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INSIDE TODAY’S Peninsula Daily News 103rd year, 157th issue — 2 sections, 16 pages
BUSINESS CLASSIFIED COMICS COMMENTARY DEAR ABBY DEATHS HOROSCOPE LETTERS NATION/WORLD
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UpFront
Tuesday, July 2, 2019
Peninsula Daily News
Peninsula Daily News
Tundra
The Samurai of Puzzles
By Chad Carpenter
Copyright © 2019, Michael Mepham Editorial Services
Publisher:Terry Ward, 360-417-3500, tward@ peninsuladailynews.com General Manager:Steve Perry, 360-417-3540, sperry@ peninsuladailynews.com Executive Editor: Leah Leach, 360-417-3530, lleach@ peninsuladailynews.com www.peninsuladailynews.com Follow us on Facebook (Peninsula Daily News) Twitter (@PenDailyNews) and Instagram (@peninsuladailynews)
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Peninsula Daily News (ISSN 1050-7000, USPS No. 438.580), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Black Press Group Ltd./Sound Publishing Inc., published each morning Sunday through Friday at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. POSTMASTER: Periodicals postage paid at Port Angeles, WA. Send address changes to Circulation Department, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Contents copyright © 2019, Peninsula Daily News MEMBER
Audit Bureau The of Circulations Associated Press
Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Davis, Wade to cover NBA video game ANTHONY DAVIS WILL be the cover athlete for the second time of a popular 2K Sports basketball video game. The game company announced Monday that Davis will be featured on the front of Davis NBA 2K20’s standard and deluxe editions. The six-time All-Star shared the cover with Stephen Curry and James Harden for NBA 2K16. Three-time NBA champion Dwyane Wade, who recently retired, will cover the legend edition. Davis had played seven seasons with the New
Orleans Pelicans, but the Los Angeles Lakers recently agreed to trade for him. The agreement cannot be finalized until Saturday. Davis said in a statement that being the cover athlete “means the world to me.”
ESPN film Twinkies, pizza, hot dogs, even cow brains. If it can be eaten, chances are Takeru Kobayashi holds the world record for eating it. The 41-year-old competitive eater has no problem consuming 62 slices of pizza in 12 minutes, or 337 chicken Kobayashi wings in a half hour. But seeing himself onscreen in the latest ESPN “30 for 30” documentary series, is a little harder to swallow.
In a recent interview with The Associated Press, Kobayashi said that while he was “honored” to be a part of the documentary “The Good, The Bad, The Hungry,” he was also a little perplexed. “I don’t know exactly what’s happening,” Kobayashi said. Then, through his translator, Kobayashi was able to go into more detail about why he was so self-conscious. “I’m so embarrassed when I see myself in the film that I can’t even watch it,” he said. Premiering Tuesday, the documentary comes two days before the annual Nathan’s Famous International Hot Dog Eating Contest that brought Kobayashi to prominence in the competitive eating arena. The documentary shows the rivalry between the sixtime champion and the current 11-time champion Joey Chestnut, who dethroned Kobayashi in 2007.
Peninsula Daily News PENINSULA POLL SUNDAY’S QUESTION: Which of these is the worst problem facing the North Olympic Peninsula?
Passings By The Associated Press
DAVID BINDER, 88, a longtime correspondent for The New York Times who chronicled the Cold War in Europe, the dissolution of the Soviet bloc in the East and the horrific civil wars in Bosnia, Croatia and Kosovo, died Sunday at his home in Evanston, Ill. His wife, Helga, said the cause was endstage kidney disease. A restless, relentless journal- Binder ist, Binder in 1966 covered the Berlin Wall’s construction in 1961 and its destruction in 1989 — bookends to his many hundreds of reports on East-West tensions and life under the Communist regimes in East Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria and Yugoslavia. In the early 1990s, as Germany reunified and peace returned to much of Europe, Binder went back to the Balkans to cover wars that engulfed the former Yugoslavia in massacres, mass rapes and genocide, killing 100,000 people and driving millions from their homes. He interviewed civilian victims, fighters and their leaders, including the accused Serbian war criminals Slobodan Milosevic and Gen. Ratko Mladic. Milosevic, a former president of Serbia, died in prison in 2006, and Mladic was convicted in 2017 of crimes against humanity and genocide and sentenced to life in prison by the International Criminal Tribunal in The Hague. Binder’s passport was an eight-foot accordion of pages stamped with the
visas of troubled lands, and his reports — more than 2,600 articles and commentaries in a 43-year career with The Times — offered insights into dictators and their policies and glimpses into the daily routines of citizens coping with food shortages, telephone taps and reminders of the perils of defying Communist rule. “For East Germans the wall is an obsession,” he wrote after the Berlin Wall went up. “The desperate ones think only of escape: swimming across icy waters, running in the face of gunfire across open fields under the glare of searchlights, slithering between strands of barbed wire, leaping three and four stories, crawling through sewers. Some succeed; many fail, their bodies riddled with machine gun bullets.” Binder covered Eastern Europe and Yugoslavia from 1963 to 1966. He focused on the popular socialist government of President Josip Broz Tito of Yugoslavia, who defied Soviet hegemony and led the nonaligned nations in the Cold War, and on the purges, defections and economic ups and downs of life behind the Iron Cur-
Seen Around Peninsula snapshots
A MOTOR HOME with Iowa license plates sporting several surf boards on top ... WANTED! “Seen Around” items recalling things seen on the North Olympic Peninsula. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362; fax 360417-3521; or email news@ peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure you mention where you saw your “Seen Around.”
tain in Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania and Albania. After moving to Bonn, the West German capital, in 1967, he covered the 1968 Prague Spring uprising in Czecholovakia, which was crushed by Soviet and Warsaw Pact forces. Binder was close to Willy Brandt, the West German chancellor who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1971 for his EastWest reconciliation efforts. Among Binder’s many books was “The Other German: Willy Brandt’s Life and Times,” published in 1976. He also wrote with authority on the East German leader Walter Ulbricht, who was deposed in 1971 and died in 1973, and on Nicolae Ceausescu, the Romanian dictator, whom he interviewed in 1986 for The New York Times Magazine. Binder was transferred to The Times’s Washington bureau as a diplomatic and European affairs correspondent in 1973.
Climate change
14.88%
Jobs/economy
13.11%
9.33% Housing
Illegal drugs
60.28%
Other 2.4% Total votes cast: 793 Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.
Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications
• Christina E. Kohout is a candidate for Forks City Council Position No. 5. Due to an error on election materials, Kohout’s first name was misspelled in several recent stories in the Clallam County edition of the PDN. Those reports were a front-page article May 19 about candidate filing week, a preview on Page A7 on June 12 about the League of Women Voters of Clallam County voter forums and a front-page story last Thursday on the League of Women Voters forum held in Forks.
________
The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, call Executive Editor Leah Leach at 360-417-3530 or email her at lleach@peninsuladailynews.com.
Peninsula Lookback
From the pages of the Peninsula Daily News and Port Angeles Evening News
1944 (75 years ago)
1969 (50 years ago)
season by holding up a Russ Hardie, 151 “State timber sold in the December 1987 photograph of the Hurricane Ridge pounds, Port Angeles, conForks district continues to ledge nearly buried in tinued his winning streak bring high stumpage snow. in the ring by winning over prices,” announced E.C. Wilkerson, 56, lives in John Meloy, 157, USCG, by Gockerell, North Olympic Laguna Beach, Calif., most a technical knockout at the field supervisor for the of the year, so he hasn’t felt end of the second round of a Department of Natural the fierce winds and whipscheduled three round main Resources. ping snow of Hurricane event at last night’s boxing “Bidding reached a peak Ridge in December. But show at Roosevelt gym. in April with bids averagHardie had Meloy on the ing over $100 per thousand even on a clear sunny day in June, Wilkerson can floor in the first round but board feet, but fell off to a simply look around to see the game sailor came back less inflated average of $67 signs of winter. strong in the second to per thousand in June,” he By pointing out the almost win a draw in that reported. bent-over tops of subalpine stanza. After the exchanges fir or the reddish-purple in the round, the sailor, who was not in the best of condi- 1994 (25 years ago) stems of lupine, Wilkerson John Wilkerson started revealed a snow-covered tion, failed to come up for his first nature walk of the world to a dozen visitors. the third round.
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS TUESDAY, July 2, the 183rd day of 2019. There are 182 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On July 2, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed into law a sweeping civil rights bill passed by Congress. On this date: In 1776, the Continental Congress passed a resolution saying that “these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States.” In 1881, President James A. Garfield was shot by Charles J. Guiteau at the Washington railroad station; Garfield died the following September. Guiteau was hanged in June 1882.
In 1892, the Populist Party (also known as the People’s Party) opened its first national convention in Omaha, Neb. In 1917, rioting erupted in East St. Louis, Ill., as white mobs attacked black residents; nearly 50 people, mostly blacks, are believed to have died in the violence. In 1937, aviator Amelia Earhart and navigator Fred Noonan disappeared over the Pacific Ocean while attempting to make the first round-the-world flight along the equator. In 1961, author Ernest Hemingway shot himself to death at his home in Ketchum, Idaho. In 1976, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Gregg v. Georgia, ruled
7-2 the death penalty was not inherently cruel or unusual. In 1987, 18 Mexican immigrants were found dead inside a locked boxcar near Sierra Blanca, Texas, in what authorities called a botched smuggling attempt; a 19th man survived. In 1996, electricity and phone service was knocked out for millions of customers from Canada to the Southwest on a record-hot day. Seven years after they shotgunned their parents to death in the family’s Beverly Hills mansion, Lyle and Erik Menendez were sentenced to life in prison without parole. Ten years ago: Thousands of U.S. Marines poured into Taliban-
controlled villages in southern Afghanistan in the first major operation under President Barack Obama’s strategy to stabilize the country. Five years ago: Palestinians accused Israeli extremists of abducting and killing an Arab teenager and burning his body, sparking hours of clashes in east Jerusalem and drawing charges that the youth was murdered to avenge the killings of three kidnapped Israeli teens. One year ago: Rescue divers in Thailand found 12 boys and their soccer coach, who had been trapped by flooding as they explored a cave more than a week earlier.
Peninsula Daily News for Tuesday, July 2, 2019
P A G E
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Briefly: Nation Federal charges filed in Miss. cross burning
Elliott J. Robbins died Sunday in Helmand Province. The 31-year-old was from JACKSON, Miss. — A white Ogden, Utah, man faces federal charges in a and was 2017 cross burning outside the assigned to Robbins home of African American resithe 10th Spedents in a small Mississippi cial Forces Group. town. The news release provided no Court documents show Gramore information about the ham Williamson is charged with cause of death. intimidating and interfering with Robbins joined the Army in fair housing and conspiring to use fire or explosives to commit a 2006 and deployed to Iraq the following year with the 101st felony. Airborne Division. The U.S. attorney for south After completing Special Mississippi filed a brief, saying Forces qualification, he deployed that on Oct. 24, 2017, Williamson and another man built a wooden to Afghanistan in 2017 and this year with Special Operations. cross and burned it “with the intention of intimidating and Trump sends congrats frightening” black residents of Seminary. The town has about TRENTON, N.J. — President 300 residents and is about 70 Donald Trump has congratumiles south of Jackson. lated New Jersey lawmakers for An information is similar to passing a budget that didn’t an indictment but is often filed raise taxes on the wealthy. when a person facing charges Trump, a Republican, tweeted waives the right to have a grand Monday that many high-end jury consider a case. taxpayers were planning to Court records Monday didn’t leave New Jersey. list an attorney for Williamson, Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy and a spokeswoman from the tweeted in response that Trump U.S. attorney’s office did not was fighting for millionaires, but immediately respond to a meshe’s working for the state’s midsage asking whether Williamson dle class, and people working to has legal representation. get there. Seminary is in Covington Murphy signed the $38.7 bilCounty, which is about 62 percent lion budget despite the Demowhite and 32 percent black, accord- crat-led Legislature not including to the Census Bureau. Missising an income tax hike on people sippi’s population is about 59 permaking $1 million or more. cent white and 38 percent black. Murphy campaigned on the higher rate, but lawmakers Medical sergeant dies bucked the first-term governor and former Obama administraFORT BRAGG, N.C. — The tion ambassador to Germany. U.S. Army said a medical serSenate President Steve Sweegeant has died from non-combat ney, a Democrat, is calling for injuries in Afghanistan. The U.S. Army Special Oper- public worker health benefit ations Command issued a state- reforms before considering a hike. ment saying that Sgt. 1st Class The Associated Press
Police clear protesters in Hong Kong building BY KEN MORITSUGU THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
HONG KONG — Hundreds of protesters in Hong Kong swarmed into the legislature’s main building Monday night, tearing down portraits of legislative leaders and spray-painting pro-democracy slogans on the walls of the main chamber as frustration over a lack of response from the administration to opposition demands boiled over. Police carrying riot shields and firing tear gas moved in shortly after midnight to clear surrounding streets but appeared to have paused outside the legislative building. A spokesman had earlier broadcast a warning that “appropriate force” would be used in the clearance operation, but there was no immediate word on any arrests or injuries. The flashing blue and red lights of dozens of police vans and buses lit up the abandoned streets leading to the legislature. The sharp escalation in tactics
came on the anniversary of the former British colony’s return to China, a city holiday, and reflected mounting frustration with Hong Kong’s leader for not responding to protesters’ demands after several weeks of demonstrations. The protesters hit thick glass windows until they shattered and broke and pried open steel security gates and propped them open with barricades to get inside. Police in riot gear retreated as the protesters entered about 9 p.m., avoiding a confrontation and giving them the run of the building. They stood on lawmakers’ desks in the main legislative chamber, painted over the territory’s emblem high up on a wooden wall and wrote slogans calling for a democratic election of the city’s leader and denouncing now-suspended extradition legislation that sparked the protests. Many wore yellow and white helmets, face masks and the black T-shirts that have become their uniform.
Police announced at 10:30 p.m. that they would clear the area. The actions prompted organizers of a separate peaceful march against the extradition bill to change the endpoint of their protest from the legislature to a nearby park, after police asked them to either call it off or change the route. Police wanted the march to end earlier in the Wan Chai district, but organizers said that would leave out many people who planned to join the march along the way. Hong Kong has been wracked by weeks of protests over a government attempt to change extradition laws to allow suspects to be sent to China to face trial. The proposed legislation, on which debate has been suspended indefinitely, increased fears of eroding freedoms in the territory, which Britain returned to China in 1997. Protesters want the bills formally withdrawn and Hong Kong’s embattled leader, Carrie Lam, to resign.
Briefly: World EU leaders hope for sleep, more successful talks BRUSSELS — European Union leaders let their people down Monday. And now they’re hoping some sleep will help them save face and wrap up a never-ending summit that has turned into a massive embarrassment. After a choppy few years, they had a precious opportunity to show unity as they huddled to make appointments for prestigious EU jobs, people who will run the world’s biggest trading bloc over the next five years. Instead, leaders bickered, pointed fingers, organized unsuccessful backroom meetings to stake out narrow nationalist agendas and sought first and foremost to protect their own party political interests. German Chancellor Angela Merkel had little positive to say about what happened. “Today people find this pretty bad. I can believe that and we’ll have to live with it.”
Twelve killed in floods MOSCOW — The Russian government said 12 people have died and another nine have
gone missing in floods that swept southeastern Siberia. Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Mutko said during a Cabinet meeting Monday that a search for those missing is underway and that 153 were hospitalized. The floods followed torrential rains and affected 55 towns and villages in the Irkutsk region. Mutko said four villages remain cut off but that they have enough emergency supplies. More than 4,000 houses have been flooded, according to the Emergency Ministry.
India crash claims 35 SRINAGAR, India — An overcrowded minibus crashed into a gorge in Indian-controlled Kashmir on Monday, killing at least 35 people and injuring 17 others, officials said. The bus plunged off the Himalayan mountain road as its driver negotiated a curve and rolled down into a 500-foot-deep gorge along a rocky stream in the southern Kishtwar area, said civil administrator Angrez Singh Rana. He said officials were investigating whether it was a mechanical failure or the driver’s negligence. Rescue teams evacuated the injured to hospitals, where all were in critical condition. The Associated Press
KIN CHEUNG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Protesters gather inside the meeting hall of the Legislative Council in Hong Kong on Monday. Protesters took over the legislature's main building, tearing down portraits of legislative leaders and spray-painting pro-democracy slogans on the walls of the main chamber.
Iran breaches uranium limit set by 2015 nuke agreement BY JON GAMBRELL AND AMIR VAHDAT
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
TEHRAN, Iran — Iran has broken the limit set on its stockpile of low-enriched uranium by its 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, international inspectors and Tehran said Monday, marking its first major departure from the unraveling agreement a year after the U.S. unilaterally withdrew from the accord. The announcement by Iran’s
Quick Read
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and later confirmation by the U.N. nuclear watchdog puts new pressure on European nations trying to save the deal amid President Donald Trump’s campaign targeting Tehran. Iran separately threatens to raise its uranium enrichment closer to weaponsgrade levels by Sunday if Europe fails to offer it a new deal. It also further heightens tensions across the wider Middle East in the wake of Iran recently shooting down a U.S. military sur-
veillance drone, mysterious attacks on oil tankers that America and the Israelis blame on Tehran, and bomb-laden drone assaults by Yemen’s Iranianbacked rebels targeting Saudi Arabia. Britain urged Iran to reverse course and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the action “a significant step toward making a nuclear weapon.” Iran long has insisted its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, despite Western fears about it.
. . . more news to start your day
West: Attorneys allege bias in corruption case
Nation: N.J. Bridgegate defendant seeks release
Nation: Diocese releases list of 50 accused abusers
World: Taliban blamed for downtown Kabul bombing
U.S. REP. DUNCAN Hunter of California is charged with looting his own campaign cash to finance vacations, golf and other personal expenses, then trying to cover it up. The Republican congressman said he’s the target of politically biased prosecutors. A federal judge in San Diego is scheduled to consider if Hunter is right. The congressman’s attorneys are trying to get the charges dismissed, arguing that prosecutors who initiated the investigation are admirers of Hillary Clinton and want to see Hunter, an early supporter of President Donald Trump, driven from office.
FORMER NEW JERSEY Gov. Chris Christie’s one-time appointee asked a federal court Monday to be released from prison following a major development in the George Washington Bridge lane-closing case. Bill Baroni’s attorneys said in a brief that the government does not oppose his release on bail, pending the U.S. Supreme Court’s review of the case. The high court said Friday it would hear the appeal from Baroni and another former Christie aide, Bridget Kelly, in the fall. Baroni was not initially part of the appeal, but has since been permitted to join Kelly’s effort to overturn their 2016 convictions.
THE ROMAN CATHOLIC Diocese of Providence, R.I., on Monday released a list of clerics, religious order priests and deacons it said have been credibly accused of sexually abusing children. The list of 50 names posted on the diocese website includes 19 priests and deacons who are still alive, although nearly all have been removed from ministry. One priest resigned. The list also includes 25 dead priests and six others, including religious order priests. It posted where each of the men once worked. The diocese reviewed files dating to 1950.
THE TALIBAN SET off a powerful bomb in downtown Kabul on Monday, killing at least six people and wounding more than a hundred, and sending a cloud of smoke billowing over the Afghan capital. At least 26 children were among the wounded, many of whom were cut by shards of glass when the bomb shattered nearby windows, government spokesman Feroz Bashari said. He said a total of 105 people were hurt. An education ministry spokeswoman, Nooria Nazhat, later raised the number of students who were slightly wounded to 51, from two schools.
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Peninsula Daily News
MOUNT RAINIER NATIONAL PARK — Mount Rainier National Park officials said the body of a 69-year-old hiker was recovered after he was reported overdue by family members. Officials said search teams recovered the man’s body Friday
above Paradise. Park officials started searching Thursday after family members reported that he didn’t return from a Wednesday hike to Pebble Creek in thunderstorms, sleet and hail. The hike he had been on was one of several recent conditioning trips he had taken to prepare for a Mount Rainier summit climb.
A5
Counties announce burn bans Monday
Hiker’s body recovered at Mount Rainier National Park Peninsula Daily News
Tuesday, July 2, 2019
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — Temporary bans on outdoor fires due to dry weather have been announced for the unincorporated areas of two of the most populated counties in Washington state. The King County Fire Marshal issued a ban starting Monday for unincorporated areas that prohibits all outdoor burning except for recreational fires in approved devices. All burning permits also are suspended until further notice and no additional permits will be issued in those areas.
The hiker was found by aerial search Thursday afternoon near the base of the Nisqually chute. Officials said unsettled weather conditions kept the helicopter recovery from happening until Friday. The man’s name wasn’t released. The incident is under investigation.
KING-TV reported that Pierce County officials said a burn ban also went into effect Monday and will continue until further notice in unincorporated areas. The ban includes activities such as burning yard debris and setting fires to clear land. Small recreational fires including bonfires in fire pits, cooking on self-contained gas or propane stoves and barbecues are still permitted. Residents of cities within those counties should check with city officials to see if there are burn bans in those areas.
Fire forces evacuation of home near Port Angeles Shop: $148,097 By Paul Gottlieb
Peninsula Daily News
PORT ANGELES — Occupants of a home near U.S. Highway 101 east of Port Angeles were evacuated after materials ignited near a water heater, causing flames in the basement. The fire was reported at 7:29 p.m. Sunday in the 100 block of North Lilac Avenue near the intersection of Mount Pleasant Road and Highway 101, Jake Patterson, Clallam County Fire District 2 chief, said Monday morning.
Firefighters extinguished flames in the basement, confining the fire, Patterson said. An elderly man who was evaluated by Olympic Ambulance at the scene for smoke inhalation did not need hospital care, Patterson said. Clallam County Public Utility District shut power off to the three-bedroom, 1,440-square-foot residence after the fire was brought under control. The American Red Cross helped provide the resi-
dents with overnight shelter, Patterson said. He estimated the fire caused about $2,000 in damage to the hot water tank and a small area around it. “We’re not investigating it any further,” Patterson said. “We don’t have an exact cause. It was unintentional.” The initial reports were that a dryer fire had spread to the laundry room, causing the occupants to evacuate the structure, Patterson said.
Sixteen firefighters responded to the incident with three fire engines, two command vehicles and an ambulance. By the time they arrived, the laundry room had filled with smoke and smoke was coming from the back corner windows and doors, including the front door. A covered stairway led to the basement, which was not accessible from the outside. Fire department personnel left the scene at 9 p.m. Sunday.
Man convicted in 1987 killings The Associated Press
EVERETT — A jury has convicted a Sea Tac man of the killings of a young Canadian couple more than three decades ago — a case that was finally solved when investigators turned to powerful genealogy software to build a family tree of the then-unknown suspect. Tanya Van Cuylenborg, 18, and her 20-year-old boyfriend, Jay Cook, disappeared in November 1987 after leaving their home near Victoria and crossing the Strait of Juan de Fuca on the Coho ferry to Port Angeles for what was supposed to be an overnight trip to Seattle. Their bodies were found in separate locations in northwestern Washington state about a week later. On Friday, a jury convicted William Earl Talbott II, a construction worker and truck driver who was 24 at the time of the killings and lived near where Cook’s body was discovered. Investigators preserved
DNA evidence that was recovered from Van Cuylenborg’s body and pants, but they didn’t know whose it was until last year. Authorities used genetic genealogy to identify Talbott. The genealogy technique has revolutionized cold-case investigations across the U.S. in the past year. It involves entering crime-scene DNA profiles into public genealogy databases, finding relatives of the person who left the DNA and building family trees that lead detectives to a suspect. Talbott did not testify during the trial in Snohomish County Superior Court, and the jury rejected the suggestion from his lawyers that he had sex with Van Cuylenborg but did not kill her or her boyfriend. It’s still unknown how Talbott encountered the pair and what happened during their final days. “It’s been such a long wait for all of us,” John Van Cuylenborg, Tanya’s older brother, said after the verdict
in a video posted by The Daily Herald newspaper. “It feels great to have some answers. We don’t have all the answers, but we have a lot more than we had for 31 years.” When the couple didn’t return from their trip as scheduled, their families began a frantic search for them, including renting a plane to try to spot the copper-colored Ford van they had been driving. About a week later, Van Cuylenborg’s body was found down an embankment in a rural area north of Seattle. She had been shot in the back of the head. Hunters found Cook dead two days later in brush near a bridge over the Snoqualmie River — about 60 miles from where his girlfriend was discovered. He had been beaten with rocks and strangled with twine and two red dog collars, authorities said. Talbott flinched and gasped when the jury read its verdict, then was pushed out of the courtroom in a
wheelchair, the newspaper reported. He is one of dozens of suspects authorities have arrested in old cases over the past year through the genetic genealogy, including a California man charged in the Golden State Killer case. The serial attacker killed 13 people and raped nearly 50 women during the 1970s and 1980s. In Talbott’s case, a genetic genealogist used a DNA profile entered into the GEDmatch database to identify distant cousins of the suspect, build a family tree linking those cousins and figure out that the sample must have come from a male child of William and Patricia Talbott. The couple had only one son: William Talbott II. Once Talbott was identified as a suspect, investigators tailed him, saw him discard a coffee cup and then tested the DNA from the cup, confirming it matched evidence from the crime, prosecutor Justin Harleman told jurors during the trial.
Lease: Ozias: City ‘needs time’ Continued from A1 well a new facility would survive an earthquake, the Commissioner Mark cost to retrofit, the ability to Ozias said the city needs leverage other uses and time to reach a formal deci- whether new construction sion. The Port of Port Ange- would be needed. Smith said relocating les commissioners would the Emergency Operations also need to take action. The city and county offi- Center is important to area cials will present options for law enforcement and public an emergency operations safety officials and that the center and dispatch center current dispatch center is during the city council less than ideal. “Our 9-1-1 center now meeting July 16, said Police lives in a small space with Chief Brian Smith, who did no room to expand and … it not attend the county meet- may not rate well on the ing. survivability side,” he said. “Something like a lease Benedict said the county is premature in terms of and city have applied for a where [the city] is at,” port security grant in an Smith said. “We have to get effort to secure $1 million direction from council. We’ll for renovations at the site present to council our find- and should hear back this ings and our recommenda- month on whether it will tions. That will dictate what receive the money. our next steps are.” He said about half of Smith said the city will the money would be used consider multiple options, to relocate Peninsula Comsome being better than oth- munications and the ers. Officials looked at how other half would go toward
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Continued from A1 Platypus agreed to cut $148,097 from the building cost as a donation to the city, Bright said. The city would be responsible for the remaining cost plus moving expenses for a total of $160,436. “Of that amount, $123,097 are the proceeds from an insurance claim,” Bright said in her June 18 memo. “The additional $37,339 will be taken out of the General Fund reserves.” The Dec. 14 storm knocked down at least eight trees in Lincoln Park and resulted in a power outage that affected all of Clallam County. No one was inside the 2,000-square-foot park maintenance building when a giant fir crashed through the roof and destroyed the framework, Parks Director Corey Delikat said after the storm. The fallen tree narrowly missed an adjacent substation, sparing the city from a more costly repair. “The F Street substation was near the tree when it fell and would have been a multi-million dollar project to replace if the tree had
T
he General Steel building will be stored on a Port of Port Angeles-owned property near William R. Fairchild Memorial Airport until the city is able to assemble the new structure at 1310 W. 16th St. fallen another 20 feet to the east,” Bright said in her memo. The existing maintenance shop will be demolished later this year, Bright said. The General Steel building will be stored on a Port of Port Angeles-owned property near William R. Fairchild Memorial Airport until the city is able to assemble the new structure at 1310 W. 16th St. “Parks and Recreation will be working with Public Works on the surrounding area to ensure additional trees do not fall in another event,” Bright said.
________ Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 56450, or at rollikainen@ peninsuladailynews.com.
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locating JeffCom 9-1-1 at the site also. Officials have long discussed the possibility of merging JeffCom and PenCom, but hasn’t been discussed publicly in relation to moving to the port-owned building. “If Jefferson County does join us, it is going to present some real governance challenges,” Benedict said. “It’s hard enough with two of us, but with three of us … it’s not insurmountable.”
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county expenses. Benedict said the city and county would each be using about 50 percent of the space in the building and suggested a 50-50 split on the lease. “It sounds like there’s some analysis and negotiation and I think it’s safe to say that we want to be supportive of this process and conversation,” Ozias said. Ozias suggested calling Jefferson County officials to see if there is interest in co-
to be cut from building’s price
A6
PeninsulaNorthwest
TUESDAY, JULY 2, 2019
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Judge weighs new U.S. policy Activists concerned about asylum seekers BY GENE JOHNSON
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEATTLE — Immigrant rights activists have asked a U.S. judge to block a new Trump administration policy that would keep thousands of asylum seekers locked up while they pursue their cases, instead of giving them a chance to be released on bond. Attorney General William Barr announced the policy in April as part of the administration’s efforts to deter a surge of migrants at the Mexico border, and it is scheduled to take effect July 15. It targets immigrants who have recently entered the U.S. without permission and have demonstrated to an immigration officer that they have a credible fear of persecution or torture if returned to their home country.
50-year-old policy For the past 50 years, the government has given such asylum seekers bond hearings before immigration judges where they can argue that they should be released because they are not flight risks and pose no threat to the public, according to court documents filed by the ACLU, American Immigration Council and the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project. That gives the asylum seekers an opportunity to reunite with relatives in the U.S. and to find lawyers to handle their asylum claims, making them more likely to succeed. The new policy would end that practice, keeping between 15,000 and 40,000 immigrants in custody for six months or more without requiring the government to show that their detentions are justified, in violation of their due process rights, the groups argued. Typically, close to half of asylum seekers who are granted bond hearings are released from custody. “Defendants’ new policy will require the imprisonment of thousands of individuals who represent no flight risk or danger to the
William Barr U.S. attorney general community,” Matt Adams, legal director of the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project, told U.S. District ELAINE THOMPSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Judge Marsha Pechman on Matt Adams, center right, legal director of the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project, leaves the Friday. U.S. Courthouse with others after a hearing on asylum seekers Friday in Seattle. “Every single one of them is facing drastic harm if they don’t have the opporor the past 50 tunity to present themyears, the selves for a bond hearing.” government has The plaintiffs want the judge to block the new pol- given such asylum icy from taking effect while they challenge its legality. seekers bond hearings Pechman said she intends before immigration to rule this week.
F
Stop ‘catch and release’ President Donald Trump has said he is determined to end the “catch and release” of migrants at the border. He has also called the asylum system broken, saying that some take advantage of it with frivolous claims. The lawsuit, a nationwide class action, began as a challenge to the separation of family members at the border under Trump’s “zero-tolerance” policy. Its legal claims have morphed as the government’s policies have shifted. The Justice Department has focused many of its arguments on procedural issues, insisting that the class-wide protection the immigrant rights groups seek is not available under federal immigration law. The government also said the named plaintiffs, including women from Honduras and El Salvador who were separated from their children at the border, lack
judges where they can argue that they should be released because they are not flight risks and pose no threat to the public, according to court documents filed by the ACLU, American Immigration Council and the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project.
standing to challenge the new policy because they were all given bond hearings and released from custody.
No harm shown “None of the named plaintiffs have shown any harm here,” Justice Department attorney Lauren Bingham told the judge. The Justice Department also argued that the new
MOISES CASTILLO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
In this Dec. 15, 2018, file photo, Honduran asylum seekers are taken into custody by U.S. Border Patrol agents after the group crossed the U.S. border wall into San Diego, Calif., seen from Tijuana, Mexico. policy is a legitimate interpretation of a federal law that says if immigration officers determine immigrants have a credible fear of persecution, they “shall be detained for further consideration of the application for asylum.” That language does not require asylum seekers to be detained for the entirety of their case, but even if it did, that would violate
December 8, 1943 February 21, 2019 Dwight “Von” Charles Bondy Jr. passed away February 21, 2019, in Boise, Idaho, due to stroke-related issues from an Ischemic stroke. Born December 8, 1943, in Grand Rapids, Michigan, he was the first son of five children; three girls and two boys. Dwight joined the U.S. Naval Reserves, as a junior, in John Rogers High School, in Spokane, and graduated in 1962. He served aboard the USS Sperry sub tender as a machinist’s mate while stationed at Pt. Loma, San
Moving to Lynnwood, after a corporate reconstruction, he enjoyed boating and fishing. He supported his family with a variety of temporary jobs such as selling vacuums, sewing machines and then eventually managing a furniture store, in Yakima Valley, where he enjoyed fishing and bird hunting. Soon after in 1976, Dwight moved his family to Port Angeles. He began selling Allstate Insurance and eventually took over Bill Buckner’s agency in Dwight “Von” the Port Angeles Sears Charles Bondy Jr. Store. Diego, California. Dwight retired and sold He began working as a his business in the early loan officer for Dial Finance 2000s. In 2008, he reloafter being discharged in cated to Buckeye, Arizona, 1966. Then transferred to with his wife, Aleasa, and Yakima, in 1968, and in to keep busy in life, he 1974 moved to Seattle. dealt and resold a variety
of items from golf clubs to Cadillacs. His main interest was trading colt single action guns and within a couple of years, he became quite the expert and made many close friends. He traveled across many states to all the large gun shows. Dwight “Von” Bondy is survived by his wife, Aleasa; sons, Gregory Roy and Jason Scott; stepdaughters, Alexa Marie Vallejo and Sage Mary James; grandchildren, Erika Houk, Jaylynn and Erik Van Eaton, Autumn Bondy, Kiah Brown, Tryton Brown, Anthony, Chelsea, Timothy and Greyson Vallejo; and two greatgrandchildren, Abigail and Emilia; and his adopted grandson, Zylar Brown.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SPOKANE — The state Department of Fish and Wildlife has restricted campfires and other activities on department-managed lands in eastern Washington beginning Monday. Citing the expectation of hot, dry weather to come, Cynthia Wilkerson, manager of the Fish and Wildlife’s Lands Division, said these restrictions help to reduce the risk of fire in state wildlife areas and access areas. “Observing fire restrictions and exercising common sense will go a long way toward preserving public recreation lands, wildlife habitat
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and safety for local communities and the recreating public,” Wilkerson said. A temporary restriction on firearm use also started Monday on Fish and Wildlife-managed lands. Target shooting and other gun use will be prohibited, but discharge of a firearm for legal hunting still will be permitted. Fireworks are prohibited year-round at all 33 Fish and Wildlife wildlife sites and 600-plus water access sites around the state. Throwing a lit cigarette or any other burning material from a motor vehicle on a state highway is also prohibited year-round.
Death Notices
HARPER-RIDGEVIEW
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new policy 11 days later. Under the policy, detained asylum seekers would still have another avenue for release: a request to an immigration officer for parole. The immigrant rights groups have said such requests are rarely granted under the Trump administration and are not a substitute for bond hearings before independent fact-finders.
Officials restrict campfires in eastern part of state
Death and Memorial Notice DWIGHT “VON” CHARLES BONDY JR.
the Supreme Court precedent that says the government cannot detain someone without reason, the immigrant rights advocates said. Pechman issued an injunction in April ordering the government to give migrants with bona fide asylum claims the opportunity to seek bail within seven days of a request. Barr announced the DOJ’s
Chapel, Sequim, is in charge of arrangements. www.sequimvalley Nov. 2, 1923 — June 26, 2019 chapel.com Sequim resident Reginald Barmoore Boyd died Stephen from natural causes at Mark Boynton Olympic Medical Center. Dec. 29, 1985 — June 20, 2019 He was 95. Services: Services on Sekiu resident Stephen Monday, July 8 at the Mark Boynton drowned Seventh Day Adventist near Sekiu. Church, 30 Sanford Lane, He was 33. Sequim. Viewing at Services: Celebration of 12:45 p.m. followed by life will be held Aug. 10 in funeral at 1 p.m. Graveside Sekiu. service follows at Sequim Harper-Ridgeview View Cemetery, 1505 Funeral Chapel, Port AngeSequim-Dungeness Road les, is in charge of arrangewith a reception afterward ments. at the church. www.harper-ridgeview Sequim Valley Funeral funeralchapel.com
Peninsula Daily News for Tuesday, July 2, 2019
Commentary
PAGE
A7
Has liberalism lost the world? “THE LIBERAL IDEA has become obsolete. … [Liberals] cannot simply dictate anything to anyone as they have been attempting to do over the recent decades.” Such was the confident Pat claim of RusBuchanan sian President Vladimir Putin to the Financial Times on the eve of a G-20 gathering that appeared to validate his thesis. Consider who commanded all the attention at the Osaka summit. The main event was Trump’s meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping and their agreement to renew trade talks. Xi runs an archipelago of detention camps where China’s Uighur Muslims and its Kazakh minority have their minds coercively “corrected.” A major media focus at the summit was Trump’s meeting with Putin where he playfully admonished the Russian president not to meddle again in our 2020 election. The two joked about how both are afflicted with
a media that generates constant fake news. At the G-20 class picture, Trump was seen smiling and shaking hands with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, whom U.S. intelligence says ordered the murder of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi. Trump called the prince “a friend” who has done a “spectacular job.” Trump then left for Seoul, traveled to the DMZ, and crossed into North Korea to shake hands with Kim Jong Un, who runs a police state unrivaled for its repression. Negotiations on Kim’s nuclear weapons may be back on track. Among other G-20 leaders present were Hindu nationalist Narendra Modi of India and President Recep Erdogan of Turkey, who has imprisoned tens of thousands following a coup attempt in July 2016. In his interview with the FT’s Lionel Barber, Putin appeared as much an analyst of, as an advocate for, the nationalism and populism that seems to be succeeding the 20th-century liberalism of the West. Why is liberalism failing? Several causes, said Putin. Among them, its failure to deal with the
crisis of the age: mass and unchecked illegal migration. Putin praised Trump’s efforts to secure the U.S. border: “This liberal idea has become obsolete. It has come into conflict with the interests of the overwhelming majority of the population. … This liberal idea presupposes that … migrants can kill, plunder and rape with impunity because their rights as migrants have to be protected.” Putin deplored Chancellor Angela Merkel’s 2015 decision to bring into Germany a million refugees from Syria’s civil war. His comments came as 10 Democratic candidates in the second presidential primary debate were raising their hands in support of the proposition that breaking into the USA should cease to be a crime and those who succeed in breaking in should be given free health care. Putin also sees the social excesses of multiculturalism and secularism in the West as representing a failure of liberalism. In a week where huge crowds celebrated the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall “uprising” in Greenwich Village, as it is now called, with parties and parades, Putin declared: “Have we forgotten that all of us live in a world based on bibli-
Peninsula Voices Dose of socialism
mentation of government of, No one on the left, not even by and for the people. The wealthy, through their Bernie Sanders, seriously wholly owned GOP, will tell advocates pure non-tempered you that socialism, in any socialism. form, will destroy the econAnd no one on the right, if omy and America. they are in their right minds, The truth is, without a will advocate pure unreguhealthy dose of socialism in lated capitalism. our capitalism, the only thing Do some research on the not destroyed will be the bank terms social democracy and balances of the 1 percent. democratic capitalism, and But that is exactly what you will find that these “mid- those in the 1 percent who are dle of the road” economic phi- overcome with greed and the losophies are common-sense lust for power want to hapsolutions that will bring about pen. a strong healthy economy Do not hate the wealthy while preserving the Amerifor having successfully made can dream with a valid imple- it to the top of the ladder of
cal values? … I am not trying to insult anyone because we have been condemned for our alleged homophobia. But we have no problem with LGBT persons. God forbid, let them live as they wish.” He added, “But some things do appear excessive to us. They claim now that children can play five or six gender roles.” Elton John pronounced himself “deeply upset.” Putin did not back off: “Let everyone be happy … But this must not be allowed to overshadow the culture, traditions and traditional family values of millions of people making up the core population.” Putin took power, two decades ago, as the 21st century began. In recent years, he has advanced himself not only as a foe of liberalism but a champion of populism, traditionalism and nationalism. Nor is he hesitant to declare his views regarding U.S. politics. Of Trump, Putin says, “He is a talented person [who] knows very well what his voters expect of him. … Trump looked into his opponent’s attitude toward him and saw changes in American society.” Recalling his own controversial comment that the collapse of
the Soviet Union was the greatest tragedy of the 20th century, Putin said the tragedy was not the death of Communism but the shattering of the Russian Federation into 15 separate nations. The tragedy was the “dispersal of ethnic Russians” across the newly independent successor states of the Soviet Union: “25 million ethnic Russians found themselves living outside the Russian Federation. … Is this not a tragedy? A huge one! And family relations? Jobs? Travel? It was nothing but a disaster.” What may be said of Putin? He is no Stalin, no Communist ideologue, but rather a Russian nationalist who seeks the return of her lost peoples to the Motherland, and, seeing his country as a great power, wants NATO out of his front yard. While we have issues with him on arms control, Iran and Venezuela, we have a common interest in avoiding a war with this nuclear-armed nation as we did with the far more menacing Soviet Empire of the Cold War.
_________ Patrick Buchanan’s nationally syndicated column is in the PDN every Tuesday. Email him at info@creators. com.
OUR READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND EMAIL
success. Hate them for trying to pull that ladder up behind them so that no one else can follow. The 1 percent did not become wealthy in the absence of opportunity and government regulation. Even if they inherited their wealth, most likely someone in their ancestry were the first to become wealthy, and unless they immigrated from another country already wealthy, being in the land of opportunity and government regulation had a big part in their success. David A. Desautel, Sequim
Knee-jerk liberalism MY DAUGHTER AND I were tossing a football back and forth while also flinging around arguments about free speech, sexual assault, youthful intolerance and paternal insensitivity. We were discussing a HarNicholas vard law proKristof fessor, Ronald Sullivan. He had been pushed out of his secondary job as head of Harvard College’s Winthrop House after he helped give Harvey Weinstein, accused of sexual assault, the legal representation every defendant is entitled to. To me, as a progressive baby boomer, this was a violation of hard-won liberal values, a troubling example of a university monoculture nurturing liberal intolerance. Of course no professor should be penalized for accepting an unpopular client. To my daughter, of course a house dean should not defend a notorious alleged rapist. As she saw it, any professor is welcome to represent any felon, but not while caring for undergraduates: How can a house leader support students traumatized by sexual assault when he
also is defending someone accused of rape? Our football face-off reflects a broader generation gap in America. Progressives of my era often revere the adage misattributed to Voltaire: “I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.” For young progressives, the priority is more about standing up to perceived racism, misogyny, Islamophobia and bigotry. The rise of President Donald Trump has amplified this generational clash and raised the fundamental question of how to live liberal values in an illiberal age. It’s a difficult balance, requiring intellectual humility. Don’t tell my daughter, but she has a point: The well-being of sexual assault victims is clearly a value to embrace, even as we weigh it against the right of a law professor to take on a despised client. Yet while I admire campus activism for its commitment to social justice, I also worry that it sometimes becomes infused with a prickly intolerance, embracing every kind of diversity except one: ideological diversity. Too often, we liberals embrace people who don’t look like us, but only if they think like us. George Yancey, a black evangelical who is a sociology professor, once told me: “Outside of academia I faced more problems as
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a black. But inside academia I face more problems as a Christian, and it is not even close.” For those of us who believe that liberalism should model inclusivity and tolerance, even in intolerant times, even to the exclusive and the intolerant, it was disappointing to see Cambridge University this year rescind a fellowship for Jordan Peterson, the Canadian best-selling author who said he will not use people’s preferred pronouns. Debate him — that’s how to win the argument — rather than trying to squelch him. Liberals sometimes howl when The New York Times brings in a conservative columnist or publishes a sharply conservative op-ed. We progressives should have the intellectual curiosity to grapple with disagreeable views. This column will appall many of my regular readers, and I recognize that all of this is easy for me to say as a straight white man. But the road to progress comes from winning the public debate — and if you want to win an argument, you have to allow the argument. I fear that Trump has made it easy for liberal activists to demonize conservatives and evangelicals. People are complicated at every end of the spectrum, and it’s as wrong to stereotype conservatives or evangelicals as it is to
stereotype someone on the basis of race, immigration status or sex. Campus activists at their best are the nation’s conscience. But sometimes their passion, particularly in a liberal cocoon, becomes blinding. That’s what happened at Oberlin College, long a center of activism, where students once protested the dining hall for cultural appropriation for offering poor sushi. Now Oberlin is in the news again because of a development in an episode that began the day after Trump was elected. A black student shoplifted wine from a store called Gibson’s Bakery, and a white store clerk ran after him and attempted to grab him. The police report shows that when officers arrived, the clerk was on the ground getting punched and kicked by several students. Seeing this incident through the lens of racial oppression, students denounced Gibson’s and distributed flyers claiming, “This is a RACIST establishment.” A university dean attended the protest, and the university responded to student fervor by suspending purchases from the bakery. I understand that militancy emerges from deep frustration at inequities. But it turned out that the operative narrative here was not
NEWS DEPARTMENTS ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, PDN managing editor; 360-417-3531 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com P.O. Box 1330, 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA, 98362 ■ BRIAN MCLEAN, PDN managing editor Jefferson County; 360-385-2335, ext. 6 bmclean@peninsuladailynews.com 1939 Sims Way, Port Townsend, WA 98368 ■ MICHAEL DASHIELL, editor Sequim Gazette; 360-681-2390, ext. 55049 editor@sequimgazette.com 147 W. Washington St., Sequim, WA 98382 ■ CHRISTI BARON, editor Forks Forum; 360-374-3311, ext. 5050 cbaron@forksforum.com P.O. Box 300, 490 S. Forks Ave., Forks, WA 98331
Peninsula Daily News, Sequim Gazette and Forks Forum make up the Olympic Peninsula News Group of Sound Publishing Inc.
oppression but simply shoplifting. The student who stole the wine pleaded guilty to theft and acknowledged that there was no racial profiling involved. Gibson’s last month won $44 million in actual and punitive damages from Oberlin, apparently reflecting the jury’s exasperation with the university for enabling a student mob. At a time when there is so much actual injustice around us — third-rate schools, mass incarceration, immigrants dehumanized — it’s bizarre to see student activists inflamed by sushi or valorizing a shoplifter. This is knee-jerk liberalism that backfires and damages its own cause. As a liberal, I mostly write about conservative blind spots. But on the left as well as the right, we can get so caught up in our narratives that we lose perspective; nobody has a monopoly on truth. If Trump turns progressives into intolerant agents of incivility, then we have lost our souls. As we head toward elections with monumental consequences, polarization will increase and mutual fear will surge. The challenge will be to stand up for our values — without betraying them.
________ Nicholas Kristof is a columnist for The New York Times.
HAVE YOUR SAY We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” guest opinion columns of no more than 550 words that focus on local community lifestyle issues. Please — send us only one letter or column per month. Letters and guest columns published become the property of Peninsula Daily News, and it reserves the right to reject, condense or edit for clarity or when information stated as fact cannot be substantiated. Letters published in other newspapers or websites, anonymous letters, letters advocating boycotts, letters to other people, mass mailings and commercial appeals are not published. We will not publish letters that impugn the personal character of people or of groups of people. Include your name, street address and — for verification purposes — day and evening telephone numbers. Email to letters@peninsuladailynews.com, fax to 360-417-3521, or mail to Letters, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Sunday RANTS & RAVES 24-hour hotline: 360-417-3506
A8
WeatherBusiness
TUESDAY, JULY 2, 2019
➡
Neah Bay 59/52
Bellingham 66/57
Olympic Peninsula TODAY
Port Townsend 62/55
Port Angeles 61/52
Sequim Olympics Snow level: 8,500 feet 63/53 Port Ludlow 64/55
Forks 65/53
National weather
Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 72 52 0.00 11.95 Forks 71 52 0.00 30.75 Seattle 81 59 0.00 12.81 Sequim 82 53 0.00 4.70 Hoquiam 70 55 0.00 17.35 Victoria 77 52 0.00 12.89 Port Townsend 75 48 **0.00 5.74
Almanac
Brinnon 64/57
New
First
Full
Last
Today
July 9
July 16
July 24
Forecast for Tuesday, July 2, 2019 Bands separate high temperature zones for the day.
➡
Aberdeen 66/55
Yesterday
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TONIGHT
WEDNESDAY
Low 52 Where is
THURSDAY
64/53 The heat?
FRIDAY
65/53 We need it
Marine Conditions Strait of Juan de Fuca: W morning wind 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft. A chance of showers. W evening wind 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft.
SATURDAY
65/54 Cold-weather blues
65/53 To beat
Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise tomorrow Moonset today
Today’s weather Washington TODAY
CANADA
Tacoma 66/53 Yakima 79/53
Astoria 66/56
ORE.
Stationary
H
L
High
Low
<-10
-0s
Showers
0s
10s
20s
Rain
30s
T-storms
40s
50s
Flurries
60s
70s
Snow
80s
90s
Ice
100s 110+
High Tide 12:03 a.m. 1:42 p.m. 6.9’
7:01 p.m. 2.7’
2:27 p.m. 7.0’
Port Angeles
1:16 a.m. 6.7’ 5:03 p.m. 7.0’
9:04 a.m. -2.5’ 9:29 p.m. 6.0’
2:00 a.m. 6.7’ 9:47 a.m. -2.8’ 5:43 p.m. 7.2’ 10:21 p.m. 5.9’
©2019 2:50 a.m. AccuWeather, 6.6’ 10:33 a.m. Inc. -2.8’ 6:22 p.m. 7.4’ 11:18 p.m. 5.7’
Port Townsend
2:53 a.m. 8.3’ 10:17 a.m. -2.8’ 6:40 p.m. 8.7’ 10:42 p.m. 6.7’
3:37 a.m. 8.3’ 11:00 a.m. -3.1’ 7:20 p.m. 8.9’ 11:34 p.m. 6.6’
4:27 a.m. 8.1’ 11:46 a.m. 7:59 p.m. 9.1’
-3.1’
Dungeness Bay*
1:59 a.m. 7.5’ 5:46 p.m. 7.8’
2:43 a.m. 7.5’ 10:22 a.m. -2.8’ 6:26 p.m. 8.0’ 10:56 p.m. 5.9’
3:33 a.m. 7.3’ 11:08 a.m. 7:05 p.m. 8.2’ 11:53 p.m.
-2.8’ 5.7’
Spokane 76/55
Seattle 65/58 Olympia 66/52
Warm
P ressure
NATIONAL SUMMARY: The most active areas in terms of thunderstorms toTexas and Louisiana coasts, northward to the Great TODAYday will stretch from the TOMORROW THURSDAY Lakes, parts of the central Appalachians and the central and northern Plains. Ht Low Tide Ht High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht These storms are most likely to bring torrential downpours and gusty winds. 9.0’ Most 7:12 a.m. -2.2’areas12:49 a.m.free 9.2’of rain 7:56 and a.m. generally -2.5’ 1:36 a.m. 9.2’ 8:41 a.m. -2.6’ other will be sunny.
La Push
Victoria 65/57
Ocean: W morning wind 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft. A chance of showers. W evening wind 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft.
9:17 p.m. 5:19 a.m. 6:15 a.m. 9:28 p.m.
Tides
Forecast for Tuesday, July 2, 2019
F ronts Cold
9:39 a.m. -2.5’ 10:04 p.m. 6.0’
7:50 p.m. 2.5’
3:13 p.m. 7.2’
8:40 p.m.
2.3’
*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
Why wealth gap has grown despite economic growth ©2019 AccuWeather, Inc.
BY CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — As it enters its 11th year, America’s economic expansion is now the longest on record — a streak that has shrunk unemployment, swelled household wealth, revived the housing market and helped fuel an explosive rise in the stock market. Yet even after a full decade of uninterrupted economic growth, the richest Americans now hold a greater share of the nation’s wealth than they did before the Great Recession began in 2007. And income growth has been sluggish by historical standards, leaving many Americans feeling stuck in place.
Those trends help explain something unique about this expansion: It’s easily the least-celebrated economic recovery in decades. As public discontent has grown, the issue has become one for political candidates to harness — beginning with Donald Trump in 2016. Now, some of the Democrats running to challenge Trump for the presidency have built their campaigns around proposals to tax wealth, raise minimum wages or ease the financial strain of medical care and higher education. America’s financial disparities have widened in large part because the means by which people build wealth have become
more exclusive since the Great Recession. Fewer middle-class Americans own homes, fewer are invested in the stock market and home prices have risen far more in wealthier metro areas on the coasts than in more modestly priced cities and rural areas. The result is that affluent homeowners now sit on vast sums of home equity and capital gains, while tens of millions of ordinary households have been left mainly on the sidelines. “The recovery has been very disappointing from the standpoint of inequality,” said Gabriel Zucman, an economist at the University of California, Berkeley, and a leading expert on income
and wealth distribution. Household wealth — the value of homes, stock portfolios and bank accounts, minus mortgage and credit card debt and other loans — jumped 80 percent in the past decade. More than one-third of that gain — $16.2 trillion in riches — went to the wealthiest 1 percent, figures from the Federal Reserve show. Just 25 percent of it went to middle-to-uppermiddle class households. The bottom half of the population gained less than 2 percent. Nearly 8 million Americans lost homes in the recession and its aftermath, and the sharp price gains since then have put ownership out of reach for many would-be buyers. For America’s middle class, the homeownership rate fell to about 60 percent in 2016 from roughly 70 percent in 2004, before the housing bubble, according to separate Fed data. The other major engine of household wealth — the stock market — hasn’t much benefited most people, either. The longest bull market in U.S. history, which surpassed its own 10-year mark in March, has shot equity prices up more than four-fold. Yet the proportion
of middle-income households that own shares has actually declined. The Fed calculates that about half of middle-income Americans owned shares in 2016, the most recent year for which data is available, down from 56 percent in 2007. That includes people who hold stocks in retirement accounts. The decline in stock market participation occurred mainly because more middle-income workers took contract work or other jobs that offered no retirement savings plans, the Fed concluded. Hannah Moore, now 37, has struggled to save since graduating from college in December 2007, the same month the Great Recession officially began. She has worked nearly continuously since then despite a couple of layoffs. “I had many jobs, all at the same time,” she said. “It’s just not been the easiest of decades if you’re trying to jump-start a career.” She works for a design firm in Los Angeles that contracts with luxury apartment developers that build rental housing marketed to high-tech employees. She loves the work. But she struggles with Los Angeles’ high costs. Moore said she could afford a monthly mortgage
payment. But she lacks the savings for a down payment. About half her income, she calculates, is eaten up by rent, health insurance and student loan payments of $850 a month. As financial inequalities have widened during the past decade, racial disparities in wealth have worsened, too. The typical wealth for a white household is $171,000 — nearly 10 times that for African-Americans. That’s up from seven times before the housing bubble, and it primarily reflects sharp losses in housing wealth for blacks. The African-American homeownership rate fell to a record low in the first three months of this year. Most economists argue that higher income growth is needed to make it easier for more Americans to save and build wealth. Zucman favors a higher minimum wage, cheaper access to college education and more family-friendly policies to enable more parents to work. He and his colleague Emmanuel Saez, also an economist at the University of California, Berkeley, helped formulate Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s proposed wealth tax on fortunes above $50 million to help pay for those proposals.
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Dow Jones industrials
117.47 26,717.43
Nasdaq composite
84.92 8,091.16
Standard & Poor’s 500
22.57 2,964.33
Russell 2000
3.09 1,569.66
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Construction spending falls 0.8 percent WASHINGTON — Spending on U.S. construction projects fell in May, the first drop in six months, as home building fell for a fifth straight month. The Commerce Department reported Monday that spending fell 0.8 percent in May, the first decline since a 1.3 percent drop in November, to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $1.29 trillion. Spending in April was revised up from a flat reading to a small gain of 0.4 percent. The weakness in May was widespread with spending on single-family homes and apartments down 0.6 percent while nonresidential construction fell 0.9 percent.
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Activity slows WASHINGTON — U.S. factory activity grew at a slower pace in June for the third straight month as measures of new orders and inventories fell. The Institute for Supply Management, an association of purchasing managers, said Monday that its manufacturing index slipped to 51.7 last month from 52.1 in May. Any reading above 50 signals an expansion. While the sector is still growing, the report pointed to an ongoing weakening in U.S. manufacturing.
Gold, silver futures August gold fell $24.40, or 1.7 percent, to settle at $1,389.30 an ounce Monday. Silver for September shed 14.8 cents, or 1 percent, to $15.193 an ounce. The Associated Press 922301460
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Spending on government projects also dropped 0.9 percent, led by a decline in construction spending by the federal government.
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Peninsula Daily News for Tuesday, July 2, 2019
Sports
SECTION
B
Free agency
American Legion
Wilder in hunt for title Team splits with Lakeside on the road BY PIERRE LABOSSIERE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
BELLEVUE — Wilder split a pair of games with Lakeside for the second time this year, putting themselves in good position to win the Washington Area 1 AAA American Legion
Brooklyn suddenly toast of the NBA BY BRIAN MAHONEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — Just three seasons ago, the Brooklyn Nets were the worst team in the NBA. On Sunday, ALSO . . . they were the ■ Klay story of the league. Thompson They agreed to to stay with deals with superWarriors/B3 stars Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving as part of a sensational start to free agency, giving the longtime No. 2 team in New York top billing in the Big Apple. They landed two of the top players available, both perennial AllStars and NBA champions, and they weren’t finished. They also added center DeAndre Jordan, who played with Durant and Irving on the 2016 U.S. Olympic team that won the gold medal, and veteran swingman Garrett Temple. It was such a powerful victory that the crosstown Knicks even put out a statement acknowledging their fans’ disappointment, just three hours after shopping season had started. And it was even more remarkable given where the Nets were not long ago. An ill-fated trade with Boston in 2013, when the Nets acquired Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce in hopes of competing for a championship but didn’t even get out of the second round, cost them years of high draft picks and contributed to them becoming the worst team in the league. They bottomed out at 20-62 in 2016-17, when Durant won NBA Finals MVP in his first season with Golden State after the Warriors beat Irving’s Cleveland Cavaliers for the title. Now those players will try to win one together. Irving, who grew up in New Jersey, said in a video posted Monday by his representation at Roc Nation Sports that he always wanted to play back home. Part of the video was shot with Irving on the Brooklyn Bridge. “I wouldn’t change anything about this journey, at all,” Irving said. “It’s brought me back here and that’s home, and home is where my family is. Home is where I want my legacy to continue. And, I’m happy to be in Brooklyn.” Roc Nation, which announced Sunday it is now representing Irving, said he had agreed to a fouryear, maximum contract . He might have to wait a year to play with Durant, who could miss next season while recovering from a ruptured Achilles tendon. But with Irving taking controls of the offense and a promising young core around him, the Nets should be a playoff team, even while Durant recovers. TURN
TO
NBA/B2
league championship. Wilder hasn’t won the league title yet, but has two league losses (8-2) to Lakeside’s three (11-3). If Wilder can win out, they will clinch the Area 1 AAA championship. Wilder and Lakeside have split four games this season. Wilder’s only two losses all season have been to Lakeside, both with Lakeside’s Brody Liddle starting the game. Lakeside has lost twice to Wilder and picked up another league loss to Bellingham Post 7.
In Game 1, Liddle, who pitches at 4A Issaquah High School, and Wilder’s Brody Merritt had an epic pitchers’ duel. Liddle pitched the entire game, giving up seven hits, three earned runs and striking out six while walking one. Merritt also went the distance, going six innings, giving up two earned runs on eight hits. He struck out one and walked three. The difference in the game was two unearned runs as Wilder made two costly errors in the game. Lakeside
was able to score the go-ahead run in the bottom of the sixth inning on a passed ball. In the top of the seventh, Liddle struck out two batters while mowing down the side in order to preserve the win. Milo Whitman went 2 for 2 at the plate with a run scored, an RBI and a walk, while Joel Wood hit a double and scored a run. Ethan Flodstrom had a hit and an RBI and Wyatt Hall had a hit and an RBI. Gavin Guerrero had a hit and a run scored. TURN
TO
WILDER/B2
Lincoln Park BMX
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Boston Celtics guard Kyrie Irving (11) shoots over Indiana Pacers guard Darren Collison (2) in April 2019. Irving is joining Kevin Durant and DeAndre Jordan to play for the Brooklyn Nets.
COMICS, CLASSIFIEDS, PUZZLES In this section
Hosting the hottest riders 339 racers compete in state qualifier BY PIERRE LABOSSIERE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — More than 300 riders from the Olympic Peninsula and all around the state of Washington raced at a BMX state qualifier at the Lincoln BMX Park this weekend. Nearly $3,000 was raised on Saturday for the Race for Life. The funds go toward the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. Local BMX riders Thomas Dalgardno, Andy Goldsbary, Cash Coleman, Zebastian FerrierDixon, Mason Beal, Jackson Beal, Evan Hernandez and George Williams raised $1,580 for Race for Life, while the Lincoln Park BMX Track raised an additional $1,350 for a total of $2,930. The Sunday races were a BMX state qualifier race. A total of 339 racers ranging in age from under 5 to over 50 participated in more than 60 races held all day. A total of 561 racers participated in events held Friday, Saturday and Sunday. “Some of the local riders were just as competitive as riders from around the state,” said track operator Sean Coleman. There are a total of 12 state qualifiers held around the state during the spring and summer. The Port Angeles races were the seventh in the series. The net state qualifier will be in Everett on July 20. For the second straight year, the state championships are coming to Lincoln Park BMX.
DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Raddick Serna (23) of Gig Harbor leads #661 Kohen Wills (661) of Puyallup in the first big curve on Sunday’s state qualifier BMX racing at Lincoln Park in Port Angeles. A total of 339 racers competed Sunday and more than 560 over the weekend. They will be held on Aug. 24-25, Des Moines. and more than 700 racers could 8 cruiser total — Kohen Wills, Puyallup. total — Kaiden Ireland, Everson. show up for the state champion- 910cruiser cruiser — Stevie Lucash, Kent. ships. 12 cruiser — Dylan Downing, Orting. Below are listed the first- 13 cruiser — Dylan Gasca, Buckley. place finishers. For complete 14 cruiser — Paxtyn Hermes, Pasco. results, look to this story on 15 cruiser — Zaine Stenson, Maple Valley. 17-20 cruiser — Cory Cooke, Port Angeles. www.peninsuladailynews.com. Sunday, June 30 state qualifier results Washington State Championship Double Lincoln Park BMX First-place finishers 11-12 girls cruiser — Kaylee Case, Kennewick. 15-16 girls cruiser — Taylor Coleman, Port Angeles. 46-50 women cruiser — Hidi Cramer,
26-30 cruiser — Kyler Esmay, Kent. 36-40 cruiser — Kyle Hutchins, Bremerton. 41-45 cruiser — Brent Lee, University Place. 46-50 cruiser — Jon Lindberg, Bremerton. 56-60 cruiser — Nicholas Roth, Everett. 5 & under novice — Danny Goettling, Sequim. 6 novice — Beau Browning, Port Angeles. 8 novice — Ben Keeler, Port Angeles. 10 novice — Jaedyn Halladay, Sequim. 11 novice — Erick Castro, Kent.
World Cup
Briefly . . .
England wary of ‘ruthless’ US team
Australians coming to the Peninsula
BY ANNE M. PETERSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LYON, France — England coach Phil Neville says the United States has a ruthless streak. It’s one of the reasons the U.S. has never missed the semifinals at the Women’s World Cup, and why the team has three overall titles, more than any other nation. “America has got that ruthless streak of wanting to win,” Neville said. “You saw the last five minutes of the (quarterfinal) game against France. The game management was fantastic. They took the ball into the corner, they knew what it took to win, and they celebrated like winners. That’s what I admire, and that’s what my team has now. It’s about winning.” The third-ranked Lionesses play the defending champions today in Lyon (Noon Pacific Time, FOX). The winner will go on to the championship match, facing
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The United States’ Abby Dahlkemper, left, and Megan Rapinoe share a laugh during a training session of the US Women’s Soccer team in Lyon, France, on Monday. the winner of the other semifinal Wednesday between Sweden and the Netherlands. England has never broken through to the final at the World Cup. The Lionesses fell to Japan four years ago in the semis in Canada. TURN
TO
WORLD CUP/B2
12 novice — Austin Fortman, Port Angeles. 13 novice — Weston A. Opdyke, Port Angeles. 15 novice — Chase Schweitzer, Port Hadlock. 26-35 novice — Tyson Drew, Ephrata. 36-40 novice — Tracy Smith, Moses Lake. 41-45 novice — Mark Brown, Lynnwood. 6 intermediate — Sawyer Roberts, Seabeck. 7 intermediate — Kohen Wills, Puyallup. 8 intermediate — Hayden Bottenberg, Mill Creek. 9 intermediate — Kellan Miller, Seattle. 10 intermediate — Rian Guzman, Lynnwood. 11 intermediate — Vaunn Zimmerman, Redmond. 12 intermediate — Jefrey Nelson, Moses Lake.
TURN
TO
BMX/B3
WNBA Storm drops game
SEATTLE — DeWanna Bonner and Brittney Griner each scored 20 points to help the Phoenix Mercury beat PORT ANGELES — Hold Seattle 69-67 on Sunday, on to your slouch hats: The handing the Storm their first Australians are coming to the home loss of the season. Olympic Peninsula. The Mercury (5-5) took Three Australian teams the lead for good at 57-56 on will be on the Olympic Penin- Griner’s basket with 5:05 left sula all week to play baseball. in the game. That sparked a The Australia White, Aus10-0 run that ended at 65-56 tralia Red and Australia on Bonner’s 3-pointer two Black teams will first play three exhibition games at Vol- minutes later. The Storm (8-6) closed the unteer Field beginning today. deficit to 65-63 before the Australia Black will play final minute, and Jordin Canthe Cascade Crush out of ada was fouled attempting a Bellingham at Volunteer Field at noon. At 3 p.m., Aus- 3-pointer with 1.2 seconds left that gave her a chance to tralia Red will play a second game against Cascade Crush tie it at the foul line. But Canada missed the first at 3 p.m. attempt and the Mercury’s On Wednesday, Wilder Jr. Leilani Mitchell secured the will take on Australia White rebound after Canada intenat Volunteer Field at 2 p.m. tionally missed the third one. Then, all three teams will Sami Whitcomb had 13 play at the 2019 Dick Brown points, Mercedes Russell and Firecracker Invitational at Alysha Clark added 12 each Civic Field beginning Thursand Canada scored 10 for the day along with Wilder, Centerfield and Lakeside. Wilder Storm, who won their first five games at home. Senior will get its first crack The Peninsula Daily at an Australian team on FriNews and day, playing Australia White at 7 p.m. The Associated Press
B2
SportsRecreation
Tuesday, July 2, 2019
Peninsula Daily News
Today’s
SPORTS ON TV
Scoreboard Calendar
Baseball: Australia White vs. Wilder Jr. at Volunteer Field, 2 p.m. Highline Bears at Port Angeles at Civic Field, 5:05 p.m.
Sunday’s Games Bend 4, Port Angeles 1 Bellingham 2, Portland 1 Corvallis 9, Yakima Valley 1 Victoria 10, Kelowna 5 Ridgefield 6, Walla Walla 4 Cowlitz 10, Wenatchee 5 Monday’s Games Kelowna at Victoria, 1 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Portland at Corvallis, 6:30 p.m. Highline at Port Angeles (Nonleague), 6:35 p.m. Bellingham at Yakima Valley, 6:35 p.m. Ridgefield at Bend, 6:35 p.m. Cowlistz at Walla Walla, 6:35 p.m. Kelowna at Wenatchee, 7:05 p.m.
American Legion
Baseball
Area 1 NW AAA League
American League
W L GB Lakeside Recovery 11 3 — Wilder Baseball Club 8 2 1 Lakeside BR 3 5 5 Snohomish 3 9 7 Bellingahm 3 9 7
West Division W L Pct GB 53 32 .624 — 46 38 .548 6½ 46 39 .541 7 42 43 .494 11 37 51 .420 17½ Central Division W L Pct GB Minnesota 53 30 .639 — Cleveland 45 38 .542 8 Chicago 39 42 .481 13 Detroit 27 52 .342 24 Kansas City 29 56 .341 25 East Division W L Pct GB New York 54 28 .659 — Tampa Bay 48 36 .571 7 Boston 44 40 .524 11 Toronto 32 53 .376 23½ Baltimore 24 59 .289 30½ Sunday’s Late Game Oakland 12, L.A. Angels 3 Monday’s Games Toronto 11, Kansas City 4 Baltimore at Tampa Bay, late L.A. Angels at Texas, late Tuesday’s Games Boston (Price 5-2) at Toronto (Thornton 2-5), 4:07 p.m. Baltimore (Bundy 3-10) at Tampa Bay (Morton 8-2), 4:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Paxton 5-3) at N.Y. Mets (Vargas 3-3), 4:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Canning 3-4) at Texas (Jurado 5-3), 5:05 p.m. Detroit (Boyd 5-6) at Chicago White Sox (Lopez 4-7), 5:10 p.m. Houston (TBD) at Colorado (Marquez 8-3), 5:10 p.m. Cleveland (Bauer 6-6) at Kansas City (Junis 4-7), 5:15 p.m. Minnesota (Odorizzi 10-3) at Oakland (Mengden 2-1), 7:07 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games Baseball: Australia Black vs. Cascade Crush (Bellingham), at Volunteer Field, Noon Australia Red vs. Cascade Crush at Volunteer Field, 3 p.m. Highline Bears at Port Angeles at Civic Field, 6:35 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Area 1 NW AA Division Mount Vernon Burlington Bellingham Sedro-Woolley Wilder Junior Anacortes Lynden Lightning Blaine Lynden Christian Lakeside Recovery Crosscutters Meridian Stanwood Stanwood A
12 0 GB 6 2 4 7 3 4 5 2 4½ 6 3 4½ 3 4 6½ 3 4 6½ 3 4 6½ 2 3 6½ 3 5 7 2 4 7 0 5 8½ 1 7 9 0 8 9½
West Coast League Overall Standings North Division W L Victoria 16 7 Bellingham 14 7 Port Angeles 10 13 Wenatchee 9 12 Yakima Valley 8 15 Kelowna 6 13 South Division W L Walla Walla 15 6 Corvallis 15 6 Ridgefield 11 10 Bend 10 11 Portland 9 14 Cowlitz 6 15
Pct. GB .696 — .667 1 .435 6 .429 6 .348 8 .316 8 Pct. GB .714 — .714 — .524 4 .476 5 .391 7 .286 9
Houston Texas Oakland Los Angeles Seattle
St. Louis (Flaherty 4-5) at Seattle (Carasiti 0-0), 7:10 p.m.
National League West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 57 29 .663 — Colorado 44 40 .524 12 San Diego 42 41 .506 13½ Arizona 43 43 .500 14 San Francisco 36 47 .434 19½ Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 45 39 .536 — Milwaukee 45 39 .536 — St. Louis 41 41 .500 3 Pittsburgh 39 43 .476 5 Cincinnati 38 43 .469 5½ East Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 50 35 .588 — Philadelphia 44 40 .524 5½ Washington 42 41 .506 7 New York 38 47 .447 12 Miami 32 50 .390 16½ Sunday’s Late Game N.Y. Mets 8, Atlanta 5 Monday’s Games Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh, late Milwaukee at Cincinnati, late San Francisco at San Diego, late Tuesday’s Games Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 7-5) at Pittsburgh (Musgrove 6-7), 4:05 p.m. Miami (Gallen 0-1) at Washington (Corbin 7-5), 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Anderson 4-2) at Cincinnati (Roark 5-6), 4:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Paxton 5-3) at N.Y. Mets (Vargas 3-3), 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Pivetta 4-2) at Atlanta (Keuchel 1-1), 4:20 p.m. Houston (TBD) at Colorado (Marquez 8-3), 5:10 p.m. Arizona (Clarke 2-3) at L.A. Dodgers (Stripling 3-2), 7:10 p.m. San Francisco (Beede 1-3) at San Diego (Strahm 3-6), 7:10 p.m. St. Louis (Flaherty 4-5) at Seattle (Carasiti 0-0), 7:10 p.m.
Women’s Soccer World Cup at a Glance SEMIFINALS Tuesday’s Match At Lyon, France England vs. United States, Noon Wednesday’s Match At Lyon, France Netherlands vs. Sweden, Noon THIRD PLACE Saturday’s Match At Nice, France Semifinal losers, 8 a.m.
Today CHAMPIONSHIP Sunday’s Match At Lyon, France Semifinal winners, 8 a.m.
Soccer Major League Soccer EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Philadelphia 9 5 5 32 34 25 D.C. United 8 4 7 31 25 19 Montreal 9 8 3 30 24 31 Atlanta 9 6 2 29 23 15 New York 8 6 3 27 30 20 New York City FC 6 1 8 26 27 19 Toronto FC 6 7 5 23 30 31 Orlando City 6 8 3 21 24 22 New England 5 8 5 20 20 35 Chicago 4 7 7 19 26 27 Columbus 5 11 2 17 16 27 Cincinnati 3 13 2 11 15 42 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Los Angeles FC 11 2 4 37 39 14 LA Galaxy 10 7 1 31 24 22 Seattle 8 4 5 29 27 21 FC Dallas 7 7 5 26 27 25 San Jose 7 6 4 25 28 27 Minnesota United 7 7 3 24 30 26 Houston 7 6 3 24 22 22 Real Salt Lake 7 8 2 23 24 28 Portland 6 8 2 20 25 28 Vancouver 4 7 8 20 21 25 Colorado 5 9 4 19 28 36 Sporting Kansas City 4 6 7 19 27 29 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Sunday’s Game Portland 1, FC Dallas 0 Wednesday’s Game Seattle at New York City FC, 4 p.m. Philadelphia at Orlando City, 4:30 p.m. Atlanta at Chicago, 5 p.m. San Jose at Minnesota United, 5 p.m. Los Angeles FC at Sporting Kansas City, 5:30 p.m. New York at Houston, 6 p.m. Columbus at Real Salt Lake, 7 p.m.
WNBA WNBA at a Glance WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Las Vegas 7 5 .583 — Seattle 8 6 .571 — Los Angeles 6 6 .500 1 Minnesota 6 6 .500 1 Phoenix 5 5 .500 1 Dallas 4 7 .364 2½ EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Washington 9 3 .750 — Connecticut 9 4 .692 ½ Chicago 6 6 .500 3
World Cup: Americans brash and confident Continued from B1 They went on to defeat Germany in the third-place match for the team’s best tournament finish. Neville said that’s not good enough. “My players now want to win,” he said. “If we don’t get the right result, we’ll feel the disappointment and we’ll see that as a failure. That’s not me being negative, that’s just our expectations, and our belief and our confidence and our mindset.” There were questions when Neville was appointed to lead the team early in 2018 because he’d never coached a women’s team. But the former Manchester United and Everton star has answered all the critics by building a team that believes it can win. “I think we’ve shown throughout this tournament that we can go toe-to-toe with anybody,” captain Steph Houghton said. The Lionesses head into the U.S. game with four straight shutouts in France, including a 3-0 quarterfinal victory over Norway. Jill Scott, Ellen White and Lucy Bronze each scored, with Bronze’s goal sealing it.
White, as well as Alex Morgan and Megan Rapinoe, has five goals each in the tournament to lead the field for the Golden Boot. Australia’s Sam Kerr also scored five, but the Matildas were eliminated in the round of 16. Rapinoe has been particularly dangerous in the past two games, scoring twice in a 2-1 victory over Spain in the round of 16 before another brace in the 2-1 quarterfinal victory over France. The performance in Paris on Friday night came as Rapinoe was embroiled in controversy over a video that surfaced of her saying she wouldn’t visit the White House if the Americans win the World Cup. President Donald Trump subsequently called her out on Twitter. The French peppered goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher with shots and the United States settled into a five-man backfield, something French coach Corinne Diacre said she’d never seen the top-ranked Americans do before. The United States held firm. Christen Press said being able to shift from the team’s normally aggressive attack to a more defensive stand is part of what makes the team ruthless. “I would characterize it as optimism
Wilder: 11-2 on the season Continued from B1 In the second game, Wilder got up 7-0 and then had to hold off a furious Lakeside rally in the bottom of the sixth inning. After making Wilder sweat with its sixth-inning outburst, Lakeside kept coming in the bottom of the seventh inning as Wilder hung on tight. Lakeside got a hit and pitcher Flodstrom walked two batters to load the bases. With the tying run at second base and the winning run at first, Flodstrom was able to get a fly ball out to end the threat and the game. Hayden Woods started the game, going 5 1/3 innings and giving up two earned runs, while walking none and striking out four. Jadon Seibel pitched 2/3rds of an inning, giving up a hit and no runs. Flodstrom pitched the final inning, giving up one hit and two walks while striking out one. Guerrero remained red-hot for Wilder, going 3 for 4 at the plate with two runs scored and an RBI. Over his past four games, Guerrero is 12 for 17 for a .706 batting average.
Flodstrom was 2 for 3 with a double, a run scored, an RBI and a walk. Tyler Bowen was 2 for 4 with a run scored, while Whitman had a hit, a run scored and an RBI. Wilder (11-2, 8-2) now gets ready to play in the Firecracker Tournament beginning Thursday at Civic Field. Lakeside 4, Wilder 3 Wilder 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 — 3 7 2 Lake. 0 1 1 1 0 1 x — 4 8 0 LP: Merritt Pitching Wilder — Merritt 6IP, 8H, 2ER, K, 3BB. Hitting Wilder — Whitman 2-2, R, RBI, BB, SB; Wood 1-4, 2B, R; Guerrero 1-3, R, SB; Hall 1-3, RBI; Adams 1-3; Flodstrom 1-2, RBI, SF, SB. Wilder 7, Lakeside 5 Wilder 2 0 2 2 1 0 0 — 7 8 2 Lake. 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 — 5 12 2 WP: Woods Pitching Wilder — Woods 5.1IP, 10H, 2ER, 4K, 0BB; Seibel 0.2IP, H, 0ER; Flodstrom 1IP, H, K, 2BB. Hitting Wilder — Guerrero 3-4, 2R, RBI, SB; Bowen 2-4, R, 2SB; Flodstrom 2-3, 2B, R, RBI, BB; Whitman 1-3, R, RBI; Wood 0-2, R, 2BB, SB.
9 a.m. (26) ESPN Tennis ITF, Wimbledon Men’s and Women’s First Round (Live) 9 a.m. (304) NBCSN Beach Volleyball FIVB, World Championship Day 5 (Live) Noon (13) KCPQ Soccer FIFA World Cup, USA vs. England, Women’s Semifinal (Live) 4 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, San Antonio Spurs vs. Memphis Grizzlies, Summer League (Live) 5 p.m. (313) CBSSD Basketball WNBA, Atlanta Dream at Minnesota Lynx (Live) 6 p.m. NBA TV (27) ESPN2 Basketball NBA, Los Angeles Lakers vs. Golden State Warriors, Summer League (Live) 7 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, St. Louis Cardinals at Seattle Mariners (Live) 7:30 p.m. (306) FS1 Soccer CONCACAF, Gold Cup Semifinal (Live) 8 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, Miami Heat at Sacramento Kings Summer League (Live)
that we’re going to win. But there is a ruthlessness to this team. And that’s win at all costs,” Press said. “That means tactically adapt in a way that we never have in four years. And you have to do that to win. … It’s incredible that we could change and still be so solid.” The United States and England have met just once before in the World Cup, a 3-0 U.S. win in the 2007 quarterfinals. But earlier this year the teams played to a 2-all tie in the SheBelieves Cup. The Americans have been called brash and confident at this World Cup, from a resounding 13-0 victory over Thailand in the opener, to a shutout of nemesis Sweden to close the group stage, and finally to Rapinoe’s raised arms in the victory over France. Neville added ruthless to the list. Naeher explained that it’s just a part of the team’s DNA. “That’s the root of the U.S. women’s national team, from back to the teams from 20 years ago,” she said. “And that’s always been the U.S. mentality and that’s something that every veteran player has instilled in all the new players as we’ve come in. It’s now our job to carry that through.”
Wednesday 3 a.m. (26) ESPN Tennis ITF, Wimbledon Men’s and Women’s Second Round (Live) New York Indiana Atlanta
5 7 .417 4 5 9 .357 5 2 8 .200 6 Sunday’s Games New York 74, Atlanta 58 Dallas 89, Minnesota 86 Los Angeles 94, Chicago 69 Phoenix 69, Seattle 67 Monday’s Games No games scheduled Tuesday’s Games Chicago at Las Vegas, Noon Atlanta at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Wednesday’s Games New York at Seattle, Noon
Briefly . . . Blue Jays celebrate Canada Day in romp TORONTO — Backed by an offensive barrage, Blue Jays left-hander Clayton Richard had a relatively easy time ending the longest losing streak of his career. Freddy Galvis hit a pair of solo home runs, rookie Cavan Biggio had four RBIs and Toronto beat the Kansas City Royals 11-4 on Monday in an afternoon Canada Day contest. Randal Grichuk had four hits and four RBIs and Teoscar Hernández added a solo home run as the Blue Jays won for the 15th time in 19 regular-season home meetings with the Royals. Richard (1-4) allowed three runs and seven hits in six innings to win for the first time since Aug. 18, 2018, when he beat Arizona while pitching for San Diego. “It’s huge,” Richard said of earning his first win with Toronto. “That’s why we play the game, is to win. It feels a lot better doing that than the alternative.” Wearing red caps and jerseys in honor of Canada Day, the Blue Jays scored in each of the first four innings and finished with a season-high 18 hits. The Associated Press
NBA: Irving frustrated in Boston Continued from B1 more attractive by freeing up salary to bring in two stars. Irving wasn’t expected to The Nets got back to the playoffs last season after be one of them a few months going 42-40, stamping them- ago, after he’d said last fall selves as a team on the rise. he planned to re-sign in BosBrooklyn might be able to ton. But despite his good keep rising all the way to the stats it was a bad season for top after Sunday’s moves. him with the Celtics, who Even after winning titles were considered an Eastern in his first two seasons with Conference favorite but the Warriors, there was seainstead lost in the second son-long speculation that round. Durant might leave. But Irving became frustrated much of that speculation had and reconsidered his plans, been focused on the Knicks, deciding his future was not in who had more than $70 milBoston, but in Brooklyn. Now lion and the ability to sign he’ll play for the team he two top free agents after watched while growing up in trading Kristaps Porzingis New Jersey, where the Nets during the season. played before moving to BarRight city, but wrong clays Center in 2012. team. Even when the Nets had The Nets felt confident better teams, the Knicks still with what they could offer, got more attention and it from their roster, to their sometimes felt as if they medical staff, to their faciliwould always be the marquee ties. And when they made a team in the city. cap-clearing trade last month, they became even That changed Sunday in a
New York minute. The Nets were not only the talk of the town but of the whole league, and when the Knicks were shut out early on, they took the rare step of commenting about their situation. “While we understand that some Knicks fans could be disappointed with tonight’s news, we continue to be upbeat and confident in our plans to rebuild the Knicks to compete for championships in the future, through the draft, targeted free agents and continuing to build around our core of young players,” Knicks President Steve Mills said in a statement. The Knicks eventually agreed to deals with forwards Julius Randle, Taj Gibson and Bobby Portis, so they did get something. Just nowhere near as much as the Nets.
SportsRecreation
Peninsula Daily News
Tuesday, July 2, 2019
B3
Thompson announces he’s staying with Warriors By Janie McCauley The Associated Press
The Canadian Press
via the
AP
Golden State Warriors basketball guard Klay Thompson speaks to the media before practice during the NBA Finals against the Toronto Raptors in Toronto in May. Thompson announced Monday his decision to stay with the Golden State Warriors for $190 million over the next five years.
OAKLAND, Calif. — All-Star guard Klay Thompson said on social media he is staying put with the Golden State Warriors, using a clip of Leonardo DiCaprio in the movie “The Wolf of Wall Street” with the line “I’m not leavin!’” Thompson posted on his Instagram account Monday. He is expected to sign a five-year max contract for $190 million when the NBA free agent moratorium period ends, remaining with Golden State just as he had hoped all along. Last year, he made it clear again: “I’ve said it many times before: I would like to be a Warrior for life.” Thompson had been scheduled for surgery this past week for a torn ACL in his left knee after he was injured during a Game 6 loss
to the Toronto Raptors in the NBA Finals. Neither the Warriors nor Thompson’s agent have confirmed whether he has had the surgery. Along with Stephen Curry, Thompson is part of one of the most dangerous backcourts in the NBA, given their accuracy from 3-point range that extends well beyond the line. He has been durable, too, never missing a postseason game before sitting out Game 3 because of a strained left hamstring. Myers said last week he planned to sit down with Thompson before the start of free agency Sunday, when Golden State saw Kevin Durant depart for the Brooklyn Nets. The two-time NBA Finals MVP is recovering from surgery for a torn right Achilles tendon that he injured in Game 5 of the finals. Being part of the Warriors’
dynasty — five straight NBA Finals berths and three championships in four years from 201518 — appeals to Thompson. He has cherished his role alongside more notable superstars like Curry and Durant, content staying more under the radar. “It’s hard to walk away from something, you were here when it started and yeah, you just want to stay on the train as long as you can,” Thompson said last year. One of the most dynamic shooters in the league, Thompson also is a top defender who often draws the assignment of an opponent’s star player. Golden State would now have Thompson and Curry locked up for the long haul, which will mean so much for the franchise as it moves into new Chase Center in San Francisco next season. Curry received a $201 million, five-year contract last July.
Angels pitcher Skaggs Mark Rypien charged found dead in hotel room with domestic assault The Associated Press
ARLINGTON, Texas — Los Angeles Angels pitcher Tyler Skaggs died Monday at the age of 27, stunning Major League Baseball and leading to the postponement of the team’s game against the Texas Rangers. Skaggs was with the team in Texas when he was found unresponsive in his hotel room, police said. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Police said they are investigating, but no foul play is suspected at this time. Skaggs was “an important part of the Angels Family,” the team said in a statement. “Our thoughts and prayers are with his wife, Carli, and his entire family during this devastating time.” Skaggs, who would have turned 28 on July 13, had been a regular in the Angels’ starting rotation since late 2016, when he returned from Tommy John surgery. He struggled with injuries repeatedly over the past three seasons but persevered to become a valuable starter in Los Angeles’ injury-plagued rotation. The left-hander had just pitched on Saturday, allowing two runs in 4 1/3 innings in a 4-0 loss to Oakland. Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred said he was “deeply saddened” by Skaggs’ death. “We will support the Angels’ organization
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
Los Angeles Angels starting pitcher Tyler Skaggs throws against the Oakland Athletics during Saturday in Anaheim, Calif. through this most difficult period, and we will make a variety of resources available to Tyler’s teammates and other members of the baseball family,” Manfred said in a statement. Skaggs was born in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Woodland Hills, in the far western part of the sprawling San Fernando Valley. He graduated from Santa Monica High School in 2009, when the Angels drafted him in the first round. The Angels traded Skaggs to Arizona in 2010, and he started his bigleague career with 13 appearances over two seasons for the Diamondbacks. The Angels reacquired him in December 2013, and he has won 25 games over five seasons with the club. Skaggs started a career-
high 24 games last season, going 8-10 with a 4.02 ERA. He missed playing time in April this season with a sprained ankle but came back strong. Skaggs was part of the same Angels’ draft class as Mike Trout, and they were roommates in the low minor leagues before Skaggs was traded to Arizona. They played on the same team in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in 2010. Cleveland Indians ace Trevor Bauer, who played with Skaggs in the Diamondbacks organization, tweeted: “We came up together. We won together. We laughed and celebrated together. Today, we all lose and mourn together.” Skaggs grew up in Santa Monica just west of Los Angeles, but but rooted for the Angels instead of the closer Dodgers.
SPOKANE — Former Super Bowl hero Mark Rypien, who announced last year that he believes he suffered brain damage while playing in the NFL that caused him to behave violently at times, pleaded not guilty on Monday to a charge of domestic violence against his wife. Rypien was taken to the Spokane County Jail on Sunday afternoon after his arrest near a bank on the north side of the city. A witness who saw the couple called police and said Rypien’s wife alleged he had struck her. She was evaluated and did not need medical treatment, police said. Rypien, 56, was released without bail; his next court appearance was scheduled for July 31. Prosecutors initially asked for a no-contact order between Rypien and his wife at the brief hearing, but she argued against that. There was no answer at the Spokane offices of the Rypien Foundation, which battles childhood cancer. Rypien’s attorney, Chris Bugbee, did not immediately return a telephone message. Rypien announced last year he believes he has Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, caused by repeated concussions while playing in the NFL. He said he believes this condition caused him to have erratic and violent behav-
The Associated Press
Former Super Bowl hero Mark Rypien plays in the American Century Championship golf tournament in Stateline, Nev., in July 2014. Rypien has been arrested in Spokane on suspicion of domestic violence. ior. “I’ve been down the darkest path,” he said last year. “I’ve made some horrible, horrible mistakes.” Rypien said that in the past he has attempted suicide, hired prostitutes and suffers from persistent depression and anxiety. He was a lead plaintiff among 4,500 former players who won a settlement related to CTE in 2013. Rypien was the most valuable player of Super Bowl XXVI after the 1991 season as the Washington Redskins beat the Buffalo Bills. In a lengthy interview with The SpokesmanReview newspaper last year, Rypien acknowledged that he was also involved in a domestic violence inci-
dent with his wife in 2017. “I got angry and I threw her on the bed a couple of times,” Rypien said. He and his wife blamed a medication change for his behavior. A high-school quarterback in Spokane who went on to star at nearby Washington State University, Rypien was drafted by the Redskins in 1986. He played in four games during his last season in the NFL with the Indianapolis Colts in 2001, although he did not play between 1998 and 2000. Numerous NFL players have reported a wide variety of problems related to CTE, including homelessness, erratic behavior, suicide and other early deaths.
Briefly . . . 15-year-old beats Venus Williams WIMBLEDON, England — Coco Gauff grew up admiring the Williams sisters. Picked up a tennis racket as a little girl because of them. And on Monday at Wimbledon, still just 15, Gauff beat one of them.
Gauff, the youngest competitor to qualify at the All England Club in the professional era, showed the poise and power of a much older, much more experienced player, pulling off a 6-4, 6-4 victory in the first round over Venus Williams, who at 39 was the oldest woman in the field. When it ended, Gauff dropped her racket and put her hands on her head. After a handshake and
exchange of words at the net with Williams, Gauff knelt by her sideline chair and tears welled in her eyes. Up in the stands, her father leaped out of his seat. “Honestly, I don’t really know how to feel. This is the first time I ever cried after a match. Or winning, obviously; I’ve cried after a loss before,” said Gauff, who is based in Florida. “I don’t even know how to explain how I feel.”
This was her third tour-level match; Williams has played more than 1,000. This was Gauff’s first match at Wimbledon, where Williams has played more than 100 and won five titles. “It didn’t really seem real, for a moment,” said Gauff’s father, Corey, between handshakes and slaps on the back and requests for selfies from spectators leaving No. 1 Court. “On the walk to the
court, I was walking behind her. She was excited. I was excited. She seemed confident, but I wasn’t sure if it was false confidence or she really was. I just said to her: This match is really magical. Just enjoy it. Your first Wimbledon main draw and you’re on a main court against somebody you looked up to from the beginning.” The Associated Press
BMX: State championships coming in late August Continued from B1 13 intermediate — John Machado Jr., Steilacoom. 14 intermediate — Christian Marshall, Spokane. 15 intermediate — Colby Groves, Port Angeles. 17-20 intermediate — Erick Rios, Federal Way. 41-45 intermediate — Paul Baur, Belfair. 46-50 intermediate — Aaron Tate, Port Orchard. 51 & over intermediate — Danny Bushnell, Vancouver. 6 girls — Kaydian McClure, Gig Harbor. 8 girls — Jordan Taylor, Bonney Lake. 9 girls — Olivia Guyll, Port Orchard. 10 girls — Mia Molzan, Gig Harbor. 11 girls — Tess Bailey, Lake Tapps. 13 girls — Sydney Garonzik, Lake Tapps. 15-16 girls — Sierra Altendorf, Everett. 7 expert — Wyatt Christensen, Kingston. 9 expert — Kaiden Ireland, Everson. 10 expert — Stevie Lucash, Kent. 11 expert — Jasper Altendorf, Everett. 12 expert — True Bailey, Lake Tapps. 13 expert — Dylan Gasca, Buckley.
14 expert — Kyle Norton, Vancouver. 15 expert — Zaine Stenson, Maple Valley. 17-20 expert — Trenton Moore, Port Orchard. 21-25 expert — Jake Shepherd, Buckley. 36-40 expert — Kyle Hutchins, Bremerton. 41-45 expert — Brent Lee, University Place. 46-50 expert — Darren Simmons, Tacoma. Saturday, June 29, Race for Life Double 13-14 girls cruiser — Hidi Cramer, Des Moines. 10 cruiser — Rhett Smith, Moses Lake. 12 cruiser — Brian Belbin, Port Angeles. 14 cruiser — Paxtyn Hermes, Pasco. 31-35 cruiser — Adam Finch, Bellingham. 46-50 cruiser — Jre Sullivan, Seattle. 5 & under novice — Atticus Reed, Port Angeles. 6 novice — Beau Browning, Port Angeles. 8 novice — Ben Keeler, Port Angeles. 10 novice — Sky Wasankari, Port Angeles. 13 novice — Russel Gaither, Sequim.
15 novice — Chase Schweitzer, Port Hadlock. 26-35 novice — Kyley Glenn, Kent. 41-45 novice — Tracy Smith, Moses Lake. 6 intermediate — Dominic Casebolt, Port Angeles. 8 intermediate — Alison Gallagher, Spokane. 9 intermediate — Kellan Miller, Seattle. 11 intermediate — Vaunn Zimmerman, Redmond. 13 intermediate — Kaylee Case, Kennewick. 14 intermediate — Christian Marshall, Spokane. 51 & over intermediate — Brad Working, Olympia. 8 girls — Bailey McCrea, Port Orchard. 11 girls — Tess Bailey, Lake Tapps. 9 expert — Damien Comeau, Snoqualmie. 11 expert — Max Gosciniak, University Place. 12 expert — True Bailey, Lake Tapps. 13 expert — Garrett Johnson, Spokane. 14 expert — Duke Hutchinson, Kirkland. 15 expert — Nathan Wells, Mount Vernon. 21-25 expert — Jake Shepherd, Buckley.
From left, Thomas Dalgardno, Andy Goldsbary, Cash Coleman, Zebastian Ferrier-Dixon, Mason Beal and Jackson Beal teamed up to raised $1,580 during the Race for Life event at the Lincoln BMX Park. Not pictured are Evan Hernandez and George Williams. The proceeds are going to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. The track also raised $1,350.
B4
Fun ’n’ Advice
Tuesday, July 2, 2019
Dilbert
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Baby keeps couple together
by Scott Adams
For Better or For Worse
❘
Garfield
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DEAR ABBY: Four years ago, I became friends with a co-worker and things took off too fast. Within a couple of months, I became pregnant. We were thrown together without really even knowing each other because, deep down, we wanted a family and decided to stick it out. Well, it’s been a hell of a ride. I ended up having to leave because neither one of us was happy, and it wasn’t the greatest environment to raise our daughter in. I came back a few months later, and we have been trying our best to get along and be great parents for her. But our past issues with each other constantly raise their ugly heads and cause problems that make us want to split up. I have suggested individual and couples counseling, but he isn’t into it, and it’s always a blame game between us. I’m beyond tired of it. My head says go, but my heart says stay. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Weighing the Pros and Cons
by Lynn Johnston
Classic Doonesbury (1993) ❘
Frank & Ernest
by G.B. Trudeau
❘
by Bob and Tom Thaves
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by Brian Basset
TAURUS (April 20May 20): Participate, share your skills and make new friends. Don’t let change anger you; embrace what’s new and exciting. You will discover something you didn’t realize you’d enjoy doing. Take care of requests made by a peer or relative. 4 stars GEMINI (May 21June 20): Speak up, clear the air and make your decision known. If you don’t say anything, you’ll have no business complaining. Look for a way to backtrack if you have made too many promises. Put a stop to overspending and indulgent tendencies. 3 stars
ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
CANCER (June 21July 22): Make the most with what you’ve got, and you will be surprised with what you come up with. Use your imagination, and deal with matters concerning others responsibly. Consider your motives before you make a commitment. Honesty is the best policy. 3 stars
❘
by Hank Ketcham
Van Buren
Pickles ❘
by Brian Crane
ate family of the deceased. I really cannot find a way to forgive her actions. Hurt and Angry in the East
Dear Hurt: Please accept my sympathy for the loss of your mother. What happened is one of the regrettable aspects of living in the 21st century. Your cousin might be part of the generation that thinks every detail of their lives must be put online for consumption by an audience waiting with bated breath. If my guess is accurate, then I agree doing it without first running it by the immediate family was insensitive and thoughtless. Not knowing your cousin, I don’t know whether it was a “self-serving grab for attention.” However, what’s done is done. It’s over. I hope you won’t allow this to ruin your relationship with this relative or your memories of your dear mother. Dear Abby: I’ve always wondered when it’s appropriate for a couple to start giving gifts as a couple vs. individually. I’ve seen couples who start early on in their relationship and others who have been together for what feels like forever who still individually give gifts. Wondering in Texas Dear Wondering: There are no hard and fast rules about something like this. It might depend on all the circumstances involved, and also might have something to do with how independent from each other the couple is.
________ Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, the late Pauline Phillips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.
The Last Word in Astrology ❘
by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer
Dennis the Menace
Abigail
Dear Abby: My mother passed away a short time ago, and my cousin immediately posted about the funeral on social media without even mentioning me in her post, or asking me how I felt about such a posting. Have people grown so self-centered and uncaring about other people’s feelings that they think posts like this are appropriate without asking the immediate family’s feelings on the matter? It seems to me it’s a self-serving grab for attention and sympathy without any respect for the immedi-
ARIES (March 21April 19): Keep your emotions in check. Channel your energy into something constructive. Embrace a positive attitude and a fun-loving approach to life. Now is not the time to let anyone push you into a debate. Live, love and laugh. 2 stars
Rose is Rose
DEAR ABBY
Dear Weighing: Your child’s father might prefer to play the blame game because he’s unwilling to own up to his part in the problem. Dragging an unwilling partner to counseling would be unproductive. However, that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t go without him. If you do, you will have a clearer understanding about whether and why you should continue living together. Keep in mind that a household where there is conflict is not a healthy environment for a child.
by Jim Davis
Red and Rover
Peninsula Daily News
by Eugenia Last
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Aggressive behavior will meet with opposition and unwanted change. You’ll get better results if you are willing to compromise. Know what you want, and offer something of equal value. Personal improvements will encourage you to take better care of yourself. 3 stars
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21): Take a step back, be reserved and live within your means. Taking better care of your health, money and meaningful relationships will help you bypass an argument. Self-improvement should be your prerogative and romance a priority. 3 stars
VIRGO (Aug. 23Sept. 22): Self-evaluation will inspire positive change. Your example will set a standard for others to follow. Be the one who represents goodness and practicality, and your reputation as the go-to person in your circle will put you in a dominant position. 4 stars
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19): Look for alternatives if you don’t like what’s happening. If someone close to you wants to make a change, it doesn’t mean you have to follow suit. Take the path that feels as though it will lead to a destination of choice. 3 stars
LIBRA (Sept. 23Oct. 22): Concentrate on what you can accomplish instead of fighting a losing battle. Personal improvement will lead to better health and an understanding of who and what is right for you. Spend less and do more. 2 stars SCORPIO (Oct. 23Nov. 21): Dream it, believe it and do it. Don’t sit on the sideline because someone refuses to join you. Go it alone, do your own thing and satisfy your needs. A trip or meeting will help initiate your plans. 5 stars
The Family Circus
❘
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 18): You can paint a picture for someone, but that doesn’t mean he or she will like what you have to offer. Look inward, and do what is best for you. A personal change should be based on practicality, not to appease someone. 3 stars PISCES (Feb. 19March 20): Participation will lead to new beginnings. What you learn about yourself and what you want will pave the way to less confusion and better choices. Walk away from conflict and those heading in a direction that doesn’t suit your lifestyle. 5 stars
by Bil and Jeff Keane
Classified
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Tuesday, July 2, 2019 B5 Tuesday, July 2, 2019 B5
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4026 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Clallam County General Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County
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B U R I A L P LOT : H a l f cost, premium location. $1,400/obo. (360)808-0611 Customer Service Representative City of Port Angeles: Part-time, 16 hours/ week. Some benefits. $17.514-$20.910/hour. For more information and to apply visit: www.cityofpa.us. Recruitment closes 7/12/19. COPA is an E.O.E. FORD: ‘96, Ranger, Extra cab, 4 cyl, 5 spd, has new clutch. $1,000. (360)457-4383
3010 Announcements ESP Sprint Boat Tickets for sale at the following locations: Lowe r E l h wa Fo o d a n d Fuel, Mobile Music, IGS (PA); Doghouse Powder Coating (SEQ). Race dates, July 27th, Sept 7th. Hi Neah Bay, I’m returning to my birthplace this week! Looking for Makah art items, so Theresa, Billy, Greg, Melissa, get ready. Micah, I hope the mask I’ve paid for is ready. Thanks, Eric Orzeck
3020 Found Found: Brown, tabby m a l e c a t W. PA . Ca l l Pe n i n s u l a Fr i e n d s o f Animals, 360-452-0414. FOUND: Horse, Olympic Discovery Trail, at mile post 18, in Joyce, call to id. (360)928-1148 FOUND KITTEN: Grey kitten, 10-12 weeks old. Fo u n d i n M t A n g e l e s area, PA. 360-775-5154
3023 Lost LOST CAT: 7yo male black and white Tuxedo, L i n c o l n a n d Pe a b o d y Sts., PA. 360-775-5154 LOST HORSE: male 17 yo C h ev. Ca n . bl a ck white shoulder. Agate Beach Rd 360-775-5154
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G L AS S P LY: 17 ’, s o ft top, 280 Volvo Penta inboard/outboard drive on trailer, Evinrude 15hp troller, trim tabs, depth finder, GPS, Boss marine FM/CD player, crab pot, line and pot puller, down riggers, anchor, float coat and 2 vests. Other extras. Nice clean unit. $6500. (360)461-7429
PLACE YOUR AD ONLINE With our new Classified Wizard you can see your ad before it prints! www.peninsula dailynews.com 911 Dispatcher (Communications Officer) City of Port Angeles is looking to hire multiple 911 Dispatcher positions. $21.48/hour plus excellent benefits. Testing will take place Friday July 12th at the Vern Burton Community Center. To apply visit Public Safety Testing at www.public safetytesting.com to create a profile and register for the test. For more information please call 360-417-4510 or email afountai@ cityofpa.us. APPLY NOW! Join our Birth to Three team. Must be certified teacher OR Early Childhood Degree, special ed endorsement for both certs. 20 hours a week 47 / hr. + mileage, contracted position. Send resume to PO Box 1787, Forks WA 98331 or call Linda 360-374-9340 CAREGIVERS HELP WANTED. Hiring for Personal Care caregivers. Requirements: Must be 18, HCA or CNA, CPR/First Aid, T B te s t , M u s t p a s s background check, have reliable vehicle, c u r r e n t d r i v e r ’s l i cense, and auto insurance. Contact: www.concernedcitizen spnw.org Call Shannon S at: 360-374-9340
4026 Employment General DIETARY AIDE: P/T, Apply in person, Park View Villas, 8th & G Streets, PA. HAIR STYLIST needed, full service salon. Sat, Mon, and Tues. Hadlock area. 360-385-3953
Clallam County Employment Opportunities For complete job listings and to get an application Visit: www.clallam.net
Hi Neah Bay, I’m returning to my birthplace this week! Looking for Makah art items, so Theresa, Billy, Greg, Melissa, get ready. Micah, I hope the mask I’ve paid for is ready. Thanks, Eric Orzeck Human Resources Specialist City of Port Angeles: Part-time 20 hours/ week. Some benefits. $26.62-$31.81/hour. For more information and to apply visit: www.cityofpa.us. First review of applications is July 15th. COPA is an E.O.E Customer Service Representative City of Port Angeles: Part-time, 16 hours/ week. Some benefits. $17.514-$20.910/hour. For more information and to apply visit: www.cityofpa.us. Recruitment closes 7/12/19. COPA is an E.O.E. HELP WANTED. Family Resource Coordinator, Port Angeles area. Join our Birth to Three team. On the job training. 30 to 40 hours a week 18 / hr. + mileage, Send resume to PO Box 1787, Forks WA 98331 or call Linda 360-374-9340 Human Resources Specialist City of Port Angeles: Part-time 20 hours/ week. Some benefits. $26.62-$31.81/hour. For more information and to apply visit: www.cityofpa.us. First review of applications is July 15th. COPA is an E.O.E MAINTENANCE CLEANER Jefferson Transit PT To w n s e n d WA . Tw o openings for a full-time position responsible for bus cleaning and fueling, shelter cleaning and general nonskilled labor. Evening or weekend work hours may be required. Job description, application and information available at www.jefferson tran sit.com or by mail or at Jefferson Transit, 63 4 Corners Road, Port Towns e n d , WA 9 8 3 6 8 . (360) 385-3020, ext.119. Closes 5:00 PM, July 15 th. EOE
OlyCAP Early Childhood Services is now accepting applications for the following positions: Teacher, Teacher Assistant, Classroom Aide, Child Development Sub. Application and job descriptions at: www.olycap.org or call (360) 452-4726. EOE.
PORT ANGELES CARRIER ROUTES AVAILABLE Peninsula Daily News Circulation Departments We are looking for individuals interested in routes. Must be reliable, 18 yrs. of age, have a valid Washington State Drivers License, proof of insurance and a reliable vehicle. Early morning delivery, deadline for delivery: 6:30 a.m. Call (360)452-4507 or email: Circulation@ peninsuladaily news.com
4080 Employment Wanted Father & Sons’ Landscaping. Lawn maintenence, 1X cleanups, weeding, pruning, organic and chemical fertilization. In business since 1992. (360)681-2611 GREEN CLEANING in Sequim. 360-582-7855 Residential and Commercial Remodels and Repairs, interior and exterior painting in Sequim and Port Angeles.General Contractor with over 30 years experience. 360-461-6175 bvmngmt@outlook.com Wa LIc Bigvavm822L2 We are licensed, bonded, and insured.
105 Homes for Sale Clallam County
180 Degree View of Strait Gorgeous 180 degree v i ew o f t h e b e a u t i f u l Strait and Vancouver Island with Mountain Views too. All utilities are i n i n c l u d i n g p o w e r, phone, private well, and s e p t i c sys te m . L o t i s Tow Truck drivers need- ready to build on with ed, CDL preferred. house pad completed. 360-457-4484 Property is very private And secluded yet close to Joyce. Geotechnical study completed and fully surveyed. MLS#321009 $349,900 Patti Morris 360-461-9008 JACE The Real Estate Company
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Comfortable County Living This wonderful Pacific NW style home is warm and inviting. The interiors display a spacious kitchen with granite countertops and walk-in pantry, living room with a free-standing stove, 3 br, an office, and a generous sized family room. There is an over-sized attached garage with a free-standing stove, a bunk house, a large commercial size shop, and a covered RV carport. The landscape is c o m p l e te w i t h fl ow e r beds, old growth trees, and fruit trees. MLS#331058 $485,000 Lynn Moreno 360.477.5582 Olympic Real Estate Group Commercial Property – 1.45 Acres 4 Separate Commercial Zoned Lots with building pad and maximum traffic exposure on North side of Highway 101 just east of Del Guzzi Drive traffic light. 2 Driveway aprons approved by WSDOT – 1 already in. Property is surveyed, has approved Drainage plan, and Geotechnical Site Review. Utilities are at or near the property line. Owner may finance with substantial down. MLS#320431 $119,900 Patti Morris 360-461-9008 JACE The Real Estate Company
2.3 Acres With Old Barn L o c a te d o n t h e We s t side of Port Angeles, this property is mostly wooded with some clearing and fruit trees. The property is currently lacking all utilities. City water, power, and sewer are available to the property but have not been installed. MLS#330873 $139,000 Tom Blore 360-808-6981 PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE FSBO: Mountain view, 2 6 3 0 s f. h o m e , p l u s apar tment. Lg kitchen w/island, 3Br, 3Ba, detached 4 car garage, handicap ramps. 30 Mantle Rd. $415,000. (360)809-9351
PLACE YOUR AD ONLINE With our new Classified Wizard you can see your ad before it prints! www.peninsula dailynews.com
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY Investment to purchase a light industrial manufacturing complex. Custom designed for engineering and manufacturing welded aluminum vessels + many industry specific upgrades! Current long-term NNN lease to a single tenant who is well established. Ideal location on Hwy 101 b e t we e n S e q u i m and Port Angeles, 2.44 acres zoned RLC, with 3 structures for a total of 23,350 square feet of s p a c e . E XC E L L E N T OPPORTUNITY MLS#330993/1473013 $2,575,000 MaryAnn Miller 360.774.6900 TOWN & COUNTRY
LOCATION & VIEWS! Great Opportunity, Great L o c a t i o n , Ac ro s s t h e street from the Strait of Juan de Fuca sits this classic 3 br 2 ba farmhouse with 1 br cottage. This property has it all with water and mountain views, classic barns and 964 sf guest cottage, perfect for a rental or visiting guests. Numerous fruit trees throughout the property. There is plenty of room for a mini farm; the perfect location to raise chickens, horses or plant veggies or lavender. The Sequim dream come true. MLS#330747 $425,000 Craig & Darel Tenhoff 206-853-4743 Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim
Great opportunity for investors looking to get into the lucrative vacation rental market in Port Angeles. Separate entry to the basement would allow you to run a business out of the basement while living fulltime in the main house, or maybe it’s time to open that cafe you’ve always wanted, plenty of off-street parking and storage make this an ideal property for use in many different commercial endeavors. Br ing your dreams and make them a reality. MLS#330783 $215,000 Molly Herring 360-461-7090 Windermere Port Angeles
New Appliances & Designer Styling Immerse yourself in incredible views of Protection Island, Puget Sound and beyond! This comfor table and peaceful A DA c o m p l i a n t h o m e has everything you need to relax and feel on top of the world. 3 plus br, 3.5 ba 3,977 sf, 33,106 sf lot. MLS#1473004 Heidi Kaas WINDEREMERE (206)719-2224
Great Views, Great Location This home has picturesque panoramic views from nearly every room in the house. It is located within 3.5 miles of city limits and sits in a very private location. The design incorporates floor to ceiling windows in the living room to take advantage of the ever changing nautical views. Cedar ceilings and maple floors give this home a feeling of warmth with an added touch of class. The entertaining kitchen is complete with a propane stove, granite counter tops, ample counter space, center island, sizable dining area, and a delightful sunroom. The impeccable landscaping is quite the conversation piece. This home is a featured model home for Lindahl homes. Call for a complete list of amenites. MLS#to come $685,000. Lynn Moreno 360.477.5582 Olympic Real Estate Group Immaculate, bright & welcoming Rare, Single-Level 3 BD plus 2BA Home on 1-ac with garages plus huge 42’x30’ RV garage, 2 workshops with bench, m a t u re f r u i t o rc h a rd , new roof (2019), new front porch (2019). MLS#330963 $469,000 JACE The Real Estate Company INVESTOR ALERT B e a u t i f u l re m a r ka bl e building oppor tunity in t h e C i t y. S s i d e m ay have mountain views. Some timber value. City water and sewer at street. 2.4 Acres MLS#321394 $289,000 Linda French 360-461-0803 John L. Scott Sequim PARTIAL WATER VIEW LAND Quiet and private with trees and partial water views, 4.89 acres. Perc test done for pressurized system, well (18gpm), electricity and irrigation o n t h e p ro p e r t y. S i te cleared for building area. Located bet ween Sequim and Pt Angeles. MLS#330726/1451889 $114,900 Cathy Reed (360) 460-1800 Windermere Sequim East
PRICE REDUCED! Amazing custom built home 3Br 2Ba 2831sf. on a pr ivate 2.40 ac. Brazilian Cherr y hard wood floors, custom cabinets, granite counter tops, 9 ft. ceilings, crown molding, formal dining room, den/office, cozy propane fire place to heat up the living room. Master bedroom has a walk in closet, separate s h owe r to i l e t , d o u bl e sinks and a jetted tub. Large deck in the back that can be entered from the living room or master bed room. Over sized 3 car garage(1043 sf) R.V. port with concrete pad. MLS#330732 $609,000 Mike Fuller 360-477-9189 Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim
Private, Secluded 22.17 Acre Lot Beautiful property with 2 ac parked out building site with balance in timber designation. Power, water, phone, and Crescent Water installed to property line. You won’t find a more beautiful lot to build on. Enjoy plenty of riding trails, electronic gate, Seller says “Sell Now” so bring all offers. Owner may finance with substantial down. MLS#310453 $269,900 Patti Morris NEW PRICE! 360-461-9008 2 BD, 2.5 BA. 2670 SF 1 story with finished base- JACE The Real Estate Company ment, guest BD/BA with family room, fireplace on RELAX AND ENTERboth levels, situated on TAIN! cul-de-sac for privacy. Beautiful custom home Sunland amenities; beach access, pool, ten- with skylights and vaulted ceiling. 3BR, 2BA, livnis and more! ing room with propane MLS#1447723 FP, for mal dining and $422,000 kitchen eating area. MeTyler Conkle rillat kitchen cabinets lic# 112797 with pull out shelves. Pri(360) 670-5978 vate fenced back yard WINDERMERE with patio, southern exSUNLAND posure and MTN view MLS#330252/1410001 WHY PAY $399,900 SHIPPING ON Sheryl Burley INTERNET lic# 41329 360-460-9363 PURCHASES? Windermere Sequim East
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RESIDENTIAL Terrific mini farm on 3.9 acres. Enjoy spacious 2500+- sq. ft. 4 bedroom 3.5 bathroom home, small barn, dog kennel, garden shed, and end of Ross Lane privacy. All this 7-8 minutes from downtown Port Angeles. Property fenced for livestock and fenced garden area. MLS #331071 $349,000 Paul Beck 360.461.0644 Professional Realty Services Sequim Prime Commercial Property Sequim’s busiest interchange, 0.93 acres, Hwy 101 and River Road, SE corner of 101 and River Rd, multiple commercial u s e s, bu i l t i n 19 9 1 – 1769 sf, zoning is highway commercial, unobstructed mtn views, 1.34 adjacent acres also for sale MLS#321485 $575,000 Team Thomsen (360)808-0979 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY SERENITY IN SUNLAND Tastefully updated triLevel, 2 BD, 2 BA, new c u s to m k i t c h e n , n ew master bath with walk-in tiled shower, front deck overlooks beautiful landscaping. A piece of h e ave n w i t h S u n l a n d Amenities! MLS#1477577 / 331067 $359,000 Terry Peterson Lic#107780 360-797-4802 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
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COME SEE recent changes! At the high point in Emerald Highlands the views include mountains and ocean from this custom home that was just listed. It has just one level with 3 br and 2 ba, oversize garage, private fenced back yard, an inviting wrap around deck and easy care landscaping. Close to downtown Sequim. MLS#330639/1444499 Listed for $450,000 Deborah Norman 360.460.9961 BrokersGroup RE Professionals
Custom Home Expansive Views 9+ Private Acres The sweeping views of the valley, pasture land, the Straits of Juan de Fuca, and BC from this mountain top home are simply gorgeous. The home style is Colonial with a wrap around d e ck . B e a u t i f u l h a rd wood floors grace this wonderful home throughout the main living space. The design includes a gourmet kitchen with a 12.5 ft granite center island, butlers pantry, and large w a l k - i n p a n t r y. T h e home is ADU compliant. There are two attached garages and a heated/ insulated 900 sf shop with a bath attached. This space could be a separate living quarters. Call for further details. MLS#330499 $790,000 Lynn Moreno 360.477.5582 Olympic Real Estate Group
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ATTENTION INVESTORS Very nice location and n e i g h b o r h o o d , 19 7 1 one-level duplex with spacious units, 1,016 sf, 2 br 1 ba each, fireplaces, carports in back with extra par king spots around. All city utilities with separate meters for both. Great financials and rental history. Just listed. MLS#331057 $275,000 Ania Pendergrass 360-461-3973 Remax Evergreen
Classified
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Peninsula Daily News Peninsula daily news
Tuesday, July 2, 2019 Tuesday, July 2, 2019 Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
ACROSS 1 Former NFL running back Jennings who won “Dancing With the Stars” in 2017 7 Cuban dance 12 Govt. Rx watchdog 15 Give in (to) 16 Thorny plant 17 Belonging to us 18 Invisible impediment in the workplace 20 The Pac-12’s Trojans 21 Solar phenomena 22 Kooky traits 24 Flub it 25 Able to speak easily, as a language 27 Badly mistaken 31 Average schlub 34 53-Down noise 35 Not worth debating 36 Is in the red 37 Civil suit cause 38 Predators in pool halls 40 Designer Jacobs 41 Set in stone, say 42 Benevolent 43 Hägar’s wife 44 Paul Newman caper film 46 Comedian Elayne 48 Full of moxie 49 Theater segment 50 “Reservoir Dogs” co-star Harvey 52 Find at a dig 57 Blackjack eleven 58 Invisible impediment in the sky 61 Twitter guffaw 62 Chose (to) 63 Bit of ramen 64 Football lineman 65 Prerequisites 66 “Communist Manifesto” co-author with Marx DOWN 1 Garb for many a Dickens waif 2 Rights-defending org. 3 Read quickly
By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle — horizontally, vertically, diagonally and even backward. Find them, circle each letter of the word and strike it off the list. The leftover letters spell the WONDERWORD. VIRGINIA CAVALIERS WIN MARCH MADNESS Solution: 12 letters
G U Y A L P N N A M T T A T S 4 Gas brand with toy trucks 5 Marketing jargon 6 Interior designs 7 Grand slam quartet, in baseball shorthand 8 Internet address letters 9 1002, in old Rome 10 Regal meals 11 Participates in a debate 12 Invisible impediment in the theater 13 Nightfall 14 Curved sections 19 French “to be” 23 Workers’ earnings 25 Scandinavian cruise sight 26 “Please understand ... ” 27 Eight-member ensemble 28 Suds 29 Invisible impediment in science fiction 30 Packaged buy including shower curtain, towels, etc.
Monday’s Puzzle Solved
A D E F E A T E B T N C A I A
© 2019 Andrews McMeel Syndication
R E A S F R R T I A H M N A L
O E S I A D E O M Y S A T S I
S T O X N K N E M N E R H E E
R D N T S H N I X O N K O M R
E U U A U T T E N N E B N O S
www.wonderword.com
D I A R K E E Q B T M U N C A A ◯ ◯ ◯ ◯ R K E R A B T T N A E E K D L R E O H K R C T A S C A T E H S S Y I K T R E J R A L T A 7/2
Adams, Anthony, Athlete, Badocchi, Basketball, Bennett, Bracket, Burg, Caffaro, Cavaliers, Clark, Coach, College, Culver, Defeat, Diakite, Draft, Duke, Dunk, Fans, Final, Guy, Huff, Hunter, Jerome, Katstra, Kersey, Key, Mark, Morant, NCAA, Nixon, Odiase, Play, Quarter, Raiders, Rank, Salt, Season, Selection, Stattmann, Task, Team, Tournament Yesterday’s Answer: Reflex
ERMIP
JYEON ©2019 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
32 Join the flow of traffic 33 Basketball Hall of Famer Robertson 35 Like some stray mutts 38 Slalom setting 39 Clue 43 Producer of curls 45 Attaches with rope 46 Cutting remark 47 Number on a pump
MOVING BOXES: 25 or s o, s m a l l , m e d i u m , large. $1 ea. Wardrobe. $3 ea. (360)681-2451 OFFICE CHAIR: Leather, fair condition. All adjustments work, $29. 360-477-6100 Original Budweiser bottle by Car l Conrad, stamped with DOC, $75. 360-452-6842 PET DOOR: Pet Safe, Medium, 8 1/8 X 11 3/4, new in box, $15. 360-808-6009
50 Curly leafy green 51 Micro or macro subj. 52 Tacks on 53 Pond critter 54 Staff helper 55 Phone in a pocket 56 “__ chic!” 59 Sporty truck, briefly 60 Nancy Drew’s beau
Rotophase: 240 v. 1 PH to 240 v. 3 PH; 3 HP As new with control panel, $125. 360 732-4311. SHABBY CHIC: Butler 5-gallon steel can. Perfect for garden decor! $25. 360-457-9789
STOVE: Elec with simulated fire, window, forced air heat, $200. 360-681-8761 TABLE and 4 CHAIRS: very nice kitchen table, $150. Excellent cond. 541-617-9348 Weighted Blanket: 15 Lbs; 60x80” Gray with velour cover, $45. 360-406-0657
Peninsula Classified 360-452-8435
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• 1 Ad Per Week • No Garage Sales, • 4 Lines Firewood, Livestock, Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com • Private Party Pets, or Construction Only Materials.
E
RE CALLS NOFPHONE
“
Yesterday’s
SINGLE LEVEL OPEN CONCEPT Enjoy the good life in this lovely 3 br, 2 ba home in a friendly age 50+ community. Amazing water views from the open concept kitchen, living, dining area and from the master bedroom. There are no stairs to enter this home or any on the interior. MLS#330857/1462716 $325,000 Lynn Bedford 360-417-2806 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY
SEQ: Nice duplex, 2 br, 2 b a , ava i l . 8 / 01 , n o pets/smoking, 1 yr lease, $1,100 plus deposit/last. (360)681-0205
505 Rental Houses Clallam County
Properties by
Inc.
(360) 452-1326 portangeleslandmark.com
(360)
417-2810
VOTED #1 RENTAL AGENCY IN CLALLAM COUNTY 2018! LET OUR FRIENDLY TEAM MANAGE YOUR RENTAL PROPERTY WE OFFER • Protection of Your Investment • Tenant Screening • Rent Collection • Direct Bank Deposits • Facilitate Maintenance • Online Statement Access 24/7/365 • Friendly Service & More…
WE LOOK FORWARD TO WORKING WITH YOU VISIT US AT
PORTANGELESRENTALS.COM OR
1111 CAROLINE ST. PORT ANGELES
Inc.
(360) 452-1326 330 E First St • Suite1 Port Angeles, WA 98362
portangeleslandmark.com
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
”
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: CLOUT DADDY EFFECT CHEESE Answer: Her father handed the business over to her, and she — SUCCEEDED
6100 Misc. Merchandise
8142 Garage Sales Sequim
1122 Quantum Power GARAGE SALE: SeChair. Like new 1122 quim Fri, July 5th 9-3 Quantum Power Chair and Sat, July 6th 9-2. new charger and battery Sequim, Go west of with ROHO Air Seat was Cays Road follow the $1500 now just $750. arrows to 551 West SEQ: Nice duplex, 2 br, 360-681-2127 Nelson Rd. This sale 2 b a , ava i l . 8 / 01 , n o pets/smoking, 1 yr lease, ‘64 Lincoln, $1500; ‘55 isn’t just in the garage $1,100 plus deposit/last. C h e v y P / U p r o l l i n g it’s also in the drive (360)681-0205 f r a m e, $ 5 0 0 ; c e m e n t way and house! Golf, m i xe r, $ 4 9 0 ; G i b s o n garden, furniture and $200; Cab-over lots more 1163 Commercial tractor, camper, $500; ‘53 FerRentals guson tractor, $1200; Aluminum Grumman ca- 7035 General Pets noe, $400; 1.5 ton steel truck flatbed, $1700. AKC Standard Poodle 360-461-9164 Properties by Puppies. Black, 15 wks, Inc. HONDA GENERATOR: champion pedigree, parE U 10 0 0 , 10 0 0 w a t t , (360) 452-1326 g o o d c o n d i t i o n , r u n s ents genetic health tested, shots up to date, Vet portangeleslandmark.com great, $335. checked, dewor med, 360-670-6055 smart, attentive, loving, confident, and ready to M I S C : D i a m o n d R i n g go to their new homes. .85K, appraised excel- $1,500. 360-457-3579 6035 Cemetery Plots l e n t . $ 6 , 3 0 0 . L e a t h e r Coat, green, new, tall med-large. $2,500. 360B U R I A L P LOT : H a l f 461-1917 or 360-797- 9820 Motorhomes cost, premium location. 1328 $1,400/obo. F O R E ST R I V E R : ‘ 0 8 , (360)808-0611 MISC: Lincoln, inser t, Sunseeker, 31’ 2 slides, wood stove, w/blower. 14,7k mi, 5,000 miles on 6045 Farm Fencing $300. Orchid Cactus, all new tires in Sept., big. $250. Chest freezer, $ 1 , 0 0 0 p i l l o w q u e e n & Equipment 1 y r o l d , n e a r ly n ew. mattress, drapes, well cared for, runs perfectly. Honda Harmony Tiller $100. (360)683-4014 $29,100/obo. FG500, used once, like 360-370-7770 NEW $450 Call Bill 6115 Sporting 360-683-2383 Goods F O R E ST R I V E R : ‘ 17, F R 3 , C l a s s A , 3 2 ’, 2 TRACTOR: ‘50, Ferguson, TO-20, rare, runs CAR BIKE RACK: for s l i d e s , 1 8 k m i l e s , a n d d r i ve s x l n t , n ew s a l e . S i m i l a r t o t h e $72,500. Tow car also S w a g m a n C h i n o o k available. 360-461-1912 tires, PTO, $3,250/obo. Rack. 1-1/4” or 2” hitch or 208-661-0940 (360)452-2484 receiver. Tilt down feature allows access to ITASCA: ‘03, Suncrusi6075 Heavy rear of vehicle. Locking er, 38K miles, 35ft, 8.1 pin secures rack to vehi- Chev with Allison trans, Equipment cle. $200. 360-775-6278 2 slides, excellent cond. Front load tractor (Kioti). $25,000/firm. As is, not running, with MISC: Cannon gun safe, (360)477-1895 A m e r i c a n E a g l e, key a tt a c h m e n t s , $ 6 , 4 0 0 and combination lock. TRAVEL TRAILER: ‘06 obo. (Sequim) $800. Alaskan Camper Wildwood, 27’ 2-door su360-477-3542 for truck bed, needs re- p e rs l i d e, q u e e n b e d , pairs. Best Offer. WANTED: $12,000. (360)808-1904 (360)460-1539 Small Older Crawler (bulldozer) running or 9832 Tents & not, even garden size, also small farm tractor Travel Trailers 6125 Tools with loader, Skidsteer etc, any condition. Also ‘12 Dutchman Denali, backhoe unit for tractor, WRENCH SET: MAC, excellent! Sleeps 10, old tools, anvils, vises, angle style, 11 pieces in $21K. 360-477-1966 post vises, old advertis- soft case, new. $300. (360)461-7429 ing signs, old barn items, private party. Cash. 360-204-1017 6140 Wanted
6080 Home Furnishings
Lovely 2BD 2 BA 2 car garage, w/d, $1250 mo. Mid-Century Modern avail 8/15. 360-681-8066 Scandinavian Westnofa “Siesta” lounge chairs 605 Apartments (2) with headrests and ottomans. Brown leathClallam County er, bent wood frames. Great condition! $2100 obo, Cash only. 360-457-9789 Properties by 872159538
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665 Rental Duplex/Multiplexes
962379584
STEREO: vintage AM/FM Cassette/8 Track with spkers, work great, $125. 360-582-6787
DAYTIN
105 Homes for Sale Clallam County
R E F R I G E R ATO R : 1950s FORD Philco, works good, $50. (obo) 360-460-6136 RELOAD: RCBS, press, s c a l e s, d i e s, c a l i p e r, much more. $100. (360)991-1965
TONKYT
872159533
MISC: Yeti Mug, 30 oz tumbler + Tal stainless water bottle, both $35. 360-457-6494
7/2/19
872159540
F
REE
F W S V N F F U H A C R A D V
Unscramble these Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
Mail to: Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362 Bring your ads to: Peninsula Daily News, 305 West 1st St., PA Sequim Gazette/Peninsula Daily News 147 W. Washington, Sequim or FAX to: (360)417-3507
Monday E and Tuesdays DS R F For items $200 and under A
F S L T E T F I N A L E U O A
By David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
5th wheel/trailer Prodigy COLLECTIBLE: Framed Lane: Queen Anne chair brake control, like new 1974 Calendar, Angeles that reclines, tapestry, $25, OBO.360-417-8118 Millwork/Supply (Bears). $200. 360-477-8298 $150. 360-681-7579 AMMO: 12 gauge shotL AW N E D G E R : 3 gun 7.5 birdshot, 8 box- Craftsman: 12” 1 1/8 w h e e l , 2 h p B r i g g s & es (200) rounds, $40 for HP Band Saw with built- Stratton, works great. all. 360-452-9685 in stand, $200. $200. (360)509-9015 949-241-0371 BABY JOGGER: ver y LIFE VESTS: Stearns good condition, $40. C u l t i v a t o r / e l e c t r i c : XL adult size. Two vests 360-452-6632 Craftsman , works great, $20. each, Good condiwonderful in small areas. tion. 360 379-1532 BIKE RACK: Saris Su- $25. 360-928-3447 perbones III, new, still in LOUNGE CHAIR: Wickbox. $180. DOG KENNEL: large, er and wrought iron, with 360-969-9308 18” x 30” with tray and 2 foot stool, $100. doors, good condition, 360-477-2207 B I R D CAG E : L a r g e , $40. 360-457-8221 ve r y g o o d c o n d i t i o n , LOVE SEAT: Leather, 17X17X21 inches. $25. EXTENSION LADDER: tan. $185 OBO. (360)797-1330 2 8 ’ We r n e r D 6 2 2 8 - 2 , (360)850-8896 300lb. cap. $200. BOOK: Dale Brown, 360-452-7721 L U G GAG E : 1 l a rg e “Chains of Command.” black, 2-wheeled, 1 blue $10. (360)797-4230 FREE: 4 drawer dresser, 2 - w h e e l e d , c a r r y- o n , w i t h m i r r o r, o l d , b u t $50. 360-477-9030 BOOTS, MENS: Denali, good. 360-461-7129 Thermo Lite, leather and MISC: 20 gallon sand rubber, size 10, $15. FREE: Entertainment blaster, $40; 24’ exten360-683-7435 C e n t e r, O a k , g o o d sion ladder, $95. condtion. 949-241-0370 CAMERA TRIPOD: An(360)316-1623 tique, all brass. $30. MISC: Bike rack, fits (360)681-2978 FREE: Metal crib (safe 1.25” and 2” Hitch, $85; and sturdy), mattress 20’ Extension Ladder, CANOE: Classic Aluma- and bedding, like new. $85. 949-232-3392 craft, 17’, good condi360-565-1036 tion. $200 firm MISC: CD-Rs 100ct 52x (360)681-2254 FULL BED: Complete, 700MB 80 Min $7; Sony ver y nice. Mattresses, DVD+R 25 ct 4.7 GB $5. CEILING FAN: Harbor headboard, frame, only 360-775-9680 B r e e z e , 5 2 ”, a g e d $99. 360-928-0236 bronze finish, new in MISC: Dbl sink 32”x19” box. $75. (360)582-0373 Fu l l - s i z e B e d Fra m e $ 2 5 ; R a n g e h o o d with Oak Head and Foot 5”x17”x36” $20. CHAINSAW: Stihl MS Boards, $35. 360-683-2459 250, pulls hard, but does 360-457-6388 run. $100. MISC: Executive desk (360)775-9328 INLINE SK ATES: adc h a i r. $ 4 5 . Co m p u te r justable size 4-7, great desk, holds a pr inter. Chaise Lounge: down shape. $10. with pads. $25. (360)683-0768 seat and two pillows $15. 360-457-6431 Good cond., 70x39x31, $70. 503-853-5880 JACKET: Leather Motor MISC: Lift chair, $75; Cycle, “Eagle Leather” Ta bl e, 3 c h a i rs, $ 7 5 ; d e s k w i t h b o o k s h e l f, CLOTHES: Girls, size XL, Very nice. $75. $50. 360-452-8549 10/12 ,$10 for all; boys, 360-620-2480 size 6, $10 for all. Like MISC, Like new: Dremnew. 360-477-9962 KENNEL: 12x12, $150, el, 200+ bits, $50; Pulsar 360-683-2458, lv msg generator, 1200w peak, COCOA FIBER CORES: For gardens, 7 bricks to- KITCHEN TABLE: (4) $65. 360-670-6420 tal, $35. 360-775-5248 chairs. $75/obo. MISC: Treadmill. $40. (360)670-6195 R o c k i n g c h a i r. $ 4 0 . DINING SET: Table and Backrest. $15. Lv msg. (4) chairs. $40. Sequim www.peninsula (360)504-2942 (928)304-1774 dailynews.com
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A U D I A K I T E G E L L O C
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
6081 Bargain Box 6081 Bargain Box 6081 Bargain Box 6081 Bargain Box
E E R F
7/2/19
By Emily Ludolph and Jeff Chen
C L A R K G R U B R A C K E T
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& Trades
WANTED: 16-18’ Hughes, Lund, etc. Qualit y fish boat with soft top. 360-963-2122 WANTED: Freon R12. We p ay CA $ H . R 12 R500 R11. Convenient. Certified professionals. www.refrigerantfinders 2008 HI-LO 17ft Towlite .com 312-291-9169 pop-up hard-sided trailer, bathroom, stove, waVisit our website at t e r h e a t e r , e l e c t r i c www.peninsula tongue lift, electric hook dailynews.com up(30 amp) water, sewOr email us at er, newer tires, battery, classified@ fully loaded 3400 lbs, peninsula easy towing! $8,500. dailynews.com 360-681-0199
9832 Tents & Travel Trailers 2 012 S p ri n g d a l e 2 12 R B LS 2 5 ’ Tra i l e r with Slide-out Lounge/Dinette. Trailer in excellent condition used 6-8 times since 2012. Includes Reese We i g h t D i s t r i bu t i o n Hitch along with shank and ball for tow vehicle. Full queen bed, flat screen TV, many extras. $14,250. Call (360) 385-9524 24’ Kit Campanion trailer, ‘96, double doors, AC, excel cond. $3,800. 360-775-7869 Classic 1992, 23’ Hi-Low “Fun Lite” Travel Trailer Improve your tow gas mileage significantly and camp in style with this easy-tow fully contained and collapsible trailer. It has a new electric tongue hoist, or iginal roll-out-awning (in good shape) , and an effective air conditioner. The trailer has been well maintained and is ready to travel. $5,500. Call Brent: 360-775-8969 for a viewing. HOLIDAY RAMBLER: ‘07, 24ft, Aluma lite travel trailer. $8,500. (360)457-4636 Travel Trailer: 2016, 24’ Forest River Max, loaded, LED lighting, elec. stabilzer jacks, power aw n i n g, A / C, 1 s l i d e room, excel. condition! $24,750. 360-797-3068 U t i l i t y Tra i l e r : 2000#GVWR, 4’ X 6.5’, 3/4” plywood box, $500. 360-461-3947
9802 5th Wheels 5th Wheel Trailer: Arctic Fox, 33’ quality trailer needs work. $2,700. 360-385-2311 BIG HORN by Hear tland: ‘10, 34’, 3 slides, great shape. $21,000. (360)460-6720 HITCH: Reese 5th Wheel, 16k, bed rails and hardware, can deliver. $350/obo. 360-417-8118
Place your ad with the only DAILY Classified Section on the Peninsula! PENINSULA CLA$$IFIED 360-452-8435 or 1-800-826-8435 peninsula dailynews.com
Classified
Peninsula Daily News Peninsula daily news 9808 Campers & Canopies
9050 Marine Miscellaneous Quit wishin,’ stop fishin,’ 12’ car top boat, 6 HP Suzuki, elec. motor, 2 salmon poles, reels. Gear. $995. 360-2414821
9740 Auto Service 9434 Pickup Trucks & Parts Others ENGINES: 350 Chevy, (2) 1 rebuilt like new. $900. 1 in pieces. $100. (360)457-6540 (360)460-3105 cell
9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect.
2 0 0 7 J AYC O S e l e c t 1 2 H W Te n t Tr a i l e r sleeps 6, Queen & King beds, furnace, stove, hot water heater, Shower & toilet, 2 propane tanks $4,500. Includes Champion Gas Generator CALL 360-681-5271
P O R S C H E : ‘ 8 7, 9 4 4 , good condition, sun roof, power windows, 121k miles, AM/FM/CD. $9,300. (360)452-2468 WANTED: 1967-68 Plymouth Fury, 4 door, in any condition. (360)477-2381
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
SAILBOAT: 25’ Corona- 9292 Automobiles Others 10’ LIVINGSTON: Fresh d o, 15 H P O u t b o a rd , paint in/out, galv trailer, s l e e p s 5 , m o o r a g e , ‘05 Prius, great gas mileMinn Kota elec. motor, $3,900. 360-385-2012 age 116K, $7,500; ‘89 new oars/battery. $725. Dodge Van, original 318, (360)457-8209 60K, $8,500. 360-461-1917 ‘84 Champion Bass Boat, 17,’ excellent conBEETLE: ‘74 gold color, dition. $7,250. 360-385sunroof, new tires plus 2792 pls leave message studs, mags, Ger man brakes, refurbished. THUNDER JET: ‘05 Alu- $4200 obo. 360-457-7432 minum 20’ Envoy, 175hp Sportjet, 8hp elec., start Tohatsu, EZ loader trailer, stored in Sequim. $15,900. (425)941-9480 BAYLINER: ‘88, CAPRI BOWRIDER. This Boat is ready to go! Fresh engine, fresh water cooling. Out-drive serviced. Ca m p e r c a nva s, n ew upholster y. Ever ything works. Have titles, tab’s for both. Full gas tank too. $6,000. 360-316-6246 BELL BOY: ‘78 , cabin cruiser, 24’, inboard/outboard, rebuilt outdrive and engine. ‘84 Caulkins trailer. $2500 obo. (360)670-1109 B OAT / T R A I L E R : 14 ’, w/glavanized E-Z Loader, Johnson 50hp, depth f i n d e r, m a n y e x t r a s . $2000. (360)683-1308 or (360)460-1539
9817 Motorcycles BMW: ‘95, 540i, Excellent condition, auto transmission, 203k miles, maintenance records. $3,500/OBO. (360)477-5629 ‘05 Gold Wing GL 1800 m o t o r c y c l e , C D, f o g l i g h t s , g r e a t c o n d . , BUICK: ‘00 Century ltd edition, V6, new tires, $6,300. 360-460-0233 new brakes, 134K miles. ‘ 0 7 H a r l e y Da v i d s o n $2500. 253-439-0436 Electa Glide, 43K miles, tr unk detaches, extra C H E V : ‘ 0 2 , Ca m e ro seat, for a strip down convertible, auto, V6, silver with burgundy leathlook, $9,000. er upholstery, 85K miles, 360-461-1526 To y o t i r e s , i n g o o d 2 010 H a r l ey X R 12 0 0 shape, all power, always s p o r t s te r, exc . c o n d . g a r a g e d . $ 4 , 7 0 0 . ( 3 6 0 ) 4 6 1- 1 74 2 o r 1200 miles, $7,500. (360)460-2694 360-452-0128 ‘01 Yamaha Vino Scooter, 360 original miles! Like new! $1200. 360-452-3213
‘96 Honda Shadow B O S T O N W H A L E R : VT1100, 62K mi., newer ‘78-15’, excel. cond., ‘02 re a r t i re a n d b a tte r y, M e r c 6 0 h p 4 s t r o k e . $2,395. 360-460-6213 $8450. (360)681-5464 HARLEY: ‘03, FXDL, 92 CAMPION: ‘02 Model cu in, one owner, 25k 542, very clean, set up m i . , b e tte r t h a n n ew. for fishing and crabbing. $8,500. (360)808-0611 too many extras to list. HARLEY: ‘10 FLSTSB, $16,000. (360)912-2077 (Crossbones), 11,151 G L AS S P LY: 17 ’, s o ft m i l e s, l o t s o f ex t ra s, top, 280 Volvo Penta in- $15,000. 360-460-6971 board/outboard drive on trailer, Evinrude 15hp troller, trim tabs, depth finder, GPS, Boss marine FM/CD player, crab pot, line and pot puller, down riggers, anchor, float coat and 2 vests. Other extras. Nice clean unit. $6500. Harley Davidson, 2002 (360)461-7429 Dyna Low-Rider, great c o n d i t i o n , n ew t i re s , G O F I S H I N G , Wh a l e 21,000 mi. and extras. watching, lake floating $5,800. 360-301-0213 on your own 26’ Cabin M O T O R C YC L E : ‘ 9 9 Cruiser. $2,800. Honda Goldwing, 50th (360)640-0875 A n n i ve r s a r y, m a r o o n HARRISON FARRELL: color, excellent cond., ‘86 Hard chine, sloop, e x t r a s . $ 5 , 5 0 0 / O B O. 360-477-4003 23’, incl., trailer, $4000. (360)774-6064 MOTOR SCOOTER: ‘07, 250CC, low miles, always garaged. $1,200. (360)457-8729
HOTWOODS.com: Fish & Sport 15, 4 pontoon, 9.9 Johnson, 55 Minnkota, Honda 1000 generat o r , d e c k 5 ’ X 1 3 ’ 6 ”. $4500. Sequim. (509)885-0999 YAMAHA: ‘10 Enduro Fat tire TW 200. $2500 PACIFIC MARINER: 15’, firm. (360)670-1109 35 hp, elect start, 6hp kicker, downrigger, elec- GARAGE SALE ADS Call for details. tronics, fully equipped, 360-452-8435 Caulkins trailer. $2,500/ 1-800-826-7714 obo. (360)452-9691
H O N DA : ‘ 9 2 , A c c o r d wagon, clean, sunroof, spotless, 186K miles, $2,000. (360)457-5435 KIA: ‘11, Soul, 97,937 mi, white, 25mpg and 32 hwy, clean, $8,500. (360)775-7730
BUY WITH CONFIDENCE! ‘08 Dodge Ram 4x4 2500 Heavy Duty, SXT, 62,804K low mileage, MOPAR warrenty to July ‘20, Cummins 100,000 p o w e r t r a i n w a r r a n t y, front and rear towing receivers, lift airbags rear axle, very strong vehicle, newer tires and batteries, local service, 1 o w n e r, c l e a n c a r fa x . $28,500 obo. 360-582-1292 or 310-995-7966 CHEV: Silverado 1500 LS Extra Cab 4X4, 73,908K mi, 4.8L Vortec V8, automatic transmission, chrome grille, 17’’ fa c to r y c h ro m e a l l oy wheels, brand new Michelin Defender tires, factory chrome running boards, chrome rear bumper, trailer towing package, matching arrow fiberglas canopy, four opening doors, keyless door entry, power door locks, power adjustable windows, power mirrors, tilt steer ing wheel, cruise control, air conditioning, AM/FM CD player stereo with auxiliary input, Sirius satelite radio capable, rear folding seat, latch child seat safety system Vin #8Z303154 $17,995 Gray Motors 360-457-4901 graymotors.com
FORD: ‘10 Escape XLT AWD, 99,910K mi, 3.0L V6, automatic transmission, chrome grille, fog l i g h t s , 17 ’’ fa c to r y 5-spoke chrome alloy wheels, like new Open Countr y tires, factor y running boards, trailer tow i n g p a cka g e, re a r glass or gate openings, roof rack with crossbars, body colored side mirrors/door handles, keycode door entry, keyless door entry, power door locks, power adjustable mirrors, power windows, tilt steering wheel, cruise control, air conditioning, automatic/dual zone clim a te c o n t ro l , fa c to r y touch screen navigation system, bluetooth AM/FM/CD player stereo with AUX/USB inputs, Sirius satelite capability sun roof, auto dimming rear view mirror, homelink, sunglasses holder, center console armrest w i t h s to ra g e, l e a t h e r seating surfaces, front leather heated bucket seats, power adjustable d r i ve r ’s s e a t , a u dio/cr uise/phone controls on steering wheel, b a ck u p c a m e ra w i t h parking assist, rear folding seats, rear latch child seat safety system. Vin #AKA03571 $10,995 Gray Motors 360-457-4901 graymotors.com
LONG DISTANCE No Problem! Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714
9935 General Legals
REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS (RFQ) PORT OF PORT ANGELES BOAT HAVEN FUEL FLOAT REPLACMENT - DESIGN The Port of Port Angeles is inviting engineering consulting firms to submit their qualifications for consideration to provide professional services for the Port’s Boat Haven Fuel Float Replacement Project. Interested Consultants will need to be experienced and knowledgeable in concept development, preliminary design and final design engineering for replacement of a fuel float at a public marina. Obtaining the RFQ: A copy of the RFQ may be obtained at the following website address: http://www.portofpa.com/bids.aspx Any addenda issued for the RFQ will be published at the same website address. Questions: All questions regarding this RFQ should be addressed to Jesse Waknitz, Environmental Manager at (360) 417-3452, or by e-mail at jessew@portofpa.com Submittal Deadline: Consultant qualifications are to arrive at the Port of Port Angeles Administration Building, 338 W. First Street, P.O. Box 1350, Port Angeles, WA 98362, not later than 4:30 PM (PST), August 8, 2019. The Port of Port Angeles is an equal opportunity and employer and strives to ensure that minority, women and veteran-owned firms are afforded the maximum practicable opportunity to compete. Pub: July 2, 9, 2019 Legal No. 862918
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NOTICE OF INVITATION FOR BIDS SEALED BIDS will be received by the Board of Clallam County Commissioners at 223 East Fourth Street, Room 150, Port Angeles, V/ashington until 10:00 a.m., Tuesday, July 9, 2019, at which time they will be publicly opened andread aloud for: The construction of 1.6 miles of the Olympic Discovery Trail, beginning atWaterline Road (DNR #J-3100) and ending at Gossett Road. V/ork includes clearing & grubbing, excavation, earthwork, drainage pipe, rebuilding three stream crossings by installing 2 culverts and one steel truss bridge, surfacing, paving with Commercial HMA, and other related work. Complete plans and specifications may be obtained from the office of the Public Works Department, Courthouse,223 E.4th St., Ste. 6, Port Angeles, WA 98362, (360) 417-2319. Questions regarding this project may be directed to Dave Bibler at (360) 4172311.
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9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County
The sealed bids must be clearly marked on the outside of the envelope, “BID PROPOSAL - ODT-Waterline Rd. to Gossett Rd., CRP C1.2354”. Address bid proposal to: Board of Clallam County Commissioners,223 E. 4th St., Ste. 4, Port Angeles, WA 98362 or hand-deliver to 223 E. 4th St., Room 150, Port Angeles, Washington. Bid documents delivered to other offices and received late by the JEEP: ‘95, Grand Commissioners’ Offrce will not be considered nor Cherokee Laredo 4x4. will bids received by facsimile or e-mail. Runs good. New: carpet, floor mats, brakes front Clallam County will determine the lowest responand back, rotors in front, sible bidder in accordance with the terms of Clallam oil change, alternator, D O D G E : ‘ 0 0 , Da ko t a County Code Section3.12.070 and reserves the more replacement parts, X LT, V 6 , 2 W D, G r ay, right to reject any and all bids and to waive infortoo many to list. Transwith shell, $2,000. malities in the process or to accept the bid which in mission serviced at 360-461-6047 its estimation best serves the interests of Clallam Tranco Transmissions. County. $2,000. 360-460-6981 DODGE: ‘10, RAM 1500, 4Dr, 4x4, 142K, 4.7 ltr, S U B UA R U : F o r e s t e r Clallam County in accordance with Title VI of the tow pkg, silver, grt cond. 2.5i Limited, ‘16, 13K Civil Rights Act of 1964,78 Stat. 252, 42 USC $8,900. (303)638-6278 m i l e s , e x c . c o n d . , 2000d to 2000d-4 and Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, Department of Transportation, Subtitle $25,000. 360-457-5937 A, Office of the Secretary, Part 21, NondiscriminaFORD: ‘08 F350 Lariat. tion in Federally-Assisted Programs of the Depart1- t o n d u a l l y, d i e s e l , 4WD, automatic, leather 9730 Vans & Minivans ment of Transportation issued pursuant to such Act, hereby notifies all bidders that it will affirmatively great condition. 119K. Others ensure that in any contract entered into pursuant to $16000. 360-461-3947 C H E V: ‘ 14 , C h r y s l e r this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterFORD: ‘08 F-350 Lariat, Town & Country Tourn- prises as defined at 49 CFR Part 26 will be afforded extended cab, 6.4L die- ing Van, 88,479 Miles, full opportunity to submit bids in response to this insel. 77,700 mi. Original 3 . 6 L V 6 , a u t o m a t i c vitation and will not be discriminated against on the owner, very good condi- transmission, fog lights, grounds of race, color, national origin, or sex in t i o n , m a n y e x t r a s . chrome grille, 17’’ factory consideration for an award. 9-spoke aluminum $22,900. Call for details. wheels, like new tires, The attached contract plans, these contract provi360-808-6430 roof rack, body colored sions and the Standard Specifications for the FORD: ‘96, Ranger, Ex- side mirrors/door han- above-described project are hereby tra cab, 4 cyl, 5 spd, has dles, chrome door acn e w c l u t c h . $ 1 , 0 0 0 . cents, roof rack, power APPROVED THIS 18th DAY OF June, 2019. sliding doors, power rear (360)457-4383 lift gate, keyless entry, BOARD OF CLALLAM COUNTY GMC: ‘89, Sierra, 3/4 power door locks, power COMMISSIONERS w i n d o w s , p o w e r a d - __________________________ ton, Needs work. $500. j u s t a b l e m i r r o r s , t i l t Mark Ozias, Chair (360)477-6516 steering wheel, leather ATTEST: wrapped steering wheel, __________________________ cruise control, air condi- Loni Gores, Clerk of the Board tioning, automatic/dual zo n e c l i m a te c o n t ro l , PUB: June 25, July 2, 2019 AM/FM CD player stereo Legal No. 862018 with auxiliary/USB input, satelite radio capability, bluetooth phone/stereo MAZDA: ‘84. b2000 83k c o n t r o l s o n s t e e r i n g original miles, 2WD, 5 wheel, DVD enter tainspd, clean, unaltered in- ment system, front leathterior, original Clarion er bucket seats, ar mAM. Lumber rack/tool re s t s, p ow e r d r i ve r ’s box. New tires. Weber seat, center console with carb conversion. Original storage, 2nd row capowner’s and Shop Manu- ta i n’s c h a i rs, c h ro m e dash/inter ior accents, al. $3,250, obo. rear window wiper, rear 360-582-6787 folding seats, latch child M A Z DA : ‘ 9 3 , B 2 2 0 0 , seat safety system, front manual trans, 130,164 impact, side impact and miles, needs work. $850. full side curtain airbags. Vin #ER158321 13,995 360-477-7537 Gray Motors SUPPORT EDUCATION: 360-457-4901 M A Z DA : ‘ 9 3 , B 2 2 0 0 , graymotors.com manual trans, 130,164 miles, needs work. $850. #1 Online Job Site 360-477-7537 on the Olympic Peninsula www.peninsula 9556 SUVs dailynews.com Others
SUBARU: ‘17, Outback, 2.5i Limited wagon. very clean, 34,500/miles. blue/gray with cloth interior. $22,500 360-460-0131, or email houndhelper@ CHEV: ‘96 Blazer, 4.3 L, gmail.com good cond., well mainVW: ‘02, Golf, 2.0, 4 Dr, tained, 4 door. $1200. (360)683-4050 5 spd, 36/mpg, 108k mi, great stereo, great cond. $5,000. (360)452-9685
“WOW
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V E S PA : S w e e t r i d e , great mileage. 2008 Piaggio Vespa granturismo 200cc motorscooter. 5,387 miles, always garaged, regularly serviced, h e l m e t a n d b a tte r y charger included. $2,500. 713-449-7418.
FORD: ‘15, Ford Focus SE 5-Door Hatchback 61,051 Miles, 2.0L four cyc l i n d e r, 5 - s p e e d manual transmission, 16 ’’ fa c to r y 10 - s p o ke aluminum wheels, nice all-season tires, keyless entry, power door locks, power adjustable mirrors, power windows, tilt steering wheel, cruise control, air conditioning, AM/FM CD player stereo, Aux/USB Inputs, Bluetooth Phone/Satelite Radio Capable, Back Up Camera, Front Bucket S e a t s , R e a r Fo l d i n g Seats, Front/Side Impact Airbags, Full Side Curt a i n A i r b a g s , L AT C H child seat safety system Vin #FL386425 $9,995 Gray Motors 360-457-4901 graymotors.com
‘0 0 Chevy S10 4WD. Extra cab, nice truck! Needs motor work. $1,000. 360-460-2667
Momma ❘
9556 SUVs Others
Tuesday, July 2, 2019 B7 Tuesday, July 2, 2019 B7
Classified
ITE & WH
Tuesday, July 2, 2019 Tuesday, July 2, 2019
CL
A
from
9 L Augu st 1 5 - 1 8 , 2 0 1 Y A M T COUN
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OPEN RAISES AWARENESS FOR RESCUES
Broadening horizons
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