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Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper

Firefighter jobs depend on levy in Port Ludlow District to hold 2 open houses BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Sam Calhoun of Port Angeles hangs the first of many banners heralding the Juan de Fuca Festival, starting today at the Vern Burton Community Center.

20th year for fest Juan de Fuca arts event offers 4 days of music BY DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ

ALSO . . .

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Karen Hanan, founder of the Juan de Fuca Festival of the Arts, was still in high school when she put on her first show. This was 1970 in Havant on England’s south coast, and she thought it would be fun to bring the band Magna Carta to town. Hanan called the booking agent and offered 100 pounds, the equivalent of about $150. After a stunned silence, the agent said, “Well, we’re going to be in your area. I’ll take your hundred pounds and a case of beer.� Magna Carta came, and so began Hanan’s career in

â– Classes, workshops on the Juan de Fuca schedule/A5 â– See Peninsula Spotlight inside for more on festival

the performing arts. That career took a leap forward in May 1994, when Hanan and a herd of volunteers put on the first Juan de Fuca Festival of the Arts in Port Angeles.

Didn’t sit around Having moved to the North Olympic Peninsula in late 1993, Hanan didn’t sit around waiting for someone else to get something going. This weekend, the Juan de Fuca Festival celebrates

its 20th year with four days and three nights of music, dance, comedy, theater and visual art, all emanating from headquarters at the Vern Burton Community Center, 308 W. Fourth St. “It’s a tremendous opportunity to see the world in four days,� said Hanan, who produced seven festivals before moving on to become director of the nonprofit Arts Northwest booking organization. “There are world-class performers in your hometown,� she added. But unlike events such as the Northwest Folklife Festival this weekend at Seattle Center, a fan can get to the stages without elbowing through a mob. TURN

TO

PORT LUDLOW — Three firefighters will face layoffs and three lieutenants will see their rank reduced to firefighter if a maintenance-and-operations levy fails with voters in November, Port Ludlow Fire and Rescue officials said Thursday. The amount of the property tax levy will be determined at a commissioners meeting at 7 p.m. July 9 at Fire Station 31, 7650 Oak Bay Road. “We only get one shot at this,� said Chief Brad Martin. “We don’t want to ask for too much because it might not get passed, and we don’t want to ask for too little because we’ll come up short again.� Martin said the district is facing a shortfall of between $400,000 and $500,000. In preparation for the levy, the district has scheduled two open houses to hear concerns from community members about fire commissioners’ intentions to place the levy request on the November ballot. They will take place from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. June 5 at the fire station

FESTIVAL/A5

and from 10 a.m. to noon June 8 at Fire Station 33, 101 S. Point Road. “Before we run the levy, we want to know what the people need and what they will support,� Martin said. “We want to get a feel from the citizens before we determine the levy amount.�

Aug. 6 deadline In order for the measure to appear on the Nov. 5 ballot, it must be submitted to the Jefferson County Auditor’s Office by Aug. 6. The levy is necessary, Martin said, because of declining funds due in part to decreased property values in the fire district and the overall state of the economy that has caused financial issues for tax-funded entities, including fire districts. While the layoff notices will be distributed to the affected firefighters by June 1, they will not go forward unless the levy fails. Actual layoffs would not take effect until Dec. 31. The district, which serves a 55-square-mile area, has two staffed stations and one volunteer station, and employs 12 career firefighters, including four paramedics. One of the targeted layoffs is a paramedic position, leaving three paramedics and six resident volunteer firefighters.

Snowpack still robust heading into summer BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — A blast of early winter weather combined with ho-hum spring temperatures has kept the Olympic Mountain snowpack robust heading into summer. Olympic basin snowpack was 128 percent of normal — good news for farmers, fish and whitewater recreationalists — as of Thursday, according to the U.S.

Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service. “I think we’re good to go this year,� said Art Gabel, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Seattle. Snowpack is measured by the water content within the snow. It is gauged at three automated snow telemetry sites in the Olympic Mountains. TURN

TO

SNOWPACK/A5

PT art and glass shop is moving to Hawaii BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — Businesses often close down one location and relocate to another. But moves from Port Townsend to Hawaii are pretty rare. Akamai Art and Glass Supply will close its doors May 31, after which time it will move lock, stock and paintbrush to a new location in Kailua-Kona in Hawaii. “We’ve been here for seven years, and we never got used to the gray and the dark,� said Johanna Wiseman, who owns the shop with Shirley Spencer. Throughout this month, the

“One of the emotional things has been the shoplifting.� JOHANNA WISEMAN Akamai Art and Glass co-owner store has discounted its inventory and reduced it to one-third its former size, with the rest to be sold at 50 percent off next week.

Schools invited in After the store closes, schools that have supported it throughout the years will be invited in to choose what they want or need.

$ $

“We will give them a budget, and they can take whatever they want,� Wiseman said. Wiseman said business has been good recently for the specialty shop that needs a steady stream of clients to keep it afloat. “We are not leaving because of business, but one of the emotional things has been the shoplifting. “It’s sometimes $500 a month, and while the business can absorb this, it’s hard when you realize that the people who are stealing are the people you know, that you’ve talked to and developed a relationship with, that you conCHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS sider friends,� Wiseman said. From left, Shirley Spencer, Johanna Wiseman and Dawn TURN TO CLOSING/A5 Sagar prepare Akamai Art and Glass Supply for closing.

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FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

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Tundra

The Samurai of Puzzles

By Chad Carpenter

Copyright © 2013, Michael Mepham Editorial Services

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

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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 © 2013, Peninsula Daily News MEMBER

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Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

Cannes crime: Jewelry taken in 2nd heist THIEVES OUTSMARTED 80 security guards in an exclusive French Riviera hotel and made off with a necklace that creators say is worth a staggering 2 million euros ($2.6 million) in the second such jewelry heist during this year’s Cannes Film Festival. The De Grisogono jewelry house said Thursday that the necklace was stolen after a party for festival attendees at the Hotel du Cap-Eden-Roc on Tuesday night. In a statement, it said the theft occurred “despite the large security measures set in place: over 80 security guards plus police.” A police official who spoke on condition of anonymity said Thursday that the “high-value” necklace was stolen overnight from the luxurious resort town of Cap d’Antibes. Last week, thieves stole about $1 million worth of jewels after ripping a safe from the wall of a hotel room in Cannes. The jewelry was taken from the Novotel room of an

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PAYING

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STONES

The new memorabilia exhibit “Rolling Stones: 50 Years of Satisfaction” goes on display today at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland. pines, includes a character who is visiting the city and taken aback by poverty, crime and the sex trade. The chairman of metropolitan Manila, Francis Tolentino, wrote an open letter to Brown on Thursday, Brown hounded saying that while Inferno is Dan Brown’s descripfiction, “we are greatly distion of Manila as “the gates appointed by your inaccuof hell” in the American nov- rate portrayal of our beloved elist’s latest book has not metropolis.” gone down well with officials Tolentino said the novel in the Philippine capital. fails to acknowledge Filipinos’ good character and comThe book Inferno, which passion. is being sold in the Philipemployee of Chopard, the Swiss-based watch and jewelry maker that has loaned bling to A-list stars walking the red carpet at the film festival.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL WEDNESDAY’S QUESTION: If you were stuck on a desert island with food, water and shelter, what would be the most important luxury? Reading material A companion

51.8%

Music player 2.5% Internet service

17.5%

Sunscreen 2.9%

Passings

Something else

By The Associated Press

WAYNE F. MILLER, 94, a photographer who created a groundbreaking series of portraits chronicling the lives of black Americans in Chicago after serving with an elite Navy unit that produced some of the most indelible combat images of World War II, died Wednesday. Mr. Miller also was known for his work as a curator on an international photojournalism exhi- Mr. Miller bition called “The Family of Man” and for contributing the photos to Dr. Benjamin Spock’s A Baby’s First Year. He had lived in Orinda, Calif., for six decades and become ill only in the last weeks of his life, his granddaughter Inga Miller said. Born in Chicago, Mr. Miller trained for a career in banking but became a photographer when famed fashion photographer Edward Steichen picked him to be part of the military unit assigned to document the war. While assigned to the Pacific theater, he took some of the first pictures of the atomic bomb-devastated Hiroshima. His best-known wartime photograph shows a wounded pilot being pulled from a downed

17.9%

fighter plane. Mr. Miller had been scheduled to be aboard the plane before it was shot down, and the photographer who took his place was killed, according to Inga Miller. After returning home to Chicago, Mr. Miller spent two years in the late 1940s on the city’s south side capturing the experiences of black residents, many of whom had moved north during the war in search of jobs and the promise of civil rights. The originals from his “The Way of the Northern Negro” series are now held in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the Guggenheim Museum and the Smithsonian Institution.

_________ LEONARD MARSH, 80, the co-founder of the Snapple beverage brand, has died. Snapple was founded in New York as Unadulterated Food Products in 1972, selling natural fruit juices to health food stores. Mr. Marsh started the business with his brotherin-law, Hyman Golden, and his childhood friend Arnold Greenberg. The now wellknown brand name didn’t appear until 1980. Mr. Marsh was a window washer when he launched the business and ultimately served as Snap-

ple’s CEO for many years. The Quaker Oats Co. bought Snapple in 1994 for $1.7 billion, and Mr. Marsh stayed on for some time after the acquisition.

Total votes cast: 1,260 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

Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

1938 (75 years ago) Blasting conducted during Works Progress Administration flood-control work along the Bogachiel River unearthed a large vein of coal on the farm of William Klahn, about 5 miles from Forks. The vein is about 25 feet deep and 15 feet wide. Klahn was due in Port Angeles to have a coal sample from the ridge between the river and LaPush sent to the University of Washington for testing.

1963 (50 years ago) Fire believed to have started from a smouldering cigarette butt damaged a cottage at the Fort Worden Juvenile and Diagnostic Center in Port Townsend. Twenty-one boys fled to a nearby vacant cottage after being alerted by Jodie Stewart, a retired Army colonel who works at the state-operated center. Superintendent Elmer G. Lindquist said one of the boys on cleanup duty dumped an ashtray into a wastebasket, then emptied the wastebasket into

7.2%

Corrections and clarifications

a garbage can. The fire apparently ■ Anne Patricia Engen started in the garbage can, of Port Angeles will celewhich was on the back porch. brate her 80th birthday Sunday with family and 1988 (25 years ago) friends. An investigation into last Her surname was mismonth’s grounding of the spelled on Page B5 Thurs490-foot tanker Matsukaze day. off Whiskey Creek Beach A corrected Birthday west of Port Angeles deterCorner feature for Ms. mined that the ship went Engen appears today on outside shipping lanes while Page B9. overtaking a tugboat. __________ The Vessel Traffic Service The Peninsula Daily News at Pier 36 in Seattle said the strives at all times for accuracy Japanese-owned tanker and fairness in articles, headlines went slightly outside the and photographs. To correct an shipping lane and into a error or to clarify a news story, radar “blind spot” as it tried phone Executive Editor Rex Wilson at 360-417-3530 or email to pass the tug Henry M. rex.wilson@peninsuladailynews. The ship apparently com. failed to change a required course near the Twin Rivers area and ran aground.

Laugh Lines

Seen Around Peninsula snapshots

A 94-POUND BOY hooking and landing an 80-pound halibut . . . WANTED! “Seen Around” items. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax 360-417-3521; or email news@peninsuladailynews.com.

HOUSE REPUBLICANS JUST tried for the 37th time to repeal Obamacare. If Republicans really wanted to do away with Obamacare, they should just endorse it as a conservative nonprofit and let the IRS take it down. Jay Leno

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS FRIDAY, May 24, the 144th day of 2013. There are 221 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On May 24, 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge, linking Brooklyn and Manhattan, was dedicated by President Chester Alan Arthur and New York Gov. Grover Cleveland. On this date: ■ In 1775, John Hancock was elected President of the Continental Congress, succeeding Peyton Randolph. ■ In 1844, Samuel F.B. Morse transmitted the message “What hath God wrought” from Washington to Baltimore as he formally opened America’s first telegraph line.

■ In 1935, the first major league baseball game to be played at night took place at Cincinnati’s Crosley Field as the Reds beat the Philadelphia Phillies, 2-1. ■ In 1937, in a set of rulings, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the Social Security Act of 1935. ■ In 1941, the German battleship Bismarck sank the British battle cruiser HMS Hood in the North Atlantic, killing all but three of the 1,418 men on board. ■ In 1961, a group of Freedom Riders was arrested after arriving at a bus terminal in Jackson, Miss., charged with breaching the peace for entering white-designated areas. The members ended up serv-

ing 60 days in jail. ■ In 1962, astronaut Scott Carpenter became the second American to orbit the Earth as he flew aboard Aurora 7. ■ In 1976, Britain and France opened trans-Atlantic Concorde supersonic transport service to Washington. ■ In 1980, Iran rejected a call by the World Court in The Hague to release the American hostages. ■ In 2001, 23 people were killed when the floor of a Jerusalem wedding hall collapsed beneath dancing guests, sending them plunging several stories into the basement. ■ Ten years ago: Furious crowds hurled debris and insults at

Algeria’s President Abdelaziz Bouteflika when he visited a town devastated by a deadly earthquake. ■ Five years ago: British actor Rob Knox, 18, who had completed filming a minor role in “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince,” was stabbed to death during a brawl in London. His attacker, Karl Bishop, was later sentenced to life in prison. ■ One year ago: Brian Banks, a former high school football star whose dreams of a pro career were shattered by what turned out to be a false rape accusation, burst into tears as a judge in Long Beach, Calif., threw out the charge that had sent Banks to prison for more than five years.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday, May 24-25, 2013 PAGE

A3 Briefly: Nation Okla. tornado cleanup stalled by storm band

747 rains down parts

ATLANTA — Federal authorities are investigating after a Boeing 747 on approach to Atlanta’s airport lost parts from its right wing that landed on a woman’s house. MOORE, Okla. — A band of The Federal Aviation Adminthunderstorms battered the istration said Thursday the Oklahoma City area Thursday, China Airlines flight landed slowing cleanup operations in safely at Hartsfield-Jackson the suburb where a tornado Atlanta International Airport killed 24 people and destroyed after Sunday’s incident. No injuthousands of homes this week. The first of the funerals, for a ries were reported. Clayton County homeowner 9-year-old girl, Antonia Candelaria, killed at a Moore elemen- Pamela Ware told Atlanta statary school that took a direct hit tion WSB-TV she was thankful to survive after part of the wing in Monday’s storm, was schedhit her house. The TV station uled for Thursday morning. reported another piece of the Early estimates say the torplane landed in front of a nado caused more than $2 bilWalmart a few miles away. lion of damage. Whole subdivisions in the fast-growing comArias penalty mistrial munity of 56,000 people were destroyed. PHOENIX — Jurors who Two elementary schools were spent five months determining hit — one was leveled — by the fate of convicted murderer Monday’s tornado. Candelaria Jodi Arias couldn’t decide if she was one of seven children who should get life in prison or die perished at the Plaza Towers for killing her boyfriend, sendElementary School. ing prosecutors back to the The medical examiner said drawing board to rehash the six of the children who died case for another 12 people. there suffocated after being burJudge Sherry Stephens ied under a mass of bricks, steel announced a mistrial in the and other materials as the penalty phase Thursday and building collapsed. A seventh scheduled a July 18 retrial. child, 8-year-old Kyle Davis, was Arias looked visibly upset killed instantly by an object — about the mistrial. Family memperhaps a large piece of stone — bers of the victim, Travis Alexthat fell on him. ander, cried in court. Thursday’s thunderstorms A new jury now will be produced hail, heavy rain and seated to try again to reach a high winds. A flash flood warndecision — unless the prosecuing was in effect. The National tor takes execution off the table Weather Service said more and agrees to a life term. The Associated Press severe storms were forecast.

Boy Scouts vote to let openly gay youths join Landmark step at Texas meet THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

GRAPEVINE, Texas — In a landmark step its chief executive called “compassionate, caring and kind,” the Boy Scouts of America on Thursday ended its longstanding policy of forbidding openly gay youths to participate in its activities. The decision, which followed years of resistance and wrenching internal debate, was seen as a milestone for the Boy Scouts, a symbol of traditional America. More than 1,400 volunteer leaders from across the country voted, with more than 60 percent approving a measure that said no youth may be denied membership “on the basis of sexual orientation or preference alone.” The top national leaders of the Boy Scouts had urged the change in the face of vehement opposition from conservative parents and volunteers, some of whom said they would quit the organization. But the decision also put the Scouts more in tune with the rise in public acceptance of homosexuality, especially among younger parents who are essential to the future of an institution that has

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

James Oliver, left, hugs brother and fellow Eagle Scout Will Oliver, who is gay, Feb. 4 as he and supporters carry boxes with petitions to change Scouting policy in Dallas. been losing members for decades. rassment at the twisted logic of But the decision is unlikely to forcing an Eagle Scout who turns 18 to quit. bring peace to the Boy Scouts. Gay-rights advocates called the decision a breakthrough. No decision on gay adults Some conservative churches The group put off the even and parents said the Scouts were more divisive question of whether violating their oath to be “morally to allow openly gay adults and straight.” leaders, and those on both sides of Still, for gay men who were the debate predicted that, with forced out of scouting and their the resolution’s passage, the Boy allies, thousands of whom joined Scouts would soon be forced to the push for change, the opening start allowing gay adults — of membership was more than whether by lawsuits or embar- welcome.

Obama says drones are necessary

Briefly: World British soldier killed in attack ID’d as drummer LONDON — Britain’s military said the soldier killed in a suspected terrorist attack was a popular drummer and machine gunner, a father and a passionate fan of Manchester United. The Ministry of Defense identified him Thursday as 25-year-old Lee Rigby of 2nd Battalion The Royal Regiment of Fusiliers. Capt. Alan Rigby Williamson, the adjutant of the 2nd Fusiliers, said Rigby had a 2-year-old son, Jack. Meanwhile, two Muslim hard-liners said the man seen wielding a bloody butcher’s knife after Rigby’s killing is a Muslim convert who took part in demonstrations with the banned radical group al-Muhajiroun. Meanwhile, British police on Thursday evening announced the arrests of two more suspects in the case. Police said a man and a woman, both aged 29, were arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to murder.

26 die in Niger attacks NIAMEY, Niger — Suicide bombers in Niger detonated two car bombs simultaneously

Thursday, one inside a military camp in the city of Agadez and another in remote Arlit at a French-operated uranium mine, killing a total of 26 people and injuring 30, according to officials in Niger and France. A surviving attacker took a group of soldiers hostage, and authorities were attempting to negotiate their release. The timing of the attacks, at the same moment more than 100 miles apart, and because the bombers were able to penetrate both a well-guarded military installation and a sensitive, foreign-operated uranium mine, highlight the growing reach and sophistication of the Islamic extremists based in neighboring Mali. Both attacks were claimed by a spinoff of al-Qaida.

Rickshaw bomb kills 11 QUETTA, Pakistan — A large bomb hidden by the Taliban in a rickshaw exploded as a police vehicle passed in southwest Pakistan on Thursday, killing 11 policemen and two civilians, police said. The bombing on the outskirts of Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan province, came the same day as fighting in the restive northwest left four soldiers dead. Police claimed 20 militants also died in those clashes. The Quetta blast wounded more than 20 people, said senior police officer Fayaz Sumbal. Pakistani Taliban spokesman Ahsanullah Ahsan claimed responsibility for the attack in a telephone call to The Associated Press. The Associated Press

President calls attacks legal counterterrorism THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MIURA DOLPHINS CO. LTD. VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Former Japanese extreme skier Yuichiro Miura, 80, stands atop Mount Everest on Thursday.

80-year-old man scales Everest THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

KATMANDU, Nepal — An 80-year-old Japanese man who began the year with his fourth heart operation became the oldest conqueror of Mount Everest on Thursday, a feat he called “the world’s best feeling” even with an 81-year-old Nepalese climber not far behind him. Yuichiro Miura, a former extreme skier, also climbed the 29,035-foot peak when he was 70 and 75. It was a moment Japanese news agency Kyodo captured on video from 6 miles away, using a camera crew on another mountain. Miura and son Gota made a phone call from the summit of the world’s highest point, prompting his daughter Emili to smile

Quick Read

broadly and clap her hands. “I made it!” Miura told her. “This is the world’s best feeling, although I’m totally exhausted.” Nepalese mountaineering official Gyanendra Shrestha, at the Everest base camp, confirmed that Miura had reached the summit and was the oldest person to do so.

81-year-old Nepalese The previous oldest was Nepal’s Min Bahadur Sherchan, who reached the summit at age 76. Sherchan is preparing to scale the peak next week despite digestive problems he suffered several days ago. Sherchan, 81, said Wednesday he was “ready to take up the challenge.”

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama on Thursday defended America’s controversial drone attacks as legal, effective and a necessary linchpin in an evolving U.S. counterterrorism policy. But he acknowledged the targeted strikes are no “cure-all” and said he is haunted by the civilians unintentionally killed. The president also announced a renewed push to close the Guantanamo Bay detention center in Cuba, including lifting a moratorium on prisoner transfers to Yemen. But shutting the prison will still require help from Republicans reluctant to back Obama’s call to move some detainees to U.S. prisons and try them in civilian courts.

National Defense University speech “Neither I, nor any president, can promise the total defeat of terror,” Obama said in remarks at the National Defense University. “What we can do — what we must do — is dismantle networks that pose a direct danger, and make it less likely for new groups to gain a foothold.” Since taking office, Obama’s counterterrorism strategy has increasingly relied on the use of strikes by unmanned spy drones, particularly in Pakistan and Yemen. The highly secretive program has faced criticism from congressional lawmakers who have questioned its scope and legality. He acknowledged the civilian deaths that sometimes result — a consequence that has angered many of the countries where the U.S. seeks to combat extremism — and said he grapples with that trade-off.

. . . more news to start your day

West: Shuttered peanut plant starts producing again

Nation: Ohio kidnap case hero gets burgers for life

Nation: Another busy hurricane season forecast

World: Hopes raised for new Mideast peace talks

THE NEW MEXICO peanut butter plant shuttered eight months ago after a salmonella outbreak is making nut butter again. Sunland Inc. Vice President Katalin Coburn said the company’s products could be in stores within a month. The Food and Drug Administration shut the plant in September after its products were linked to 41 cases in 20 states. Many were linked to natural peanut butter the company made for Trader Joe’s, Safeway and Sprouts. The shutdown of the country’s largest organic peanut butter processor left many stores scrambling for months to find alternative natural peanut butters.

THE MAN WHO put down his Big Mac to help rescue three women held captive for a decade in an Ohio house will never have to pay for another burger in his hometown Charles Ramsey has been promised free burgers for life at more than a dozen Cleveland-area restaurants. The Plain Dealer said the restaurant where Ramsey worked as a dishwasher created a burger in his honor, but eateries wanted a larger tribute. He was called a hero after helping Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight break out of the house May 6. Ariel Castro of Cleveland is now facing charges.

FEDERAL FORECASTERS ARE predicting yet another busy hurricane season in 2013. Thursday’s outlook calls for 13 to 20 named storms, seven to 11 that strengthen into hurricanes and three to six that become major hurricanes. The prediction by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is more than what’s considered an average Atlantic season. Last year was the third-busiest on record, with 19 named storms. Ten became hurricanes, and two were major storms with winds of more than 111 mph. That included Sandy, which caused $50 billion in damage.

THE UNITED STATES and Israel raised hopes Thursday for a restart of the Middle East peace process despite little tangible progress so far from U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry’s 2month-old effort to get Israelis and Palestinians back to the negotiating table. Meeting in Jerusalem, Kerry praised Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the “seriousness” with which he is looking at revitalizing peace hopes. “It’s something I want,” Netanyahu said. “It’s something I hope the Palestinians want as well.” Kerry met with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas later Thursday in Ramallah.


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PeninsulaNorthwest

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Hundreds attend funeral of PA teen Suspected PA heroin provider in Clallam jail BY JEREMY SCHWARTZ PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — The colors red and black accompanied by the sounds of sobbing filled a funeral chapel Thursday as at least 300 family members and friends gathered to bid farewell to 17-year-old Maceo Niehaus, who died last week of a suspected heroin overdose. Teenagers and adults alike gathered for the service wearing Maceo’s favorite colors and shirts with his photo printed on him, filling the main DrennanFord Funeral Chapel and spilling out into the entry hall. “If just one person can see what happened to Maceo and turn away [from drug use], then Maceo will not have died in vain,” said David Moffitt, a family friend and the recently retired pastor of First Christian Church in Port Angeles who officiated the service.

Teen remains jailed David Zavodny, 18, is in the Clallam County jail in lieu of $250,000 bond for investigation of providing Maceo with the heroin that reportedly killed him. Zavodny was charged last week with one count of maintaining premises for drug trafficking, though a homicide charge related to allegedly providing heroin to Maceo could come at a

JEREMY SCHWARTZ (2)/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

ABOVE: Ricki Niehaus, right, grandmother of 17-year-old Maceo Niehaus, hugs a family friend during Maceo’s funeral Thursday. Maceo died last week of a suspected heroin overdose. LEFT: Miranda Cary-Dewater, 16, cousin of 17-year-old Maceo Niehaus, signs the guestbook at Maceo’s funeral. later date, according to the Clallam County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office. Maceo was found dead May 14 at the Ennis Street home in which Zavodny lived. Maceo had not been breathing for between 40 and 45 minutes when Zavodny called 9-1-1 at 1:48 p.m. that day, according to police reports.

Just out of rehab Ricki Niehaus, Maceo’s grandmother, said Maceo had been home for 20 days from a four-month drug treatment and basic train-

ing program called Camp Outlook in the Eastern Washington town of Connell when he died and seemed to be fully intent on staying clean. “I have to hope kids learn from it,” Ricki Niehaus said. “I feel like he gave his life, like Jesus, so the other kids can learn from his mistake.” Family and friends described Maceo as bighearted, outgoing and competitive, always up for a BMX bike or four-wheel ATV race at a friend’s home-built dirt track.

“He knew he was going to be big,” Ricki Niehaus said, adding that Maceo had wanted to be a professional BMX rider. Devin Richardson and Tre Singleton, both 18, were a cousin and good friend to Maceo, respectively, though both described him as a brother. “I’m still kind of in denial about the whole thing,” Richardson said in an interview after the funeral Thursday. “I love him; always will.” Singleton, who had known Maceo since the second grade, said he heard

Buddhist master to teach 2 classes

They were the last words Singleton would hear from Maceo’s mouth. Singleton and Richardson said they hope Maceo’s death will be a wake-up call for friends or anyone his age who has fallen into hard drugs. “Addiction can take your life at any given point,” ‘Weird’ message Richardson said. “To the people that Singleton said Maceo called later that morning haven’t learned from this, I with a message Singleton pray for them every day.” ________ described as weird. “Maceo called and said, ‘I Reporter Jeremy Schwartz can love you all,’ like he knew be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. he’d be gone,” Singleton 5074, or at jschwartz@peninsula said. dailynews.com.

Wireless PA ’Net system complete BY JEREMY SCHWARTZ PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — A Tibetan Buddhist master will make two appearances this weekend, one geared toward novices and another for those who are practiced in the religion. Tulku Yeshi Rinpoche will teach about “Universal Compassion and Tibetan Buddhism” from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. today. A teaching about the “37 Practices of the Bodhisattva” is from 9:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. Sunday. Both take place at the Rosewind Common House between 35th and Umatilla streets. Admission is free, but donations are accepted. “We don’t realize that a lot of what we do and say creates a condition of our

about Maceo’s death last week after a call from Zavodny, whom Singleton said he did not know well. Maceo and Singleton had been hanging out at a friend’s house between 3 a.m. and 4 a.m. May 14 when Maceo left for Zavodny’s house, Singleton said.

Tibetan Buddhist teacher Tulku Yeshi Rinpoche is scheduled to make two appearances in Port Townsend this weekend. suffering,” said Padma Yong Chedtso, a teacher of Tibetan Buddhism who is hosting the event. “The first teaching will show people how to live a happier life themselves, while the second teaching is for people who are already studying Buddhism and want to benefit everyone,” Yong said. Chedtso said having a “reincarnated master” speak locally benefits

the neighborhood. “Everyone wants to be happy; that’s a basic human desire,” she said. “These teachings can show people how to do this, by showing them how to emulate compassion and not anger.” Born in a tent to nomadic parents in Eastern Tibet, Rinpoche has received teachings from 30 masters in all four schools of Tibetan Buddhism.

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Charles “Doc” Beaudette, president of Internet service provider OlyPen, which is maintaining the non-hardware portions of Metro-Net, said 101 people so far have signed up with OlyPen to use the wireless network. _______ Beaudette said users can subscribe to “fixed-point” Jefferson County Editor Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360- network service, in which a 385-2335 or at cbermant@ device similar to a modem is installed at a home or busipeninsuladailynews.com.

Friday, May 24 thru Monday, May 27

Athlete’s Choice

A Chod Master, shamanistic healer and astrologer as well as the founder of Tibetan Zen and author of 13 books, he moved to Seattle in 2002 and has taught Buddhism and Tibetan culture throughout the U.S. since then, according to a news release. His recognition as a Tulku, or reincarnated master, came later in life after he already had spent years diligently studying the Dharma in Tibetan and Indian monasteries. His autobiography, A Modern Liberation Odyssey, details his life under Communist rule as a young boy and his eventual goal to attend a Tibetan Buddhist monastery. It was published in 2012, and a second book in English, Tibetan Zen, is coming soon, Chedtso said. For more information, email jkkumekawa@gmail. com.

PORT ANGELES — Most of the city’s 63 square miles now can be called a Wi-Fi hot spot. City Council members voted unanimously this week to accept as complete the $2.7 million Metro-Net system, which extends wireless Internet access to about 80 percent of the city through a “mesh network” of small wireless access points on poles throughout the city. Port Angeles-based Capacity Provisioning Inc. started installing the 239 access points last July and had until this July to install them all, making the project within budget and ahead of schedule, Police Chief Terry Gallagher said during Tuesday night’s council meeting. The main goal of the mesh network is to improve law enforcement communication and access to information from individual patrol cars, Gallagher said, though a separate portion of the network is reserved for public use. “It is everything we thought it might be,” Gallagher said.

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ness and communicates with a nearby wireless access point, or pay a certain amount to access the network through a laptop or other wireless-Internet capable device. Outside of one free hour per day and 10 free days in 2013, users will pay $5.95 per day, $15.95 per week or $34.95 per month for the mobile Metro-Net service, Beaudette said.

Wastewater plant Also during Tuesday’s meeting, council members voted unanimously to sign a $570,103 contract with Lynnwood-based Technical Services Inc. to upgrade the hardware and software used to control the city’s wastewater-treatment plant. The plant’s current computers, which automatically operate and adjust numerous plant components and alert public works staff when issues arise, are at least 20 years old, City Engineer Mike Puntenney said, and replacement parts are no longer made for them. “The [computers controlling the plant] we have are obsolete. They don’t make them any more,” Puntenney said. “When they fail, we’re going to be operating that system manually.” The contract will pay for the replacement with a new system that will have multiple points of data backup so control of the plant will not be lost during a natural disaster or other emergency, Puntenney said. The new system also will be integrated with the city’s combined sewer overflow stormwater and wastewater system upgrades, integration Puntenney said the current plant computers would not be able to accomplish. Puntenney said the computer upgrades will not affect customer utility rates. “We do have this paid for within the wastewatertreatment plant [capital facilities plan] budget for next year,” Puntenney said.


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

(J) — FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

A5

Vietnam vet wants ribbon for war draftees BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

JOYCE — A Vietnam veteran who has been fighting for recognition for Vietnam draftees for more than five years is finding his pleas falling on deaf ears. Tony Cook, 67, has contacted the military, politi-

cians, activists and veterans organizations to create a ribbon — or a device to wear on an existing ribbon — for about 540,000 service members who didn’t volunteer for service and often didn’t want to join the military but showed up to serve their country.

In 1965, Cook dropped out of college when he received a Selective Service notice to report for induction and reported for duty Nov. 5, 1965. Like 540,000 others — about half of whom were drafted during nine years of American involvement in

the war — he served in Vietnam alongside volunteers who offered draftees no respect and returned home where the drafted veterans were given little credit for their combat duty, Cook said. He crafted the concept of a conscription ribbon that

would combine the color scheme of two ribbons awarded to Vietnam veterans, a large C for “conscripted� in red — symbolizing the blood spilled in Vietnam — and a broken olive branch. The Department of Heraldry, a Pentagon office that

designs and approves military symbols and awards, would have the final say on the award, most of which are typically much simpler in design. The design of the final award doesn’t matter as long as there is some recognition, Cook said.

Festival: Performers are onstage starting today CONTINUED FROM A1 Although the Vern Burton center, a former high school gymnasium, is no Carnegie Hall, the Juan de Fuca folks have made do quite well, thank you. Starting today, a cavalcade of performers from across the Olympic Peninsula and around the globe will arrive on the main stage, the Elks Naval Lodge ballroom stage and, in three sets of “After Hours� shows, a trio of smaller downtown venues. Named as it is for Juan de Fuca, the Venetian-born explorer, the festival is about discovering new vistas.

A global gamut Bands specializing in music from Mexico, Ireland, India and Argentina — along with abundant American jazz, blues, bluegrass and rock ’n’ roll — will hop up on the stages. The Sierra Leone Refugee All Stars will bring reggae and African music to Port Angeles High School today in three concerts for local students from elementary through high school; the octet will take the main stage tonight at 8:30. The world-fusion band Delhi 2 Dublin, the Latin band LoCura, the Balance Dance Co., the Groove for Thought vocal jazz ensemble and Danish unicyclistcomedian Henrik Bothe also are on the menu between now and Monday. Surrounding it all are other activities, including: ■The Art Shack inside the Vern Burton center, with workshops on drumming, personal mythology, greeting card-making and more. ■The Street Fair, free to the public outside the

said, on the level of Strawberry or Bumbershoot in Seattle. “We’re right up there with them, except for the price,� he added. Because Juan de Fuca is a nonprofit and receives significant support from local sponsors and members, ticket prices are below other multiday music and arts extravaganzas. A full festival pass is $60 at the gate, while single-day passes are $20 for today or Monday and $25 for Saturday or Sunday. These can be purchased at the Vern Burton center, while more information about all facets of the event is found at www.JFFA.org.

Workshops take patrons beyond music PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

and teacher Kayla Oakes invites children age 5 and older to an PORT ANGELES — Marketing introduction to the Juan de Fuca your art and music. Discovery Arts Summer Camp, to Developing a personal “journey be offered in Port Angeles from map.â€? July 29-Aug. 2. Learning about modern dance, A BrainDance activity is part of tango and BrainDance. this session in the Art Shack at the Starting today, these topics and Vern Burton center. more will be explored during the â– 12:45 p.m. — Zumba, a 20th annual Juan de Fuca Festival dance-fitness craze that stirs of the Arts. together salsa, merengue, cumbia, Workshops, classes and introducreggaeton and other dance styles tory sessions are slated at the Vern from around the world, will arrive Burton Community Center, 308 W. on the second-floor stage of the Fourth St., and nearby Port Angeles Elks Naval Lodge, 131 E. First St. venues today through Monday. â– 1:45 p.m. to 3:15 p.m. — Admission to these activities is “The Lost Art of Hand-Letteringâ€? included — and in the case of art workshops, materials are provided with Jackson Smart delves into old-fashioned letterform, color mix— with a festival pass, unless othing, brushes and fonts at the Vern erwise noted. Passes are available at the Vern Burton center’s Art Shack. Burton center at $20 for a singleday ticket today or Monday, $25 for Sunday Saturday or Sunday, or $60 for a â– Noon to four-day pass. 1 p.m. — “Whole Person Drummingâ€? Today workshop with â– 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. — “Effective Zorina Wolf of Sequim’s Village Marketing for Musicians and ArtHeartbeat Studio. istsâ€? with University of Colorado â– 1 p.m. to professor Storm Gloor, presented 3 p.m. — The BalWolf by the Western States Arts Federaance Dance Comtion; at the Chamber Stage adjapany of Boise will offer a mixed-levcent to the Vern Burton center. els class in modern dance technique for participants ages 12 and older at Saturday the Port Angeles Dance Center, 124 E. Front St. â– Noon to 1 p.m. — Dancer Vern Burton, with more than 60 vendors open from noon to 7 p.m. today, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, and from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday. â– Performances on the Vern Burton green, such as the Five Acre School Sound Waves Marimba Band today at 4:30 p.m., Sequimarimba at noon Saturday and the Na Hula Ă“ Wahine

‘Ilikea dancers at 1:15 p.m. Sunday. ■Open-mic afternoons on the Vern Burton green from 2:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday and 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday; the Great Juan de Fuca Sing-Along with Tom Shindler at noon Sunday. ■After Hours shows featuring main-stage acts at intimate venues starting

This class is free with a Juan de Fuca Festival ticket or $10 for drop-ins. ■1:45 p.m. to 3:15 p.m. — Art Factory with Melissa Klein, an artist and teacher who will set up a series of art stations for “creating art from the inside out.� Klein will invite visitors to make “journey maps� using their personal mythology, symbols and favorite animals to envision the future. No art experiKlein ence is necessary for this workshop inside the Vern Burton’s Art Shack. ■7:15 p.m. — Tango in the Olympics, a local dance group, will offer support and instruction for everyone who wants to learn or practice the tango while Tangoheart, led by bandoneon player Bertram Levy of Port Townsend, plays. The Elks Naval Lodge ballroom, 131 E. First St., is the place.

‘Always progressive’ The festival “has always been progressive and experimental,� said Nancy Vivolo, a volunteer since 1994 who is now president of the Juan de Fuca Foundation for the Arts board of directors. “We have an attitude of ‘Let’s try this,’� Vivolo said. Some things, like the hiphop-grunge band booked the first year, haven’t drawn good crowds, and that’s “part of the growing process.� For the arts-curious, “this is an opportunity to expand� by wandering into one venue or another to check out a new band. “It’s like trying a new food,� said Vivolo: “Take three bites; try three songs.� “The longevity of the festival is something I’m particularly proud of,� added Hanan. “The town really has ownership of it, which is wonderful.�

Monday ■1 p.m. to 3 p.m. — A cardmaking workshop with Amber Roundtree is open inside the Vern Burton’s Art Shack, so festivalgoers can come learn to make inexpensive, personalized greeting cards for any occasion.

at 10:30 tonight, Saturday and Sunday night at Bar N9ne, 229 W. First St.; Bella Italia, 118 E. First St.; and Next Door Gastropub, 113 W. First St.

Diverse audiences Dan Maguire, executive director of the Juan de Fuca Festival, has sought to attract audiences that are more diverse than ever, age-

and musical taste-wise. This year, for instance, he’s using a Seattle Foundation grant to bring the Sierra Leone Refugee All Stars, while booking bands such as the Barbary Ghosts and Houston Jones, who played the main stage at ________ California’s Strawberry Features Editor Diane Urbani Music Festival. de la Paz can be reached at 360“We’re a great West 452-2345, ext. 5062, or at diane. Coast festival,� Maguire urbani@peninsuladailynews.com.

Snowpack

Closing: Shop’s last day May 31

CONTINUED FROM A1 deep at the upper Dungeness sensor at last reading By comparison, HurriThe snow telemetry cane Ridge had 67 inches sites are: â– A 4,010-foot-high of snow Thursday, Olympic site in the upper Dunge- National Park reported. Snowpack in the Washness basin in Clallam ington Cascades is rangCounty; â– A 3,960-foot sensor ing between 144 percent to on Mount Crag in East 108 percent of normal. Jefferson County; â– A 5,010-foot site at Below-par elsewhere Waterhole near Hurricane Eastern Washington is Ridge in Clallam County. relatively dry, with basin The combined Olympic snowpacks between 73 basin snowpack was well percent and 98 percent of above average all winter. average. The snow water equivaMany parts of Oregon, lent in the Olympics was Idaho and Montana are 211 percent of normal in even drier. early January and 143 About three-fourths of percent of normal in the surface water in the March. Pacific Northwest comes

CONTINUED FROM A1 in touch with their home. Last year, they saw a The shop has several house on the Big Island security cameras that “are that they liked and made a only any good if you stare at low offer they were sure them all day,� Wiseman would be refused. When it was accepted in said. The 3,400-square-foot 30 minutes, they were store at 2328 W. Sims Way “stuck� with the property. After a trip to the house was crammed with 24,000 items, many of them very earlier this year, they made small, something that the decision to move and screamed “opportunity� to a attempt to keep the Port Townsend store open. shoplifter. “We were operating the Wiseman said it was different in Hawaii, where the store remotely for a while, inventory and layout were thinking that we could keep it open with our current much the same. “During the first six manager, Dawn Sagar, and months that we were here, assistant manager, Bailey we lost more to shoplifting Farnath,� Wiseman said. “Bailey got a job that than in eight years in was going to pay for her colHawaii,� she said. Wiseman and Spencer lege and was going to turn came to Port Townsend by it down because she didn’t accident, and their leaving want to leave us stranded. “But I told her to take it, is as fortuitous. The two operated art [that] we don’t hire stupid supply stores for 30 years in people — and if she turned Hawaii before moving to down that job, she was Washington and have kept fired.�

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man said. “Now we are approaching some of the businesses downtown to see if they can fill the void, telling them we carry certain things and seeing if they have room for them in their inventory.� While the shop caters to professional artists, several customers are amateurs and hobbyists who just want to make something original with their hands, Wiseman said. “There is something tactile you get when you create art,� she said. “Smushing paint around can be a lot more gratifying than pushing pixels around.� Akamai will be open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday through May 31.

Wiseman and Spencer don’t plan to move much of the current inventory to the new store in Hawaii that will open by Labor Day, though they will take some ________ fixtures. Jefferson County Editor Charlie “When Swain’s [Out- Bermant can be reached at 360door] closed, we added some 385-2335 or at cbermant@ items to fill the gap,� Wise- peninsuladailynews.com.

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from mountain snowmelt, Natural Resources ConAs of Thursday, snow- servation Service water pack was 132 percent of supply specialist Scott normal at Waterhole and Pattee has said. 119 percent at Mount ________ Crag. Reporter Rob Ollikainen can The 650-percent-of-nor- be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. mal reading in the upper 5072, or at rollikainen@peninsula Dungeness basin can be dailynews.com. attributed to the fact that the snow is gone by late May in many years. The peninsuladailynews.com snow was only 5 inches

Waterhole, Crag

After that, Sagar decided to make the trip to Hawaii. “It’s hard to find good help. When you do, you need to hang on to them,� Spencer said. The store’s location on Upper Sims Way on the south end of town is off the beaten track, but that hasn’t hurt the business, Wiseman said. “We’re not downtown darlings, and we didn’t want to be,� she said. “Downtown is more a tourist area, and we are not a tourist business.�


A6

PeninsulaNorthwest

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Transit hires managerial replacement Kitsap transfer takes helm from retiring official BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

ARWYN RICE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FIRE

DESTROYS HOME ON

LARCH AVENUE

Clallam County Fire District No. 2 firefighters train their horses on an unoccupied home at 506 N. Larch Ave. in Port Angeles that was destroyed in a Thursday morning fire. The fire spread to a nearby tree and landscaping before it was brought under control.

Man charged in ‘smash and grab’ at pawn shop Suspect to be arraigned in Superior Court today BY JEREMY SCHWARTZ

olice suspect that Bret Miles Dotson, 29, and at least one other person broke through the glass door of the pawn shop May 11 and made off with more than 100 pieces of jewelry, ranging in value from $40 to $1,500, and two .45-caliber guns.

P

and made off with more than 100 pieces of jewelry, ranging in value from $40 PORT ANGELES — A to $1,500, and two .45-caliPort Angeles man suspected ber guns. shop burglary: of being one of at least two Officers, already people who broke into a Similar burglary responding to a separate pawn shop on First Street call May 11, were disPolice are still investiwill be arraigned today on patched to a reported breakmultiple charges related to gating a similar burglary at in at the pawn shop and the “smash and grab� bur- the Radio Shack at 1940 E. saw a black Kia Sportage First St. that occurred in glary. SUV driving east on First Bret Miles Dotson, 29, the early morning hours of Street near the pawn shop has been charged with one May 8 in which thieves with its headlights off. count of first-degree bur- stole several iPods and two glary and two counts each laptop computers. 10-minute chase Officers are investigatof theft of a firearm and Responding officers second-degree unlawful ing both burglaries as connected, though they have attempted to stop the Kia, possession of a firearm after not uncovered evidence but the SUV driver continallegedly breaking into EZ tying Dotson to the Radio ued driving and led police Pawn at 113 W. First St. on Shack break-in. on a 10-minute chase that May 11 and stealing two As part of the Radio ended with the pursuing handguns and several Shack burglary, police were officers losing the Kia on a pieces of jewelry. looking for a dark-colored small residential street off Dotson is expected to be early 1990s Honda Accord Mount Angeles Road. arraigned in Clallam that surveillance footage The Kia later was found County Superior Court showed driving away from abandoned in a parking lot today at 9 a.m. the electronics store at at the intersection of Eighth Port Angeles police sus- about the time the burglary and Francis streets with pect that Dotson and at occurred. stolen property inside least one other person broke Police reports gave matching that missing from through the glass door of this account of how Dotson the pawn shop. the pawn shop in the early was found and arrested in Police tracked the occumorning hours of May 11 connection with the pawn pants of the vehicle using PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

police K-9 Bogey to a home in the 500 block of East Eighth Street where Dotson is known to stay. Police searched the home after obtaining a warrant and said they found numerous items stolen from the pawn shop, including two handguns, rings, bracelets, jewelry and a coin valued at $1,325.

Burglary aftermath Brian Winters, manager of EZ Pawn, said the glass door broken in during the burglary cost about $3,000 to replace, not including the six hours to clean up broken glass. Winters said he’s looking to buy metal shutters that can be closed at night but can still be seen through. “So it doesn’t look like a war zone or downtown L.A.,� Winters said, adding that the May 11 burglary was EZ Pawn’s first.

_________ Reporter Jeremy Schwartz can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5074, or at jschwartz@peninsula dailynews.com.

PORT ANGELES — Clallam Transit has approved a contract with its next general manager. Wendy Clark-Getzin, capital development director for Kitsap Transit in Bremerton, will replace retiring Clallam Transit System General Manager Terry Weed on July 1. She will earn $98,000 per year under a three-year agreement that Clallam Transit board members approved unanimously at a meeting in Forks this week. “I hope to achieve the continued stability that Clallam Transit has shown financially, as well as continuing the quality and quantity of services,� ClarkGetzin said in a telephone interview. Mike Chapman, Transit board member and Clallam County commissioner, lauded Clark-Getzin for her experience, education, legislative connections and ability to find state and federal transportation funds.

Experience cited “Her blend of experience in planning and budgetary skills was really the skill set that I think the board was looking for,� said Chapman, who was part of a recruitment committee that identified three finalists and presented one — ClarkGetzin — to the full board. “Her skill set, her connection to the community, the relationships she has at both the state and federal level with regard to funding sources, and her ability to plan put her over the top,� Chapman added. “She was by far the No. 1 candidate.� Transit board members discussed the selection in a closed-door executive session and reconvened in open session to vote on a memorandum of understanding to appoint ClarkGetzin as general manager by resolution, transit office manager and clerk of the board Mary Bower said. “The process that the Clallam Transit board was able to pull together so completely impressed me,� said Clark-Getzin, a 19-year Kitsap Transit employee. “I feel like I have my eyes wide open.� Weed, 64, will retire July 5 after 33 years with Clallam Transit. He became operations manager in 1984

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‘Beautiful spots’ Clark-Getzin played violin in the Port Angeles Symphony and bought property with an extra lot, thinking she may eventually retire in “one of the most beautiful spots in the world.� In 1994, Kitsap Transit hired Clark-Getzin to work on capital facilities projects, including the Bremerton Transportation Center.

Simultaneous openings Two of her projects, a Kingston-area park and ride, as well as a Bainbridge Island bike barn, opened on the same day, according to a Wednesday report in the Kitsap Sun. Clark-Getzin said the job allowed her to work regionally in all levels of government. During her time in Bremerton, Clark-Getzin earned a master’s in public administration and developed strong ties with state legislators such as current U.S. Rep. Derek Kilmer, a Port Angeles native whose 6th Congressional District includes the North Olympic Peninsula and Kitsap County. Clark-Getzin said she plans to seek new opportunities for Clallam Transit and “bring other community partners together.� “I am so pleased for the whole family to be able to make this move,� said Clark-Getzin, who has two elementary school-aged children and a husband, Daniel, an industrial paint chemist who plays the cello. “It just feels like a really good time to take that next huge step.�

________ Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5072, or at rollikainen@peninsula dailynews.com.

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Fumie Gage is teaching Brazilian and silk ribbon embroidery and tatting, the lost art of lace-making. Brazilian embroidery is a dimensional embroidery technique which uses vibrant rayon osses. Silk ribbon embroidery uses silk ribbons instead of the more standard and widelyrecognized osses to create works of art. Call 360-461-9158 for more information, or to schedule a visit with the needlework guild.

into strands that you can use directly to knit or crochet a unique one of a kind scarf or hat. Saturday June 9th, 2pm. Visit Cabled Fiber Studio website at www.cabledfiberstudio.com for more details or stop by the store at 106 N. Laurel in Port Angeles. The store can be reached at 360-504-2233, or info@cabledfiberstudio.com.

and was promoted to general manager in January 2005. Weed has e a r n e d $ 1 0 4 , 0 0 0 Clark-Getzin per year since 2010. “Terry has done a great job,� Chapman said. “He served Clallam Transit for over 30 years. Like I’ve always said, you don’t necessarily replace someone of Terry’s caliber, but [Clark-Getzin] brings a different skill set.� Weed said he plans to spend his retirement in the Port Angeles area. “It’s really great to follow on the heels of Terry Weed,� said Clark-Getzin, 48. “I really expect this transition is going to be smooth.� A native of Long Beach, Calif., Clark-Getzin earned a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering from California State University, Long Beach, and a master’s in urban planning from McGill University in Montreal. She worked in Clallam County government as a transportation planner and geographic information system analyst from 1991 to 1993. “I have fond memories of [current Clallam County Transportation Program Manager] Rich James describing how beautiful Port Angeles was,� ClarkGetzin recalled.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

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Marine life center to dedicate artwork Installation to honor men’s vision BY DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Nine months ago, sculptor and carver Clark Mundy began a monumental work, one that would symbolize a dream shared by two men. It’s ready. Today, “Kindred Spirits,� fashioned from a 13-foot, 450-pound Western red cedar tree trunk, will be officially welcomed at the Arthur D. Feiro Marine Life Center on City Pier at 331 N. Lincoln St. with a gathering at 3 p.m. Admission is free. “Kindred Spirits� is a story pole with its own bench, a tree adorned with copper symbols and found objects in honor of the late Art Feiro and Will Wirt, the Port Angeles educators who envisioned the marine life center. “It’s just gorgeous,� said Deborah Moriarty, the Feiro center’s director.

JOE SMILLIE (2)/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Sequim-Dungeness Hospital Guild Thrift Store volunteer Kathy Godbe models a Chinese New Year-inspired outfit she selected from the thrift store’s shelves at the guild’s annual fashion show Wednesday in Club Seven at 7 Cedars Casino. Models dressed up in holiday themes.

Hospital guild gives more than $32,000 BY JOE SMILLIE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

BLYN — Local health agencies will be able to train more nurses, provide more prescriptions and inspect more pathogens thanks to $32,700 in donations from the SequimDungeness Hospital Guild. The guild gave out the yearly profits from its thrift shop on Second Avenue and Bell Street to Olympic Medical Center’s laboratory, Peninsula College’s School of Nursing and the SequimDungeness Valley Health and Wellness Clinic at the guild’s annual luncheon at 7 Cedars Casino. “We’ve had a really good year at the shop. Even though the economy does seem to be improving, I think we’ve superseded it,� guild President Jean Janis told the sellout luncheon crowd of 160 Wednesday in the casino’s Club Seven lounge. “And guess what? Tomor- The Sequim-Dungeness Hospital Guild row morning at 10 a.m., representatives and recipients are, from left, Addie Curtis, guild vice president; Debbie Kahl, we’re open.�

Fashion show The shop’s stock was unveiled in a display during the holiday-themed postluncheon fashion show on the Club Seven stage. Guild members scoured the store’s racks to assemble outfits designed to highlight holidays. Since its founding in the early 1970s, the guild has donated more than $2 million to area health care organizations. The guild donated $15,000 to the SequimDungeness Valley Health and Wellness Clinic, this year’s top recipient. “I could just say a great big thank-you. This is an amazing contribution to our services,� said Rose Gibbs, director of the clinic. The funding will be used to help pay prescription and health care costs to the clinic’s approximately 2,000 patients, 350 of whom use it as their primary care facility, Gibbs said. The clinic, which treats those with no or insufficient insurance, also gives out about $250,000 worth of prescription assistance to patients, a number of whom rely on the clinic for diabetes medication. “Without us, they certainly wouldn’t be able to afford the insulin that keeps them out of the hospital,� said Gibbs, joined by the clinic’s new executive director, Jean Stratton.

High-tech help

Mundy engineered the sculpture to wrap around one of the center’s support posts. “So it looks like it belongs here,� Moriarty said. At this afternoon’s dedication, refreshments will be served, and Wirt’s and Feiro’s friends and family will share stories of how the center came to be. Then as now, a flock of volunteers and various fundraising events — the Fish on the Fence art project and banquet, for example — turned ideas into reality. Feiro, a high school and Peninsula College science teacher, summed up his vision for the center as a “multifaceted, dynamic, living, breathing facility . . . a teaching laboratory, a pub-

guild treasurer; Jean Janis, guild president; Steve Blackham, director of lab services at Olympic Medical Center; Rose Gibbs, director of the Dungeness Valley Health and Wellness Clinic; Jean Stratton, executive director of the clinic; Mary Hunchberger, executive director of the Peninsula College Foundation and College Advancement; and Richard Newman, chief human resource officer at OMC. tuberculosis is in a person’s system. “Now, we will be able to stain the body fluid and detect if it’s there very quickly,� Blackham said. That will keep patients from having to be isolated and held longer than they need to be, he said. He noted that the guild has donated more than $400,000 to OMC since its founding.

Nursing scholarships Peninsula College’s School of Nursing was given $5,000 from the guild for scholarships. Mary Hunchberger, executive director of the Peninsula College Foundation and College Advancement, said applications for scholarships at the nursing school have risen to 225 this year, nearly triple the 80 applicants from a year ago. Four students are enrolled under the guild’s scholarship, she added. “Next year, because of your generosity, we’ll have

lic center for marine studies and a point of interest for tourists.� The Arthur D. Feiro Marine Laboratory, as it was known then, opened in November 1981. After Feiro died in 1982, Wirt became its director. Wirt, who had been a professor of biology and chemistry at Peninsula College, served at the Feiro center for many years before his death in 2008. “Thousands of visitors and schoolchildren have benefited from Art and Will’s vision over the years,� Moriarty said.

are “for rest and remembrance,� according to Mundy, who will give brief remarks at today’s gathering. The Feiro Marine Life Center has switched to its summer hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, with admission at $4 for adults, $1 for children ages 4 to 17 and free for those 3 and younger. In addition to the science exhibits and art on display, the center will offer five summer programs for youths ages 5 to 18, Moriarty noted. Youngsters and their families can find out more by visiting www.Feiro Family donations MarineLifeCenter.org or The $13,000 “Kindred phoning the center at 360Spirits� monument, with its 417-6254. ________ hand-hammered copper sea stars, kelp and fish, was Features Editor Diane Urbani funded by donations from de la Paz can be reached at 360the Feiro and Wirt families. 452-2345, ext. 5062, or at diane. The story pole and bench urbani@peninsuladailynews.com.

Briefly: State

many, many more,� Hunchberger told the guild crowd. Longtime guild volunteer Norma Valeske was recognized at the lunch for more than 24 years of working in the thrift shop and training other employees. A special scholarship was awarded to Jenna Tmajko, a Sequim High graduate who now attends Chamberlain College of Nursing in Phoenix. Kasey Jones was sworn in to replace Donna Huswick as the guild’s secretary. The new slate of officers is: President Jean Janis, Vice President Addie Curtis, Secretary Kasey Jones, Treasurer Debbie Kahl and thrift shop Chairwoman Sue Tondreau.

Mom pleads not guilty in child’s death SEATTLE — A woman accused of neglecting two young daughters in a car on the Tulalip Reservation had a not-guilty plea entered for her Thursday in federal court in Seattle. Christina Carlson was indicted earlier this month on murder and criminal mistreatment charges. The (Everett) Daily Herald reported the 37-year-

old Tulalip woman faces a 30-year sentence if she is convicted. Carlson’s 19-month-old old daughter, Chantel Craig, died in October of dehydration and malnutrition. She was found in filthy conditions in a car with her 3-year-old sister, who also suffered from malnutrition but survived. Court papers say before they were found, Carlson was sending text messages attempting to buy drugs.

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Mayor Mike McGinn announced Thursday the city is hiring two new park rangers to patrol Cal Anderson Park and Occidental Square. The hiring is prompted by recent violence in Cal Anderson Park. The funds come from unspent money in the parks’ operating budget. Rangers remind people of the rules, head off problems and work with police. The new rangers should be on duty by the end of June. The Associated Press

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The guild’s $11,700 donation to the OMC laboratory will be used to purchase a fluorescent microscope, lab director Steve Blackham said. The microscope, Blackham said, will be used to identify some slow-growing pathogens and fungi. The hospital currently has to send out tests to have labs with equipment such as fluorescent microscopes determine whether an organism associated with

Wrap-around

DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Lillie Wirt, the widow of late Feiro Marine Life Center Director Will Wirt, stands beside “Kindred Spirits,� the story pole and bench honoring her late husband and his friend Art Feiro at the marine life center in Port Angeles.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday May 24-25, 2013 PAGE

A8

Something’s done on Capitol Hill WHENEVER THE WORLD of Washington, D.C., seems hopeless, someone will point out that the Senate Judiciary Committee did a good job on immigration reform. That’s it? Yeah, pretty Gail much. Immigration Collins reform has been the 2013 bipartisan bright spot in the Senate, unless you were really moved by the day they voted to debate gun control before killing all the gun control plans. The committee members cheerfully plowed through 300odd proposed amendments, while taking turns telling which country their great-grandfather came from. There was, of course, a lot of disagreement, although almost everybody seemed to enjoy slapping down ideas offered by Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama. Mainstream Republicans have been super-energized to do immigration reform ever since the Hispanic vote went against them in the last election. Democracy does work. If somebody came up with a dramatic poll showing that all the people with diabetes, asthma and chronic back problems had voted against Mitt Romney, there would no longer be a problem getting funding for health care reform. High points in the committee’s long slog toward passage included a proposal from tea party icon Mike Lee of Utah to exempt employers of “cooks, waiters, butlers, housekeepers, governesses, maids, valets, baby sitters, janitors, laundresses, furnacemen, caretakers, handymen, gardeners,

footmen, grooms and chauffeurs of automobiles for family use” from checking to make sure their help had the proper legal status. It didn’t go anywhere, but if you happen to run into Lee, feel free to say: “The butler did it.” The most painful low point in the committee’s deliberations came at the end, when the Democrats gave up on an amendment allowing same-sex spouses the same right as heterosexuals to apply for permanent resident status for their partners. It’s not every day when you hear a senator announce that he had decided to support a move that involved “rank discrimination.” But the Republicans who were needed to get an immigration bill through the Senate had made it supremely clear that if any hint of gay marriage entered the legislation, they were going to take their toys and go home. Decide for yourself how you feel about this one, people. Stand up for equality or finally get a major bill through the Senate? Defend equality or cave in and hope that the Supreme Court bails you out when it rules on the Defense of Marriage Act next month? It is, at minimum, a useful reminder of what lawmaking looked like back in the days when the two parties made deals and we complained that nobody was sticking to their principles. Back to the can-do days when senators routinely said things like Sen. Orrin Hatch’s explanation of his thinking on immigration: “I’m going to vote this bill out of committee because I’ve committed to do that.” The bill, which would give millions of undocumented residents a path toward eventual citizenship, now goes to the full Senate, where

STEVE SACK/CAGLE CARTOONS

it actually looks as though it’s going to pass. Any further progress would require cooperation from the House of Representatives, the circle of hell where the damned are condemned to spend eternity voting to repeal the health care reform law. Perhaps you missed the one last week. Let me summarize: ■ “The Obamacare law must be ripped out by its roots!” ■ “The 37th time! The 37th time!” ■ “A malignant tumor that’s metastasizing on America’s liberty!” ■ “We have spent over 56 hours on the floor debating repeal of the law of the land!” The House Republican leadership would probably rather have

Peninsula Voices Pesticide use Even though there is a lot of good information in the article [“Caterpillar Infestations Found,” PDN, May 22], I am amazed and dumbfounded that there is no mention — or even a caveat — about not using pesticides during the “bloom.” There was a caution about using pesticides and I

congratulate all about that; however, if anyone thinks that tent caterpillars will or may reduce fruit production, I can guarantee that using pesticides on a fruit tree or berry will reduce fruit production more than tent caterpillars will. I find it hard to believe that the Master Gardener or [horticulturist] Andrew

May did not mention not using pesticides during fruit bloom. Even the labels on most if not all pesticides caution not to use the product during fruit bloom because of the hazards to pollinating insects. I will be surprised if beekeepers don’t descend upon you, the Master Gardeners

been working on something else. But the newer members whined that they’d hardly had any opportunities to vote to repeal Obamacare at all. “It sends a great statement back to our district,” said Rep. Ted Yoho, Republican of Florida, who many people enjoy quoting because they like saying Ted Yoho. Also, it’s hard for the Republicans to agree among themselves about anything else. One influential conservative organization recently urged Speaker John Boehner to drop the whole legislation idea completely and just hold committee hearings about the IRS scandal and Benghazi forever. “Recent events have rightly focused the nation’s attention squarely on the actions of the

OUR READERS’

Obama administration,” argued the Heritage Action for America. “It is incumbent upon the House of Representatives to conduct oversight hearings on those actions, but it would be imprudent to do anything that shifts the focus from the Obama administration to the ideological differences within the House Republican conference.” We really hate it when they get imprudent.

________ Gail Collins is a columnist for The New York Times whose work often appears on the PDN Commentary page. Email her via the website http://tinyurl.com/nytcollins.opfdq. Martha Ireland, whose column appears every other Friday, is on hiatus through June.

LETTERS, FAXES AND EMAIL

May 17] counsels that we just don’t have to know unless we have the appropriate security clearance (provided by government). Road to tyranny The American people can be lied to, intimidated, The letter [“Standing Tall,” Peninsula Voices, May oppressed, shunted aside, and their representatives 17) can be summed up as: (Congress) ignored and dis“It can’t happen here.” respected. At the same time, the letter [“Benghazi Criticism,” The Constitution [can

and May like a plague of tent caterpillars. David H. Crossley Port Angeles

be] skirted and manipulated, as in Benghazi, IRS, inappropriate press investigations, Justice Department shenanigans and whistleblower persecution. The road to tyranny is growing wider and shorter. Stand by saluting while it occurs, but at least look. Joseph R. Barry Port Angeles

Judges get pay raises, Inslee doesn’t THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

GOV. JAY INSLEE and most statewide elected officials and lawmakers won’t get a pay raise this year, but judges will see a salary hike under the salary schedule adopted by the Washington Citizen’s Commission on Salaries for Elected Officials. Inslee’s salary remains at $166,891 a year, the same amount that the governor’s pay has been since September 2008. “It’s appropriate for these times when we’re doing everything we can to balance the budget,” Inslee spokeswoman Jaime Smith told The Olympian newspaper in Olympia. “You trust the commission to take into account all the factors in setting the salaries. That’s their job,” she said. The commission was created in 1986 by a constitutional amendment to set the pay for statewide elected officials, judges and legislators. The 17 unpaid commissioners include 10 people selected at random from voter registration rolls.

Others are chosen to represent business, labor and other interests. They consider how much elected officials elsewhere are paid for similar work. The commission’s decision is final. Annual changes take effect Sept. 1. Other changes in the schedule the commission adopted Wednesday include: ■ Pay for state Supreme Court justices goes up $3,284 to $167,505. ■ Pay for Court of Appeals judges goes up $3,127 to $159,455. ■ Pay for Superior Court judges goes up $2,977 to $151,809. ■ Pay for District Court judges goes up $2,834 to $144,544. ■ Lt. Gov. Brad Owen’s salary increases $3,052 to $97,000.

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■ Treasurer Jim McIntire’s pay goes up $8,050 to $125,000. ■ Lands Commissioner Peter Goldmark’s pay goes up $2,432 to $124,050. ■ State schools chief Randy Dorn’s pay also goes up $2,432 to $124,050. Like the governor’s pay, the salary is frozen for the other officials elected statewide in Washington. Attorney General Bob Ferguson stays at $151,718. Secretary of State Kim Wyman stays at $116,950. Auditor Troy Kelley stays at $116,950. Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler stays at $116,950. The commission also froze legislators’ salaries. House Speaker Frank Chopp and Senate Majority Leader Rodney Tom will continue to be paid $50,106. Minority leaders and rankand-file legislators remain at $46,106. Lawmakers receive additional per diem pay during legislative sessions.

ball coach Lorenzo Romar at $1.35 million, and fourth is WSU coach Ken Bone at $855,000. By comparison, former Gov. Chris Gregoire — the state’s chief executive in 2012 — earned $162,000 after forfeiting a portion of her pay when other state workers’ pay was cut. Most state workers saw a 3 percent reduction in pay since July 2011. The first non-coach is fifth on the list — Washington State UniCoaches highest-paid versity President Elson Floyd at Earlier this week, the state $625,000, and sixth is UW presiOffice of Financial Management dent Michael Young at $563,000. released a list of 2012 public salaA total of 68 state employees ries that showed college coaches earned more than $300,000. are the top-paid state employees Most of them are in higher in Washington. education, and many are paid Coaches are paid from athletic through research grants, not department revenue, such as taxes or tuition. ticket sales and television rights, Many of the highest-paid UW or gifts — not taxpayer funds. employees are in high-demand, University of Washington foot- high-paying fields such as mediball coach Steve Sarkisian earned cine or computer science, the $2.7 million last year, followed by Office of Financial Management Washington State University foot- said. ball coach Mike Leach at $2.3 milThe complete list of state salalion. ries is online at http://fiscal.wa. Third on the list is UW basket- gov/Salaries.aspx. The commission sets salaries for two years at a time, and the schedule for September 2014 follows this year’s trend. Annual salaries for the governor and most statewide officials will remain frozen, except for the schools superintendent, who will get a raise. Judges will get another round of raises, and salaries for legislators will remain the same.

NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ LEAH LEACH, managing editor/news, 360-417-3531 lleach@peninsuladailynews.com ■ MARGARET MCKENZIE, news editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5064 mmckenzie@peninsuladailynews.com ■ BRAD LABRIE, sports editor; 360-417-3525; blabrie@peninsuladailynews.com ■ DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ, features editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5062 durbanidelapaz@peninsuladailynews.com ■ General news information: 360-417-3527 From Jefferson County and West End, 800-826-7714, ext. 5250 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com News fax: 360-417-3521 ■ Sequim office: 147-B W. Washington St., 360-681-2390 JOE SMILLIE, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, jsmillie@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way., 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com

HAVE YOUR SAY ■ REX WILSON, executive editor, 360-417-3530 We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” and “Teen Point of View” guest opinion columns of no more than 550 words that focus on local community lifestyle issues. Please — send us only one letter or column per month. Letters and guest columns published become the property of Peninsula Daily News, and it reserves the right to reject, condense or edit for clarity or when information stated as fact cannot be substantiated. Letters published in other newspapers, anonymous letters, personal attacks, letters advocating boycotts, letters to other people, mass mailings and commercial appeals are not published. Include your name, street address and — for verification purposes — day and evening telephone numbers. Email to letters@ peninsuladailynews.com, fax to 360-417-3521, or mail to Letters to the Editor, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Sunday RANTS & RAVES 24-hour hotline: 360-417-3506


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

CommentaryViewpoints

TV networks serving up schlock NETWORKS ARE GENERALLY leery of shows that are set in the past. TV executives think younger viewers don’t care about history. And they’re always on the Maureen hunt for the Dowd younger demo, working on the mistaken premise that millennials buy more and change brands more often than profligate and fickle baby boomers. It’s funny that networks are afraid of the past, given that they’re stuck in it. TV honchos cling to outmoded programming traditions even as many younger Americans, gorging on a movable feast of platforms, are losing the habit of turning on the TV, and even as top talent peels off to enjoy the freedom of cable and imaginative hubs like Amazon, Hulu, YouTube and Netflix, which is crackling with “House of Cards” and a fresh season of “Arrested Development.” Networks still prefer to play it safe with likable characters, not darker ones like Tony Soprano, Walter White, Don Draper, Nicholas Brody and face-chewing zombies. Watching the derivative and uninspiring fare served up last week by the networks during their previews to woo advertisers, I was flummoxed at the lack of creativity and modernity. Rod Serling had more originality on a sick day than all the networks’ high-priced talent combined. Serling once complained that TV drama “must walk tiptoe and in agony lest it offend some cereal buyer from a given state below the Mason-Dixon.” But the networks of the 21st century don’t seem hungry to push the envelope, despite their ever-shrinking audiences. I asked one media big shot

what he watches. He replied, “Homeland,” “Breaking Bad” and “Mad Men” — all cable hits — failing to mention any of his own network’s shows. Then why, I wondered, can’t networks show more verve? “They’re enslaved to tradition,” he said. “It’s silly. They should be bolder and more aggressive, edgier and sexier, but there’s a lot of timidity.” So NBC, which some weeks finished last behind Univision, offers us Blair Underwood in “Ironside,” a remake of its old series with Raymond Burr; Minnie Driver in “About a Boy,” a redo of the movie based on Nick Hornby’s novel; James Spader in “The Blacklist” as yet another variation on Hannibal Lecter, a suave criminal mastermind strapped to a chair who will only cooperate with the FBI if he works with a young, pretty female agent; and Jonathan Rhys Meyers in “Dracula,” which doesn’t really count as new blood. Judd Apatow and Kristen Wiig turned Melissa McCarthy into an outsize star in the movie “Bridesmaids,” so naturally lots of writers raced to produce pilots with plussize women straining to be funny. Rebel Wilson, the talented, heavyset Aussie actress who played Wiig’s obnoxious roommate in “Bridesmaids,” will star in ABC’s “Super Fun Night,” about three nerdy girlfriends who aim for madcap Friday nights. “Back in the Game” is about a young blonde who joins a beerguzzling former baseball player in coaching an underdog Little League team. “Bad News Bears” redux. “Resurrection” is about dead relatives popping up on the doorstep — zombies with better skin. At least ABC passed on “Westside,” Romeo and, like, Juliet set in Venice, Calif., and “Middle Age Rage,” which the network describes as “a middle-aged mother who is fed up with feeling invisible and begins to speak and demand the respect she feels she’s earned.”

CBS proffers “Reckless,” described as a sultry legal show set in Charleston, S.C., with a comely Yankee litigator clashing over a police scandal with a Southern city attorney “as they struggle to hide their intense attraction.” I saw this when the city attorney was a New Orleans cop and it was called “The Big Easy,” starring Ellen Barkin and Dennis Quaid. CBS has “Bad Teacher,” based on the 2011 Cameron Diaz movie, and “Friends With Better Lives,” the plot of which sounds just like the 2006 Nicole Holofcener movie, “Friends With Money.” The one retread that might have been fun, “Beverly Hills Cop,” with Eddie Murphy himself dropping by in guest spots, CBS passed on. Fox has “Enlisted,” a wacky comedy about three brothers in the Army in Florida, which smacks of Bill Murray, Harold Ramis and John Candy in “Stripes,” even down to what sounds like the same music. J.J. Abrams’ “Almost Human” looks like a hand-me-down blend of “RoboCop” and “Blade Runner.” Even Fox’s freshest ideas are antique: a show about a hunky Ichabod Crane called “Sleepy Hollow” and “24” with Kiefer Sutherland, but this time squeezed into 12 episodes. Doing a comedy turn at the ABC upfronts at Lincoln Center, Jimmy Kimmel had the most trenchant comment about the quality of the new season’s pilots, slyly observing: “One of the shows previewed today was written by a thirdgrade class. Your challenge tonight is to figure out which one it was.”

________ Maureen Dowd is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The New York Times. Email her via http://tinyurl.com/dowdmail. Her column appears here Fridays.

The Obama pal and your medical records WHO IS JUDY FAULKNER? Chances are, you don’t know her. But her politically connected, taxpayer-subsidized electronic medical records company may very well know you. Top Obama donor and bilMichelle lionaire Malkin Faulkner is founder and CEO of Epic Systems, which will soon store almost half of all Americans’ health information. If the crony odor and the potential for abuse that this “epic” arrangement poses don’t chill your bones, you ain’t paying attention. As I first noted last year before the IRS witch hunts and Justice Department journalist snooping scandals broke out, Obama’s federal electronic medical records (EMR) mandate is government malpractice at work. The stimulus law provided a whopping $19 billion in “incentives” (read: subsidies) to force hospitals and medical professionals into converting from paper to electronic record-keeping systems. Penalties kick in next year for any provider who fails to comply with the one-size-fits-all edict. Obamacare bureaucrats claimed the government’s EMR mandate would save money and modernize health care. As of December 2012, $4 billion had already gone out to 82,535 professionals and 1,474 hospitals; a total of $6 billion will be doled out by 2016. What have taxpayers and health care consumers received in return from this boondoggle? After hyping the alleged benefits for nearly a decade, the RAND Corp. finally admitted in January that its cost-savings predictions of $81 billion a year — used repeatedly to support the

Obama EMR mandate — were, um, grossly overstated. Among many factors, the researchers blamed “lack of interoperability” of records systems for the failure to bring down costs. And that is a funny thing, because it brings us right back to Faulkner and her well-connected company. You see, Epic Systems — the dominant EMR giant in America — is notorious for its lack of interoperability. Faulkner’s closed-end system represents antiquated, harddrive-dependent software firms that refuse to share data with doctors and hospitals using alternative platforms. Health IT analyst John Moore of Chilmark Research, echoing many industry observers, wrote in April that Epic “will ultimately hinder health care organizations’ ability to rapidly innovate.” Question: If these subsidized data-sharing systems aren’t built to share data to improve health outcomes, why exactly are we subsidizing them? And what exactly are companies like Faulkner’s doing with this enhanced power to consolidate and control Americans’ private health information? It’s a recipe for exactly the kind of abuse that’s at the heart of the IRS and Justice scandals. As I reported previously, a little-noticed Health and Human Services inspector general’s report issued last fall exposed how no one is actually verifying whether the transition from paper to electronic is improving patient outcomes and health services. No one is actually guarding against GIGO (garbage in, garbage out). No one is checking whether recipients of the EMR incentives are receiving money redundantly (e.g., raking in payments when they’ve already converted to electronic records). And no one is actually protect-

ing private data from fraud, theft or exploitation. But while health IT experts and concerned citizens balk, money talks. Epic employees donated nearly $1 million to political parties and candidates between 1995 and 2012 — 82 percent of it to Democrats. The company’s top 10 PAC recipients are all Democratic or left-wing outfits, from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (nearly $230,000) to the DNC Services Corp. (nearly $175,000) and the America’s Families First Action Fund Democratic super-PAC ($150,000). The New York Times reported in February that Epic and other large firms spent hundreds of thousands of dollars lobbying for the Obama EMR “giveaway.” Brandon Glenn of Medical Economics observes “it’s not a coincidence” that Epic’s sales “have been skyrocketing in recent years, up to $1.2 billion in 2011, double what they were four years prior.” It’s also no coincidence, as a famous Democratic presidential candidate once railed, that the deepest-pocketed donors “are often granted the greatest access, and access is power in Washington.” That same candidate, Barack Obama, named billionaire Democratic donor Faulkner as the only industry representative on the federal panel overseeing the $19 billion EMR “incentives” program from which her company benefits grandly. The foxes are guarding the Obamacare henhouse. The IRS vultures are circling overhead. The shadow of tyranny and the stench of corruption are unmistakable.

________ Michelle Malkin’s nationally syndicated column appears in the PDN every Friday. Email malkinblog@gmail.com.

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

A9



PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday, May 24-25, 2013 SECTION

SPORTS, DEATHS, COMICS, BUSINESS In this section

B The return of

Other area events PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Event is back at new locale after a hiatus

Summer won’t officially arrive on the North Olympic Peninsula until June 20, but the three-day Memorial Day weekend gives residents and visitors plenty of reason to start summer unofficially. In addition to two big town festivals — the Juan de Fuca Festival of the Arts in Port Angeles (see Peninsula Spotlight magazine in this edition) and ShrimpFest in Brinnon (see story on this page) — there are myriad events scheduled between today and Monday. For information about other arts and entertainment events, also see Peninsula Spotlight.

BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

BRINNON — After a year’s absence, the Brinnon ShrimpFest has returned with verve. “We didn’t have this [festival] last year, and there were a lot of people who really wanted this to happen this year,� said Phil Thenstedt, one of the organizers for the Emerald Towns Alliance. “We were looking for new blood, and the new location will make it a lot better.� ShrimpFest 2013 takes place from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday in the field behind Yelviks General Store, 251 Hjelvicks Road at U.S. Highway 101.

Memorial Day events

CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Celebrating the shrimp

Spectators at the 2011 Brinnon ShrimpFest watch modified belt sanders fly down a custom track. After a year’s hiatus, ShrimpFest returns this weekend — with the unusual belt-sander races returning as well.

The event — a fundraiser for the Emerald Towns Alliance, a civic nonprofit in the BrinnonQuilcene areas — has been around in one form or another since 1994 and is intended to celebrate the Hood Canal spot shrimp season, which is in May. Memorial Day, which gives shrimpers time to get their catch prepared, became obvious as the right time for the commemoration. For several years, ShrimpFest took place in nearby Dosewallips

State Park. But the 2011 implementation by the state of the Discover Pass, which requires a one-day $10 pass for every vehicle to park, mucked up the works. The ShrimpFest organizers were unable to strike a waiver deal with the park system, and they could not afford to pay the event fee to the state that would have taken the place of the passes’ revenue.

Thenstedt said ShrimpFest was going through a transition anyway, with a lot of past participants no longer willing to take part in the festival. That was then.

The corner turned for 2013 when the event found a new home 3 miles north of the old location.

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The new space has more room for visitors and more parking, which is included in the cost of admission — $4 a day or $6 for two days (kids younger than 12 and active-duty military are admitted free). Thenstedt said the layout is more welcoming than the park, which located the event in the middle of the woods.

New location

The “Original� Since 1957

X g &LEXOGEN 'ARDEN HOSE

Solemn Memorial Day events — honoring American service members who made the ultimate sacrifice for their country — will be listed in the Peninsula Daily News on Sunday. For a rundown of campgrounds, resorts and similar places to take in the Peninsula’s rich scenery, check out the newly released 2013 North Olympic Peninsula Guide. The 136-page spring/summer guide, less than a week old, is free and available at scores of visitor-oriented locations in Jefferson and Clallam counties. And now, on to more events happening this weekend in our communities:


B2

PeninsulaNorthwest

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

‘Minor’ eclipse happens tonight PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

A subtle lunar eclipse takes place tonight in the North Olympic Peninsula sky — and even if it’s not cloudy, viewers might not be able to tell it’s happening. It will be a “penumbral eclipse,� visible across much of North America, South America and western Africa. A penumbral eclipse is “the least interesting type of eclipse because the moon is in Earth’s faint outer (penumbral)

Starwatch Extra shadow,� according to the Space. com website. “Unless you’re a seasoned skywatcher, you likely won’t notice the effect.� While it will not be an outstanding show, if you know what to look for, it will be interesting. To see this penumbral

eclipse, you have to really pay attention. At no point will the moon be more than partially eclipsed, meaning that while you will see a reduction in the moon’s brightness, no part of its disk will be completely within the shadow (umbra), and no part of its disk will appear completely dark. The slight dimming of the moon’s disk in penumbral eclipses is, at best, barely perceptible to the untrained eye.

What astrologers say Believe in astrology? “Even though penumbral eclipses are the ‘weakest’ of all the eclipses, this one will still make us stand up and take notice,� according to one astrologer, Janet “Sparrow� Moon at www.sparrowmoon.com. Another astrology website predicts: “Some of us may stop mid-stream and change directions in business or in a relationship. Lunar eclipses bring separation and may end a chap-

ter of your life, as you begin a new one.� (The PDN’s astrology column is on Page B11 today.) Tonight’s eclipse will begin at 8:53 p.m. It will reach its climax at 9:10 p.m. The eclipse will end at 9:26 a.m.

_________ Read more about the stars, moon and planets in our monthly Starwatch astronomy column. Starwatch appears in the Peninsula Daily News the first Friday of every month.

‘Much Ado’ to take stage in Chimacum BY DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

A ride down the giant slide at the Brinnon ShrimpFest in 2011 was fun for parents and children alike. Here, from left, Anthony Stanhope of Auburn, holding daughter, Lillian, 3; Kalaya Schweiger of Enumclaw; and James Schweiger, holding his daughter, Jayda, 2, show their pleasure as they finish the run.

Shrimp: Biggest draw

are belt-sander races CONTINUED FROM B1 urday, at which time contestants take belt sanders that “The last ShrimpFest are decorated with caricalaid out all the vendors in a tures such as ducks or devils and race them down a grid,� he said. “This year, we are put- 50-foot wooden strip. The track confines the ting it all in a circle around sander to a narrow path, so the stage area. “The land is a natural the only control the “driver� amphitheater with a view has is to turn the sander on of the mountains and the or off. Every contestant races water that you can see from against each other, with the everywhere.� The festival features 80 winners earning trophies vendors, including craft and cash prizes. Live music also is a big booths, food booths, exhibits, a beer garden, live music part of this year’s ShrimpFest. and activities for children. “In past years, the music stopped and started. This Belt-sander races year, it will go on all the The big event returns: time,� Thenstedt said. the festival’s renowned belt“As soon as one group sander races, in which con- finishes, another will start.� testants soup up their The special performers power tools and race them are Seattle cover band along a plank. Seduction at 1 p.m. SaturThe races take place day and local favorite from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sat- Locust Street Taxi from

11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday. Performers onstage both days are the Old Sidekicks, Greg Parke, Eric Miller, Kendra and James, an Elvis Presley tribute artist. Thenstedt said past events have drawn around 1,400 people during the two days, but he expects that number could be lower because of the one-year lapse in 2012. He said ShrimpFest could draw people who are driving on U.S. 101 from one destination to another — a surprise for travelers who will stop to see what it’s all about. For more information, email shrimpfest@hotmail. com or phone 360-796-4456.

________ Jefferson County Editor Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360385-2335 or at cbermant@ peninsuladailynews.com.

ENJOY LIFE FOR LESS LOVE SEATS SOFAS STARTING AT STARTING AT 299 399 6 as me Sa

NEW FURNITURE AND MATTRESSES -ON 3AT A M P M s 3UN A M P M FINANCING AVAILABLE 6 Months, Same as Cash

w w w. pab a rga i nwareh o u se.net s ( W Y % A ST s 0OR T !NGELES

Free meal scheduled at church

tables, coleslaw, dessert and beverages. Reservations are recommended and may be made by phoning the church at 360-683-5367 between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. the Tuesday or Wednesday before the dinner or by emailing dinners@sequimtumc.org.

Funeral planning FORKS — A free seminar on planning funeral

arrangements will be held at JT’s Sweet Stuffs, 80 N. Forks Ave., at 12:30 p.m. Friday, May 31. Attendees will be taught four steps in planning final arrangements. The event is sponsored by Harper-Ridgeview Funeral Chapel and Mount Angeles Memorial Park. Refreshments will be served. To RSVP, phone 360-452-9701. Peninsula Daily News

DIRTY STOVES POLLUTE

$25 off

annual cleaning Until July 31

EverWarm

Call 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 www.peninsuladailynews.com

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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Hero has been unfaithful. “It’s a great accomplishAnd so, with abundant ment that we are excited to humor along the way, the share with the community.� Among the actors bringcouples must work things ing Shakespeare’s classic to out before they can wed. life are high-schoolers Peter Glitsch as Benedick, Emilia ‘Lots of laughter’ Lewis as Beatrice, Daniel “There is some live music Elsberry as Claudio, Noah and lots of laughter in our Falge as Don Pedro, Kelsey production,� promised Mac- Ferrenberg as Leonata, rina Lewis, one of the play’s Emily Bufford playing both parent-directors. Ursula and Antonia, Zara The Olympic Peninsula Kulish as Dogberry and Home Connection students eighth-grader Leah Niehave devoted a whole man as Hero. semester to “Much Ado,� she For more information added. about the production and “It has been a big under- about the Olympic Penintaking, but the kids have sula Home Connection prorisen to the occasion,� she gram, email ophctickets@ said, “and it promises to be gmail.com or phone 360643-1936. a lot of fun.

WARNING

WE DELI VER! And remo ve old w orn o ut

Eighth-grader Leah Nieman, left, and 12th-grader Emily Bufford star in William Shakespeare’s “Much Ado About Nothing� at the Chimacum Grange Hall tonight through Sunday.

Briefly . . .

SEQUIM — A free community dinner will be served at Trinity United Methodist Church, 100 S. Blake Ave., at 6 p.m. on Thursday. The meal includes meatloaf, mashed potatoes, vege-

G IN C LE N A AB N L s FI AI h nth AV Mo Cas

OVER 60 TO LOOK AT!

CHIMACUM — With a cast of teenagers, Shakespeare’s comedy “Much Ado about Nothing� will frolic across the stage at the Chimacum Grange, 9572 Rhody Drive tonight through Sunday. The bard’s classic of love, misunderstandings and, at last, harmony has just three performances this weekend: at 7 p.m. tonight, a 3 p.m. matinee Saturday and at 7 p.m. Sunday. The Olympic Peninsula Home Connection, the home-schooling parents’ cooperative affiliated with the Crescent School District, is presenting the play, with admission a suggested donation of $3 to $10 at the door. Refreshments will be for sale during intermission at each three-hour performance. In this tale, we meet Beatrice and Benedick, a woman and man at odds while the nearby Claudio and Hero are falling madly in love. A “merry war� ensues between Benedick and Beatrice until each is tricked into admitting true love for the other. But all doesn’t end well yet. Claudio is deceived into believing


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

B3

Events: CASA CONTINUED FROM B1 Against Monsanto,â€? which includes similar rallies in more than 200 U.S. cities Port Angeles and around the world. Port Townsend residents Poker run benefit who wish to participate can meet at the Haines Street PORT ANGELES — The Transit Center to organize sixth Rock N Roll Bike a carpool. The caravan will Show and Poker Run bene- depart Port Townsend at fit for Court Appointed Spe- 9:30 a.m. Saturday. cial Advocates, or CASA, For information, phone will be held Saturday and 360-460-4281 or email Sunday. beverly.goldie@gmail.com. The motorcycle show will be held Saturday on the Charity bake sale upper-level parking lot of the Armory Square buildPORT ANGELES — The ing, 228 W. First St. Answer for Youth, or TAFY, Registration is from will hold a bake sale fund9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., and the raiser at Swain’s General bike show will run from Store, 602 E. First St., from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. Prizes will be awarded Proceeds from the fundat 3 p.m. PORT ANGELES SCHOOL DISTRICT raiser will support services The cost is $20 per for homeless youths in the Port Angeles High School students and staff who participated in a pottery bowl benefit to motorcycle per class community. raise funds for Serenity House of Clallam County meet prior to delivery of the bowls. Back entered. Anyone wanting to bake row from left are school art instructors Kathleen Knisely and John Casey, science instructor Awards will be given in a for the sale can phone Jennifer Duncan-Taylor, Joseph Barnes, Derek Schumacher, Landon Boe, Austin Polly, Kayli variety of classes, including Susan Hillgren at 360-670Edwards, Heather Kaufman and Virginia Caynak; and front row from left are Lauren Gallacci, vintage, trike, custom/paint/ 4363. Lexi Pankowski, Anastacia Sperry, Kristina Marvelle, Emily Asher-Stone, Kalob Alley, Serenity mural, best in show and House representative Brad Collins, Lucas Watkins, Sauna Lewis and Taylor Rutz. people’s choice. Sequim There will be concessions and a 50-50 raffle. Admission to the motor- Benefit breakfast cycle show is free, but donations will be accepted. SEQUIM — A benefit The motorcycle Poker breakfast for the Port AngeRun will begin Sunday at les Relay For Life will be Olympic Powersports, 221 held at Applebee’s restauS. Peabody St. rant, 130 River Road in Bikers can sign up from Sequim, from 8 a.m. to 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. 10 a.m. Saturday. PENINSULA DAILY NEWS raising project started by former art The Gateway transit center, and The first bike out will For $10, diners will leave at 10 a.m., and riders receive two pancakes, there are a few left for sale. PORT ANGELES — Port Ange- teacher Jenny Steelquist. will meet at the Romberg bacon, scrambled eggs and Serenity House Deputy Director A total of 48 out of 59 bowls les High School teachers John residence, 574 Old Olympic a drink. Brad Collins met last week with were sold, raising more than $650 Casey, Jennifer Duncan-Taylor and Highway, for prizes and dinTo purchase a ticket, for Serenity House. Kathleen Knisely, and art students teachers and students who helped ner. phone Kimberly Hunter at make bowls for the Serenity House To purchase a bowl, email Colused their pottery-making skills as The cost is $15 for a 360-775-1369 or email project. lins at Serenityhouse.brad@gmail. a fundraiser to benefit Serenity rider and bike, and $5 for canuhunt@yahoo.com. Collins sold bowls at a recent com or phone 360-452-1439. House of Clallam County. passengers. This is the fifth year for the fund- Port Angeles Farmers Market at Suggested donation is $10. CASA recruits, trains MAC swap meets and supports volunteers to SEQUIM — The MAC represent the interests of — Museum & Arts Center abused and neglected children in the courtroom and of the Sequim-Dungeness Valley — will hold the first other settings. of its monthly summer swap meets Saturday. Shot at gun club The swap runs from THE (EVERETT) DAILY HERALD of access to the post’s check- affidavit filed this week in way to raise money or they’d ing account to pay bills for Snohomish County Supe- have to close down. PORT ANGELES — The 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the SULTAN — The Veterans “Several people dug in Port Angeles Gun Club just MAC’s DeWitt Administra- of Foreign Wars post here is himself and a number of rior Court. “What Mr. Sherman took their wallets for a couple of east of Morse Creek is invit- tion Center field, 544 N. reeling after a thief emptied people close to him. away from us is just unbe- hundred bucks or wrote a ing nonmembers to shoot at Sequim Ave. Vendor setup its bank accounts, siphoning check for a couple of hunlievable,â€? Donahue said. Began in 2007 its range through June 30. time begins at 8 a.m. away more than $90,000. Normally, the post has dred bucks,â€? Gibson said. The gun club offers sevThere is no advance “There is just nothing The misconduct began in money to award scholar“We’ve got some good feleral types of clay-bird shoot- sign-up for vendors, and the there,â€? said Chuck Dona2007 and didn’t come to the ships to local students las who are part of our ing, including singles, hand- cost for a 10-foot-by-10-foot hue, commander of VFW attention of others at the headed for college, or to post,â€? Donahue said. icap, doubles, continental selling space is $15. Sherman has no crimiand five-stand. Vendors are expected to Stoehr-Glidden Post 2554 post until late last year help out veterans having a Shooting is available pay that day and provide in Sultan, an unincorpo- when the bank said the difficult time paying a nal history. Police traced from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. their own display equipment. rated community in eastern account had been emptied. power bill, he said. Not now. unauthorized payments There should have been a Wednesdays and Sundays. Nonprofit groups and Snohomish County. But nobody is giving up, from the post account to Worse, a trusted mem- large cash balance dating to said Gerry Gibson, a post roughly a dozen people. Cost is $3.50 for a line of clubs also are welcome to ber of the organization the sale of post property trustee. 25 shots, which is reduced participate as vendors. One person received from the standard price of several years ago. Those interested should appears to be responsible. Post members were told more than $26,500, court $4 per line. contact Priscilla Hudson at “Ed Sherman admitted that they needed to find a papers said. The post’s former quarFor safety reasons, 360-681-2257 or priscilla@ termaster, Edward Ray to writing these unauthor12-gauge trap shells must macsequim.org. Sherman, 65, of Lake Ste- ized checks and said he be purchased at the club for The MAC will hold addi- vens was charged this week knew it was wrong and he $6 per box of 25. tional swap meets the with first-degree theft. is ashamed. The end result Shooters must have a fourth Saturday of each Snohomish County pros- of the theft of funds was the Medicinal Co - operative 12-gauge shotgun in safe, month through August. ecutors allege Sherman has total depletion of VFW usable condition; knowlFor more information, admitted taking advantage funds,â€? according to a police Helping Heal the Natural Way, edge of safe gun handling; visit www.macsequim.org. and wear adequate hearing providing a high quality alternative and eye protection. Weekend art demos medication for qualifying patients. Club rules and etiquette SEQUIIM — The MAC brochures are available at the club, located at 253093 — Museum & Arts Center ofďŹ ce@/LYMPIAN#ARE COM s WWW /LYMPIAN#ARE COM U.S. Highway 101 across — presents two free art -ON &RI AM PM s 3AT AM PM s 3UN !PPOINTMENT /NLY demos at the MAC Center, from Wilder Auto Center. 4UMWATER 4RUCK 2OUTE 0ORT !NGELES s 452-2255 For more information, 175 W. Cedar St., this weekend. visit www.shootpagc.com or Watercolorist Iris Edey phone 360-457-4053. will demonstrate botanical sketching and sign copies of Open house slated her illustrated books from PORT ANGELES — The 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. new Clallam County GeneTURN TO EVENTS/B4 alogical Society Research Center, 402 E. Lauridsen Blvd., will be open from noon to 4 p.m. Saturday. The hours are intended to accommodate those who find weekday hours inconvenient. Volunteer staff is on hand to help. Regular hours for the center are from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays. Saturday, June 8th (9AM—12PM) For more information, 541 Eureka Way phone 360-417-5000 or visit www.olypen.com/ccgs. Sequim, WA 98382 Varicose Veins Brown Discoloration

Bowl benefit sale for Serenity House big hit

VFW post reeling after money drained

Olympian Care

2A687353

Setting the Medicinal Standard

28666872

VARICOSE VEIN SCREENING

GMO Awareness

x Bulging veins

x Itchy/Scaly Skin

x Painful/aching legs

x Ulcerations

x Swelling

x Brown Discoloration

Please call to schedule a free evaluation and discussion of your treatment options

(360) 698-6802 Aksel G. Nordestgaard, MD,FACS, RVT 7KH 9HLQ 6SHFLDOLVW

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35790823

PORT ANGELES — A rally to raise awareness of the health risks of genetically modified organisms in food is scheduled for 10:45 a.m. Saturday at Front and First streets at Golf Course Road in eastern Port Angeles. GMOs are the result of genetic engineering, which often includes the splicing of genes from different organisms into crops so they can better withstand high doses of herbicides and pesticides, their foes say. The awareness rally is part of a worldwide day of action called “March

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32400 RAINIER AVE. NE | 360.297.7636 WWW.PORTGAMBLEGENERALSTORE.COM


B4

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Events: Shepherd’s Fest CONTINUED FROM B3 College Glee Club will perform at St. Paul’s Episcopal Paulette Hill will dem- Church, 1020 Jefferson St., onstrate bead stitching and at 7:30 p.m. today. Glee club members will pendant wire-wrapping from noon to 3 p.m. Sunday. present a free hourlong conAdmission to the Exhibit cert of choral music dating Center is $2 for adults, and from the Renaissance to the present, featuring the work children get in free. Artists interested in con- of composers such as Tallis, ducting demonstrations can Brahms, Verdi and Lauridphone Steph Ellyas at 360- sen. For more information, 683-8110. contact Elizabeth Champion at 909-607-2671 or Home improvement elizabeth.champion@ SEQUIM — The Home pomona.edu. Depot, 1145 W. Washington St., will hold free do-it-your- Children’s voices self-gardening workshops PORT TOWNSEND — Saturday and Sunday. A vertical-garden work- Two African choirs will pershop will run from 10 a.m. form this weekend for the Fort Worden Children’s to 11:30 a.m. Saturday. A seminar on organic Choir Festival: the Makini gardening will be held from Schools Children’s Choir 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Sunday. from Nairobi, Kenya, and the Nairobi Girls’ Chorale. The singers will step up Shepherd’s Festival at 3 p.m. Saturday for the SEQUIM — The annual festival concert in McCurdy Shepherd’s Festival will Pavilion at Fort Worden run from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. State Park, 200 Battery Way. Monday at Sequim Prairie This event is part of the Grange’s Macleay Hall, 290 Makini choir’s first tour of Macleay Road, with lamb the United States. kabobs, lamb chili and arts The Makini Schools and crafts for sale. Children’s Choir is made up The event is sponsored of singers ages 9 to 11, with by the North Olympic Shut- 11 girls and three boys. tle and Spindle Guild, and Along with the Nairobi the Olympic Peninsula Girls’ Chorale, they will Fiber Growers Association. meet young singers in three Guild members will more West Coast choirs: ■ The Spectrum Vocal demonstrate fiber-spinning Ensemble and will talk about weaving Performance from Gig Harbor. with fiber. ■ The Bellevue Becky Northhaven, who trains border collies, will put Girlchoir from King County. ■ The All Saints Youth on a sheep-herding demonstration with her dogs at Chamber Choir from Pasadena, Calif. 10 a.m., noon and 2 p.m. The vocalists range from Sheep and llama demos elementary through high also are planned. A petting farm for chil- school ages. Admission to the concert dren is sponsored by the is $15 for adults or $12 for Lambchops 4-H Club. students and senior citizens, and patrons may buy Port Townsend tickets in advance by phoning Stephanie Charbonneau of Exceptional Choral Glee club concert Events at 360-271-8086. PORT TOWNSEND — Tickets also will be sold The 25-member Pomona at the door Saturday.

Stove workshop set PORT TOWNSEND — A biochar stove-building workshop will be held at the Quimper Grange, 1219 Corona St., from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. Biochar is the resulting product of pyrolosis — the thermochemical decomposition of organic material — in a simple gasifier stove. Participants will help build five 55-gallon biochar stoves, learn how to operate a variety of smaller stoves, and learn about the benefits of applying biochar to their home garden. Biochar can be a useful soil amendment, retaining moisture and nutrients that promote healthy soil fauna, organizers said. When buried, biochar can sequester carbon in the soil for thousands of years. A potluck lunch will be cooked on the stoves, so attendees are encouraged to bring food to share. Suggested donation for the workshop is $20, though no one will be turned away. To take home one of the stoves, the total cost of the workshop and equipment is $90. All proceeds benefit the Quimper Grange. For more information or to register, contact Francesco Tortorici at francescot@gmail.com or 360-385-5068.

CHRIS HANSEN

This view of Sekiu Airport was taken from the cockpit of pilot Gary Fernandez’s plane while on approach for landing during 2011’s Sekiu Fly-in.

Juniper Dunlap. Also to appear: soprano Sophia Parkhurst and the PT Trio, with clarinet player Paul Becker and Fred Nussbaum on cello. Also: the Grace Players — Jim Espensen, Jeni Little and Don Fristo — and the Yesango Marimba Ensemble. All proceeds from the concert will support 11 children who have lost their parents to the AIDS scourge in Uganda. Admission to the 4 p.m. performance at Grace Lutheran Church, 1120 Walker St., is a suggested donation of $12. For more details about the concert and the AIDS Orphans program, phone Concert for orphans Grace Lutheran at 360-385PORT TOWNSEND — 1595 or visit www.Grace Children and adults will Lutheran.us. perform the music of Mozart, Beethoven, Sarasate and Quilcene Brahms, plus a selection of African and American songs, Sunday in a concert to ben- Plant and pie sale efit a group of orphaned chilQUILCENE — The dren in Uganda. Organizer and pianist Quilcene-Brinnon Garden Lisa Lanza said the players Club plant sale, pie sale and will be teenage cellist Mad- raffle will be held Saturday. elyn Kowalski, violinist The event will be at the Rinnah Becker, pianist Quilcene Masonic Lodge, Jackson Schott and singer 170 Herbert St., from 9 a.m. and ukulele player to 1 p.m.

Plant sale items include Japanese maples, vegetables and herbs, shrubs, native plants and hanging baskets, along with indoor houseplants and seeds. Fresh bouquets will be available, plus homemade pies, pastries and gardening books. Raffle items will be provided by local businesses, artists and craftspeople. Donations of raffle and baked-good items are welcome. All proceeds from the sale are returned to the community through donations to food banks, school libraries and scholarships. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/qbgc-sale.

Forks Bluegrass concert FORKS — The Forks Elks Lodge will be the site of the fourth annual Bluegrass & BBQ beginning at 5 p.m. Saturday. The event features several bands, including Crescent Blue, Laura and Isaiah and Loose Gravel. Proceeds from the $20 admission — advance purchase required — will ben-

efit the Forks Abuse Program. Tickets are available at Windfall thrift store, 181 Bogachiel Way, or from the Forks Abuse Program office at 81 Second Ave. The Forks Elks Lodge is located at 941 Merchants Road. For more information, phone 360-374-6411.

Sekiu Fly-in slated SEKIU — The annual Memorial Day weekend Sekiu Fly-in will be held at the Sekiu Airport from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. Attendees should bring side dishes and desserts to the airport by 11 a.m. Admission is $8 for adults, $7 for seniors and $1 for children 5 and younger. A barbecue lunch of pulled pork, beef and chicken will be served. Proceeds benefit the Rocky Hinkle Memorial Scholarship Fund. Pilots flying in can chart a course over the Swiftsure Yacht races in the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday, May 24-25, 2013 PAGE

B5 Outdoors

State track revs up

Halibut Crescent boys have derby good shot at 1B title set this 1B, 1A Meet weekend BY LEE HORTON

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Halibut report Because this is a holiday weekend, the halibut fishery will be open an extra day, through Sunday, in Marine Areas 5 (Sekiu), 6 (Port Angeles, Sequim) and 9 (Admiralty Inlet). Anglers who prefer to avoid the mass of humans chasing halibut money, can fish for big uglies near Sequim (west of the base of Dungeness Spit), or in Port Townsend or Sekiu. After a week off, the halibut fishery reopened last week in Marine Areas 6 and 9. It wasn’t as hot as the opening week, but many fish were still caught. “The opener was just outstanding,” Menkal said. “It’s a hard act to follow.” The reopening started off hot Thursday, and then tapered off by Saturday. It seems knowledge has been power for anglers chasing mighty halibut. TURN

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HORTON/B7

four and Neah Bay two. The 1A state championships are also being held at Eastern Washington. It will feature 12 athletes form the North Olympic Peninsula: Four each from Chimacum, Forks and Port Townsend. The Crescent boys, which were the runners-up in 2012, again have the best chance of claiming a team championship. The Loggers’ state title hopes depend on the throwing of Josh Sowder (discus and shot put), Gene Peppard (shot put) and Derrick Findley (javelin). “Josh Sowder and Gene Pep-

DARRELL YOUNT Crescent track and field coach pard really will fuel the trophy run, if we’re to get it done,” Crescent coach Darrell Yount said. “We know they can go anywhere in the top three in the shot — we could go one-two, we could be one-three, we could be two-three, but I really think they will be nowhere else. “Josh could win the discus — worse case scenario, he could be second.” Sowder is ranked third in the 1B classification in both of his events, while Peppard ranks fifth in the shot put. The rankings don’t add any pressure for Sowder. In fact, they have the opposite effect. “It kind of puts me over on the cocky side of things,” Sowder said before practice this week.

“Not necessarily a good thing, but it’s kind of nice going in knowing that I’m one of the best.” Yount also expects points from Findley in the javelin. “He’s capable of going huge. His training regime has got him really peaking at the right time,” Yount said. “He could go into the [160foot range] and be top three, so our throwers could put about 26 or 27 points on the board all by themselves.” Yount said the field will be much more competitive than last year, when Valley Christian (85) and the Loggers (83) both scored in the 80s. TURN

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TRACK/B7

PA, Sequim seek trophies Softball teams open 2A state at Selah today PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SELAH — Port Angeles and Sequim’s softball teams start their quest for 2A hardware today. T h e ALSO . . . Roughriders ■ Quilcene and Wolves, softball team who have set for 1B dominated tourney in the Olympic Yakima/B7 League this year, will try to make noise at the 2A championships, scheduled for Carlon Park in Selah. Port Angeles (20-4), which earned third place at the West Central District tournament last weekend, will take on Granite Falls at noon today on Field 1 in the first round. Sequim (21-2), meanwhile, will play host Selah at 10 a.m. on Field 4 after leaving the district tourney with the No. 5 seed to state. The Riders, who went 16-2 in league after losing only to Sequim, went 3-1 at districts after pounding Orting 14-2 in the loser-out first round, surprising higher seed Franklin Pierce 6-1 in the quarterfinals before losing 3-0 to eventual champion White River in the semifinals. White River did not give up a run at districts. Port Angeles concluded district play by dominating Sum-

LONNIE ARCHIBALD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Haley Gray of Port Angeles lays down a bunt against Orting at the West Central District championships last week at Sprinker Fields in Tacoma. ner, which had shocked Sequim three years, but they did give in the quarterfinals, 10-2 in the eventual fourth-place Sequim a run for its money in the third third-fourth place game. consolation round last year, losing 4-3. Seek first trophy “We’re coming here to play Now the work really starts one game at a time,” Port Angefor the Riders, who have never les coach Randy Steinman said placed in state. right after the Roughriders’ bus Port Angeles went 1-2 in 2009 pulled into their hotel parking and two-and-out in 2011. lot in Selah late Thursday afterGranite Falls, the first-round noon. opponent, hasn’t had much bet“If we keep playing like we ter luck but does have a ton of have been playing lately, we state experience. should do quite well.” This will be the fifth consecuSteinman has scouted Grantive year the Tigers have been to ite Falls, and says the Tigers are state, but they have not placed a mirror-image of the Riders. the last four seasons. “They are just like us,” he They were 1-6 in the past said. “They have no big power, no

home run hitters, and they play small ball just like us. “All teams at state are good. You just need to make less mistakes to be able to keep playing.” The winner between Port Angeles and Granite Falls will play the Othello and W.F. West winner in the quarterfinals at 4 p.m. today on Field 2. The defending state champion W.F. West Bearcats are a state powerhouse, winning first last year and third place both in 2011 and 2010. The losers of the two firstround games will meet in the loser-out consolation quarterfinals at 2 p.m. on Field 2 today. TURN

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SOFTBALL/B7

New-look Storm without Bird Franchise face to miss year with an injury THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE — The Seattle Storm got used to star center Lauren Jackson being absent because of injuries and commitments with the Australian national team. Now, they’ll have to adjust to playing without Jackson and floor leader Sue Bird. Both will miss the entire season while recovering from major surgeries. Jackson is rehabbing her hamstring, and Bird recently had knee surgery. The rest of the team will have to step up without two stalwarts who led Seattle to two WNBA championships during their careers. Those veterans include Tina Thompson, Tanisha Wright and Camille Little. “I definitely think it’s going to take some time,” Thompson said.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Seattle Storm’s Tina Thompson shoots a free throw against the Tulsa Shock in a preseason game on May 17 in Seattle. “The personality of our team is going to be very blue collar. We’re going to be a very hardworking team. Defense is definitely going to be a staple and personality of this team.” It also provides opportunities for younger players, including Seattle’s first-round pick Tianna

Hawkins of Maryland and second-year player Shekinna Stricklen. The Storm open on the road Sunday at Los Angeles against the Sparks and star Candace Parker. They get a week off before hosting No. 1 pick Brittany Gri-

ner and Phoenix for their home opener on June 2. The first month of the season will be a crash course in jelling the veterans, free-agent signings and younger players. Seattle’s offseason additions included guards Noelle Quinn and Temeka Johnson, and forward Nakia Sanford. “The general public sort of sees us being is a non-factor. But I beg to differ,” Seattle coach Brian Agler said. “I’m excited about this season. There are a lot of things about it that are going to be challenging, but we welcome challenges here.” A year ago, the Storm played the majority of the season without Jackson, who remained in Australia to prepare for the London Olympics. She played in just nine games and hasn’t played a full season since 2010, when Seattle won its second league title. In her nine games after the Olympics, she averaged a careerlow 10.2 points. Jackson underwent hamstring surgery in January and announced a month later she would bypass the WNBA season while she recovered.

SPORTS/BUSINESS

THERE’S MONEY SWIMMING out in the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Port Angeles becomes the cen- Lee ter of halibut Horton fishing on the North Olympic Peninsula, if not the entire state of Washington, this weekend. Hundreds of anglers are expected to participate in the Port Angeles Salmon Club’s 13th annual halibut derby, which takes place Saturday and Sunday. The popular derby will award $20,000 worth of cash prizes to the top 30 halibut caught by ticket holders within the U.S. waters from Low Point to the base of Dungeness Spit. The angler who catches the biggest fish will receive $5,000, second place gets $2,500, and third place takes home $1,500. The cash amounts taper off from there. For instance, the sixth largest halibut will earn its captor $1,000, and the 10th biggest fish is worth $500 — all the way down to $135 for the 30th-place fish. Last year, Jeff Reynolds became the first two-time winner in the history of the derby with a 112-pound halibut. He was the only angler to catch a halibut that exceeded 100 pounds. Reynolds would have to be the favorite to win again this year. And not just because of his two-timing status. Reynolds is also a regular on the Port Angeles Salmon Club’s monthly salmon and halibut derby ladders at Swain’s General Store (including this month’s derby, with a 150pound halibut). Derby tickets cost $40, and can be purchased through today at Swain’s General Store (360-4522357) in Port Angeles and Brian’s Sporting Goods and More (360-6831950) in Sequim. Tickets can also be purchased at derby headquarters, the Port Angeles Yacht Club (1305 Marine Drive in Port Angeles), today and Saturday. To be eligible, every person in every boat must have a derby ticket. Bob Aunspach of Swain’s and Brian Menkal of Brian’s Sporting Goods and More both said that ticket sales had been slow by mid-week, but that’s fairly normal for a derby. Many participants wait until right before the derby to buy a ticket; they want to make sure the weather will be conducive to halibut fishing. And it should be. Wind is the biggest nuisance to halibut fishing, but only “light wind” shows up in the forecast. “It looks like it will be a good weekend,” Aunspach said.

CHENEY — Crescent will rely on a trio of throwers and a couple of hurdlers intent on beating each other in its attempt to bring home team trophies from the 1B state track and field championships at Eastern Washington University. The Loggers, who will be represented at state by five boys and six girls, have a legitimate chance to earn girls and boys trophies at the 1B meet, which takes place today and Saturday. The North Olympic League will have a strong presence at state. Along with Crescent’s 11 athletes, Clallam Bay is sending

“Josh Sowder and Gene Peppard really will fuel the trophy run, if we’re to get it done.”


B6

SportsRecreation

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

Today’s

Latest sports headlines can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.

Scoreboard Calendar

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”

AREA SPORTS SHOT

Today Track and Field: Port Angeles and Sequim at 2A state championships, at Mount Tahoma High School (Tacoma), 11:30 a.m.; Chimacum and Port Townsend at 1A state championships, at Eastern Washington University (Cheney), 1:30 p.m.; Crescent, Clallam Bay and Neah Bay at 1B state championships, at Eastern Washington University (Cheney), 1:30 p.m. Softball: Sequim vs. Selah at 2A state tournament, at Carlon Park (Selah), 10 a.m.; Port Angeles vs. Granite Falls at 2A state tournament, at Carlon Park (Selah), noon; Quilcene vs. Almira Coulee Hartline, first round at 1B state tournament, at Gateway Sports Complex (Yakima), Field 3, 1 p.m. Boys Tennis: Port Angeles at 2A state championships, at Nordstrom Tennis Center (University of Washington), TBD. Girls Tennis: Sequim at 2A state championships, at Nordstrom Tennis Center (University of Washington), TBD.

Saturday Track and Field: Chimacum and Port Townsend at 1A state championships, at Eastern Washington University (Cheney), 10 a.m.; Port Angeles and Sequim at 2A state championships, at Mount Tahoma High School (Tacoma), 11:30 a.m.; Crescent, Clallam Bay and Neah Bay at 1B state championships, at Eastern Washington University (Cheney), 10 a.m. Softball: Port Angeles and Sequim at 2A state tournament, at Carlon Park (Selah), TBD; Quilcene at 1B state tournament, at Gateway Sports Complex (Yakima), TBD. Boys Tennis: Port Angeles and Sequim at 2A state championships, at Nordstrom Tennis Center (University of Washington), TBD. Girls Tennis: Port Angeles and Sequim at 2A state championships, at Nordstrom Tennis Center (University of Washington), TBD.

Baseball Angels 7, Mariners 1 Wednesday’s Game Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi Bay lf 5 0 0 0 Aybar ss 3011 MSndrs cf 4 0 1 1 Trout cf 4220 Morse rf 3 0 1 0 Pujols dh 4121 KMorls 1b 4 0 3 0 Trumo 1b 4130 Smoak dh 4 0 0 0 Hamltn rf 2012 Shppch c 4 0 0 0 HKndrc 2b 4100 Ackley 2b 4 0 0 0 Callasp 3b 4222 Andino 3b 3 0 0 0 Conger c 3011 Ryan ss 3 1 2 0 Shuck lf 4000 Totals 34 1 7 1 Totals 32 712 7 Seattle 000 000 010—1 Los Angeles 511 000 00x—7 E—Conger (4). DP—Seattle 3. LOB—Seattle 9, Los Angeles 5. 2B—K.Morales (13), Ryan (2), Trumbo (14), Callaspo (4). 3B—Trout (5). CS—Aybar (2). IP H R ER BB SO Seattle Maurer L,2-6 3 11 7 7 2 2 Furbush 3 0 0 0 0 3 Medina 1 1 0 0 1 1 Wilhelmsen 1 0 0 0 1 0 Los Angeles C.Wilson W,4-3 8 6 1 1 2 10 D.De La Rosa 1 1 0 0 1 0 WP—Maurer 2, C.Wilson 2. Umpires—Home, Vic Carapazza; First, Gerry Davis; Second, Jeff Nelson; Third, Lance Barksdale. T—2:44. A—33,313 (45,483). Seattle

American League

STATE

The Olympic Mountain Bike Team of Jefferson County, the Killer Whales, celebrate winning the high school state championship races this past weekend at Washougal. The Killer Whales brought home six individual state championships and five overall points titles. Team members include Cassie Ross, Mazy Braden, Annalise Rubida, Camille Ottaway, Riley Fukano, Sage Brennan, Milo Steimle, Joseph Tweiten, Luca Freier, Andy Hull, Oliver Parish, Joel Mackey, Groves Moore, David Hoglund, Miguel Salguero, Calvin Leckenby, Jack Doyle, Eli Biskup, Jake Brady and Gus Wennstrom.

25 19 .568 ½ 21 22 .488 4 21 24 .467 5 18 25 .419 7 Wednesday’s Games Atlanta 8, Minnesota 3 Texas 3, Oakland 1 Toronto 4, Tampa Bay 3, 10 innings Detroit 11, Cleveland 7 Baltimore 6, N.Y. Yankees 3 L.A. Angels 7, Seattle 1 Boston 6, Chicago White Sox 2 Houston 3, Kansas City 1 Thursday’s Games Baltimore at Toronto, late Minnesota at Detroit, late Cleveland at Boston, late L.A. Angels at Kansas City, late Today’s Games Baltimore (Tillman 3-2) at Toronto (Jenkins 1-0), 4:07 p.m. Minnesota (Deduno 0-0) at Detroit (Ani.Sanchez 4-4), 4:08 p.m. Cleveland (Masterson 7-2) at Boston (Lackey 2-4), 4:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (D.Phelps 2-2) at Tampa Bay (Ro.Hernandez 2-4), 4:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Vargas 3-3) at Kansas City (Mendoza 1-2), 5:10 p.m. Miami (Koehler 0-2) at Chicago White Sox (Danks 0-0), 5:10 p.m. Oakland (Milone 4-5) at Houston (Bedard 0-2), 5:10 p.m. Texas (Grimm 3-3) at Seattle (J.Saunders 3-4), 7:10 p.m. Saturday’s Games Baltimore at Toronto, 10:07 a.m. Cleveland at Boston, 10:35 a.m. L.A. Angels at Kansas City, 11:10 a.m. Minnesota at Detroit, 1:08 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 1:10 p.m. Miami at Chicago White Sox, 4:15 p.m. Oakland at Houston, 4:15 p.m. Texas at Seattle, 7:10 p.m. Sunday’s Games Baltimore at Toronto, 10:07 a.m.

Minnesota at Detroit, 10:08 a.m. Cleveland at Boston, 10:35 a.m. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 10:40 a.m. L.A. Angels at Kansas City, 11:10 a.m. Miami at Chicago White Sox, 11:10 a.m. Oakland at Houston, 11:10 a.m. Texas at Seattle, 1:10 p.m.

National League West Division W L Arizona 26 21 Colorado 26 21 San Francisco 26 21 San Diego 21 25 Los Angeles 19 26 East Division W L Atlanta 28 18 Washington 24 23 Philadelphia 23 24 New York 17 27 Miami 13 34 Central Division W L St. Louis 30 16 Cincinnati 29 18 Pittsburgh 28 18 Chicago 18 27 Milwaukee 18 27

Pct GB .553 — .553 — .553 — .457 4½ .422 6 Pct GB .609 — .511 4½ .489 5½ .386 10 .277 15½ Pct GB .652 — .617 1½ .609 2 .400 11½ .400 11½

Atlanta (Medlen 1-5) at N.Y. Mets (Hefner 0-5), 4:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Feldman 4-3) at Cincinnati (Arroyo 4-4), 4:10 p.m. Miami (Koehler 0-2) at Chicago White Sox (Danks 0-0), 5:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (A.J.Burnett 3-4) at Milwaukee (Estrada 3-2), 5:10 p.m. San Diego (Stults 4-3) at Arizona (McCarthy 1-3), 6:40 p.m. St. Louis (Lynn 6-1) at L.A. Dodgers (Capuano 1-2), 7:10 p.m. Colorado (Chatwood 2-0) at San Francisco (Lincecum 3-3), 7:15 p.m. Saturday’s Games Colorado at San Francisco, 1:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 1:10 p.m. Atlanta at N.Y. Mets, 4:15 p.m. Miami at Chicago White Sox, 4:15 p.m. Philadelphia at Washington, 4:15 p.m. St. Louis at L.A. Dodgers, 4:15 p.m. San Diego at Arizona, 7:10 p.m.

Basketball NBA Playoffs

Wednesday’s Games Atlanta 8, Minnesota 3 Cincinnati 7, N.Y. Mets 4 L.A. Dodgers 9, Milwaukee 2 Colorado 4, Arizona 1 Washington 2, San Francisco 1, 10 innings Pittsburgh 1, Chicago Cubs 0 Philadelphia 3, Miami 0 St. Louis 5, San Diego 3 Thursday’s Game Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh, delayed, late Today’s Games Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 4-2) at Washington (Zimmermann 7-2), 4:05 p.m.

CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE Miami 1, Indiana 0 Wednesday: Miami 103, Indiana 102, OT Today: Indiana at Miami, 5:30 p.m. Sunday: Miami at Indiana, 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 28: Miami at Indiana, 5:30 p.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE San Antonio 2, Memphis 0 Sunday,: San Antonio 105, Memphis 83 Tuesday: San Antonio 93, Memphis 89, OT Saturday: San Antonio at Memphis, 6 p.m. Monday: San Antonio at Memphis, 6 p.m. x-Wednesday, May 29: Memphis at San Antonio, 6 p.m. x-Friday, May 31: San Antonio at Memphis, 6 p.m.

scholastic Basketball Coaches Association Hall of Fame. DALLAS, Texas — Bailee Hill and Thoemke will be two Jones of Port Angeles and Haleigh of six assistants feted at the 39th Harrison of Sequim will be annual Hall of Fame Banquet, at attending the Junior National the Tacoma Elks Club on July 24. Volleyball Tournament in Dallas, Hill has taught in the Sequim Texas, from June 27 to July 1. PORT ANGELES — Wilder School District for 36 years, 28 at Jones and Harrison are memBaseball, an elite baseball team bers of the Northwest Juniors 18 Sequim High School. He is the based in Port Angeles but conElite Black Volleyball team, chair of the math department and taining players from throughout faculty advisor for the Honor Socithe North Olympic Peninsula, will coached by Tony Miranda. The 18 Elite Black team comety. have tryouts for the 2013 season peted in the Puget Sound Hill was head coach for 11 Tuesday and Wednesday. Regional Bid tournament earlier years, from 1989-90 to 1998-99, The tryouts will be at Civic Field from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. or 6 this month and came in first, thus and again in 2006-07. He was securing its spot in the national p.m. Tuesday, and from 6 p.m. to assistant coach to Rick Kaps for division of the Girls Junior 8:30 p.m. Wednesday. 12 years, from 1977-78 to 1988National Championship tournaTuesday’s hours are earlier 89. ment. because of the Port Angeles High The other 13 years he assisted Northwest Juniors defeated School spring sports banquet is Brian Roper, Matt Thacker and South Sound, Club Wahine, ITVC Tuesday night. current coach Greg Glasser. and Sudden Impact. Wilder opens the season June Thoemke has coached at CresHarrison is a senior outside 1 at home against Pac Tech in a hitter while Jones is a junior mid- cent, Central Kitsap, North Kitdoubleheader. sap, Olympic and North Mason. dle blocker. The team will have nine Thoemke was the head coach straight home games to open the at Olympic when the Christian Hill, Thoemke make Hall season, all but one doubleheaders. Welp-led Trojans won the 2A TACOMA — Longtime Sequim Wilder hosts Sequim on June state title in 1983. 18 and June 30, both doublehead- head and assistant boys basketball coach Larry Hill, and former ers. PA athletes of week Crescent head basketball coach The Port Angeles team also PORT ANGELES — Senior hosts the Firecracker Tournament Howard Thoemke will be inducted boys soccer player Jack Doryland into the 2013 Washington InterJuly 4-7.

and girls tennis player Kyrie Reyes were named Port Angeles High School athletes of week recently. Doryland, the goalkeeper, again was instrumental in getting the Roughriders their third victory in a penalty kick shootout against Bremerton. This was the second time this season that Doryland was spectacular in a shootout victory against Bremerton. In the shootout, Doryland saved two of nine Bremerton penalty kicks, and made the ninth kick himself for the Riders to seal the win. Academically, Doryland has one of the highest GPAs (3.78) at the school throughout his four years. Reyes was one of the tennis team captains this year. She had five wins this season, two were at No. 1 and three were at No. 2 singles. Reyes is a determined athlete who gives 100 percent at practice and each match. She is a role model on and off the court. Peninsula Daily News

West Division W L Texas 30 17 Oakland 25 23 Seattle 20 27 Los Angeles 19 27 Houston 14 33 East Division W L New York 28 18 Boston 28 19 Baltimore 25 21 Tampa Bay 24 22 Toronto 19 27 Central Division W L Cleveland 26 19

Pct GB .638 — .521 5½ .426 10 .413 10½ .298 16 Pct GB .609 — .596 ½ .543 3 .522 4 .413 9 Pct GB .578 —

Briefly . . . Wilder Baseball slates tryouts for elite team

Two play at nationals

Today 9 a.m. (47) GOLF CHAMPS, Senior PGA Championship (Live) Noon (47) GOLF PGA, Crowne Plaza Invitational (Live) 4 p.m. Pac-12 NETWORK Baseball NCAA, Washington State at Oregon State (Live) 4 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Softball NCAA, Alabama vs. Tennessee, Super Regionals (Live) 4 p.m. WGN Baseball MLB, Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati Reds (Live) 4:30 p.m. (2) CBUT Hockey NHL, Ottawa Senators at Pittsburgh Penguins, Stanley Cup Playoffs (Live) 5:30 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA, Indiana Pacers at Miami Heat, Playoffs (Live) 6 p.m. (26) ESPN Softball NCAA, Division I Tournament, Super Regionals (Live) 7 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Boxing, Rodriguez vs. Hernandez (Live) 7 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners (Live)

Saturday

CHAMPIONS

Detroit Kansas City Chicago Minnesota

SPORTS ON TV

4:30 a.m. (47) GOLF EPGA, BMW PGA Championship (Live) 9 a.m. (26) ESPN Softball NCAA, Division I Tournament, Super Regionals (Live) 10 a.m. (5) KING Track & Field IAAF, Adidas Grand Prix, Site: Icahn Stadium New York City (Live) 10 a.m. (47) GOLF PGA, Crowne Plaza Invitational (Live) 11:30 a.m. (13) KCPQ Soccer UEFA, Bayern Munich vs. Borussia Dortmund, Champions League (Live) 11:30 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Lacrosse NCAA, Division I Tournament, Semifinals (Live) 11:45 a.m. (4) KOMO Auto Racing NASCAR, History 300, Site: Charlotte Motor Speedway - Charlotte, N.C. (Live) Noon (5) KING Golf CHAMPS, Senior PGA Championship (Live) Noon (7) KIRO Golf PGA, Crowne Plaza Invitational (Live) Noon (26) ESPN Softball NCAA, Division I Tournament, Super Regionals (Live) Noon (47) GOLF LPGA, Bahamas Classic, Site: Ocean Club Golf Course Paradise Island, Bahamas (Live) 12:30 p.m. (8) GBLBC Golf PGA, Crowne Plaza Invitational (Live) 1 p.m. Pac-12 NETWORK Baseball NCAA, Washington State at Oregon State (Live) 1 p.m. WGN Baseball MLB, Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati Reds (Live) 2 p.m. (26) ESPN Softball NCAA, Super Regionals (Live) 4 p.m. Pac-12 NETWORK Baseball NCAA, Arizona State at Washington (Live) 4 p.m. (13) KCPQ Baseball MLB, Oakland Athletics at Houston Astros (Live) 4 p.m. (25) ROOT Soccer MLS, Portland Timbers at Washington D.C. United (Live) 5 p.m. (2) CBUT (5) KING Hockey NHL, Detroit Red Wings at Chicago Blackhawks, Stanley Cup Playoffs (Live) 5 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Softball NCAA, Division I Tournament, Super Regionals (Live) 6 p.m. (26) ESPN Basketball NBA, San Antonio Spurs at Memphis Grizzlies (Live) 7 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners (Live) 2 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Tennis ITF, French Open, First Round, Site: Stade Roland Garros - Paris (Live)


SportsRecreation

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

B7

Horton: Neah Bay halibut fishery has closed CONTINUED FROM B5 because it has reached its catch quota. “We’re pretty bummed “The same guys getting about it. That was devasthem are the ones getting tating news for us,” Lawthem,” Menkal said. rence said. “They know the spots Halibut fishing is and have been at it longer.” always good for business, Aunspach made the and Big Salmon had schedsame observation. “Certain guys got it fig- uled its 10th annual halibut derby for next Saturured out,” he said. day. This will be the first Neah Bay shut down time the derby has been Bad news for Neah Bay. canceled. Lawrence said Joey Lawrence of Big the resort schedules the Salmon Resort (360-645derby for the weekend fol2374) in Neah Bay said the lowing the Port Angeles state Department of Fish derby to avoid dueling derand Wildlife informed the bies. resort Thursday that the Lawrence speculated halibut fishery in Marine that the closure was a Area 4 will be shut down result of the short chinook

fishery, which was open in Neah Bay for the first time in 15 to 20 years. “I think it was a doubleedged sword; it was too difficult to separate the salmon fisher from the halibut fishers,” Lawrence said. Not all is lost — or has been taken away — from Neah Bay. It still has incredible lingcod and sea bass fishing, and salmon fishing opens June 22. Start crossing your fingers that the state will magically find some extra quota like last July when it planned to close Marine Areas 3 (LaPush) and 4 (Neah Bay) to recreational

bottomfishing. The closure was delayed five or six weeks. In this case, Neah Bay would be fine with just one extra week of halibut.

Waters West is 15 Waters West, a full-service fly fishing shop in downtown Port Angeles, is celebrating its 15th anniversary through the end of the month. In honor of its 15 years, Waters West (140 W. Front St.) currently has everything on sale from 15 to 40 percent off. They are also holding the following events: ■ Saturday, May 25:

Spey casting class. Learn how to cast and fish a spey rod for steelhead, salmon and trout with Curtis Reed on the Forks area rivers. The cost of the class is $95. ■ Sunday, May 26: Free fly tying demonstration at the store from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Learn from John Gort how to tie chironomid patterns for lake fishing. ■ Wednesday, May 29: Free fly casting clinic at Lincoln Park from 4 to 6 p.m. This clinic is for all ability levels, and will help fly fishers improve their casting before the steelhead

opener Saturday, June 1. For more information, phone Waters West at 360417-0937 or visit www. waterswest.com.

Send photos, stories Have a photograph, a fishing or hunting report, an anecdote about an outdoors experience or a tip on gear or technique? Send it to sports@ peninsuladailynews.com or P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362.

________ Outdoors columnist Lee Horton appears here Thursdays and Fridays. He can be reached at 360452-2345, ext. 5152 or at lhorton@ peninsuladailynews.com.

Softball: Sequim chasing state championship CONTINUED FROM B5 two years. The 2013 Wolves looked The Wolves, meanwhile, almost as strong as 2011 in topped off a perfect the beginning, losing just unbeaten season in 2011 once in the preseason before with their first state soft- romping through the Olympic League with an 18-0 ball title. They captured fourth record. But they looked vulnerplace in state in 2012 and able at times at districts, now will try to make it receiving a bye in the first three state places in three round and dropping the years. quarterfinal game 6-4 to Last season the Wolves Sumner. lost their first game, then Sequim then pounded won four in a row before Kingston 10-3 in the loserdropping the consolation out consolation semifinals final to claim fourth. before shutting down OlymThe 4-2 record makes pic 11-0 in the consolation them 8-2 at state the past final to go 2-1 at districts

and earn the No. 5 seed to state. Like Sequim, host team Selah has a fair amount of state experience in recent years. The Vikings will be playing in their fourth straight tournament, capturing fourth place in 2011 but not placing while going 2-2 each in the 2010 and 2012 tourneys. The Sequim-Selah winner will play the SedroWoolley and Fife winner in the quarterfinals at 4 p.m. today. The losers play in the consolation loser-out quar-

terfinals at 2 p.m. The state championship game is set for 2 p.m. Saturday on Field 4. The third-place game will be at 2:30 p.m. on Field 3 on Saturday.

Rangers eying 1B championship YAKIMA — Quilcene is going to ride sophomore standout pitcher Sammy Rae in the 1B state tournament at Gateway Sports Complex. Other pitchers have give the Rangers some good innings this year, but coach

Mark Thompson said Rae will likely be the only one to take the mound at state. “I think our only chance of winning at this level is with Sammy on the mound,” Thompson said. The Rangers open the tournament against the same team they opened the 2012 tournament with, Almira Coulee Hartline. The Warriors won 12-2, but Thompson said his team is “clearly” better than last year, especially defensively. Almira Coulee Hartline will test that defense with its small ball approach.

Last year, the Warriors bunted six times. Thompson is confident his team is not only improved, but that they are capable of winning state. Of the Rangers’ four losses, only one came when they were playing their starters, and that was against the Port Angeles JV team. “I have to think that all eight teams are going into this thinking they have a chance to win it all,” “If the ball bounces the right way, any team can win if they have talent. We have the talent.”

Track: Speedy Welever going for sprint titles CONTINUED FROM B5 other competitors. “Yeah, definitely. It’s def“It’s going to be about initely one of those things,” five teams scoring in the Lester said. “But, we don’t have a 40s, who are going to battle it out for the trophies,” rivalry. After a race, we hug each other.” Yount said. Both Lester and Devanie “It just depends who’s hot a state, you know, which Christie said it helps havkids step it up and hit big ing a teammate who is on their same level. marks.” “It encourages you to go Macen McLain is a oneman team for Mansfield. faster, but it can be really He’ll be competing in four frustrating if you get beat events, and according to by the other person,” Yount, could be the favorite Devanie Christie said. “I get really angry, but in all four. If he does, he might win you know that you did good the team title for Mansfield. because your other team One of those events is member only beat you by a the long jump, in which little bit.” Yount said that Christie Findley will also compete. Yount said Findley is has a habit of running with probably jumping for sec- the fastest kid in her heat, and Lester makes sure to ond place. McLain doesn’t have as keep up with Christie. “[Devanie’s] so competifirm of a grip on high jump, tive, she has a tendency to so Donovan Christie has a chance to avenge his sec- just glue on people and not ond-place finish to McLain let them get away,” Yount said. last year. “They hate to lose to Christie is aiming for and capable of a 6-foot-4 each other. Especially Ryan. jump, which Yount said Ryan does not like Devanie would give him the Cres- to beat her. And being a competing cent school record and likely freshman, against a junior, she wants a state championship. Martin Waldrip, younger to be the top dog right now.” Both will also run in the brother of Matthew, is the Crescent boys’ only runner, 4x100 and 4x200 relays, and could bring more points along with Kellie Belford and Jandi Frantz. in the 3,200-meter run. Yount said Belford, the A team championship isn’t as realistic for the Log- Crescent team captain, is gers’ girls, but they are the key to both relays. “Relay teams . . . tend to capable of placing. melt at big championship Junior Devanie Christie is one of the favorites to win meets, if they don’t have a the javelin, but she also has leader. She’ll have them all a chance to medal in the calm,” Yount said. Yount said Shannon Wil100-meter hurdles. Among the hurdlers liams and Meghan Shamp she’ll have to beat is fresh- also have very good chances man teammate Ryan Les- to medal in the shot put and discus, respectively. ter. Lester said the two get Clallam Bay along, but she wants to beat Devanie Christie Justin Welever highmore than any of the lights the Bruins going

to state. Welever, a senior who will attend Aurora University in Illinois on a track scholarship, is one of the best sprinters in 1B and on the Peninsula. He ranks fourth in 1B in the 100 and sixth in the 200. Welever was eliminated from state in the preliminaries last season, and Clallam Bay coach Aaron Burdette said he has worked hard to become of the state’s elite. “He’s all-business. That’s what we call him, All-Business,” Burdette said. “If he runs a really good race, he has a chance to win it.” Welever will be joined at state by Jesse Wonderly (400-meter run) and Casey Randall (long jump). Eighth-grade high jumper Molly McCoy is the only Clallam Bay girl at state. Because of middle school basketball, McCoy missed the first month of the track and field season. She started slow, but has leaped to the top-10 rankings. “The whole world is in front of her,” Burdette said.

The Cowboys won two individual titles at last week’s 1A Tri-District meet: Rafael Pagasian won the long jump and Daryl Settlemire the discus. Settlemire place ninth at state in the discus in 2012, and is ranked second in 1A this year. Pagasian, meanwhile, moved up to third place in the long jump by beating his personal record by a foot at the tri-district meet. Freshman Bailey Castillo has a good chance to reach the medal stand in the javelin, in which she ranks eighth in state. Super-athlete Mel Thornton will compete in the 300 hurdles. “I’m very optimistic and pleased with how we competed at the tri-district meet,” Chimacum coach Tony Haddenham said.

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Forks The Spartans have three throwers and one runner at state. Sydney Christensen and Shane WhiteEagle are both competing in the shot put. Christensen has the top girls shot put mark in the Peninsula. Miguel Morales will throw the discus, Kari Larson will run the 800.

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Sanford said. Sanford said that competing in the 2A Olympic League is good for his squad. “I like it. We get good competition throughout the season, and it prepares us for the postseason,” he said.

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Skyler Coppenrath won the boys triple jump, and Rebecca Stewart took the girls triple jump. Stewart also qualified for state in the 300 hurdles. Sprinter Jewel Johnson was a double qualifier, as well, reaching state in the 100 and 200. Patricia Reeves is the fourth Port Townsend athlete at state, having qualified in the high jump. All four athletes are juniors, all are state returners, and all are ranked in the top 10 in 1A in their events. “They’re peaking at the right time, and their marks are moving up,” Port Townsend coach Kevin

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday, May 24-25, 2013 PAGE

B8

Birth control coverage up for appeal Hobby Lobby stores seeking an exemption THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DENVER — In the most prominent challenge of its kind, Hobby Lobby Stores Inc. asked a federal appeals court Thursday for an exemption from part of the federal health care law that requires it to offer employees health cover-

age that includes access to the morning-after pill. The Oklahoma City-based arts-and-crafts chain argued that businesses — not just the currently exempted religious groups — should be allowed to seek exception from that part of the health law if it violates their religious beliefs. “They ought to be able — just like a church, just like a charity — to have the right to opt out of a provision that infringes on their religious beliefs,” said Kyle Duncan, who will argue before the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals

on behalf of the Green family, the founders of Hobby Lobby Stores Inc. and a sister company, Christian booksellers Mardel Inc. The Greens contend that emergency contraception is tantamount to abortion because it can prevent a fertilized egg from implanting in the womb. They also object to providing coverage for certain kinds of intrauterine devices. Lower courts have rejected Hobby Lobby’s claim, saying that for-profit businesses aren’t covered by an exemption that was added to the law for religious

organizations. That exemption applies to churches but not affiliated nonprofit corporations, like hospitals, that do not rely primarily on members of the faith as employees.

‘Not religious’ groups In a decision issued late last year, a federal judge concluded simply, “Hobby Lobby and Mardel are not religious organizations.” But U.S. District Judge Joe Heaton in Oklahoma City also wrote that “the court is not unsympathetic” to Hobby Lobby’s

dilemma and that the question of compelling health coverage for certain procedures “involves largely uncharted waters.” Other businesses are challenging the contraception mandate, too. Hobby Lobby is the most prominent company making the claim. Two smaller companies based in Indiana and Illinois made similar arguments in the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago on Tuesday. As in Chicago, the U.S. Justice Department will argue for the government that the contraception mandate should stay.

$ Briefly . . . Credit union leader takes part in course

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

RALPH LAUREN

35

PROFIT RISES

PERCENT

Ralph Lauren Corp. reported a 35 percent increase in fourth-quarter profit as the luxury retailer benefited from lower cotton prices and cost controls. Above, Lauren’s fall collection is modeled during Fashion Week in February in New York.

AAA: 31.2 million will hit roads on holiday weekend THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Still, the price isn’t (See related local travel story today, “Camping sea- expected to reach the 2011 It’s going to be another son unofficially opens on Memorial Day national busy Memorial Day week- North Peninsula,” Page B10 average of $3.79. end on the nation’s high- today.) (Gas prices on the North ways. Olympic Peninsula are usuThrough Monday, More at the pump ally much higher than the 31.2 million Americans will national average. drive 50 miles or more to a Gas will cost slightly (The average price for a beach, campground or other more this year. getaway, according to car The national average gallon of regular was $4.09 price for a gallon of gasoline in Jefferson and Clallam lobbying group AAA. That’s a small increase has risen 7 cents in the past counties on Thursday, a from last year but still well week to $3.66 and could Peninsula Daily News surshort of the record 37.3 mil- increase over the weekend. vey showed.) The total number of holiGas averaged $3.64 last lion people who drove durday travelers should decline Memorial Day. ing the holiday in 2005. almost 1 percent to 34.8 million, AAA said, because NEWLY EXPANDED SERVICES! fewer will choose to fly. N AAA estimates that 2.3 'BDJBMT t .BTTBHF t .BOJDVSF million travelers will take 1FEJDVSF t #PEZ 8BYJOH to the skies, down 8 percent &ZFMBTI &YUFOTJPOT .PSF from last year.

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would permit growing as many as 45 pot plants in homes so residents could grow their own, although that would conflict with state rules. Council member Nick Licata said the city is in a “bit of the Twilight Zone” because of uncertain regulations. The full Seattle City Council is expected to take up the zoning issue June 3.

Nuke plant refuel

PORT ANGELES — Olympic Bagel, 802 E. First St., has switched to its summer hours. Hours are now 6 a.m. to 3 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays and 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Sundays. For more information, phone 360-452-9100.

RICHLAND — The only nuclear power plant in the Northwest is shut down for a refueling that takes place every two years. More than 1,300 temporary employees have been hired for the refueling and maintenance work at the Columbia Generating Station near Richland. The Tri-City Herald reported that this is the plant’s 21st refueling outage. The Energy Northwest plant generates enough electricity to supply a city the size of Seattle.

Marijuana zoning

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SEATTLE — A Seattle City Council committee has approved zoning for large indoor marijuana farms in some industrial areas of the city. The zoning approved Wednesday would allow growing operations the size of a football field. The city rules also

Gold futures for June delivery rose $24.40, or 1.8 percent, to settle at $1,391.80 an ounce on Thursday. Silver for July delivery gained 4 cents, or 0.2 percent, to end at $22.51 an ounce.

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“American travelers are experiencing fee fatigue and frustration with everything from higher fares to airport security. As a result, many are choosing road

travel,” said Robert L. Darbelnet, CEO of AAA. The airline industry’s lobbying group, Airlines for America, said it expects a typical Memorial Day weekend and sees summer traffic increasing by 1 percent. The average domestic round-trip airfare for June, July and August is $421. That’s down $6 or 1.4 percent from last summer, according to the Airlines Reporting Corp., which processes almost half of all airline tickets sold in the U.S. Another 1.3 million travelers are estimated by AAA to take buses, trains, ferries and other forms of travel, down 12 percent from last Memorial Day. The travel forecast done by IHS Global Insight for AAA — one of the nation’s largest leisure travel agencies — is based on interviews with 306 Americans and factors in estimates about the overall health of the economy.

MADISON, Wis.— Peninsula Credit Union CEO Jim Morrell was one of 40 credit union professionals to become Credit Union Development Educators recently. Morrell was guided by eight program facilitators and mentors through the intensive Development Education Training from the National Credit Union Foundation at the Lowell Center on the University of Wisconsin campus. DE Training provides lessons in cooperative principles and credit union philosophy while incorporating challenges credit unions face today. During the program, participants were involved in group exercises, field trips, issue discussions with speakers from around the credit union system, team projects proposing solutions for credit unions to help alleviate or eliminate challenging situations in any given area. Participants also worked through and presented solutions to payday lending, a small credit union merger dilemma, the low-income designation, building an Islamic banking center, developing a credit union awareness campaign and league consolidation. Peninsula Credit Union has a branch at 1250 W. Sims Way in Port Townsend.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

B9

Fine-art intrigue focus of novel in library talk PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SEQUIM — Geraldine Brooks’ novel People of the Book will be discussed at the Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave., at 3 p.m. Saturday, June 8. This work traces the harrowing journey of the famed Sarajevo Haggadah, a Hebrew manuscript created in 15th-century Spain.

When it falls to Hanna Heath to conserve this priceless work, the series of tiny artifacts she discovers in its ancient binding — an insect wing fragment, wine stains, salt crystals and a white hair — unexpectedly plunge Hanna into the intrigues of fine art forgers and ultra-nationalist fanatics. Copies of the book are

Birthday

available at the Sequim Library, including large print, audiobook and downloadable audio or e-book formats. They can be requested online through the library catalog at www.nols.org. Preregistration for this program is not required, and drop-ins are always Geraldine Brooks’ People of the Book. welcome.

CORNER

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ALMS-SEEKERS Bangladeshi Buddhists monks living in Sri Lanka parade through a street seeking alms on the eve of Vesak or Buddha Poornima in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on Thursday. The festival marks Buddha’s birth, enlightenment and death.

Briefly . . . ‘What People Hunger For’ sermon set PORT ANGELES — The Rev. Barbara Wilson will present “What People Hunger For� at Unity in the Olympics’ 10:30 a.m. Sunday worship service. Special meditation will be from 10 a.m. to 10:15 a.m. Events are open to the public. For more information, phone 360-457-3981.

Jazz Mass slated PORT ANGELES — St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church will welcome the Peninsula Jazz Ensemble for its fourth annual Jazz Mass at the 10 a.m. Sunday service. It is held the weekend of the Juan de Fuca Festival of the Arts “in celebration of the diversity of music, which expresses our praise and worship of God,� organizers said. It will be followed by a taco feed. For more information, visit www.standrewpa.org or phone the church at 360457-4862.

Meditation slated PORT ANGELES — Meditation on Mindfulness, a teaching by Tulku Yeshi Rinpoche, will be held in the PUB Conference Room, J-47, at Peninsula College, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd., from 8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Saturday. Suggested donation is $25 to help cover room rental, though no one will be turned away. Tulku Yeshi Rinpoche will teach how to meditate and how to establish a practice of mindfulness. This event will be followed by a teaching on Discovering the Four Noble Truths of Buddhism at 1:30 p.m. Both events are at the PUB Conference Room. Phone Devan Miller at 360-477-5445 or email port. angeles.dzogchen.sangha@ gmail.com.

Sines to speak

“Port Townsend 2018: Reimagining Life and Faith in Changing Times� from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. This “participationspiced� lecture, based on real-time interviews and local statistics, will consider the future of the city/county in the next five years and how to prepare to be able to respond. Admission to one or both events is a suggested donation of $5 per person. Tom and Christine Sine are authors and speakers on topics ranging from Celtic spirituality to the future of the Christian Church. Tom, known for books such as The Mustard Seed Conspiracy and Mustard Seed vs. McWorld, and Christine live in Seattle and host talks at conferences around the world.

Special U.S. envoy WASHINGTON — The State Department has appointed a special envoy to monitor and combat antiSemitism as a new report documents a global increase in incidents of anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial. Ira Forman, former CEO of the National Jewish Democratic Council, was chosen as special envoy as the State Department released its annual report on religious freedom around the world. The report said expressions of anti-Semitism by government officials, religious leaders and the media were of great concern, particularly in Venezuela, Egypt and Iran. At times, the report said, such statements led to desecration and violence. Secretary of State John Kerry called the report a “clear-eyed, objective look at the state of religious freedom around the world� and said that in some cases, the report criticizes U.S. allies and would-be allies.

QUEEN OF ANGELS CATHOLIC PARISH 209 West 11th St. Port Angeles

360.452.2351 www.queenofangelsparish.org

Mass Schedule: Saturday Vigil: 5:00 p.m. Sunday 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Tuesday evening 6:00 p.m. Wed. thru Sat. 8:30 a.m. Old Latin Mass every 2nd & 4th Sunday 2:00 p.m. Confession: 30 minutes prior to all Masses Saturday 4:00-5:00 p.m.

BETHANY PENTECOSTAL CHURCH E. Fifth & Francis Port Angeles 457-1030 Omer Vigoren, Pastor SUNDAY 9:30 a.m. Sunday School 10:45 a.m., 6:30 p.m. Worship WED. & SAT.: 7 p.m. Eve. Service

www.unityintheolympics.org 2917 E. Myrtle, Port Angeles 457-3981 Sunday Services 10:30 a.m. Rev. John Wingfield

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Confession:

INDEPENDENT BIBLE CHURCH Sunday: 116 E. Ahlvers Rd. 8:15 & 11 a.m. Sunday Worship 9:50 a.m. Sunday School for all ages Nursery available at all Sun. events Saturday: 112 N. Lincoln St. 6:00 p.m. Upper Room Worship Admin. Center: 112 N. Lincoln St. Port Angeles, WA / 360-452-3351 More information: www.indbible.org

Peninsula Daily News’ 3rdAge says “happy birthday� in its own way to North Olympic Peninsula residents 70 or older who will be celebrating a milestone. People celebrating a 70th, 75th, 80th or greater birthday can have their photos published free of charge in the weekly Birthday Corner. Along with the recent photo, please send the celebrant’s name, town of residence, a short biographical synopsis and news of any birthday celebration at least two weeks before the birthday to: Birthday Corner Peninsula Daily News P.O. Box 1330 Port Angeles, WA 98362 Photos will be returned. The sender’s name and telephone number must accompany the information.

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 139 W. 8th Street, Port Angeles 360-452-4781 Pastor: Ted Mattie Lay Pastor: Shirley Cruthers Guest Preacher: Neal Allen Worship Hours: 8:30 & 11:00 a.m. Nursery Provided: both services Sunday School for all ages: 9:45 a.m.

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Mass Schedule: Saturday Vigil: 5:00 p.m. Sunday 8:30 a.m. & 10:30 a.m. Monday & Tuesday: 8:30 a.m. Thursday-Saturday: 8:30 a.m.

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DUNGENESS COMMUNITY CHURCH 683-7333 45 Eberle Lane, Sequim Sunday Service 10 a.m.

Sunday 10:00 a.m. Meeting @ Deer Park Cinemas - Hwy 101 & Deer Park Road, Port Angeles Glen Douglas, Pastor 452-9936

An Inclusive Community Celebrating Shared Values & Putting Them Into Action in the Larger Community OLYMPIC UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP 417-2665 www.olympicuuf.org 73 Howe Rd., Agnew-Old Olympic to N. Barr Rd., right on Howe Rd. May 26, 10:30 a.m. Joseph Bednarik

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EVERY SUNDAY 9 a.m. Sunday School for all ages 10 a.m. Worship Service Nursery available during AM services

Wednesday 11:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist

EVERY WEDNESDAY 6:30 p.m. Bible Study Invite your friends & neighbors for clear, biblical preaching, wonderful fellowship, & the invitation to a lasting, personal relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ.

To know Christ and to make Him known www.standrewpa.org

Atheist complaint MUNCIE, Ind. — Ball State University is investigating an atheist organization’s complaint that one of the professors at the Indiana college is teaching religion rather than science. The Freedom From Religion Foundation has filed a formal objection to Eric Hedin’s teaching with university officials. Hedin teaches an honors class called “Boundaries of Science,� which the foundation maintains teaches creationism rather than science. The foundation is dedicated to “nontheism� and separation of church and state. Retired professor Ruth Howes, who formerly taught the Boundaries of Science class, said it’s important to help students understand viewpoints that are different from their own. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press

HOLY TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH (ELCA)

CHURCH OF CHRIST

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Park & Race, Port Angeles 457-7062 Pastor Neil Allen

301 E. Lopez Ave., PA 452-2323 Pastor Richard Grinstad Sunday Worship at 8:30 a.m. & 11:00 a.m. SUNDAY Sunday School at 9:45 a.m. 9:00 a.m. Adult Sunday School Nursery Provided Radio Broadcast on KONP 1450 at 10:00 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. most Sundays www.htlcpa.com

1233 E. Front St., Port Angeles 360-457-3839 Dr. Jerry Dean, Minister A Christ–Centered message for a world weary people. SUNDAY 9:30 a.m. Sunday School 10:45 a.m. Worship Service

FIRST UNITED METHODIST & Congregational Church 7th & Laurel, Port Angeles 360-452-8971 Joey Olson, Pastor SUNDAY Childcare provided 8:30 a.m. Worship 9:45 a.m. Sunday School for all ages 11:00 a.m. Worship Youth Activities - Contact Church office@pafumc.org www.pafumc.org

. 3EQUIM !VE s www.sequimbible.org

SUNDAY 9:30 a.m. Traditional Worship Children’s Classes 10:30 a.m. Coffee Fellowship 11:00 a.m. Contemporary Worship Children’s Classes ages 3-12 Adult Discipleship Hour 6:00 p.m. E3/Mid-Hi School Bible Study Dave Wiitala, Pastor Shane McCrossen, Youth Pastor

"IBLE CENTERED s &AMILY FRIENDLY

34569893

PORT TOWNSEND — First Presbyterian Church, 1111 Franklin St., will host two events Saturday. Christine Sine will present “To Garden with God: The Spirituality of Gardening� at First Presbyterian Church, 1111 Franklin St., from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. This seminar explores the ways the life, death and resurrection of Christ are enacted in gardens. It is an interactive session that will provide an opportunity for reflection and prayer as well as practical hints on gardening, organizers said. Tom Sine will present

They married in 1956, living Anne Patricia Engen of Port and working in several states Angeles will celebrate her 80th birthday Sunday with family and while Russell served in the friends. military. They Born May 25, 1933, in Baltidivorced in more, she grew up with two sis1976. ters, twins Jean and Joan, and a Anne moved brother, Eddie. Ms. Engen in 1977 to OreShe attended elementary gon, where she school in Baltimore. lived until moving to Port Angeles She also went to school in in 1985. Cashtown, Pa., and Gettysburg, She has three children, twins Pa., before graduating from Seton Michael and Kathleen, and High School in Baltimore. daughter Beverly. She studied nursing at Mercy Anne retired from Olympic Hospital in Baltimore, earning her Memorial Hospital in 1996 and degree in 1954. still resides in Port Angeles. While working in Baltimore, She is a member of Queen of she met Russell Engen at a Angels Church. Her hobbies United Service Organizations include model trains, dollhouses function.

Anne Engen


B10

PeninsulaNorthwest

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Memorial Day weekend Information opens camping season scarce in ricin case PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

For many people across the North Olympic Peninsula, Memorial Day weekend marks the unofficial start of the camping season. With many campgrounds operating on a first-come, first-served basis, there is plenty of space available for those who act quickly. Campers can choose among county parks, campsites within Olympic National Forest and the nearly million acres of Olympic National Park.

he’s originally from Bogota, Colombia, and studied electronic engineering technolTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS ogy at ITT Technical InstiSPOKANE — A tute in Spokane Valley. It 37-year-old janitor who says he worked for ABM has been charged with Janitorial Services. threatening to kill a federal judge in a case that Employer statement involves letters containA message left at ABM’s ing the deadly poison ricin is a registered sex Spokane office Thursday offender who lived in a was not immediately rundown apartment returned, but the company building near downtown issued a statement through a public relations firm: “The Spokane. Matthew Ryan individual in question has Buquet remained jailed not been employed by our Thursday after appear- company for more than a ing in federal court a day month, long before these earlier and pleading not letters were reportedly guilty to a charge of mail- postmarked. We are coopering a threatening com- ating with the authorities and, given that this is a munication. “He sticks to himself,” pending case, at this point said Scott Ward, who we would refer you to them.” Wednesday’s grand jury lives across the hall from Buquet’s apartment. “He indictment accuses Buquet doesn’t talk, really. He’s of mailing a death threat to U.S. District Judge Fred kind of quiet.” Van Sickle in Spokane on May 14. Court appearance The indictment did not The short, balding mention ricin, but the FBI Buquet wore dark-tinted made the link in a news glasses and was shackled release late Wednesday, in court. He gave brief saying analysis showed the “yes” and “no” answers to letter sent to the judge conquestions from U.S. Mag- tained “active ricin toxin.” istrate Judge Cynthia The U.S. Postal Service Imbrogno. said last week that two letLittle information was ters were intercepted — one immediately available addressed to the courthouse about Buquet. His public and the other to the downdefender did not immedi- town post office — and they ately return a telephone contained ricin in a crude call Thursday. form that did not immediBuquet is a registered ately pose a threat to worksex offender with a 1998 ers. conviction for taking A search of federal court indecent liberties with a records turned up no indi10-year-old girl, accord- cation that Buquet had ever ing to the Spokane appeared before Van Sickle County Sheriff’s Office. or had any connection to He served 18 months in the judge. jail. He will next be in court A search of public for a bail hearing Tuesday. records shows Buquet If convicted of mailing a doesn’t appear to have threatening communicaany close relatives. tion, he could face up to 10 A Facebook page with years in prison and a his name and photo says $250,000 fine. BY NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS

Jefferson County parks The Jefferson County Parks and Recreation Department operates campgrounds throughout Jefferson County, not including the West End. “Our parks are a great option, especially for people who might be looking to make a reservation this close to the weekend,” said Matt Tyler, Jefferson County Parks and Recreation Department manager. Campsites at Quilcene Community Campground, 294964 U.S. Highway 101, are $12 per night. The campground offers 14 campsites with easy access to swimming, boating and fishing in the Hood Canal as well as access to trails to Olympic National Park and Olympic National Forest.

‘Undiscovered gem’ Tyler said he expects plenty of campers over the holiday weekend. “Quilcene is a bit of an undiscovered gem,” he said. “You’re close to the town, you have access to the marina for swimming — all for $12. It’s pretty nice.” Just outside Port Hadlock, Oak Bay Park offers two parks in one: an upper and lower campground. Both cost $18 per night or $20 with electricity, with a $3 charge for each additional vehicle. The upper campground is situated on the bluffs at 290 Cleveland St., while the lower campground, 301 Portage Way, lies on a spit jutting into Oak Bay. Lake Leland Campground, located north of Quilcene, will remain closed through the 2013 season. For up-to-date facility information on Jefferson County parks, visit www. countryrec.com.

Clallam County parks Clallam County operates two parks with campgrounds: Salt Creek Recreation Area and Dungeness Recreation Area. Campsites cost $22, or $27 with RV hookup. Clallam County residents receive a $3 discount. Dungeness has eques-

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Tammie Hawkins sits by a campfire with dog, Spigot, as Susan Lee cooks breakfast on a campstove at the Altair campground in the Elwha Valley of Olympic National Park on Memorial Day weekend in 2012. trian trails, birdwatching opportunities for land and sea birds, and easy access to the Dungeness National Wildlife Refuge. Located on Kitchen-Dick Road just west of Sequim, the Dungeness Recreation Area offers 67 campsites. Half are by reservation only, while the other half are first-come, first-served. Salt Creek Recreation Area west of Port Angeles offers unobstructed views of the Strait of Juan de Fuca, with trails leading to upland forests, rocky bluffs, rocky tidepools, sand beaches and Salt Creek. Located on Camp Hayden Road off state Highway 112, Salt Creek features 92 campsites, half of which are first-come, first-served. As of Thursday afternoon, reservations were full at both parks, but campers can still find a spot as long as they’re willing to arrive early. “That’s only half our sites, so I don’t want to discourage anybody,” said Galin Downing of the county’s Parks, Fair and Facilities Department. “Depending on the weather forecast, we may be full by the middle of the day on Friday.”

Olympic National Park

Kalaloch, all are first-come, first-served. Reservations at Kalaloch are full over the holiday weekend. Reservations for later dates can be made by calling 877-444-6777 or visiting www.recreation.gov. In the Elwha Valley just west of Port Angeles, Altair and Elwha campgrounds both are open as scheduled. Altair, which is located just north of the nearly dismantled Glines Canyon Dam, opened for the season Wednesday. McKenna said both campgrounds — but especially Altair — will offer visitors a unique camping experience due to their proximity to the Elwha River. “You can really see what’s happening with the restoration of the river and all the changes that are occurring.” Southeast of Port Angeles, the park’s Deer Park Campground will remain closed until the snow has melted. In East Jefferson County, the park’s Dosewallips Campground is open but can only be reached after a 5.5-mile hike. The road has been closed for years because of a road washout. A complete list of campgrounds and reservation information is available at http://tinyurl.com/pdnparkcamp. For more information on park closures or camping, contact the rangers at the park’s main visitor center, 3002 Mount Angeles Road, Port Angeles, or phone 360565-3131. Information on backcountry camping is available at the visitor center or by calling 360-565-3100.

All are first-come, firstserved. Falls View Campground, located 3.5 miles south of Quilcene on U.S. Highway 101, reopened today for the 2013 season. Campsites cost $10 per night, with a $5 fee for extra vehicles. Seal Rock Campground is located 2 miles north of Brinnon on Highway 101. Campsites cost $18 per night, with a $5 fee for extra vehicles. Dungeness Forks Campground, off Palo Alto Road on Forest Service Road 2880, offers only tent camping. The campground lies in a shaded, forested area at the fork of the Dungeness and Gray Wolf rivers 7 miles southeast of Blyn. On the West End, Klahowya Campground is located on the south shore of the Sol Duc River, at Milepost 212 on U.S. Highway 101. Visitors can stroll down Pioneer Path, a wheelchairaccessible, 0.3-mile interpretive trail through second-growth hemlock and fir trees that borders the Sol Duc River. From Klahowya, it’s a 10-minute drive to Lake Crescent and 30-minute drive to the Sol Duc Hot Springs. Campsites cost $17 per night, with a $5 fee for extra vehicles. Klahanie Campground, 6 miles east of Forks on the South Fork Calawah River, is closed. It is scheduled to reopen July 3. More on Olympic National Forest campgrounds can be found at http://tinyurl.com/ pdn-forestcamp.

Olympic National Park campgrounds on the North Olympic Peninsula include Altair, Elwha, Heart o’ the Hills, Hoh, Kalaloch, Ozette and Sol Duc. “Memorial Day is typically a really busy weekend at the park, one of the busiest of the year depending on the weather,” said park spokeswoman Rainey McKenna. Fees for overnight camp- National forest ing at Olympic National The U.S. Forest Service Park campgrounds range from $12 at most sites to operates five campgrounds $18 at Kalaloch. Except for in Olympic National Forest. Carol ‘Jean’ Kirner

Woman wounded in shooting dies THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

RENTON — A woman who was wounded in a shootout Wednesday night at a Renton park has died. Police spokesman Robert Onishi told KOMO the 20-year-old woman was hit in the abdomen and could not be saved despite surgery at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle where she died Thursday morning.

Death Notices

Remembering a Lifetime ■ Death and Memorial Notice obituaries chronicle a deceased’s life, either in the family’s own words or as written by the PDN staff from information provided by survivors. These notices appear at a nominal cost according to the length of the obituary. Call 360-452-8435 Monday through Friday. A form is at www.peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.” ■ Death Notices, in which summary information about the deceased, including service information and mortuary, appears once at no charge. No biographical or family information or photo is included. For further information, call 360-417-3527.

Jan. 30, 1933 — May 14, 2013

Death and Memorial Notice RAYMOND SCHOEPFLIN September 5, 1925 May 8, 2013 World War II veteran and longtime former resident of Sequim Raymond Schoepflin passed away at his home in Vancouver, Washington, on May 8, 2013. Ray faced leukemia with great courage. Ray was born to Charles and Elizabeth (Schultz) Schoepflin in Grandview, Washington, on September 5, 1925. He joined the U.S.

Witnesses told police that a fight broke out between two women from two groups at Liberty Park. Then a man from each group pulled out a gun and fired multiple shots. The woman who died was not one of the women fighting. Police questioned and released one man but are still trying to identify the shooters.

Army and served in Europe during World War II. After the war, he attended Walla Walla University and earned his bachelor’s degree in 1949. Ray took his experience and education into the workforce and excelled not only in sales and bookstore management and distribution in Washington, Oregon and Iowa, but also in hospital management in Oregon and university student aid and finance management in California.

He carried his inquisitive and bright nature with him throughout his life, and it showed in the love he had for his family and his interest in design, invention and fishing. Ray leaves behind his wife, Ruth Schoepflin; his son, Rennie Schoepflin; daughter Peggy Corbett; stepchildren Greg Bronsema, Rhonda Stott and Michelle Kasziewicz; grandchildren Nic Corbett, Adam Corbett and Charles Schoepflin; and great-granddaughter Karis Schoepflin.

Former Port Angeles resident Carol “Jean” Kirner died of dementia at Discovery Memory Care in Sequim. She was 80. Services: Celebration of life at 1 p.m. Saturday, June 1, at Bethany Pentecostal Church, 508 S. Francis St., Port Angeles. Linde-Price Funeral Service, Sequim, is in charge of arrangements.

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Fun ’n’ Advice

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Dilbert

Pickles

Garfield

Momma

DEAR ABBY: My husband and I attended the wedding of the son of some old friends in another state. Rather than buy the young couple a gift, we instead gave them a check for $1,000. Imagine our astonishment when a month later, the following arrived in our mailbox: “Dear ‘Loretta’ and ‘Evan,’ “Thank you for the generous donation. We really enjoyed spending that money. If ever you feel like you have too much of it, we would gladly take it off your hands. “Love, ‘Mason’ and ‘Candace’” Abby, my husband and I have worked hard for many years in our business and have been blessed by the Lord. We are not millionaires. We were happy and humbled to be able to share with them — until we received this. The money wasn’t a donation; it was a gift. Stung in Sioux City

by Lynn Johnston

by Brian Crane

Frank & Ernest

by Bob and Tom Thaves

Van Buren

ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

by Hank Ketcham

Doonesbury

by Garry Trudeau

Dear Abby: I have many problems, but my biggest one is, how do I forgive someone so I can move on with my life? It would take me forever to tell you everything that has been said and done. Forgiving sounds simple, but it is the hardest thing I have ever had to do. Can you help? Challenged in Illinois Dear Challenged: If hate and resentment are eating away at you, then it is probably healthier for you to let go of it. Forgiving someone isn’t doing something for someone else; it is a gift you give yourself that allows you to move forward with your life. Your religious adviser can help you — or, if you prefer, a licensed mental health counselor.

_________ 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.

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Make plans to do something with friends or take a day trip that will help you expand your interests or improve your relationship with someone you think is special. Communication plus a little romance can lead to a promise or commitment. 3 stars

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Honor a promise and take care of responsibilities. Don’t let anyone sidetrack you with fast talk or promises that are unrealistic. Make changes based on honor and integrity, not ulterior motives. A change of pace or environment will do you good. 2 stars

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don’t ignore what’s going on in a partnership. You must take action and do whatever it takes to secure your position. Don’t let false information or a misunderstanding come between you and someone special. Take the initiative. 3 stars

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Participate in activities that will challenge you physically, and avoid any chitchat with people trying to make you take on tasks that don’t belong to you. Form an alliance with someone you trust and who you feel can contribute as much as you. 4 stars

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Focus on your health and emotional wellness. If you haven’t been doing what’s best for you, start by changing your lifestyle. Do whatever it takes to eliminate stress. Someone is likely to deceive you. Ask direct questions. 3 stars

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Do what you do best and you will impress onlookers. Share your thoughts and engage in talks that will open up opportunities to work with creative, interesting individuals. Love and romance are in the stars, and mixing business with pleasure will pay off. 3 stars

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Let your creative imagination take over when you are in a crowd or socializing with friends. A free-spirited approach will give those you encounter a look at your finer qualities. A philosophic change is apparent. Follow your heart. 5 stars

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Let your intuition guide you when it comes to investments, contracts or any medical legal or financial matters. Don’t feel obliged to make a decision because someone is pressuring you. Don’t spend to impress; invest in you and your talent. 3 stars

The Family Circus

workplace materials into the bathroom gross and inappropriate? Waiting for E. Coli to Kill Me

Dear Waiting: You are asking the wrong person this question. You should be asking the head of human resources or your boss. I’m no germophobe either, but I agree that what your co-worker is doing is extremely inappropriate. You should not have to sanitize your hands after touching anything your co-worker might have touched, but that’s what I’m suggesting you do.

The Last Word in Astrology ❘

by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer

Dennis the Menace

Abigail

Dear Abby: One of my co-workers takes company research presentation books into the restroom with him multiple times a day and spends upwards of a half-hour in there with them. The unsanitary implications of this drive me batty. I am not germophobic, but taking shared materials into the bathroom while you’re doing your business is just too much for me. It’s not like he’s taking in a newspaper that can be tossed out; these are research materials that we must all share. My co-worker told me I need to “get over it,” that this is a “me” issue. Am I crazy, or is taking shared

by Mell Lazarus

Rose is Rose

DEAR ABBY

Dear Stung: Let’s hope the note you received was an unfortunate attempt at humor. While the message may have gone over like a lead balloon and I’m sure the parents would be beyond embarrassed if they knew, at least you received a thank-you for your generosity. I hear from many people who complain that their gifts were not acknowledged at all.

by Jim Davis

B11

Wedding-goers irked by thank-you

by Scott Adams

For Better or For Worse

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

by Eugenia Last

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Open up to someone you want to spend more time with and reveal what you want. Love and romance are on the rise and partnerships can go either way depending on honesty and integrity. 3 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Accept praise for whatever contributions you make. Discuss pressing matters with someone you fear might be erratic when you need him or her to be stable. Take over and control the situation to ensure the outcome you are looking for. 4 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Expand your interests and spend time with people who offer mental stimulation. You’ll charm the people you encounter with your physical and intellectual appeal. Love is in the stars and romance highlighted. Embrace change and try something new. 2 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Follow through with your plans and concentrate on financial endeavors that will pad your bank account. Money will come from an unusual source. Be careful not to let someone with crazy ideas help you spend your cash. You cannot buy love. 5 stars

by Bil and Jeff Keane


B12

WeatherWatch

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013 Neah Bay 55/45

Bellingham B ellli e lin n 62/47

Olympic Peninsula TODAY SHOWERS

60/45

Sequim 59/46

Olympics Snow level: 4,500 ft.

Forks 61/43

Port S WER SHO Townsend 60/46

ER OW SH

Port Ludlow 61/47

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Yesterday

National TODAY forecast Nation

Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 58 47 0.24 8.73 Forks 60 48 0.65 51.27 Seattle 53 44 0.06 14.71 Sequim 65 45 0.08 4.81 Hoquiam 54 45 0.27 30.50 Victoria 61 40 0.08 11.95 Port Townsend 55 40 0.03* 8.73

Forecast highs for Friday, May 24

Billings 77° | 54°

S

Aberdeen 61/45

Last

New

First

San Francisco 72° | 48°

Chicago 59° | 46°

Denver 88° | 46°

Miami 90° | 73°

Cartography by Keith Thorpe / © Peninsula Daily News

SATURDAY

Low 45 Cloudy with showers

SUNDAY

MONDAY

58/48 61/49 Showers likely Partly sunny; across region showers possible

Marine Weather

Ocean: W wind 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 1 to 2 ft. W swell 6 ft at 14 seconds. Scattered showers. Tonight, W wind 5 to 15 kt becoming light. Wind waves 1 to 2 ft. W swell 6 ft.

Fronts

CANADA

Seattle 63° | 46° Olympia 63° | 43°

Tacoma 66° | 46° Yakima 72° | 43°

Astoria 59° | 48°

TODAY Ht Low Tide Ht 6:44 a.m. -1.9’ 1:05 p.m. 7.3’ 6:36 p.m. 2.1’

Port Angeles

1:21 a.m. 7.0’ 4:18 p.m. 6.8’

Port Townsend Dungeness Bay*

Spokane 64° | 41°

ORE.

© 2013 Wunderground.com

TOMORROW High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 12:30 a.m. 9.6’ 7:31 a.m. -2.5’ 1:55 p.m. 7.5’ 7:26 p.m. 2.1’

8:41 a.m. -2.1’ 8:55 p.m. 5.2’

May 31 Jun 8

Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise today Moonset tomorrow

2:02 a.m. 7.0’ 5:06 p.m. 7.1’

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

8:58 p.m. 5:23 a.m. 8:44 p.m. 5:57 a.m.

Lo Prc Otlk 67 .49 Rain 57 PCldy 61 PCldy 42 Cldy 61 .80 Cldy 67 PCldy 66 Rain 74 Cldy 67 .01 Rain 52 Clr 66 PCldy 42 PCldy 35 PCldy 53 .01 Cldy 77 PCldy 63 .24 Rain

SUNDAY High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 1:16 a.m. 9.7’ 8:18 a.m. -2.7’ 2:45 p.m. 7.6’ 8:16 p.m. 2.1’

9:25 a.m. -2.6’ 9:49 p.m. 5.5’

2:46 a.m. 6.9’ 10:11 a.m. -2.8’ 5:54 p.m. 7.4’ 10:46 p.m. 5.5’

2:58 a.m. 8.6’ 9:54 a.m. -2.3’ 5:55 p.m. 8.4’ 10:08 p.m. 5.8’

3:39 a.m. 8.7’ 10:38 a.m. -2.9’ 6:43 p.m. 8.8’ 11:02 p.m. 6.1’

4:23 a.m. 8.5’ 11:24 a.m. -3.1’ 7:31 p.m. 9.1’ 11:59 p.m. 6.1’

2:04 a.m. 7.7’ 5:01 p.m. 7.6’

2:45 a.m. 7.8’ 10:00 a.m. -2.6’ 5:49 p.m. 7.9’ 10:24 p.m. 5.5’

3:39 a.m. 7.7’ 10:46 a.m. -2.8’ 6:37 p.m. 8.2’ 11:21 p.m. 5.5’

9:16 a.m. -2.1’ 9:30 p.m. 5.2’

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

NEW

Hi 77 86 91 54 80 86 82 92 87 68 84 68 58 60 89 85

2013 Subaru

OUTBACK KOENIG

2.5i MODEL CODE: DDB PACKAGE CODE: 01

3501 HWY 101, E., PORT ANGELES

360.457.4444 s 800.786.8041

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Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press

Burlington, Vt. 79 Casper 67 Charleston, S.C. 85 Charleston, W.Va. 86 Charlotte, N.C. 86 Cheyenne 68 Chicago 72 Cincinnati 78 Cleveland 85 Columbia, S.C. 86 Columbus, Ohio 82 Concord, N.H. 61 Dallas-Ft Worth 85 Dayton 79 Denver 77 Des Moines 64 Detroit 84 Duluth 55 El Paso 95 Evansville 78 Fairbanks 66 Fargo 73 Flagstaff 74 Grand Rapids 72 Great Falls 63 Greensboro, N.C. 83 Hartford Spgfld 77 Helena 63 Honolulu 83 Houston 89 Indianapolis 75 Jackson, Miss. 81 Jacksonville 81 Juneau 62 Kansas City 68 Key West 88 Las Vegas 92 Little Rock 82

Automatic!

0s

TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States: ■ 105 Death Valley, Calif. ■ 17 at Stanley, Idaho

68 1.30 Rain Los Angeles 44 PCldy Louisville 69 Cldy Lubbock 63 .45 Rain Memphis 64 .25 Rain Miami Beach 42 .03 Clr Midland-Odessa 50 1.15 Rain Milwaukee 62 .23 Rain Mpls-St Paul 64 .43 Rain Nashville 68 Cldy New Orleans 64 .05 Rain New York City 50 .10 Rain Norfolk, Va. 69 Cldy North Platte 60 .21 Rain Oklahoma City 46 .06 Cldy Omaha 54 .02 Cldy Orlando 61 .08 Rain Pendleton 37 .04 Clr Philadelphia 71 PCldy Phoenix 57 .24 Cldy Pittsburgh 39 Cldy Portland, Maine 46 Clr Portland, Ore. 44 Clr Providence 53 .30 Rain Raleigh-Durham 45 .03 Cldy Rapid City 64 .30 Rain Reno 66 Rain Richmond 39 .67 Rain Sacramento 72 Clr St Louis 71 Cldy St Petersburg 58 .07 Rain Salt Lake City 62 .01 PCldy San Antonio 66 .24 Cldy San Diego 36 PCldy San Francisco 52 PCldy San Juan, P.R. 81 PCldy Santa Fe 66 Clr St Ste Marie 62 PCldy Shreveport

75 80 94 80 86 96 62 54 82 79 78 86 70 80 60 88 54 87 103 86 55 50 72 83 56 62 86 74 78 86 87 91 67 62 83 83 58 84

GLOSSARY of abbreviations used on this page: Clr clear, sunny; PCldy partly cloudy; Cldy cloudy; Sh showers; Ts thunderstorms; Prc precipitation; Otlk outlook; M data missing; Ht tidal height; YTD year to date; kt knots ft or ’ feet

53 44 .04 Clr 62 PCldy Sioux Falls 64 .42 Cldy Syracuse 86 70 .01 Rain 68 PCldy Tampa 88 73 PCldy 63 PCldy Topeka 72 50 Cldy 75 .15 PCldy Tucson 99 67 Clr 72 PCldy Tulsa 79 57 Cldy 48 .87 Rain Washington, D.C. 86 70 .02 Rain 45 .11 Clr Wichita 78 57 Cldy 61 .09 Cldy Wilkes-Barre 90 61 .25 Rain 69 .13 PCldy Wilmington, Del. 86 71 .01 Rain 69 Rain ________ 68 .46 Rain 42 Cldy Hi Lo Otlk 58 1.14 Cldy 62 56 Sh 52 .01 Cldy Auckland Baghdad 106 79 PCldy 70 .20 Cldy Beijing 85 64 Cldy 33 .22 Cldy 54 46 Sh 72 .01 Rain Berlin 58 45 Cldy 73 Clr Brussels 92 67 PCldy 63 .12 Rain Cairo 53 44 Rain 48 .02 Rain Calgary 89 66 Ts 47 1.39 Rain Guadalajara 84 79 Ts 60 Rain Hong Kong 93 65 Clr 69 .01 Rain Jerusalem 70 52 Clr 39 Clr Johannesburg 86 58 Clr 38 Clr Kabul 51 42 Rain/Wind 70 Rain London 84 56 Ts 48 Clr Mexico City 56 46 Sh 61 Cldy Montreal 79 59 Cldy 77 PCldy Moscow 112 89 Clr 42 PCldy New Delhi 59 45 Sh 75 Cldy Paris Sh 61 Cldy Rio de Janeiro 72 62 48 Clr Rome 63 53 Sh/Wind 76 .92 Cldy Sydney 69 49 Sh 46 PCldy Tokyo 73 64 PCldy 40 .54 PCldy Toronto 56 40 Clr 65 Cldy Vancouver 61 50 Sh

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Subaru Since 1975

Warm Stationary

Jun 16 May 24

Nation/World

Victoria 61° | 48°

High Tide LaPush

58/50 Rainy day ahead

Washington TODAY

Strait of Juan de Fuca: W wind to 10 kt. Wind waves 1 ft or less. Scattered showers. Tonight, W wind 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft. Scattered showers.

Tides

59/49 Cloudy; rain in some areas

TUESDAY

The Lower 48:

Atlanta 79° | 59°

El Paso 97° | 64° Houston 88° | 75°

Full

New York 66° | 63°

Detroit 63° | 45°

Washington D.C. 66° | 63°

Los Angeles 79° | 57°

Cold

TONIGHT

Cloudy

Minneapolis 70° | 39°

Almanac

Brinnon 63/47

Pt. Cloudy

Seattle 63° | 46°

*Reading taken in Nordland

✼✼ ✼

Sunny

*As low as 0% APR for 48 mos. or 0.9% APR for up to 63 mos. or 1.9% APR for 72 mos. On Approval of Credit through Subaru Motors Finance. Sale price does not include tax, license and a negotiable dealer documentary fee up to $150 may be added to the sale price. Vehicles are one only and subject to prior sale. Photo for illustration purposes only. Not responsible for typographical errors. VINs posted at dealership. See Dealer for details. Ad expires 5/31/13.

35754847


Classified

Peninsula Daily News

Friday, May 24, 2013 C1

MORE CHOICES! Over 385 Vehicles to choose from! 0 INITIAL PAYMENT. $ 0 SECURITY DEPOSIT.

0 DOWN PAYMENT. $ 0 DRIVE-OFF LEASE.

$

$

You Can Count On Us!

Excludes dealer fees, tax, title, and license.

WILDER

www.wildernissan.com

NEW 2013

97 Deer Park Road • Port Angeles (360)

369-4123

EXCLUDES A NEGOTIABLE $150 DOCUMENTATION FEE. EXCLUDES DEALER FEES, TAX, TITLE, AND LICENSE. SUBJECT TO RESIDENCY RESTRICTIONS. VARIES BY NISSAN REGION. For well-qualified lessees when financed through NMAC. $0 initial payment required at consummation. ($0 consumer downpayment, $0 first month payment.) First monthly payment will be credited as “noncash credit” on the lease agreement. Ad expires 5/31/13. Always wear your seat belt and please don’t drink and drive. Nissan, the Nissan Brand Symbol, innovation that excites, and Nissan model names are Nissan trademarks. ©2013 Nissan North America, Inc.

TUNDRA

4-WHEEL DRIVE

36 MONTH LEASE

299

V8 Double Cab

COVERS NORMAL FACTORY SCHEDULED SERVICE FOR 2 YEARS OR 25K MILES, WHICHEVER COMES FIRST. THE NEW VEHICLE CANNOT BE PART OF A RENTAL OR COMMERCIAL FLEET. SEE PARTICIPATING DEALER FOR COMPLETE PLAN DETAILS. VALID ONLY IN THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES AND ALASKA.

$

*36 month lease for $299.00 per month. $3,000.00 cash and/or trade due at lease signing, plus tax, license and $150.00 negotiable documentary fee. Security deposit waived. Tfs tier 1+ customers on approval of credit. Residual value is $19,208.00. Photo for illustration purposes only. Offer expires 6/3/13.

WILDER

MO.*

TOYOTA You Can Count On Us!

THIS TRUCK MEANS BUSINESS

95 Deer Park Road, Port Angeles 1-800-927-9379 • 360-457-8511 Check us out online at

www.wildertoyota.com

2013 Honda FIT 36 MONTH LEASE

WILDER Honda

$

You Can Count On Us!

97 Deer Park Road, Port Angeles 1-800-927-9395 • 360-452-9268 Check us out online at

www.wilderhonda.com

169

MO.*

TOP SAFETY AWARD BY THE IIHS

*36 Month lease for $169.00 per month. $1,999.00 cash and/or trade due at lease signing, plus tax, license and $150.00 negotiable documentary fee. Automatic transmission. Security deposit waived. On approval of credit. Residual value is $10,549.30. See Wilder Honda for details. Offer expires 5/31/13.

2013 JETTA S 36 MONTH LEASE

$

199

WILDER VOLKSWAGEN

MO.*

You Can Count On Us!

97 Deer Park Road, Port Angeles 1-800-927-9395 • 360-452-9268 Check us out online at

3 Years or 36,000 Miles of No-Charge Scheduled Maintenance. Whichever occurs first. Some restrictions. See dealer or program for details.

www.wildervw.com

*36 Month lease for $199.00 per month. $0 cash and/or trade due at lease signing, plus tax, license and $150.00 negotiable documentary fee. Security deposit waived. TFS TIER_1+ customers on approval of credit. Residual value is $9,282.65. Excludes TDI® Clean Diesel and Hybrid models. See Wilder VW for details. Offer expires 5/31/13.

WILDER CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED 2003 OLDSMOBILE ALERO GL

SALE PRICE STK#H5960B

$6,995

2007 PONTIAC G6 CONV. GT SPORT

KBB $20,842

SALE PRICE STK#V5576A

$14,950

2012 FORD FOCUS SEL

SALE PRICE STK#P3460

$8,995

SALE PRICE

$16,995

2010 HONDA CIVIC HYBRID

$11,950

45 MPG HWY

AWD

SALE PRICE

$14,995

2007 HONDA ACCORD EX-L V6

SALE PRICE STK#P3372

$17,909

2011 TOYOTA CAMRY SE

SALE PRICE STK#P4604

$16,950

2012 KIA SEDONA LX

$18,995

SALE PRICE STK#P4594

$19,950

SALE PRICE STK#P3419

2009 TOYOTA YARIS

35 MPG HWY

AWD

SALE PRICE

$11,995

STK#P4642A

2009 HONDA FIT SPORT NAV

SALE PRICE STK#P4603

SALE PRICE STK#H6180A

$13,950

2009 NISSAN ALTIMA S

$16,995

2008 GMC CANYON 4WD EXT CAB SLE1

KBB $20,145

$17,909

2006 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LTD HEMI 4X4

KBB $21,400

SALE PRICE

2006 INFINITI G35X

SALE PRICE STK#P4578C

$14,950

2011 NISSAN VERSA HB S

31 MPG HWY

KBB $21,201

45 MPG HWY

STK#H6006A

SALE PRICE STK#10635A

2010 FORD TAURUS SEL AWD

STK#V5530B

2009 NISSAN CUBE S

30 MPG HWY

2008 HONDA CIVIC HYBRID NAVIGATION

KBB $19,974

37 MPG HWY

2008 FORD FOCUS SE

KBB $13,271

31 MPG HWY

ONLY 55K MILES

STK#P3457

2007 FORD FOCUS ZX4 SE

$17,919

2006 JEEP WRANGLER 4WD X

KBB $22,369

SALE PRICE STK#N7165A

SALE PRICE STK#J7846C

$19,995

SALE PRICE STK#P3391

$19,995

SALE PRICE STK#H5938A

$16,995

SALE PRICE STK#N6955

$16,995

2010 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SXT

2010 MERCURY MILAN PREMIER AWD

KBB $18,979

KBB $19,565

SALE PRICE STK#P3358

$17,989

2012 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT 4X4

4x4 SALE PRICE STK#P3462

$20,995

SALE PRICE STK#H6080A

$18,465

2009 TOYOTA VENZA

KBB $25,370

SALE PRICE STK#N7713A

$21,909

Vehicles are one only and subject to prior sale. VINs posted at dealership. Sale price doesn’t include tax, license and documentation fees. A negotiable dealer documentary fee up to $150 may be added to the sale price. KBB (Kelley Blue Book) based on 4/22/13 guide book and subject to change. See Dealer for details. Ad expires 5/28/13.

WILDER AUTO You Can Count On Us!

Check us out online at

www.wilderauto.com 24-hours a day!

95 & 97 Deer Park Road, Port Angeles

1-888-813-8545


Classified

C2 Friday, May 24, 2013

Peninsula Daily News

Peninsula MARKETPLACE IN PRINT & ONLINE PLACE ADS FOR PRINT AND WEB: Visit | www.peninsuladailynews.com

Reach The North Olympic Peninsula & The World

NOON E N DEADMLisIs It! Don’t

Call: 360.452.8435 or 800.826.7714 | Fax: 360.417.3507 In Person: 305 W. 1st St., Port Angeles • Office Hours: Monday thru Friday – 8AM to 5PM

Sneak a peek Peninsula Daily news •

t o day ’ s

hottest

BIG Sale: Sat. 9-3, Sun.Mon. 11-3, 506 Dan Kell y R d . , o f f H w y. 1 1 2 . Load of jewelry, old 3 pt h i t c h s aw, wa g o n wheels, dairy stanchion, pine hutch, 16” tooled saddle/tack, old postcards, walnut/wicker settee + 2 chairs, old P.A. light post, collections of kinds, ‘69-’71 GTX doors, 32x79” screen door, ‘05 Okanagan travel trailer, Jean Cavat oil. CANOPY: Fits ‘07 Toyot a Tu n d r a , 6 . 5 ’ b e d , white, Leer. $800. (360)460-1870 CENTRAL P.A.: 2 Br., 2 bath. Fireplace, garage. W / D. N o s m o k i n g o r pets. $800. 460-8797. CLALLAM BAY 24373 Hwy. 112, 3 Br., 2 b a m o b i l e h o m e, 1 , 4 4 2 s f, d e t a c h e d garage, lease option or cash discount, $ 3 , 0 0 0 d ow n , $ 8 2 1 per mo. $68,000. (877)553-5348

classifieds!

new

FORD: ‘00 F250 Sup e r C a b. Au t o 2 W D, 147K miles, tow package, power seat and windows, power sunroof, sliding rear glass window. Recent tune up and underbody spray treatment. $5,500/obo. (360)504-0300 GARAGE Sale: Fri. only, 8-4 p.m., 252 Blue Grouse Run, off E. Sequim Bay Rd. Appliances, bunk bed, fishing gear, tools. 50% off after 2 p.m.

MRI TECH G r e a t p ay / b e n e f i t s while working with friendly staff. Apply: nbuckner@ olympicmedical.org or online at olympicmedical.org S A L E : S a t 8 - 2 p. m . To o l s , e n g i n e h o i s t , small trailer, misc. 364 Blue Ridge Rd. SEQUIM: Super 1 Br. on 1 acre, $680 utilities incl., lease. 504-2905. SHOP Sale: Sat. only, 9-5 p.m., 1921 Hwy. 101 W. Construction material, furniture, tools, automotive items, welder, brand new flooring, OSB and plywood, gardening stuff/tools, appliances, Makita cordless tools, pellet stove, wood stove, engine hoist, paint, lumber, office fur niture, woodworking tools, and much more.

Kelly’s House Cleaning. N e e d h e l p w i t h yo u r house cleaning? Call me or send an email, I can do weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly maintenance of your house. My name is Kelly, I am licensed and DUMP TRUCK DRIVER h a v e b e e n c l e a n i n g Truck and trailer. Avail. h o u s e s fo r 3 + ye a r s. to work out of town, able 360-440-3118 or email kellydakota1@ to join Teamsters Union, SOLMAR SEQUIM gmail.com min. 5 yrs. exp. Clean 3 Br., 2 bath, 2 (360)683-5447 car garage, no smoking/ LEGAL ASSISTANT pets. $890. Duane at ESTATE Sale: Fri.-Sat, Part-time, at established (206)604-0188 9-3 p.m., 267 Dunge- Por t Angeles law firm. n e s s M e a d o w s . T V s , Requirements include STEEL SHELVING king-sized bedroom set, g e n e r a l l e g a l b a c k - 3 c o m m e r c i a l g r a d e dinette table and hutch, ground, excellent written units, 24 deep x 36 wide leather sofa, side buffet, and verbal communica- x75” tall, 3 adj. shelves microwave stand, wine tion skills, strong or- per unit. $120 each. cabinet, pictures, exer- ganizational skills, famil(360)683-8849 cise equipment, leather i a r i t y w i t h c o u r t a n d chair, clothing, dresser office procedures and SUBARU: ‘91 Legacy and mirror, outdoor patio working knowledge of Wagon. 5 speed, AWD. f u r n i t u r e , a n d m u c h Word, Outlook and Ex- $2,500. (360)683-5460. cel. Applicants must be more! No earlybirds! detail oriented, have the UTILITY TRAILER: Tilt, F I R E W O O D : 6 c o r d ability to interface with 3 motorcycle trailer, curspecial, $895. Limited clients and to prioritize renlty has deck and side time only! 360-582-7910. and multi-task. Salary built over tracks for haulwww.portangeles DOE. Please send re- ing misc. $250/obo. (360)457-1320 firewood.com sume to: Peninsula Daily News PDN#705/Legal WINDERMERE H U G E M u l t i Fa m i l y Port Angeles, WA 98362 SEQUIM EAST Garage Sale! 826 W Property 8 t h S t r e e t , PA . B e Management t we e n t h e A a n d B MEMORIAL Weekend • Seq.: 2 Br., 1 bath, block across the two Estate Sale. Memorial garage, water view, no bridges. Furniture, AnWeekend Estate Sale smoking, small pet. tiques, Men, Women 100 E. Palmer St. SeImmediate Avail. $850. and Baby cloths, fabquim WA 98382. Sat• Seq.: 2 Br., 2.5 bath, ric, homemade jewelurday, May 25th, Sun2 car garage, large ry, tools, toys, cruiser day, May 26th, from ya r d , 1 , 6 3 5 s f. , n o bike, wood stove in10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Lots smoking, small pet. sert, Playskool Game of home furnishings, Avail. 7/1. $900. Ta bl e, d e c o r a t i o n s, new appliances and (360)460-9248 or and lots more! 7-4 Satconstruction tools/ (360)809-0439 urday and Sunday. gear.

3010 Announcements

4070 Business Opportunities

ADOPT ~ Art director & Global executive yearn fo r p r e c i o u s b a by t o LOVE, adore, devote our lives. Expenses paid. 1800-844-1670

3020 Found FOUND: Knife and THE BLACKBIRD strange key. Bluffs Rd., COFFEEHOUSE P.A. Must identify well, * * F O R S A L E * * G r e a t unique items. price, Thriving and Prof(360)457-8588 itable.Contact Adam for details: 360-224-9436; blackbirdcoffee@ 3023 Lost gmail.com LOST: Cat. Gray, was switched with our gray cat in P.A. (270)319-0496

4026 Employment General

ARNP Psychiatric Specialty Psych evals. and diagnosis, med. mgmt., 3540/week, full benes. Resume and cover letter to LOST: Notebook. Mani- Pe n i n s u l a B e h av i o ra l la-colored bid book, be- Health, 118 E. 8th St., tween Bell Hill and Se- P o r t A n g e l e s , W A 98362. EOE. quim. (360)683-1403. L O S T: D o g . S m a l l , Dachshund mix, brownish red, 17 yrs old, deaf. Last seen on Mc Donald St, P.A. (360)457-2780.

WHY PAY SHIPPING ON INTERNET PURCHASES? SHOP LOCAL peninsula dailynews.com

BARBER: Men’s barber or stylist with men’s haircut experience. Booth rental, 3-4 days required, no nights/weekends. (360)457-8600. CERTIFIED log truck mechanic and shop help. Call (360)417-8022

AUTOMOTIVE

SALES

Koenig Chevrolet-Subaru is seeking highly motivated individuals looking for an exciting career in auto sales.

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale General General Wanted Clallam County Clallam County HELP Wanted. Clallam Title has entry level opportunities, if you like people. Will you give 110% to ser ve them? Can you use a keyboard and a computer? Are you willing to make trips to the cour t house, run errands, and do the things the rest of us d o n ’ t s e e m t o h ave time to do? No whiners, no lazy people, nobody with too many personal commitments. Team players only. Great chance for advancement. Br ing by yo u r c u r r e n t r e sume to our either our Sequim office or Loni in the Pt. Angeles office.

Call Bill Koenig Jr at (360) 457-4444

KITSAP Credit Union has 2 teller positions at our Pt. Hadlock Branch. Apply www.kitsapcu.org. See online ad for more info. LEGAL ASSISTANT Part-time, at established Por t Angeles law firm. Requirements include general legal background, excellent written and verbal communication skills, strong organizational skills, familiarity with cour t and office procedures and working knowledge of Word, Outlook and Excel. Applicants must be detail oriented, have the ability to interface with clients and to prioritize and multi-task. Salary DOE. Please send resume to: Peninsula Daily News PDN#705/Legal Port Angeles, WA 98362 MEDICAL OFFICE LPN or MA, solo family practice, experienced in back office and phlebotomy. Resumes to: 814 S. Peabody St. Port Angeles, WA 98362

4026 Employment General CONCERNED Citizens MRI TECH is hiring for p.t. visitation G r e a t p a y / b e n e f i t s monitors to work with w h i l e w o r k i n g w i t h children and families. friendly staff. Must pass a background Apply: nbuckner@ clearance, and must olympicmedical.org have a HS diploor online at ma/GED. Exp. preferred olympicmedical.org but not required. Application at 805 E. 8th St., OFFICE ASSISTANT P.A. Part time in busy office. Computer skills in MS DENTAL asst. needed Word, Excel and pub2 - 3 d a y s / w k f o r 3 - 4 lisher. Experience premonths. Fax resume to ferred. Must be able to 6 8 3 - 9 6 8 3 o r e m a i l pass an extensive backmdmarr@gmail.com. ground clearance, be reliable, confidential, proDental Receptionist fessional, and answer Experienced. mu l t i - p h o n e s y s t e m s. Peninsula Daily News Pick up application at PDN#704/Dental Sunshine and Rainbows Port Angeles, WA 98362 office across from Forks DUMP TRUCK DRIVER Outfitters. Truck and trailer. Avail. “ON-CALL” to work out of town, able RESIDENTIAL AIDE to join Teamsters Union, P r o m o t e d a i l y l i v i n g min. 5 yrs. exp. skills of residents at 2 (360)683-5447 sites. Req HS/GED & ELWHA River Casino is Cooking/housekeeping hiring for the following skills. Work experience positions: FT Security with chronic mental illOfficer, FT Slot Atten- ness/substance abuse dant, PT Deli worker preferred. Resume to and Deli Cook. Applica- PBH, 118 E. 8th St., Port tions at elwha.org or at Angeles, WA 98362 DeE l w h a R i ve r C a s i n o. tails at http://peninsula behavioral.org. EOE. Closes on 5/31/13. PAINT ROOM TECH H E AV Y E q u i p m e n t Paint matching experiand Truck Diesel Me- ence required. Apply in c h a n i c : T h i s i s a person at Baxter Autoskilled position involv- motive, 221 W. 1st St., ing the safe and effi- P.A. cient diagnoses, adPeninsula Daily News j u s t m e n t , r e p a i r, o r Circulation Dept. overhaul of equipment H as a motor route including, tractor and straight trucks, load- available in Port Ludlow. ers, excavators and The route has 180 subother large equipment. scribers, takes approxiCDL preferred. Must mately 4 hours to deliver be able to get along daily and is 90 miles well with others and long. Papers are picked follow directions. Call up in Discovery Bay at 3 6 0 - 4 5 2 - 6 5 7 5 f o r 1 0 : 3 0 p. m . D e l i ve r y questions or to get an deadline is 6:30 a.m. application. Drug free Mon.-Fri. and 7:30 a.m. on Sundays. Route pays workplace - EOE approximately $275 per week, no collecting. KWA HOMECARE Call Dave Smith at Part/full-time Caregivers. 1-800-826-7714 Benefits, Flexible Hours. Ext. 53-6050 Call P.A. (360)452-2129 Sequim (360)582-1647 P.T. (360)344-3497

VESPA

KOENIG

3501 Hwy 101 E, Port Angeles, WA 98362

UTILITY TRAILERS SERVICE & PARTS

(360) 457-4444 • www.KoenigSales.com PRE-OWNED VEHICLES

HomeCare Supervisor Position

This is a highly responsible supervisory job in Port Townsend directing homecare workers: scheduling, training, and running daily operations. Qualifications include strong communications, computer, and marketing skills as well as enthusiasm for serving seniors. Skills test required. Visit www.kwacares.org for an application and submit it to KKim@kwacares.org

35790500

SUBARU

Permanent and On-call positions available now at Clallam Bay Corrections Center Correctional Officer 1 Pay starts at $16.48 hourly, plus full benefits. Closes 05/28/13. Apply on-line: www.careers.wa.gov. For further information please call Laura at (360)963-3208. EOE.

PREP COOK: And more. Many responsibilities incl., dishwasher, register, etc. Apply in p e r s o n a t J o s e ’s Fa mous Salsa, 126 E. INFO Tech I. City of Se- Washington, Sequim. quim, $3,454Quillayute Valley 4,120/month DOE, FT School District benefits, Required: AA degree info systems + Is accepting applications for School Nurse for the min 1 yr work exp install and maintain Windows 2013/2014 School Year. based PC’s, TCP/IP net- Please visit the district a t works telecom systems. w e b s i t e Desired: Microsoft Solu- www.forks.wednet.edu or contact QVSD Admintions Assoc Cert & istration Office at 360CompTIA A+, w w w. s e q u i m w a . g o v, 374-6262 ext. 267 for position details and apclosing date 6/7/13. plication procedure.

35776341

• We offer a lead generation engine that delivers well-qualified sales leads • Excellent, experienced sales support staff • Product management team that is attuned to the needs of the market and delivers what it wants • You will represent sales leading brands from Chevrolet-Subaru, and a large pre-owned inventory to sell from • Our leading edge automation will give you the tools you need to succeed

CHEVROLET

Place Your Ad Online 24/7

S E N I O R e m p l oy m e n t training vacancy, Clallam County. 16 hrs wk, min. wage. Qualify: 55+, unemployed, low income guidelines. Update your skills. Call: O3A for info. 866-720-4863. EOE. Support/Care Staff To work with developmentally disabled adults, no exper ience necessary, will train. $10 hr. to start. CNAs encouraged to apply. Apply in person at 1020 Caroline, P.A. from 8-4 p.m. TEMP Janitor: $12.0012.50/hr, 20 hr/wk, incl. weekends, through yearend, assists cleaning Sequim City facilities, www.Sequimwa.gov closes 5/28.

UNIT SECRETARY 10 hours week, day shift. Prior experience as unit secretar y in nursing unit required. EPIC training/experience highly desired. Apply jobs@ olympicmedical.org or nbuckner@ olympicmedical.org

4080 Employment Wanted ADEPT YARD CARE Weeding, mowing, etc. (360)452-2034 B a r k - Ta s t i c D o g Walking/Care is a new licensed, bonded and insured business serving Sequim. Reach us by phone (360)5042008, email bark.tastic @aol.com. Check out our Facebook page for more info. (360)504-2008 Don’t stuggle with dull saws and garden tools. We provide while you wait service with call in a p p t . D e n ny ’s S aw Sharpening Service (360)385-5536 FIELD MOWING Free estimates (360)460-2855 FIELD MOWING Free estimates (360)460-2855 HOUSEKEEPING Housekeeper, fast and efficient, good rates, references upon request. A happy respectful person Blanca Sanchez: (360)643-1278 JOHN’S Lawns. Complete lawn care service, commercial and residential. Ser ving Por t Angeles and Sequim. Free Estimates. (360)460-6387 email: johnslawns@olypen.com JUAREZ & SON’S HANDYMAN SERVICES Quality work at a reasonable price. Can handle a wide array of problem projects. Like home maintenance, cleaning, clean up, yard maintenance, and etc. Give us a call office 452-4939 or cell 460-8248. Kelly’s House Cleaning. N e e d h e l p w i t h yo u r house cleaning? Call me or send an email, I can do weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly maintenance of your house. My name is Kelly, I am licensed and have been cleaning h o u s e s fo r 3 + ye a r s. 360-440-3118 or email kellydakota1@ gmail.com MOWING, PRUNING, BARKING Honest and dependable. (360)582-7142 RUSSELL ANYTHING Call today 775-4570. SCUBA DIVER FOR HIRE Call 681-4429

OlyPets In-Home Pet Care offers a convenient alternative to kenneling your pets and leaving your home unattended. Call (360)565-5251 for your complimentar y “ M e e t ‘ n G r e e t .” O r visit www.OlyPets.com TAY L O R ’ S L a w n Maintenance Available all year around for any lawn care needed, moss removal and odd jobs. Just call (360)565-6660 or (360)565-6298. Always done to your satisfaction!

IT’S GOT IT ALL! V i e w s o f t h e v a l l e y, Straits, Mt. Baker, an exceptional home, 4 Br. 3+ baths, over 4,400 sf., beautiful yard, fenced, gardens, pond, 3 car garage, acreage and privacy! $575,000. ML#271064. Kathy Brown (360)417-2785 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

LOWEST PRICE This is currently the lowest price on a manufactured home in Sequim. 2 Br., 2 bath, 1,152 sf home in a nicely maintained park close to shopping, bus lines, and YARD MAINTENANCE: t h e D i s c o v e r y Tr a i l . Nice clean home; all apFree estimates. pliances included (incl. (360)912-2990 washer/dryer). Carpor t with storage shed/workYA R D W O R K a n d shop; Low monthly fee O d d j o b s M o w i n g , includes water, sewer, Tr imming, Weeding, trash and common area Roto-Tilling and any maintenance. other yardwork or odd$15,750. MLO#270961. job ser vice. Exper iGail Sumpter: 477-9361 enced Honest DeBlue Sky Real Estate pendable. $40 per hr. Sequim - 360-477-9189 includes 2 men. MASTER CRAFTS(360)461-7772 MANSHIP WITH VIEWS! 105 Homes for Sale Walk in and take in the Clallam County quality that this custom built home exudes. Seller is the original owner and builder of this nearly 5,000 sf. masterpiece on o ve r 7 a c r e s . H u g e k i t c h e n , h u g e s h o p. Huge value—come see! $699,000 ML#270903/478185 2127 Driftwood Place: Mark Macedo 3 br.,2 bath, all appli(360)477-9244 ances included+ w/d. TOWN & COUNTRY Built in surround sound, French doors NEW, NEW, NEW t o s l a t e p a t i o, b i g Roof, doors, windows, backyard, shed, dou- flooring, fixtures, cabible attatched garage, nets, countertop, heating fireplace, crown mold- system, appliances anding. Great cul de sac bay window, low mainten e i g h b o r h o o d ! C a l l nance landscaping, priTa m m y n o w ! vate master patio, (360)457-9511 or spacious corner lot in 461-9066! sunland $194,500 ML#480770/270980 ATTENTION Terry Peterson INVESTORS AND (360)683-6880 BUILDERS WINDERMERE Ta ke a l o o k a t t h e s e SUNLAND Por t Angeles building lots located in an established neighborhood with utilities, spec home and resale history. There are a total of 5 city lots available for sale and each lot is priced at $24,950. MLS#262456 Jean or Dave P.A.: 90’s S.W. 2 Br., (360)683-4844 Mf. home, 400 sf add., Windermere ramp access, covered Real Estate decks, outbuildings, Sequim East disabled equipped bath, lots of storage, gas fireCABIN ON THE place backup on large PRAIRIE! wooded lot. Mountain 1 , 1 3 6 s f. h a n d h ew n view. $75,000. Call Ken construction, outstand- a t ( 3 6 0 ) 4 5 7 - 6 8 7 9 , o r ing Olympic Mountain Suz at (360)457-6906. views, 2.95 fertile acres, NO REASONABLE stream, wildlife, chicken OFFER REFUSED coop/goat barn, hidden just outside the city, pri- Quiet setting for this upvate / spacious decking dated rambler. New car$220,000. MLS#TBD. pet and fresh paint, winTeam Thomsen dows have all been (360)808-0979 updated, new dishwashCOLDWELL BANKER er and newer stove. UPTOWN REALTY Wood deck off the front for relaxing and soaking up the sun. This one is CLALLAM BAY ready to go. 24373 Hwy. 112, 3 Br., $134,900 2 ba mobile home, MLS#270794 1 , 4 4 2 s f, d e t a c h e d Jennifer Felton garage, lease option (360)460-9513 or cash discount, WINDERMERE $ 3 , 0 0 0 d ow n , $ 8 2 1 PORT ANGELES per mo. $68,000. (877)553-5348 SEE DA SEA Great sea view from this custom built home on CLOSE TO SEQUIM L ove l y 2 0 0 4 M a r l e t t e 2 0 + f o r e s t e d a c r e s . Manufactured home in Master suite with cozy excellent condition. At- sitting area. State-oftractive kitchen. Won- the-art kitchen. Formal derful cozy family room dining room. Pr ivate with built in propane fire- guest suite. Huge garplace and bookshelves. age/workshop for cars Nice deck and Patio. 3 and toys. And the timbr., 2 bath. All bedrooms ber is nearly ready for have walk-in closets. Su- harvest. Nearly 3,000 per sized 3 bay Gar- sf of country luxury. age/workshop. Located $749,000. MLS#270955. Dick Pilling just outside Sequim with (360)417-2811 1 acre. Gardens, irrigaCOLDWELL BANKER tion water. UPTOWN REALTY $198,000. MLS#270789. Vivian Landvik SEQUIM BAY (360)417-2795 WATERFRONT COLDWELL BANKER With spectacular water UPTOWN REALTY views near John Wayne CUSTOM HOME WITH Marina. Nearly 100 feet of low-bank waterfront SHOP 3 Br., 2.5 bath, 1 level and a large 36 x 30 pole home on 1 acre with out- building with private bath standing mountain view. on 3.2 acres. Three bed2 car garage/shop at room septic and well are nearly 1,000 sf. Large i n s t a l l e d a n d i n u s e. master suite with private Building site is prepared and ready for your wapatio and spa. terfront custom home. $319,900 O w n e r f i n a n c i n g m ay MLS#270401 also be available. Heidi $269,900 (360)683-4844 Jim Hardie Windermere U-$ave Real Estate Real Estate 775-7146 Sequim East CUSTOM HOME WITH SHOP 3 Br., 2.5 bath, 1 level home on 1 acre with outstanding mountain view. 2 car garage/shop at nearly 1,000 sf. Large master suite with private patio and spa. $319,900 MLS#270401 Heidi (360)683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East

PLACE YOUR AD ONLINE With our new Classified Wizard you can see your ad before it prints! www.peninsula dailynews.com

SUPER CUTE! Adorable 3 br., 1 bath updated home on sunny corner lot. Home features fresh paint, shiny wood floors, and, updated large bath. Roomy kitchen with sunny table area. Even a Mountain view too! $135,000 MLS#270824 Jennifer Holcomb (360)460-9513 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES VIEWS, VIEWS, VIEWS Strait, Mt. Baker and beyond, custom built Bell Hill Home, double lot with 3 br., 3.5 bath open floor plan, eating area off kitchen and dining room, lower level multipurpose room, large garage with wor k space, raised gardens. $550,000 ML#270993/481875 Deb Kahle (360)683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND Why Not Have It All... 3 Br., 3 bath, open concept split level h o m e w i t h v i ew s o f discover y bay and straits from both levels. Many upgrades: new master bath, hardwood and tile floors; 2 year old roof, f i r e p l a c e a n d wo o d stove; oversized master suite with hot tub on deck; covered patio area off formal dining room; large family room; newly landscaped, fully fenced, back yard; raised garden beds; dog kennel. $327,000.00 20 Conifer Court Sequim, WA 98382 (Diamond Point) 360-670-5336 or 360-775-0314

311 For Sale Manufactured Homes SEQUIM: 2007 double wide, 1,250 sf, 2 Br., office, 2 bath, entrance ramp, excellent value. $50,000. (360)683-3031. SEQUIM: ‘78 single wide mobile home, 55+ park, 2 Br., 2 bath, garage with spare room, large covered deck. $29,500/ obo. (360)385-4882.

505 Rental Houses Clallam County CENTRAL P.A.: Charming cottage. Yard and garage, 2 br., 1 bath. No smoking, small pets OK, refs required. $800. (360)460-2502

605 Apartments Clallam County

AT T R AC T I V E , s p a cious 1 Br.-$545, 2 Br.-$645, in P.A. New carpet, vert blinds, pvt patio, updated appliances, laundr y r ms, v i ew s, o n - s i t e m g r. Ask abt our current discount. www.olympic square.com. 457-7200

CENTRAL P.A.: Clean, quiet, 2 Br., excellent r e fe r e n c e s r e q u i r e d . $700. (360)452-3540.

COLLEGE AREA P.A. 2 Br, W/D, fireplace. $600, 1 / 2 o f f 3 r d m o. r e n t . 1226 Craig Av. 4523423 PA: 1 Br., no pets/smoking, $575. (360)457-1695 P.A.: Nice 2 Br., 1 bath, W/D. $725. (360)808-4972 Properties by Landmark. portangeleslandmark.com

665 Rental Duplex/Multiplexes

CENTRAL P.A.: 2 Br., 2 bath. Fireplace, garage. W / D. N o s m o k i n g o r pets. $800. 460-8797.

P.A.: 1 Br., office, carpor t, view, clean and quiet, W/S inc. $675. (360)452-6611

SEQUIM: New 2 Br, 2 ba duplex, granite, hardwood, gated community, lawn care incl. $1,200. (360)460-0432.

671 Mobile Home Spaces for Rent

MOBILE home or travel trailer space. East P.A. $320 mo. 360-452-7582.

683 Rooms to Rent Roomshares NEW studio apt.: P.A., utilities, cable, and wifi incl. $475. 797-1397.

P.A.: 2 room for rent. Organic far m. $350 + utilities. 452-4021. ROOMMATE WANTED To share expenses for very nice home west of P.A. on 10+ acres. $ 5 1 5 m o. , i n c l u d e s utilities, DirectTV. Must see. Call Lonnie after 5 p.m. (360)477-9066.

DOWNTOWN SEQUIM 1,800 sf, 3 Br., 2 ba, 2 1163 Commercial Rentals car gar., fenced, clean, extras, near park/ CARLSBORG: Rental schools. $1,200 mo. with fenced equip. yard 582-9848 or 477-5070 in indust. park. 2,880 sf., JAMES & $1700. Or, 936 sf., $700. ASSOCIATES INC. (360)683-4231 Property Mgmt. PROPERTIES BY (360)417-2810 LANDMARK HOUSES/APT IN P.A. 452-1326 A 1 br 1 ba..............$475 A 2 br 1 ba..............$575 S E Q U I M : 1 5 0 S. 5 t h D 1 br 1 ba..............$600 Ave., Boardwalk Square. D 2 br 1 ba..............$675 (360)683-3256 A 3 br 1 ba..............$750 H 2 br 2 ba..............$750 SEQUIM: Office/retail space 850 sf. $800 mo. H 3+ br 2 br............$875 (360)460-5467 H 3 br 1.75 ba.........$975 H 2 br 2 ba 1 acre.$1100 H 4 br 2.5 ba.........$1300 6035 Cemetery Plots SEQUIM A 2 br 2 ba..............$825 A 2 br 2 ba..............$875 COMPANION NICHE H 3 br 2.5 ba.........$1000 At Sequim Valley CemeComplete List at: tery. Cost $2,000. Sell 11 Caroline St., P.A. $1,450. (360)461-2810. Properties by Landmark. portangeleslandmark.com

6042 Exercise Equipment

SEQUIM: Super 1 Br. on 1 a c r e, $ 6 8 0 u t i l i t i e s ELLIPTICAL: NEW NordicTrack E5.5 Set upincl., lease. 504-2905. Ready to use. $425. (360)461-9893 SOLMAR SEQUIM Clean 3 Br., 2 bath, 2 car garage, no smoking/ 6045 Farm Fencing pets. $890. Duane at & Equipment (206)604-0188 WANTED: Mother of 2 teens seeking 3 br. in your home or separate dwelling. Hope to barter cooking, cleaning, yard wo r k fo r p a r t i a l r e n t . Refs. avail. Sequim school dist. Tell others! rent to own? 460-0692 .

ANTIQUE TRACTOR 1 9 4 0 s Fo r d 9 N , r u n s strong, newer tires/custom rear bucket, good metal, always under cover. Freshen up the paint and its parade-ready! Or use as-is for farm work. Forks area. $1,995/obo. (360)374-6636

WINDERMERE SEQUIM EAST Property Management • Seq.: 2 Br., 1 bath, garage, water view, no smoking, small pet. Immediate Avail. $850. • Seq.: 2 Br., 2.5 bath, 2 car garage, large ya r d , 1 , 6 3 5 s f. , n o smoking, small pet. Avail. 7/1. $900. (360)460-9248 or (360)809-0439

MISC: Celli 57” tiller with 20” offset, $1200/obo. BigT dual axle trailer, 16’ bed, $1,000/obo. (360)385-2328

SEQUIM CRAFTSMAN HOME Comfort with a touch of elegance! This 2,059 sf. home with 3 Br., and 2 bath has an open floor plan, 9 foot ceilings and wainscoting to name a few fine touches. One level with city utilities 605 Apartments compliment easy living. Clallam County Call for more information! FIRST MONTH FREE $265,000. MLS#270934. EVERGREEN Jeanine COURT APTS 360-460-9221 360-452-6996 JACE The Real Estate 2 and 3 Br. apts avail. Company $325, $680, $760. Some restrictions apply. Call Visit our website at today to schedule a tour www.peninsula of your new home. dailynews.com Or email us at classified@ peninsula Managed by Sparrow, dailynews.com Inc.

TRACTOR: ‘52 Ferguson. 6-way back blade, scraper box, and ripper t o o t h , g o o d r u n n e r. $2,500. (360)710-4966.

6050 Firearms & Ammunition

AR-15: .223 cal. 5.56 Nato. Colt defence rifle, new in box. $1,450/obo. (360)640-1171 WA N T E D : M a r l i n m o d e l 6 2 r i f l e. 2 5 6 Winchester magnum cal. (360)683-1929

6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves

FIREWOOD: 2+ Cords, well seasoned, finely chopped for wood stove. $150 ea. (360)477-8228.


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

DOWN 1 Cried 2 Brightly plumed songbird 3 Bit of excitement 6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves

By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle –– horizontally, vertically, diagonally, even backward. Find them and CIRCLE THEIR LETTERS ONLY. DO NOT CIRCLE THE WORD. The leftover letters spell the Wonderword. ANNETTE FUNICELLO (1942-2013) Solution: 10 letters

J O A N N E E T L A C I S U M

J A C K J R O L O D I O M I O

J O S E P H A N I G D R D A U

F C N O L A V A G L E N Y Y S

© 2013 Universal Uclick

By James Sajdak

4 One of Islam’s five pillars 5 Ref’s aid 6 Lout 7 Texter’s “Meant to tell you” 8 Celebrex developer 9 __ of reality 10 Huey, Dewey and Louie’s mom, in early comics 11 1993 Fiat acquisition 12 Hostility 13 Decimal base 16 Looks into? 19 “Do the Right Thing” pizzeria owner 23 Do Jeeves’s job 26 Old 38-Down overseer 27 “__ Tu”: 1974 hit 28 Wielder of a hammer called Mjölnir 29 Trig function 31 Hardly exciting 35 Popeil of infomercials 36 Mean 38 Like some stocks 39 Thumbs-down votes

6100 Misc. Merchandise

5/24/13 Thursday’s Puzzle Solved

S A H O N E I K N A R F R S E

L A C E P M I C K E Y A L S K

L C A E E I I T H O M A S E E

O D T R E B L E L U R U N F C E ‫ ګ‬ L H ‫ ګ‬ U B ‫ ګ‬ B A ‫ ګ‬ L C W A C N T E

www.wonderword.com

A E R D Y N A U A A O B N I E

N S E O A E C P L P E A L R R

Join us on Facebook

C S G M Z N N H L O P L A P O

E R N S P I N S B L V L K Y L

R A I M A R T Y I O A E E S E

G E S T A R D O M D X T L O H

5/24

Actress, Airy, Avalon, Baca, Ballet, Beach, Cheerful, Club, Dancer, Danny, Disney, Dolls, Ears, Elfego, Face, Frankie, Gina, Glen, Holt, Idol, Jack Jr, Jason Michael, Joanne, Joseph, Love, Lunchbox, Marty, Mary, Mickey, Model, Mouseketeer, Musical, O Dio Mio, Pineapple, Princess, Role, Singer, Spin, Stardom, Swan Lake, Tall Paul, Teen, Thomas, Zorro Yesterday’s Answer: Hatchling The NEW Treasury 15 can be ordered by calling toll-free, 1-800-642-6480. Order online at wonderword.universaluclick.com. (Contains 130 puzzles, including 31 20x20 puzzles.) THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

TOHOT ©2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

RETUT (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

40 Retro phone feature 41 China lead-in 42 Iconic sales rep 43 “Dedicated to the __ Love”: ’50s’60s hit 44 Touch down 49 Addis __ 50 Out of one’s class? 52 Conundrum 53 Armadas 54 Large search area

6105 Musical Instruments

7025 Farm Animals & Livestock

FIREWOOD: $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special for $499. Credit card accepted. 360-582-7910. www.portangeles firewood.com

G A S S TOV E : D o v r e PIANO TUNING and reB O E R G OAT S : S e propane gas wall fur- pair since 1984. Gar y quim, registered and nace, never been used Freel Piano Service. tested, 3 mo. old weth(360)775-5480 and never had a fire in it. ers, $100 ea. 1 yr. old Was $1,200 new. Entire wethers, $150-$200. unit, including wall-vent(509)540-1600 6115 Sporting ing chimney. $500. Goods (360)452-5803 MISC: Mated pair, Bur6075 Heavy bon Red turkeys, $75 BUYING FIREARMS pair. Small dairy/cheese MISC: 2 BBQ propane Equipment Any & All - Top $ Paid making equipment, $50tanks, 5 gallon, $20 One or Entire Collec- $800. (360)477-1706. each. Kids 3-wheel SEMI END-DUMP tion Including Estates TRAILER: 30’. Electric scooter, Radio Flyer, Call (360)477-9659. $15. (360)477-8832 tar p system, excellent 7030 Horses condition. $7,500. MISC: Hot tub, needs S E A K AYA K S : 2 s e a (360)417-0153 circulating motor, (2) 5 kayaks, with r udders. PACK MULE hp motors, $1,985. Elec- One is fiberglass, Pacific 6080 Home $1,200. (360)452-7903 tric fireplace, like new, Star, $295. One kevlar, or (360)775-5701. Furnishings 1 5 0 0 w a t t , 1 1 0 vo l t , Seaward, $1,500/obo. (360)437-8223 $300. Sofa/love seat, BED: King size, Sim- black leather, $400. TV 7035 General Pets mons, soft, $2,000 new. cabinet, oak with display 6140 Wanted Sell for $500. compartment and draw& Trades (360)681-6308 ers, $300. Riding lawn BULLDOG PUPPIES mower, Sears 19.5 hp, RECLINERS: (2) wall 42” cut, $400. BOOKS WANTED! We AKC registered, chamhugger recliners, maslove books, we’ll buy pion bloodlines, 9 wks. (360)683-4384 old, full health guaranett s a g e a n d h e a t , gray, yours. 457-9789. and shots included. Visit ve r y g o o d c o n d i t i o n . MISC: Weight bench, our website at WANTED: Buying empty $250 each. 452-4760. new, $75. Aero Pilates lucypups.trepmal.com beer kegs. machine, $50. Stnls reSET: Beautiful dining $2,500-$3,000 (360)928-9645 r o o m m a r b l e , g l a s s , tail clothes rack, $45. (360)477-9724 wrought iron table with 4 Full size lumber rack, WANTED: Queen bed $ 2 0 0 . F u l l s i ze a l u m and bedding, good cond. CHICKS: Top quality nachairs. $350. Thule bed rack, $300. tive egg layer chicks. $3, (360)912-1759 (360)683-3029 Claw foot tub, $250. An$5, $8, $10. We take tique piano, $1,800. your rooster, exchange 6135 Yard & 6100 Misc. 360-460-6954. for chick any time. Jon, Garden Merchandise (360)809-0780 STEEL SHELVING Any large potted Rhody 3 c o m m e r c i a l g r a d e RIDING MOWER: 2011 CHIHUAHUA: 3 year, $26, any second or third units, 24 deep x 36 wide Toro Commercial Z Mas- Male, Chihuahua, 5lb, one half off. Thurs.-Sat. x75” tall, 3 adj. shelves ter 48”, twin bagging short tan hair, good on system, 22 hp Kawasaki, s h o t s , n e e d s l o v i n g only. 151 B Street, Port per unit. $120 each. (360)683-8849 e x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n . home. Noelle, Hadlock, 98339. (360)461-6115 $7,500. UTILITY TRAILER: Tilt, MISC: 177,000 BTU/hr (360)797-7710 FREE: Beautiful young 3 motorcycle trailer, curheater, dual fuel, forced air, like new, $290. Com- renlty has deck and side SOIL: Barnyard blend- peacock pair. Free to good home with large, m e r c i a l g r a d e 2 4 ” , 2 built over tracks for haul- ed. $25 yard. secure pen. (360)797-3977 or speed, barrel/drum fan, ing misc. $250/obo. (360)683-9146 (360)457-1320 (360)808-1842 $100. (360)477-1761.

WILDER AUTO

YO U C A N CO U N T O N U S ! /*44"/ r 78 r +&&1 r )0/%" r 50:05" r 4$*0/

Career Opportunity

F R I E N D LY S M A L L TABBY CAT: Spayed female, 2-3 yrs old, 8lbs, microchip, fully vaccinated. Fostered. Great with dogs! Outgoing and enjoys long walks. $60 adoption fee. Call (360)477-4184 HEIFER and pony: Jersey heifer, 7 months old, $950. Welsh pony, $500. Both sweet tempered. (360)477-1706.

Wilder Auto has the largest selection of new and used vehicles on the Olympic Peninsula. Come join our team of friendly sales professionals. No experience necessary, extensive training program and a great working environment await you. Benefits include a 401K program, medical and dental insurance, paid vacation and a great college tuition package for your children. Please call Jason or Rick at 452-3888 – or send your resume to: hr@wilderauto.com for more information and the opportunity to experience the Wilder difference.

M I N I AU S S I E P U P S JUST TOO CUTE! DOB 3-15-13. Two black-tri males, one blue merle male, one red merle female. ASDR registrable. C u r r e n t va c c i n a t i o n s. Ready to go to new homes now. (360)385-1981 PUPPIES: Black lab puppies. $50 each. (360)775-9681

9820 Motorhomes

$EER 0ARK 2OAD s 0ORT !NGELES

s

5/24/13

56 “Splish Splash” singer 57 Stew veggie 58 Perros may chase them 59 Old French coin 63 Recipe amt. 64 “Can I go out?” 65 1960-’61 chess champ 67 Shih __ 68 One of LBJ’s beagles

LAIPAM

EEPACI

Jumble puzzle magazines available at pennydellpuzzles.com/jumblemags

ACROSS 1 This and that 5 Cries 9 Open the door for 14 Met moment 15 Water-based paint 17 Mary __: ship in a Hammond Innes novel 18 Card game horn music? 20 Cub of comics 21 Big backup 22 Fight in Dogpatch 24 90-degree fitting 25 Card game where one person plays all the hands? 30 25% of Off! Deep Woods 32 “Am not!” retort 33 Sushi shop offering 34 Crop up 37 __ noodles: Chinese dish 40 Card game played in dugouts? 45 Dream up 46 City south of Metz 47 Carrying-on 48 Consumed 51 Mail folder 55 Card game by the Thames? 60 “Don’t think so” 61 “Ed Wood” Oscar winner 62 Unlike couch potatoes 64 Pong developer 66 Card game requiring waterproof cards? 69 Contact, in a way 70 WWII beachhead near Rome 71 Portly pirate 72 Last name of Phineas in Disney’s “Phineas and Ferb” 73 Tablet named for an organ 74 Gone

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013 C3

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

Answer here: Yesterday’s

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: AFTER ORBIT SPLASH SMOGGY Answer: The store owner’s fake vomit and other disgusting novelties resulted in — GROSS PROFITS

GARAGE

&

YARD SALES On the Peninsula 8120 Garage Sales 8142 Garage Sales 8180 Garage Sales 8182 Garage Sales 8182 Garage Sales Jefferson County Sequim PA - Central PA - West PA - West G A R AG E S a l e : S a t . , M ay 2 5 , 9 - 1 : 3 0 p. m . , Po r t To w n s e n d E l k s , 555 Otto St. Open to the p u bl i c ! L o t s o f g o o d things for sale! Tools, appliances, clothing, and antiques.

8142 Garage Sales Sequim 3-DAY MOVING SALE Sat., Sun., Mon., 25th, 26th, 27th, 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Quality and bargain items. Lots of furniture: dresser, bookshelf, sm. patio table/2 chairs, nice rolling kitchen cabinet. New Frigidaire dishwasher, tools, dishes, cookware, books, yard/garden. From Washington St. (101) go North on Dunlap, West on Willow. 515 E. Willow St. CLAIRE BORHAVEN ESTATE SALE! Amazing collection of sterling costume jewelr y, s t a i n e d g l a s s lamps, nautical items, mid century furniture, Friendly Village china, Viking glass, angels much more! Sale starts Thurs., May 23 26, 9-3 p.m., numbers at 8:00 a.m. 215 N. Sequim Ave. (24 hour security) ESTATE Sale: Estate sale of epic proport i o n s S a t . 9 - 4 p. m . Clothes; teaching/office/scrap-booking supplies; furn., appls; leather goods; Indian rugs; household items; 500+ pieces jewelry; collector toys; camping gear ; books; ammo; silverware; potter y more. New items adde d a l l d ay. 4 3 9 W. Prairie St.

2A686905

GARAGE Sale: Fri. only, 8-4 p.m., 252 Blue MOTORHOME: ‘95 34’ Grouse Run, off E. SeDamon Intruder. Cum- quim Bay Rd. Appliances, bunk bed, fishing mins diesel, no slides. gear, tools. 50% off after $37,000. Call for info at 2 p.m. (360)461-4515

BIG Sale: Sat. 9-3, Sun.Mon. 11-3, 506 Dan Kell y R d . , o f f H w y. 1 1 2 . Load of jewelry, old 3 pt h i t c h s aw, wa g o n wheels, dairy stanchion, pine hutch, 16” tooled saddle/tack, old postcards, walnut/wicker settee + 2 chairs, old P.A. light post, collections of kinds, ‘69-’71 GTX doors, 32x79” screen door, ‘05 Okanagan travG A R AG E S a l e : S a t . - el trailer, Jean Cavat oil. Sun., 8-3 p.m., 63 Marchbanks Rd. Lots of E S TAT E S a l e : Fr i . tools, household items. Sun., 9-3 p.m., 4713 Mt. Angeles Rd. 50 LIL AND LIN’S years of accumulation! ESTATE SALE Furniture, beds, bicyLoads of good stuff! c l e s , h o u s e h o l d F r e e z e r s , f u r n i t u r e , goods, crab pots and tools, spor ting goods, fishing gear, clam digc l o t h e s, g u n c a b i n e t , ging equip., barbecue, sewing machine, dress- organ, classic tur ners and much more! 33 table, wood bur ning Redwing Dr., From Se- stoves. 1964 Honda quim-Dungeness: West 250 Superhawk. Toro on Woodcock, and North field/brush mower. on Kir ner. From P.A.: East on Woodcock, and North on Kirner. Fri., 9-4 H U G E C o m m u n i t y p. m . , S a t . , 1 0 - 1 p. m . Benefit Garage Sale for Karjalainen family. Saturday is half-priced! Over 50 families have donated items such as furniture, tools, MEMORIAL Weekend clothes, household Estate Sale. Memorial items, etc. Too much Weekend Estate Sale to list! $5 raffle tickets 100 E. Palmer St. Sewill be sold for quality quim WA 98382. Satitems donated from lourday, May 25th, Sunc a l bu s i n e s s e s . A l l day, May 26th, from proceeds will go to the 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Lots Karjalainen family of home furnishings, whose 6 month old new appliances and baby Grace has been construction tools/ at Children’s Hospital gear. for over 35 days with pancreatic malfunc8180 Garage Sales t i o n . C o m e h e l p u s raise support on SaturPA - Central day May 25th 8 a.m.-2 3-FAMILY Sale: Fri. on- p.m. Campfire Clubly, 9-2, weather permit- house at 619 E. 4th St. ting, 1225 Georgiana. P.A. Books, crafts, household, toys, fabric, clothHUGE GARAGE Sale: ing, small appliances. Sat. 9-4, Sun. 10-?, 610 E. 9th St., in alley. Girls! GARAGE Sale: Sat., 9-2 D o l l s , B r a t z , B a r b i e , p.m., 219 Hawthorne Pl., High School Musical, off Old Mill Rd. Lots of sets, houses, accessomisc. r i e s , M y L i t t l e Po n y, b i ke, b o o k s, c l o t h e s. M OV I N G S a l e : S a t . - Guys! SS hubcaps, vinSun., 8-4 p.m., 323 S. tage military ammo belt Albert. Most everything w i t h a m m o, R C c a r s, $1. misc. stuff, garage full. ESTATE Sale: Fri.-Sat, 9-3 p.m., 267 Dungeness Meadows. TVs, king-sized bedroom set, dinette table and hutch, leather sofa, side buffet, microwave stand, wine cabinet, pictures, exercise equipment, leather chair, clothing, dresser and mirror, outdoor patio fur niture, and much more! No earlybirds!

11th Annual Joyce Bible Church Benevolence Garage Sale Fri.-Sat., May 24-25, 9-4 p.m., in the gym behind the church. We have lots of kitchen items, toys, tools, clothing, entertainment centers, lots more! Come see! Call Marylan Thayer with any questions or if you have items to bring. (360)928-9561. BARN Sale: Sat.-Sun., 8-5 p.m., 643 Black Diamond Rd. Antiques, furn i t u r e, t oy s, c l o t h e s, farm equipment, tools, s p o r t i n g g e a r, m u c h more! Gates open at 7 p.m. for parking. Sale begins at 8 a.m. Call Tim with any questions: (360)670-3016 (360)457-1086 GARAGE Sale: Fri., 9-4 p.m., Sat., 9-12 p.m., 1234 W. 11th. Computer parts, furniture,, househ o l d o d d s a n d e n d s, work and casual wear for men and women. G A R AG E S a l e : S a t . Sun., 9-3 p.m., 2129 W. 6 t h S t . To o l s , m i s c . household items, furniture, lots of toys and sporting equipment. H U G E M u l t i Fa m i l y Garage Sale! 826 W 8 t h S t r e e t , PA . B e tween the A and B block across the two bridges. Furniture, Antiques, Men, Women and Baby cloths, fabric, homemade jewelry, tools, toys, cruiser bike, wood stove insert, Playskool Game Ta bl e , d e c o r a t i o n s , and lots more! 7-4 Saturday and Sunday. INSIDE GARAGE Sale: Sat., 9-5 p.m., 2036 W. 6th St. Loveseat, antique furniture, 4 drawer oak file cabinet, Legos, 3 pc L - s h a p e d o a k c o m p. desk, dining table with (4) chairs, tools, retired Partylite candle holders, area rugs, 4 pc. display cabinet, much more! Cash only!

MOVING Sale: Ongoing! 9-4 p.m., 910 W. 14th St. Lots of furniture, ant i q u e c l o t h i n g p r e s s, h o u s e h o l d i t e m s, ‘ 9 2 4WD Chev. pickup and more. Rain or shine!

SHOP Sale: Sat. only, 9-5 p.m., 1921 Hwy. 101 W. Construction material, furniture, tools, automotive items, welder, brand new flooring, OSB and plywood, gardening stuff/tools, appliances, Makita cordless tools, pellet stove, wood stove, engine hoist, paint, lumber, office fur niture, woodworking tools, and much more.

8183 Garage Sales PA - East FARM Sale: 25 years. Antique fire hose cart, oak dining table, stock trailer, generator, milk bottles, tractor stuff, wood wor king tools, ar t books, electric sheep shears, old electric meat grinder, railroad ties, animal stuff, fencing, firewood and more! 126 Phinn Rd. up Blue Mountain. Friday and Saturday 5 to 8 p.m. Wor th the drive!

MOVING Sale: Fri. 9-3 p.m., Sat. 9-?, 73 Marsden Rd. Household items, 16’ flat bed 2 axle trailer, wood chipper, too much to list.

SALE: May 25-26. 9-3 p.m. A to Z with some antiques. 640 Buchanan D r i ve, o f f H i way 1 0 1 near C’est si Bon. No earlies.

S A L E : S a t 8 - 2 p. m . To o l s , e n g i n e h o i s t , small trailer, misc. 364 Blue Ridge Rd.

LONG DISTANCE No Problem! Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714


Classified

C4 FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013 9820 Motorhomes 9820 Motorhomes

M OTO R H O M E : 1 9 8 9 Fleetwood Limited 37J. new 460 Ford Banks exhaust system, HYD leveling jacks, 2 tvs, nonsmoker, 5.5 Onan generator, driver and passenger side doors, oak cabinets, corian countertops, hardwood floors. $20,000. (360)417-0619

RV: 3 8 ’ RV a n d To w C a r. 2 0 0 1 N ew m a r Mountainaire and a 2009 Honda CRV tow car offered together or separa t e l y. T h e R V h a s 61,400 miles on a gas driven Trident V10 with a Banks system added. The interior is dark cherr y wood with corian counter tops. The RV is in very good condition. We just returned from a trip to Arizona which was trouble free. The CRV tow car is in excellent condition with 47,000 miles. Asking $35,000 for the RV and $20,000 for the CRV or $53,000 together. Please call Bill or Kathy at (360)582-0452 to see the vehicles.

MOTORHOME: ‘84 30’ Spor tscoach III. 454 eng., rear queen bed, full bath, new convection micro, new fridge, wood c a b i n e t s , r u n s w e l l , S H A S TA : 1 9 8 7 2 8 ’ clean, 47k miles. $8,700. m o t o r h o m e o n E 3 5 0 (360)683-1851 Ford Chassis. 460 cubic inch motor 57,000 miles, MOTORHOME: Dodge cummins/onan 4,000 kw ‘76 Class C. 26’, good (plus model) generator c o n d . , n ew t i r e s, l ow (165hrs)/ two year old miles, nonsmoker, in PA. frostless 10cubic ft re$5,000 firm. 460-7442. frigerator/freezer, solid oak cabinets, one piece steel roof, new shocks, PRICED TO GO! 1 9 9 0 F l e e t w o o d 3 4 ’ new brakes, new tires, motorhome. Good condi- coleman rooftop A/C evtion, low milage, non- erthing works great! Injusmoker, 454 Chev with ry forces sale. Tom, (360)477-6218 B a n k s Po w e r Pa ck , Onan generator. Steal at www.peninsula $6,700. See at 1638 W dailynews.com 12th. (360)452-9611.

9832 Tents & Travel Trailers

9802 5th Wheels

7x16 Interstate Cargo / Utility Trailer 2008 Black $3800 Excellent condition, less than 300 miles on it! Call 360-928-0214 CAMPER TRAILER: ‘80 Holiday Rambler, Presidential 28’. New fridge and furnace. $3,500. (360)928-9436 KOMFORT: 17L “Lite� Travel Trailer. Immacul a t e R e f e r, 4 - b u r n e r s t ove, t u b / s h owe r. $4,500. (360)477-0321. TRAILER: ‘00 Coachmen 25’ Lite, fiberglass ex t e r i o r, r u bb e r r o o f, walk around queen, new tires. $5,500. 683-9417.

5TH WHEEL: ‘00 35’ Alfa Ideal. 3 slides, with awnings, 2 a/c, excellent cond., must see! $20,000/obo. (360)683-2529

5TH WHEEL: $13,750 /obo cash only, must sell. ‘01 Corsair 32’ Lots of extras, lamin a t e w o o d f l o o r, 2 slideouts, clean, comfor table, queen bed, central vac & more! Come see in Sekiu. Text/call 582-7130.

TRAILER: ‘06 23’ Komfort. Loaded, immculate, smooth sides, 1 slide- 5th WHEEL: 19’ Alpenout, $19,000 new. Sell lite. No leaks. $3,295. (360)775-1288 for $12,000/obo. (360)797-1771 5TH WHEEL: 26’ AlpenTRAILER: ‘90 27’ Hi-Lo. lite. New fridge/freezer, G o o d s h a p e. $ 3 , 0 0 0 / toilet, A/C, micro, dual obo. (360)683-8059. batteries and propane tank, nice stereo, queen air adustable bed, awning, all in good condition, clean and ready to go. $3,850/obo. Leave message at (360)452-4790. Toy Hauler: 2006 Thor Transport 39 WTB. Two TRAVEL TRAILER: 17’, slide outs, Garage mod‘05 Casita, Spirit Deluxe. el, Generator. $22,000. (360)460-7712 $14,000. (360)808-0809.

9802 5th Wheels

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

9808 Campers & Canopies

5TH WHEEL: ‘89 Prowl- CANOPY: Fits ‘07 Toyoer Lynx 215. New raised t a Tu n d r a , 6 . 5 ’ b e d , a x l e s, 1 2 0 vo l t r e fe r, white, Leer. $800. (360)460-1870 great shape, fully equipped, comes with hitch. Reduced $2,750. (360)460-6248, eves. 5TH WHEEL: ‘93 30’ Alpenlite, large slide-out, very nice, always parked u n d e r c ove r, ‘ 9 9 Fo r d F250 4x4, super cab XL, super duty 3/4 ton diesel with less than 100K, 1 5 , 0 0 0 l b. 5 t h w h e e l hitch and trailer hitch. Would like to sell as a pkg. Asking $19,950 for both. (360)681-2006. 5TH WHEEL: ‘96 26’ Jayco Eagle. Excellent condition. $5,000. (360)452-1646 KOMFORT: 1997 23F 5th Wheel. Great condition, New tires, water pump (2012) 2 skylights 2 t w i n b e d s, Aw n i n g , Purchase option of deluxe hitch, Chev PU tailgate, 1000 Trails Membership, Por table grey water tank. $6,000. (360)683-4552

9808 Campers & Canopies

LANCE Lite: 2003 845 Truck Camper. Great condition-used twice. Roof air, queen bed, d i n e t t e c o nve r t s t o bed. Shwr stall/pan full h g h t . B l u e i n t e r i o r. Lots of storage. Length-16.5 ft. $8,995. Call (360)681-0172 PACKAGE: ‘85 Dodge 350 and 11.5’ self contained camper. $1,900. (360)457-1153. TENT TRAILER: Coleman Sedona. 2001 with 2 Burner Stove , fridge, dinette, stabilizer jacks, front rear Queen Beds, awning. $3,500. (360)681-5161

LONG DISTANCE No Problem!

CAMPER: ‘11 10’ Alaskan cab-over. Original Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714 owner, excellent cond. $9,000. (360)452-8968.

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

BAYLINER: 17’, 70 hp C A N O E : 1 3 ’ , s q u a r e Yamaha, needs some stern, Old Town, excelleengine work but runs. nt. $600. (360)797-1771. $1,500. (360)460-9365. CHRIS CRAFT: 26’ BAYLINER: 1987 Capri Cavalier with trailer, 350 1750. GM 4 Cyl 3.0L en- MerCruiser inboard, Bow g i n e w i t h O M C s t e r n Thr uster, radar, GPS, drive. Runs great! Elec- sounder, toilet with Electronic ignition, Dual bat- tro Scan. $14,995. (360)775-0054 teries, Hummingbird 587ci Fishfinder with GPS. More info on PDN DEATH TAKES OWNonline. $3,800/obo. ER OF FISHING BOAT (360)460-0460 20 ft. Robolo Boat,Center Counsel, with 4 B E L L B OY : ‘ 6 4 1 8 ’ stroke 115 Yamaha MoClassic. Very good con- tor, has 400 hrs. on it. dition, Volvo I/O, 7.5 hp Electronics, trailer, (gaJohnson kicker, fullc an- l i va n i z e d ) d u a l a xe l , vas, new EZ Load trailer, many extras. By appointnew tires, 2 downr ig- ment. $22,000. (360)417-0277 g e r s , l o t s o f ex t r a s . $2,600. (360)417-1001. G L A S P LY : 2 6 ’ c a b i n BELLBOY: ‘78 24’ 20 cr uiser, flying br idge, KT Cruiser, 80 gal. fuel, single Cummins diesel 30 gal. water, 1,750 watt engine, low hours, radar, i nve r t e r, 1 2 0 V s h o r e VHF radio, CB, depth/ power, 4 batteries, mi- f i s h f i n d e r , d i n g h y, crowave, refr igerator, d o w n r i g g e r s , 1 6 ’ x 3 2 ’ new depth finder, com- boathouse. $27,500. (360)457-0684 pass, GPS, VHF, dinette, new galley, new Wallas ceramic diesel JET SKI: Kawasaki STX stove/heater, auto level- 12F, 3 seater, ‘06, exceling trim tabs, enclosed lent condition, trailer. head, trailer with new $6,800. (360)460-2689. disc brakes, wheels and tires. $8,000/obo. LONESTAR: 17’, 100 hp (360)683-9645 Johnson motor, 9.5 kicker, motor in great shape, BOAT: 19’ fiberglass, g a l va n i ze d E Z - l o a d e r trailer, 140 hp motor. t r a i l e r, d e p t h f i n d e r, $4,980. (360)683-3577. $2,500. (360)928-9436.

PONTOON BOAT: 10’ ODC 1018, white water and still water, oars and wheel mount. $295/obo. (360)912-1759

SAILBOAT: West Wight Potter, 19’, with 2010 5 hp Honda 4 stroke, galvanized trailer, many extras. $6,500/obo. (360)379-8207

SEA RAY: ‘74 24’ HT Cruiser. Reconditioned/ e q u i p p e d fo r o c e a n / rough weather fishing/ cruising with ALL NEW equipment and features: repowered w/ Merc Horizon Engine/Bravo-3 (dual prop), stern drive (117 hrs.), complete Garmin electronics, reinforced stern, full canvas, downriggers, circ water heating, Yamaha 9.9 kicker, EZ Load trailer, w/disk brakes (1,200 mi.), electric winch. Other extras, $52,000 invested. Sacrifice for $18,500. (360)681-5070

SLICKCRAFT: 1976 23’ inboard/outboard. 302 engine, boat and trailer. $5,200. (360)457-8190.

9817 Motorcycles

HONDA: ‘06 CRF 250X. Excellent shape. $2,900. (360)461-3415

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Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 9817 Motorcycles

9805 ATVs

APRILIA: Scarabeo mo- QUAD: 90 cc Eton. 2 torcycle/scooter 2009. s t r o ke, l i ke n ew. R e This is a pristine motor- duced $1,300. 452-3213 cycle with less then 1000 miles on it! Hardly 9180 Automobiles used! NOT A SR. S C O O T E R ! 5 0 0 C C s Classics & Collect. Needs a battery charge. $3600/obo. (360)808-6160 BMW: ‘74 R75/6. Airhead Boxer, excellent condition, 29K mi., new powder coat, shocks, always garaged. $3,500/ obo. (360)912-2679. AMC: Rare 1970 AMX 2-seater, 390 V/8, 4 spd, GOLDWING: ‘90 1500. 95% original. $18,000/ Runs great, well main- obo. (360)928-9477. tained. $3,000. (360)461-2619 CHEV: ‘56 Belair. 6 cyl., auto, 4 door, paint, inHARLEY Davidson: ‘97 terior, chrome, re-done 1 2 0 0 S p o r t . R e d a n d to stock, California car, Black, 15K miles, new 2nd owner, always gartires and battery, custom aged. $21,000. painted tank, extra tank, (360)683-7789 4 extra seats, lots of chrome, blinkers integral C H E V: ‘ 7 9 C o r ve t t e . in mirrors, detachable L82, runs great, lots of sissy bar, custom fen- new parts! $6,000/obo. der, 2 into 1 exhaust, ad(360)457-6540 justable shocks. Have o r i g i n a l p a r t s t o o. L I V I N G S TO N : 1 9 8 1 Runabout. Twin hull, 14’, $4,250. (360)460-7893 Hummingbird depth findHONDA: ‘00 XR100R. er, fisherman’s weatherE x c e l l e n t c o n d . , l o w top, low hours Honda 30 miles. $1000/obo. hp motor, on Long Seak(360)477-9777 ing trailer. Runs good! $5,000. (360)582-0941. HONDA: 2003 VT750 A c e D e l u xe C r u i s e r. S T U D E BA K E R : 1 9 5 0 S h o w r o o m C o n d i t i o n S t a r l i g h t C o u p. C o m M u s t s e e . L o t s o f plete restoration, black Chrome, Many Extras. cherry color, runs good, Will not find another bike looks excellent. $11,000. like this. Never left (360)683-8810 out,never dropped. 10,387 Low Miles 9292 Automobiles $4,500. (360)477-6968.

Others

HONDA: ‘85 Goldwing Aspencade. 1200cc, Abandoned black/chrome, exc. cond. Vehicle Auction $3,500/obo. 417-0153. In accordance with RCW 46.55.130, the following YAMAHA: ‘74 DT360. ve h i c l e s w i l l b e a u c 4k original miles, runs tioned on May 24, 2013. g o o d , a m a z i n g c o n d . 11 a.m. at 703 E. Wash$2,500/obo. 452-7253. ington St., Sequim. YAMAHA: ‘77 TT500. V i e w i n g a t 1 0 a . m . Custom and spare parts. MUST SIGN IN TO BID 8 a.m.-10:30 a.m. $1000/obo. ‘90 SUBARU LEGSW (360)477-4007 WA license#422ZOD ‘80 TOYO CRESSIDA YAMAHA: ‘79 XS 1100. WA license#068-XNE 35K, fairing, saddle bags excellent cond. $2,750/ ‘87 Ford AERO STRAR WA license#615JVQ obo. (360)808-1922 or ‘88 HONDA ACCORD (360)681-3023 after 6. WA license#242VPD ‘92 FORD EXPLORER WA license#AHW2872 9805 ATVs ‘95 VW JETTA WA license#735XXJ ‘01 CHEV PICKUP HONDA: TRX200 4WD WA license#B25318N ATV. $600. (360)477-6547 BUICK: ‘01 Regal TourPeninsula Classified ing. 107+K mi. $3,000/ obo. (702)366-4727. 360-452-8435

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013 C5

9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles For Better or For Worse Others Others Others BMW ‘08 328I SEDAN This one is in excellent condition, fully loaded, auto, 6 cyl, moon roof, leather and more. Low 44K mi. Must drive to appreciate. $20,900 Preview at: heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583

FIAT 2012 500 POP This compact car took Europe by storm when it came out in 2007. It was introduced to the U.S. market in 2012. It’s peppy, ver y fuel efficient, 2nd most of all fun to drive! Auto, 4 cyl, antilock brakes, A/C, CD, power windows/locks, alum. wheels, and more. $12,900 Preview at: CADILLAC ‘07 STS heckmanmotors.com AWD V6 Heckman Motors The ultimate in luxur y 111 E. Front, P.A. a n d h a n d l i n g p e r fo r (360)912-3583 mance, this car is immaculate inside and out, FORD: ‘06 Mustang. 2 s t u n n i n g w h i t e p e a r l door coupe, lime green, paint, 66K mi. carefully driven 17,400 $18,950 mi. by senior lady of Seheckmanmotors.com quim. Spotless interior Heckman Motors leather seats, auto, air 111 E. Front, P.A. cond. File available on (360)912-3583 regular ser vicing by Ford in P.A. $14,000/ CHEV ‘99 CAMARO obo. Interested buyers Z28 CONVERTIBLE may call (360)681-8192 V 8 , a u t o , v e r y r a r e to view car and file in ground effect pkg. with downtown area, Sequim. rear spoiler, this was a 1999 Seafair display car FORD ‘07 FOCUS at the hydroplane races WAGON in Seattle. Extremely low Automatic trans, clean 43K miles. carfax, under 100k $11,500 miles, clean inside and Preview at: out! This one has lots of heckmanmotors.com options and won’t last Heckman Motors long at this sale price! 111 E. Front, P.A. $7,150 (360)912-3583 Lipman’s Automotive IN HOUSE FINANCING C H RY S L E R : ‘ 0 2 P T AVAILABLE Cruiser LTD. Silver. 93K. (360)452-5050 $4,500/obo. 457-0238. www.lipmansauto.com 2840 E Hwy 101 E PA C H RY S L E R : ‘ 0 3 P T C r u i s e r. 1 1 5 k m i l e s , FORD: ‘90 Taurus WagShar p and well main- on. Runs fine, body OK, tained. $4,250. has some issues. (360)796-4270 $850. (360)457-4399.

NISSAN: ‘89 300 ZX. Red. V6. Automatic. Tt o p. M a ny n ew p a r t s. $4,500/obo. (360)681-3579

9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant to the Revised Code of Washington 61.24, et seq. TS No.: WA-12-532083-SH APN No.: 0330055111620000 Title Order No.: 120346759-WA-GSO Grantor(s): CAROLYN L. WHITEHOUSE Grantee(s): WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. Deed of Trust Instrument/Reference No.: 2011-1271729 I. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington, the undersigned Trustee, will on 6/21/2013, at 10:00 AM The main entrance to the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 East 4th St., Port Angeles, WA 98362 sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable in the form of credit bid or cash bid in the form of cashier’s check or certified checks from federally or State chartered banks, at the time of sale the following described real property, situated in the County of CLALLAM, State of Washington, to-wit: LOT 48 IN BLOCK B, OF ALBERT BALCH’S SUNLAND SHORES DIVISION NO. l, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED IN VOLUME 5 OF PLATS, PAGES 48, 49, AND 50, AS AMENDED BY INSTRUMENT RECORDED UNDER AUDITOR’S FILE NO. 352678, RECORDS OF CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON. SITUATE IN COUNTY OF CLALLAM , STATE OF WASHINGTON. More commonly known as: 41 ALLEN DRIVE, SEQUIM, WA 98382 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 10/20/2011, recorded 10/31/2011, under 2011-1271729 records of CLALLAM County, Washington, from CAROLYN L WHITEHOUSE , A SINGLE PERSON, as Grantors), to NORTHWEST TRUSTEE SERVICES LLC, as Trustee, to secure an obligation in favor of WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest in which was assigned by WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. (or by its successors-in-interest and/or assigns, if any), to Wells Fargo Bank, NA. II. No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any Court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust/Mortgage. III. The defaults) for which this foreclosure is made is/are as follows: Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: $11,841.25 IV. The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: The principal sum of $155,065.00, together with interest as provided in the Note from the 2/1/2012, and such other costs and fees as are provided by statute. V. The above-described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. Said sale will be made without warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances on 6/21/2013. The defaults referred to in Paragraph III must be cured by 6/10/2013 (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time before 6/10/2013 (11 days before the sale) the default as set forth in Paragraph III is cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. Payment must be in cash or with cashiers or certified checks from a State or federally chartered bank. The sale may be terminated any time after the 6/10/2013 (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrower or Grantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance by paying the principal and interest, plus costs, fees and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI. A written Notice of Default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following address(es): NAME CAROLYN L WHITEHOUSE, A SINGLE PERSON ADDRESS 41 ALLEN DRIVE, SEQUIM, WA 98382 by both first class and certified mail, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and the Borrower and Grantor were personally served, if applicable, with said written Notice of Default or the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in Paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. These requirements were completed as of 1/14/2013. VII. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all their interest in the above-described property. IX. Anyone having any objections to this sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s sale. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS - The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the deed of trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the deed of trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME. You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date of this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONTACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR OR AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situation and refer you to mediation if you are eligible and it may help you save your home. See below for safe sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in determining your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may contact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission: Toll-free: 1877-894-HOME (1-877-894-4663) or Web site: http://www.dfi.wa.gov/consumers/homeownership/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm. The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development: Toll-free: 1-800-5694287 or National Web Site: http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD or for Local c o u n s e l i n g a g e n c i e s i n W a s h i n g t o n : h t t p : / / w w w. h u d . g o v / o f f i c es/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webListAction=searchandsearchstate=WAandfilterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorneys: Telephone: 1-800-606-4819 or Web site: http://nwjustice.org/what-clear. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser’s sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary’s Agent, or the Beneficiary’s Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right’s against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 02/14/13 Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington, as Trustee By: Michael Dowell, Assistant Secretary Trustee’s Mailing Address: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington C/O Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 Fifth Avenue, San Diego, CA 92101 (866)645-7711 Trustee’s Physical Address: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington 19735 10th Avenue NE, Suite N-200 Poulsbo, WA 98370 (866)645-7711 Sale Line: 714-730-2727 Or Login to: http://wa.qualityloan.com TS No.: WA-12-532083-SH, A-4354814 05/24/2013, 06/14/2013 Pub: May 24, June 14, 2013 Legal No. 478706

by Lynn Johnston

L I N C O L N : ‘ 8 8 To w n C a r. C o z y 2 0 M P G . Runs great. Good body and interior with some rust spots. Good tires. Brakes redone. All accessories work, includi n g A / C, 1 3 0 k m i l e s. $1,500 or best offer. Call (360)683-1683 MERCEDES: ‘97 SL320. Both tops, gold/tan. $10,500. (360)683-7420. NISSAN ‘10 MAXIMA SPORT A true sport sedan with room for 5 passengers. This is one fine road machine, auto, 3.5L V6, 290 hp, moonroof, fully loaded, fuel efficient. It’s pretty much got it all. 32K low miles. $19,950 Preview at: heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583 SATURN: ‘07 Aura. Low mi. $8,000. (360)796-4762

SATURN ‘98 SC2 COUPE 1.9L DOHC 4 Cyl, auto, traction control, alloys, new tires, tilt, A/C, Kenwood CD Stereo, dual front airbags. Only 128k miles! If you are seriously looking for a good-running, affordable car, you have found it! 4 Cyl for excellent gas milage. Clean condition, inside and out! Get some serious value for your dollar! $2,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com HONDA: ‘06 Accord LX. V6, 49K. orig. owner, re- SCION: ‘08 XB. 40K, excent maint. $12,500. cellent. $12,500. (360)417-8859 (360)928-3669

CHRYSLER: 2002 LTD PT Cruiser. 78k miles New battery. Black with c h r o m e t r i m , ex t r a s . Moonroof, great stereo and a gas to drive. too HONDA: ‘94 Accord LX. much fun in the sun! R u n s a f t e r f u e l f i l t e r One owner who loved it! fixed. $1,000/obo. $5500/obo. (360)477-9082 (360)808-6160 LEXUS ‘03 ES300 DATSUN: ‘64 Fairlady Fully loaded, we seldom convertible. Mechanic’s see cars this age in this spec. $1,500. 452-6524. fine condition, don’t miss this level of quality at this low price. $12,200 Preview at: heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583

SUBARU ‘05 IMPREZA WRX AWD WAGON The Impreza Wagon is known for its handling and maneuverability. Auto, 4 cyl, AC, CD, ABS brakes, fully loaded, nice unit, low 75K mi. $14,500 Preview at: heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583 SUBARU: ‘91 Legacy Wagon. 5 speed, AWD. $2,500. (360)683-5460.

MITSUBISHI: ‘03 E c l i p s e. B l a ck , gr e a t TOYOTA : ‘ 0 1 S o l a r a . c o n d . , 1 8 8 k m i l e s . Auto, 2 door, loaded. $5,700. (360)460-2536. $4,300/obo. 461-5193.

9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9434 Pickup Trucks 9434 Pickup Trucks Others Others Others Others TOYOTA : ‘ 0 4 C o r o l l a VW ‘11 JETTA TDI CE. White, auto, air, CD, TURBO DIESEL 80K, nice, safe, reliable. SEDAN $7,500. (360)670-3437. This car is immaculate, auto, fuel efficient 4 cyl. TOYOTA’12 CAMRY LE diesel, power moon roof, Very economical 2.5 liter leather, CD, 16” alumi4-cyl, auto, A/C, cruise, num wheel and tire pkg., tilt, AM/FM/CD with blue- all the amenities. Exceltooth, power windows, lent economy without locks and seat, keyless sacrificing power. Low entry, side airbags, only 2 9 K m i l e s , 4 0 M P G 16,000 miles, balance of highway! factor y 3/36 and 5/60 $21,900 w a r r a n t y, v e r y v e r y Preview at: clean 1-owner factor y heckmanmotors.com program vehicle. near Heckman Motors new condition. 111 E. Front, P.A. $18,995 (360)912-3583 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 VW: ‘68 Square Back. reidandjohnson.com $4,800/obo. 457-7184 .

CHEV: ‘80 2 ton. ‘454’ engine, 4 sp, 2 sp rear axle, 3’ deck with 13’ dump bed, 70 gal. diesel tank. $2,000/obo. (360)457-4521 or 477-3964 after 6 p.m. CHEV: ‘81 3+3. Dump b ox , 4 W D, 4 5 4 a u t o. $3,000/obo. 460-6176. CHEV: ‘88 Dually. Crew cab. $1,500. (360)477-1761 C H E V: ‘ 9 5 3 5 0 0 H D. 8’x15’ wood deck, 84,760 mi., GTX 10-30 every 3,000 mi., original owner. $8,500. (360)301-0050

DODGE ‘05 RAM 250 VOLVO: 1987 240. One VW: ‘72 Super Beetle. CREW CAB SHORT owner. $1,500. Great shape. $2,600. BED SLT 4X4 (360)461-5013 (360)809-3656 5.9L Cummins 24V turbo-diesel, auto, 17” alVOLVO ‘99 V70 GLT loys, tow package, trailer C a r fa x c e r t i f i e d o n e 9434 Pickup Trucks break controller, spray-in owner! 104k miles, Others bed liner, diamond-plate l e a t h e r i n t e r i o r, ve r y t o o l b ox / a u x i l i a r y f u e l clean inside and out, tank, Buckstop bumper, BRUSHFIRE TRUCK powerful 2.5L engine, key l e s s e n t r y, p ow e r 1981 4X4 automatic trans with windows, doors locks, overdrive, 30+ highway 1 ton dually, 4 speed mirrors and driver’s seat, M P G , n ew t i r e s, r o o f manual with granny low, c r u i s e , t i l t , A / C, C D racks, all the power op- 5.7L V8, 250 gallon H2O stereo, info center, dual tions, and more! Volvo’s t a n k , 4 y r o l d H o n d a front airbags, KBB of have an excellent repu- GX690 generator, dual $32,649! tation for safety making side diamond plate tool $27,995 this an ideal family vehi- boxes, everything is in GRAY MOTORS great operating condition cle! 457-4901 and was meticulously $5,950 graymotors.com maintained by an EastLipman’s Automotive IN HOUSE FINANCING ern Washington fire de- FORD: ‘01 Ranger. 4x4, par tment. Try and find matching canopy, good AVAILABLE one this nice! (360)452-5050 running. $6,500. $10,500 www.lipmansauto.com 1-360-269-1208 or Preview at: 2840 E Hwy 101 E PA 1-360-269-1030 heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors VW: ‘74 Classic conFORD: ‘94 F150 4X4 111 E. Front, P.A. ver tible Super Beetle. XLT. 5.8 liter V8, auto, (360)912-3583 $9,500/obo. Call after 6 tow package, trailer p.m. (360)460-2644. break controler. $5,400. CANOPY: Arrow canopy (360)683-9417 f o r s h o r t b e d t r u c k . VW: 1973 Beetle. White fiberglass. Sliding FORD: ‘86 F250 XLT. $2,250/obo. w i n d o w. H a s l i g h t s . Matching canopy. (360)477-3725 Been in storage. $150. $1,500. 1-360-269-1208 or 1-3601269-1030. VW: ‘66 Bug. Excellent Phone (360)457-9393. shape. $5,000. (360)457-7022 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices

9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant to the Revised Code of Washington 61.24, et seq. TS No.: WA-12-533955-SH APN No.: 063001-550120 Title Order No.: 120365027-WA-GSO Grantor(s): SCOTT A HOUSTON, ANGELA D HOUSTON Grantee(s): WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. Deed of Trust Instrument/Reference No.: 2008-1218118 I. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington, the undersigned Trustee, will on 6/21/2013, at 10:00 AM The main entrance to the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 East 4th St., Port Angeles, WA 98362 sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable in the form of credit bid or cash bid in the form of cashier’s check or certified checks from federally or State chartered banks, at the time of sale the following described real property, situated in the County of CLALLAM, State of Washington, to-wit: LOT 12 OF PLAT OF MADRONA WOODS, AS PER PLAT RECORDED IN VOLUME 14 OF PLATS, PAGE 47, RECORDS OF CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON. SITUATE IN THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM, STATE OF WASHINGTON. More commonly known as: 2419 ARBUTUS LANE, PORT ANGELES, WA 98363-1357 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 3/14/2008, recorded 3/21/2008, under 2008-1218118 records of CLALLAM County, Washington, from ANGELA D HOUSTON, A MARRIED PERSON AND SCOTT A HOUSTON , A MARRIED PERSON, WIFE AND HUSBAND, as Grantor(s), to NORTHWEST TRUSTEE SERVICES LLC, as Trustee, to secure an obligation in favor of WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest in which was assigned by WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. (or by its successors-in-interest and/or assigns, if any), to Wells Fargo Bank, NA. II. No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any Court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust/Mortgage. III. The defaults) for which this foreclosure is made is/are as follows: Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: $21,382.67 IV. The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: The principal sum of $208,552.65, together with interest as provided in the Note from the 11/1/2011, and such other costs and fees as are provided by statute. V. The above-described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. Said sale will be made without warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances on 6/21/2013. The defaults referred to in Paragraph III must be cured by 6/10/2013 (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time before 6/10/2013 (11 days before the sale) the default as set forth in Paragraph III is cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. Payment must be in cash or with cashiers or certified checks from a State or federally chartered bank. The sale may be terminated any time after the 6/10/2013 (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrower or Grantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance by paying the principal and interest, plus costs, fees and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI. A written Notice of Default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following address(es): NAME ANGELA D HOUSTON , A MARRIED PERSON AND SCOTT A HOUSTON , A MARRIED PERSON, WIFE AND HUSBAND ADDRESS 2419 ARBUTUS LANE, PORT ANGELES, WA 983631357 by both first class and certified mail, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and the Borrower and Grantor were personally served, if applicable, with said written Notice of Default or the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in Paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. These requirements were completed as of 12/4/2012. VII. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all their interest in the above-described property. IX. Anyone having any objections to this sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s sale. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS - The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the deed of trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the deed of trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME. You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date of this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONTACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR OR AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situation and refer you to mediation if you are eligible and it may help you save your home. See below for safe sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in determining your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may contact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission: Toll-free: 1-877-894-HOME (1-877-894-4663) or We b s i t e : h t t p : / / w w w. d f i . wa . g ov / c o n s u m e r s / h o m e ow n e r ship/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm. The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development: Toll-free: 1-800-569-4287 or National Web Site: http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD or for Local counseling agencies in Washington: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webListAction=searchandsearchstate=WAandfilterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counsel o r s a n d a t t o r n e y s : Te l e p h o n e : 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 0 6 - 4 8 1 9 o r W e b s i t e : http://nwjustice.org/what-clear. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser’s sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary’s Agent, or the Beneficiary’s Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right’s against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 02/19/13 Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington, as Trustee By: Michael Dowell, Assistant Secretary Trustee’s Mailing Address: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington C/O Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 Fifth Avenue, San Diego, CA 92101 (866)645-7711 Trustee’s Physical Address: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington 19735 10th Avenue NE, Suite N-200 Poulsbo, WA 98370 (866)645-7711 Sale Line: 714-730-2727 Or Login to: http://wa.qualityloan.com TS No.: WA-12-533955-SH, A-4361676 05/24/2013, 06/14/2013 Pub: May 24, June 14, 2013 Legal No. 478553

Clallam County

Clallam County

DODGE: ‘99 Ram 4X4 Flatbed tr uck. Low miles, recent oil change, transmission flush and filter changes. 3/4 ton 360 engine. call 461-4151. Photos available by request. Price reduced to $3500/obo.

FORD: ‘00 F250 Sup e r C a b. Au t o 2 W D, 147K miles, tow package, power seat and windows, power sunroof, sliding rear glass window. Recent tune up and underbody spray treatment. $5,500/obo. (360)504-0300

FORD: ‘94 F150 XLT. Low mi., 4x4, runs good, looks good. $4,500. (360)452-6758 FORD: ‘98 F150. Rims, tinted, black, extended cab. Quick sale. $2,775. (360)460-0518

TOYOTA: ‘05 Tacoma. TRD, double cab, 4WD, 98K mi., V6. $15,900. (360)460-6308

FORD: ‘88 3/4 ton. Runs good. $1,000. (360)775-9669

9931 Legal Notices Clallam County

NOTICE OF TRUSTEED SALE Pursuant to the Revised Code of Washington 61.24, et seq. TS No.: WA-12-520053-SH APN No.: 063000-030780 / 06300030785 Title Order No.: 120252108-WA-GSO Grantor(s): JOSHUA K. JACOBS, HEATHER D. JACOBS Grantee(s): MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR MBS MORTGAGE COMPANY, LLC Deed of Trust Instrument/Reference No.: 2009-1231448 I. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington, the undersigned Trustee, will on 5/31/2013, at 10:00 AM The main entrance to the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 East 4th St, Port Angeles, WA 98362 sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable in the form of credit bid or cash bid in the form of cashier’s check or certified checks from federally or State chartered banks, at the time of sale the following described real property, situated in the County of CLALLAM, State of Washington, to-wit: LOT 17 AND THE WEST HALF OF LOT 18 IN BLOCK 307 OF THE TOWNSITE OF PORT ANGELES, CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON. SITUATE IN THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM, SATE OF WASHINGTON. A.P.N.: 063000 030780 06300 030785 More commonly known as: 1615 WEST 10TH STREET, PORT ANGELES, WA 98363 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 1/14/2009, recorded 1/23/2009, under 2009-1231448 records of CLALLAM County, Washington, from JOSHUA K. JACOBS AND HEATHER D. JACOBS , HUSBAND AND WIFE, as Grantor(s), to CLALLAM TITLE COMPANY, as Trustee, to secure an obligation in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR MBS MORTGAGE COMPANY, LLC, as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest in which was assigned by MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR MBS MORTGAGE COMPANY, LLC (or by its successors-in-interest and/or assigns, if any), to Wells Fargo Bank, NA. II. No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any Court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust/Mortgage. III. The default(s) for which this foreclosure is made is/are as follows: Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: $21,420.63 IV. The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: The principal sum of $166,986.40, together with interest as provided in the Note from the 10/1/2011, and such other costs and fees as are provided by statute. V. The above-described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. Said sale will be made without warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances on 5/31/2013. The defaults referred to in Paragraph III must be cured by 5/20/2013 (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time before 5/20/2013 (11 days before the sale) the default as set forth in Paragraph III is cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. Payment must be in cash or with cashiers or certified checks from a State or federally chartered bank. The sale may be terminated any time after the 5/20/2013 (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrower or Grantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance by paying the principal and interest, plus costs, fees and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI. A written Notice of Default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following address(es): NAME JOSHUA K. JACOBS AND HEATHER D. JACOBS, HUSBAND AND WIFE ADDRESS 1615 WEST 10TH STREET, PORT ANGELES, WA 98363 by both first class and certified mail on 8/2/2012, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and the Borrower and Grantor were personally served, if applicable, with said written Notice of Default or the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in Paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all their interest in the above-described property. IX. Anyone having any objections to this sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s sale. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS - The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the deed of trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the deed of trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME. You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date of this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONTACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR OR AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situation and refer you to mediation if you are eligible and it may help you save your home. See below for safe sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in determining your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may contact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission: Toll-free: 1-877-894-HOME (1-877-894-4663) or Web site: http://www.dfi.wa.gov/consumers/homeownership/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm. The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development: Toll-free: 1-800-569-4287 or National Web Site: http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD or for Local counseling agencies in Washington: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webListAction=searchandsearchstate=WAandfilterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counsel o r s a n d a t t o r n e y s : Te l e p h o n e : 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 0 6 - 4 8 1 9 o r W e b s i t e : http://nwjustice.org/what-clear. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser’s sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary’s Agent, or the Beneficiary’s Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right’s against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 1/23/13 Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington, as Trustee By: Michael Dowell, Assistant Secretary Trustee’s Mailing Address: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington C/O Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 Fifth Avenue, San Diego, CA 92101 (866)645-7711 Trustee’s Physical Address: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington 19735 10th Avenue NE, Suite N-200 Poulsbo, WA 98370 (866)645-7711 Sale Line: 714-730-2727 Or Login to: http://wa.qualityloan.com TS No.: WA-12-520053-SH, A-4353122 05/03/2013, 05/24/2013 Pub: May 3, 24, 2013 Legal No. 475748


Classified

C6 FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013 9434 Pickup Trucks Others

9556 SUVs Others

9556 SUVs Others

FORD ‘09 F150 KING RANCH 4X4 SUPER CREW This truck literally has it all! Full luxur y power, power moonroof, heated and cooled leather captains chairs, navigation system, SYNC voice activated communications and entertainment system. KING RANCH! Awesome truck! Priced right at $30,900 Preview at: heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583

C H E V: ‘ 0 1 B l a z e r. 4 door, clean inside/out, overdrive, good rubber, 4WD, auto, seats fold down, r uns great, air bags, A/C. $3,000. (360)417-0277 by appt.

HONDA ‘07 CRV LX 4WD, auto, fully loaded, very nice, excellent condition inside and out, well appointed options. $12,900 Preview at: heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583

FORD ‘01 EXPLORER SPORT TRAC 4X4 This is a great little 4x4 pickup truck with room for the whole family! PW, PDL, 4.0L V-6 engine, automatic transmission, 4x4, fog lights and much more! This truck has a low 80k miles! This truck won’t last long at this price! $8,950 GMC: ‘91 2500 Extra C a b 4 X 4 . N o r u s t . Lipman’s Automotive IN HOUSE FINANCING $2,500/obo. 477-2334. AVAILABLE M A Z DA : ‘ 8 4 P i c k u p. (360)452-5050 Runs good, low miles. www.lipmansauto.com $1,200. (360)452-5126. 2840 E Hwy 101 E PA

TOYOTA ‘03 TACOMA PRERUNNER SR5, trd off road package, extended cab stepside bed, 3.4 liter v6, auto, 2wd, A/C, cruise, tilt, A M / F M / C a s s e t t e / C D, power windows, locks a n d m i r r o r s , s l i d e r, m a t c h i n g c a n o p y, sprayed on bedliner, all oy w h e e l s , 1 0 9 , 0 0 0 miles, very clean local trade in, spotless “Autocheck” vehicle histor y report. Just in time for graduation! $11,995 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com

9556 SUVs Others FORD: ‘04 Explorer. Excellent condition, new tires/brakes, all power, trailer hitch, 102K mi. $7,000. (360)683-5494.

FORD: ‘02 Explorer XLT. Runs good. $2,700 firm. (360)504-5664. FORD: ‘87 Bronco II. 4x4. $1,500. 1-360-2691208 or 1-360-269-1030. FORD: ‘93 Explorer XLT. 4x4 auto, dark green, tan interior, looks great, runs great, 116K orig. mi., new front suspens i o n , n ew t ra n s, n ew brakes/wheel bearings, new head gaskets/timing chain, new rocker arms/ push rods, new radiator. $4,900. (360)457-3744. GMC: ‘90 Jimmy.Rebuilt. Call for details. $2,500. (360)452-6649 GMC: ‘98 Jimmy (Blazer). Low mi. on new motor, clean, runs great, all extras. 1st $2,900 takes it. (360)452-6611.

LINCOLN: ‘04 Navigat o r. 9 5 k , AW D, 4 X 4 , leather, seats 7 comfortably, good family vehicle, new compressor and tabs, 6 disc changer and Bose sound syster m, ver y reliable. $12,000/obo. (360)460-5421

9730 Vans & Minivans 9730 Vans & Minivans 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Others Others Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County DODGE ‘01 GRAND CARAVAN SPORT 3.3L V6, roof rack, privacy glass, dual sliding doors, power windows, doors, locks, mirrors, cruise, tilt, A/C, rear A/C, dual zone climate cont r o l , C D s t e r e o, d u a l front airbags. Only 85k miles! Sparkling clean, inside and out! Room for the whole family! Priced to fit your budget. $5,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

FORD ‘06 E-350 SUPERDUTY 14’ BOX VAN 5.4 liter V8, auto, A/C, cruise, tilt, 14’ superior aluminum high cube box, roll up door, dual rear wheels, only 21,000 miles, spotless “Autocheck” vehicle histor y report. A Proud addition to your business. $17,495 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com

9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County

No. 13-4-00179-9 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM Estate of ROBERT CONVERSE, Deceased. The personal representative named below has been appointed as personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(3); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the is not presented within this time frame, the 9730 Vans & Minivans claim claim is forever barred, except as otherwise providOthers ed in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s proFORD: ‘91 Van. Wheel- bate and nonprobate assets. chair lift, 97k miles, en- DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: May 10, 2013 gine purrs. $3,800. Personal Representative: (360)681-5383 MARY LORRAINE CONVERSE Attorney for Personal Representative: SEE THE MOST ROBERT W. STROHMEYER CURRENT REAL Attorney at Law ESTATE LISTINGS: Address for Mailing or Service: 1125 E. First Street, www.peninsula Port Angeles, WA 98362 dailynews.com Telephone: (360)457-9525 Pub: May 10, 17, 24, 2013 Legal No. 478809

TOYOTA ‘02 4RUNNER SR5 4X4 3.4L V6, auto, alloys, new tires, sunroof, roof rack, tow package, tinted windows, keyless entry, p owe r w i n d ow s, d o o r locks, and mirrors, leather seating, cruise, tilt, A/C, CD/Cassette stereo, dual front airbags, only 128k miles, sparkling clean inside and out! Loaded with options! Leather and sunroof! The 4Runner is a Nor thwest favor ite! Come see why! $11,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant to the Revised Code of Washington 61.24, et seq. TS No.: WA-12-535226-SH APN No.: 0330215002000000 Title Order No.: 120375224-WA-GSO Grantor(s): BEULAH M FRANKLIN, BOBBIE G FRANKLIN, ESTATE OF BEULAH M FRANKLIN Grantee(s): MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR GREENPOINT MORTGAGE FUNDING, INC Deed of Trust Instrument/Reference No.: 2005 1171339 I. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington, the undersigned Trustee, will on 6/21/2013, at 10:00 AM The main entrance to the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 East 4th St., Port Angeles, WA 98362 sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable in the form of credit bid or cash bid in the form of cashier’s check or certified checks from federally or State chartered banks, at the time of sale the following described real property, situated in the County of CLALLAM, State of Washington, to-wit: LOT 20 OF SUN MEADOWS, AS PER PLAT RECORDED IN VOLUME 12 OF PLATS, PAGE 63, RECORDS OF CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON. SITUATE IN THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM, STATE OF WASHINGTON More commonly known as: 40 INDEPENDENCE DR, SEQUIM, WA 98382 which is subject to that cer tain Deed of Trust dated 12/5/2005, recorded 12/14/2005, under 2005 1171339 records of CLALLAM County, Washington, from BEULAH M FRANKLIN AND BOBBIE G GRANKLIN , WIFE AND HUSBAND, as Grantor(s), to CLALLAM TITLE COMPANY, as Trustee, to secure an obligation in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR GREENPOINT MORTGAGE FUNDING, INC, as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest in which was assigned by MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR GREENPOINT MORTGAGE FUNDING, INC (or by its successors-in-interest and/or assigns, if any), to The Bank of New York Mellon, f/k/a The Bank of New York, as successor-in-interest to JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, as Trustee for Structured Asset Mortgage Investments II Trust 2006-AR4, Mor tgage Pass-Through Cer tificates, Series 2006-AR4. II. No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any Court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust/Mortgage. III. The default(s) for which this foreclosure is made is/are as follows: Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: $13,629.63 IV. The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: The principal sum of $176,932.87, together with interest as provided in the Note from the 6/1/2012, and such other costs and fees as are provided by statute. V. The above-described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. Said sale will be made without warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances on 6/21/2013. The defaults referred to in Paragraph III must be cured by 6/10/2013 (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time before 6/10/2013 (11 days before the sale) the default as set forth in Paragraph III is cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. Payment must be in cash or with cashiers or certified checks from a State or federally chartered bank. The sale may be terminated any time after the 6/10/2013 (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrower or Grantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance by paying the principal and interest, plus costs, fees and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI. A written Notice of Default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following address(es): NAME BEULAH M FRANKLIN AND BOBBIE G GRANKLIN, WIFE AND HUSBAND ADDRESS 40 INDEPENDENCE DR, SEQUIM, WA 98382 by both first class and certified mail, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and the Borrower and Grantor were personally served, if applicable, with said written Notice of Default or the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in Paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. These requirements were completed as of 1/18/2013. VII. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all their interest in the above-described property. IX. Anyone having any objections to this sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s sale. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS - The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the deed of trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the deed of trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME. You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date of this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONTACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR OR AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situation and refer you to mediation if you are eligible and it may help you save your home. See below for safe sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in determining your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may contact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission: Toll-free: 1877-894-HOME (1-877-894-4663) or Web site: http://www.dfi.wa.gov/consumers/homeownership/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm. The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development: Toll-free: 1-800-5694287 or National Web Site: http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD or for Local c o u n s e l i n g a g e n c i e s i n W a s h i n g t o n : h t t p : / / w w w. h u d . g o v / o f f i c es/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webListAction=searchandsearchstate=WAandfilterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorneys: Telephone: 1-800-606-4819 or Web site: http://nwjustice.org/what-clear. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser’s sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary’s Agent, or the Beneficiary’s Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right’s against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 02/19/13 Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington, as Trustee By: Tricia Moreno, Assistant Secretary Trustee’s Mailing Address: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington C/O Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 Fifth Avenue, San Diego, CA 92101 (866)645-7711 Trustee’s Physical Address: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington 19735 10th Avenue NE, Suite N-200 Poulsbo, WA 98370 (866)645-7711 Sale Line: 714-730-2727 Or Login to: http://wa.qualityloan.com TS No.: WA-12-535226-SH, A-4356733 05/24/2013, 06/14/2013 Pub: May 24, June 14, 2013 Legal No. 478613

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PROBATE NO. 13-4-00180-2 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM In the Matter of the Estate of AAMANDA LOUSIE LaGAMBINA, Deceased. The personal representative named below has been appointed as personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(3); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.540.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the deedent’s probate and non-probate assets. Personal Represetnative: Joan Faustin LaGambina P.O. Box 2641 Forks, Washington 98331 Attorney for Personal Representative: Shari McMenamin McMenamin & McMenamin PS 544 North Fifth Avenue Sequim, Washington 98382 Address for mailing or service: 544 North Fifth Avenue Sequim, Washington 98382 Court of probate proceedings and cause number: Clallam County Superior Court 13-4-00180-2 Pub: May 10, 17, 24, 2013 Legal No. 479906

NEED EXTRA CASH! Sell your Treasures! 360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714 www.peninsula dailynews.com PENINSULA CLASSIFIED

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant to the Revised Code of Washington 61.24, et seq. TS No.: WA-11-462422-SH APN No.: 03-30-06-339070 Title Order No.: 110382282-WA-GNO Grantors): MICHAEL HALLIS, KRIS HALLIS Grantee(s): MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR LENDING 1ST MORTGAGE Deed of Trust Instrument/Reference No.: 2006-1186956 I. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington, the undersigned Trustee, will on 5/31/2013, at 10:00 AM The main entrance to the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 East 4th St, Port Angeles, WA 98362 sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable in the form of credit bid or cash bid in the form of cashier’s check or certified checks from federally or State chartered banks, at the time of sale the following described real property, situated in the County of CLALLAM, State of Washington, to-wit: LOT 3 OF LE BECK SHORT PLAT, RECORDED MAY 16, 1986 IN VOLUME 16 OF SHORT PLATS, PAGE 61, UNDER CLALLAM COUNTY RECORDING NO. 577842, BEING A SHORT PLAT OF LOT 1 OF KREMER SURVEY RECORDED IN VOLUME 8 OF SURVEYS, PAGE 84, BEING A PORTION OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 6, TOWNSHIP 30 NORTH, RANGE 3 WEST, W.M., CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON. More commonly known as: 124 KIRNER ROAD, SEQUIM, WA 98382 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 8/21/2006, recorded 8/30/2006, under 20061186956 records of CLALLAM County, Washington, from MICHAEL E. HALLIS AND KRIS E. HALLIS , HUSBAND AND WIFE, as Grantor(s), to OLYMPIC PENINSULA TITLE COMPANY, as Trustee, to secure an obligation in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR LENDING 1ST MORTGAGE, as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest in which was assigned by MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR LENDING 1ST MORTGAGE (or by its successors-in-interest and/or assigns, if any), to Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as Trustee for Structured Asset Mortgage Investments II Inc. Bear Stearns Mortgage Funding Trust 2006-AR3 Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-AR3 . II. No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any Court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust/Mortgage. III. The defaults) for which this foreclosure is made is/are as follows: Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: $40,972.98 IV. The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: The principal sum of $429,280.76, together with interest as provided in the Note from the 1/1/2011, and such other costs and fees as are provided by statute. V. The above-described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. Said sale will be made without warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances on 5/31/2013. The defaults referred to in Paragraph III must be cured by 5/20/2013 (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time before 5/20/2013 (11 days before the sale) the default as set forth in Paragraph III is cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. Payment must be in cash or with cashiers or certified checks from a State or federally chartered bank. The sale may be terminated any time after the 5/20/2013 (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrower or Grantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance by paying the principal and interest, plus costs, fees and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI. A written Notice of Default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following address(es): NAME MICHAEL E. HALLIS AND KRIS E. HALLIS, HUSBAND AND WIFE ADDRESS 124 KIRNER ROAD, SEQUIM, WA 98382 by both first class and certified mail on 12/12/2012, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and the Borrower and Grantor were personally served, if applicable, with said written Notice of Default or the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in Paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all their interest in the above-described property. IX. Anyone having any objections to this sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s sale. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS - The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the deed of trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the deed of trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME. You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date of this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONTACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR OR AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situation and refer you to mediation if you are eligible and it may help you save your home. See below for safe sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in determining your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may contact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission: Toll-free: 1-877-894-HOME (1-877-894-4663) or We b s i t e : h t t p : / / w w w. d f i . wa . g ov / c o n s u m e r s / h o m e ow n e r ship/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm. The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development: Toll-free: 1-800-569-4287 or National Web Site: http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD or for Local counseling agencies in Washington: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webListAction=searchandsearchstate=WAandfilterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counsel o r s a n d a t t o r n e y s : Te l e p h o n e : 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 0 6 - 4 8 1 9 o r W e b s i t e : http://nwjustice.org/what-clear. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser’s sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary’s Agent, or the Beneficiary’s Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right’s against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 1/24/13 Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington, as Trustee By: Tricia Moreno, Assistant Secretary Trustee’s Mailing Address: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington C/O Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 Fifth Avenue, San Diego, CA 92101 (866)645-7711 Trustee’s Physical Address: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington 19735 10th Avenue NE, Suite N-200 Poulsbo, WA 98370 (866)645-7711 Sale Line: 714-730-2727 Or Login to: http://wa.qualityloan.com TS No.: WA-11-462422-SH, A-4353144 05/03/2013, 05/24/2013 Pub: May 3, 24, 2013 Legal No. 475741

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Makah Environmental Division Request for Proposal (RFP) Environmental Restoration Services The Makah Environmental Division is conducting environmental restoration activities on the Makah Indian Reservation. Professional services, including engineering and environmental consulting, are needed to sample soil, sediment, surface water, a and groundwater; to plan, coordinate, and oversee removal of asbestos, abandoned buildings and other structures, lead- and petroleum-contaminated soils; and to prepare technical reports. These restoration activities are scheduled from May 2013 through April 2015. Proposals are due by 3:00 p.m. on May 27, 2013. To request a copy of the complete RFP, contact Steve Pendleton (360)6453289 or Marge Sawyer 360-645-3286 of the Makah Environmental Division. Pub: May 14, 15, 16, 17, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 2013 Legal No. 480227

NO. 13 4 00177 2 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF: DONALD K. MYERS, Deceased. The Personal Representative named below has been appointed as Personal Representative of this estate. Any persons having a claim against the Decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Personal Representative or the Personal Representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the Court. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Personal Representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the Notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the Decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. Date of first publication: May 17, 2013 Personal Representative: Diane Cari McKinley Attorney for Personal Representative: Curtis G. Johnson, WSBA #8675 Address for Mailing or Service: Law Office of Curtis G. Johnson, P.S 230 E. 5th Street Port Angeles, WA 98362 (360) 452-3895 Pub: May 17, 24, 31, 2013 Legal No. 481567

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant to the Revised Code of Washington 61.24, et seq. TS No.: WA-12-537129-SH APN No.: 04-30-16-229120 Title Order No.: 120390941-WA-GSO Grantor(s): ETHELYN J GREENSTREET, SCOTT E ROBINSON Grantee(s): MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR AMERICAN MORTGAGE NETWORK, INC., A DELAWARE CORPORATION Deed of Trust Instrument/Reference No.: 2007-1213344 I. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington, the undersigned Trustee, will on 6/21/2013, at 10:00 AM The main entrance to the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 East 4th St, Port Angeles, WA 98362 sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable in the form of credit bid or cash bid in the form of cashier’s check or certified checks from federally or State chartered banks, at the time of sale the following described real property, situated in the County of CLALLAM, State of Washington, to-wit: LOT 3 OF SHORT PLAT RECORDED IN VOLUME 21 OF SHORT PLATS, PAGE 45, UNDER CLALLAM COUNTY RECORDING NO. 647681 BEING A SHORT PLAT OF A PORTION OF TRACT 5 OF SURVEY RECORDED IN VOLUME 2 OF SURVEYS, PAGE 149, ALSO SHOWN OF RECORD AS VOLUME 3 OF SURVEYS, PAGE 149, UNDER CLALLAM COUNTY AUDITOR’S FILE NO. 473784, SAID SURVEY BEING A PORTION OF THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 16, TOWNSHIP 30 NORTH, RANGE 4 WEST, W.M., CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON. SITUATE IN THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM, STATE OF WASHINGTON. More commonly known as: 160 SHELLY LN, SEQUIM, WA 98382 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 12/7/2007, recorded 12/11/2007, under 2007-1213344 records of CLALLAM County, Washington, from ETHELYN J. GREENSTREET AND SCOTT EDWARD ROBINSON , EACH AS THEIR SEPARATE, as Grantors), to FDIST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as Trustee, to secure an obligation in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR AMERICAN MORTGAGE NETWORK, INC., A DELAWARE CORPORATION, as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest in which was assigned by MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR AMERICAN MORTGAGE NETWORK, INC., A DELAWARE CORPORATION (or by its successors-in-interest and/or assigns, if any), to JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association. II. No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any Court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust/Mortgage. III. The default(s) for which this foreclosure is made is/are as follows: Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: $11,828.40 IV. The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: The principal sum of $364,014.20, together with interest as provided in the Note from the 7/1/2012, and such other costs and fees as are provided by statute. V. The above-described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. Said sale will be made without warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances on 6/21/2013. The defaults referred to in Paragraph III must be cured by 6/10/2013 (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time before 6/10/2013 (11 days before the sale) the default as set forth in Paragraph III is cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. Payment must be in cash or with cashiers or certified checks from a State or federally chartered bank. The sale may be terminated any time after the 6/10/2013 (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrower or Grantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance by paying the principal and interest, plus costs, fees and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI. A written Notice of Default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following address(es): NAME ETHELYN J. GREENSTREET AND SCOTT EDWARD ROBINSON , EACH AS THEIR SEPARATE ADDRESS 160 SHELLY LN, SEQUIM, WA 98382 by both first class and certified mail, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and the Borrower and Grantor were personally served, if applicable, with said written Notice of Default or the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in Paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. These requirements were completed as of 1/17/2013. VII. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all their interest in the above-described property. IX. Anyone having any objections to this sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s sale. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS - The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the deed of trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the deed of trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME. You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date of this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONTACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR OR AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situation and refer you to mediation if you are eligible and it may help you save your home. See below for safe sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in determining your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may contact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission: Toll-free: 1-877-894-HOME (1-877-894-4663) or Web site: http://www.dfi.wa.gov/consumers/homeownership/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm. The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development: Toll-free: 1-800-569-4287 or National Web Site: http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD or for Local counseling agencies in Washington: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webListAction=searchandsearchstate=WAandfilterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counsel o r s a n d a t t o r n e y s : Te l e p h o n e : 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 0 6 - 4 8 1 9 o r W e b s i t e : http://nwjustice.org/what-clear. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser’s sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary’s Agent, or the Beneficiary’s Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right’s against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 02/19/13 Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington, as Trustee By: Michael Dowell, Assistant Secretary Trustee’s Mailing Address: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington C/O Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 Fifth Avenue, San Diego, CA 92101 (866)645-7711 Trustee’s Physical Address: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington 19735 10th Avenue NE, Suite N-200 Poulsbo, WA 98370 (866)645-7711 Sale Line: 714-730-2727 Or Login to: http://wa.qualityloan.com TS No.: WA-12-537129-SH, A-FN4356209 05/24/2013, 06/14/2013 Pub: May 24, June 14, 2013 Legal No. 478615

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‘A Rouse for Ray’ | This week’s new movies

Peninsula

Juan de Fuca Festival of the Arts

JAY DICKMAN

The Sierra Leone Refugee All Stars are among the bands arriving in Port Angeles for the four-day Juan de Fuca Festival.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

THE WEEK OF MAY 24-30, 2013


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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

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PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Coming Up

Free jazz for lunch and supper PORT ANGELES — The Peninsula College Jazz Ensemble will give two free, public concerts in as many weeks, starting with a lunchtime show at the Pirate Union Building, aka the PUB, on Tuesday. The band will dish out big-band swing like Count Basie’s “Deedles,” Maynard Ferguson’s “A Foggy Day,” Tommy Dorsey’s “I’m Getting Sentimental Over You” and Charles Mingus’ “Better Get Hit in Your Soul,” at 12:30 p.m. Modern classics by Stevie Wonder, Tower of Power and Freddie Hubbard will also be on the menu. The music in the PUB will last an hour. Then on the evening of June 4, the Jazz Ensemble will return, repertoire intact, to Maier Hall, the intimate space on campus. The music will start at 7 p.m. This quarter’s concerts feature vocalists Robbin Eaves and Teresa Pierce, singing with players Bob Bailey, Kevin MacCartney, Richard Thorson, Jared Herr, Brittany Brabant, Elaine Gardner-Morales, J.

Foster, Mike Kochanek, Mike Mills and Tor Brandes, all of Port Angeles; Ben Parris, Bob Hagan, Sanford Feibus and Duncan Skinner of Sequim; and John Adams of Port Townsend. For more details about these and other public events on the campus at 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd., see www.pencol.edu or visit Peninsula College’s Facebook page.

Rootsy songs PORT TOWNSEND — The Laura Cortese Trio, a high-energy roots-music outfit, will join the fivepiece band Fish & Bird next Friday, May 31, at The Upstage. Fiddles, cello, upright bass and vocal harmonies will blend at 7 p.m. at the all-ages venue at 923 Washington St. Cover charge is $8, and the Upstage’s number is 360-385-2216. To hear some Cortese music, visit www.ThisIs LauraCortese.com.

Across Iran PORT TOWNSEND — “Modest Reception,” the cinematic tale of a strange pair driving across the mountains of Iran, is the

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Pies on the Run, a Western swing-country-yodeling band, will bring cowgirl songs and then some to the Uptown Pub, 1016 Lawrence St., Port Townsend, tonight. The ensemble is, from left, Baila Dworsky, George Radebaugh, Claudia Neva and Nancy Fitch. There’s no cover charge for the group’s 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. appearance. next Global Lens series film to screen Thursday at the Schoolhouse at Fort Worden State Park, 200 Battery Way. The movie starts at 7 p.m. with free admission. “Modest” follows the duo as they offer bags full of money to the poor people they encounter. These aren’t good Samaritans, though. Before giving the money, the couple puts their would-be beneficiaries through odd tests or immoral acts. As they con-

tinue on their route, their demands get progressively more outrageous and dark. A discussion will follow, presented by the Port Townsend Film Institute. For details, see www. PTFilmFest.com or phone 360-379-1333.

‘Bidder 70’ film PORT TOWNSEND — A screening of the film “Bidder 70” will be held at Quimper Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 2333 San Juan Ave., at 7 p.m.

Thursday, May 30. Admission is by donation. In 2008, University of Utah economics student and Unitarian Universalist Tim DeChristopher disrupted a Bureau of Land Management oil and gas auction by bidding in the name of climate justice. The film follows DeChristopher, Bidder No. 70, from college student to incarcerated felon. He bid millions of dollars he didn’t have to save

thousands of acres of land surrounding U.S. national parks that were slated for oil and gas leases. DeChristopher, who was jailed the past several years, recently has been released and has been accepted at the Harvard School of Divinity. Free on-site child care will be provided at the screening Thursday. No reservations are necessary. For information, phone Helen Kolff at 360-379-4858. Peninsula Daily News

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Peninsula Spotlight, the North Olympic Peninsula’s weekly entertainment and arts magazine, welcomes items about coming events for its news columns and calendars. Sending information is easy: Q E-mail it to news@peninsuladailynews.com in time to arrive 10 days before Friday publication. Q Fax it to 360-417-3521 no later than 10 days before publication. Q Mail it to Peninsula Spotlight, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 in time to arrive 10 days before publication. Q Hand-deliver it to any of our news offices at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles; 1939 E. Sims Way, Port Townsend; or 147-B W. Washington St., Sequim, by 10 days before publication. Photos are always welcome. If you’re e-mailing a photo, be sure it is at least 150 dots per inch resolution. Questions? Phone Diane Urbani de la Paz, Peninsula Spotlight editor, at 360-452-2345, ext. 5062, weekdays.

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PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

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ROUSE for Ray PA walkabout closes 17-day Carver festival BY DIANE URBANI

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Ray was “a man who was not afraid to be sweet,” in life or poetry. “He wanted the people he loved to know he loved them.” So remembered Tess Gallagher, who will take Raymond Carver fans on “A Rouse for Ray,” a kind of walkabout to sites that inspired the writer during his 10 years here. The traveling reading of Carver poems — to finish with pie for dessert — will start at 11 a.m. and go till about 2 p.m. Saturday, which would have been Carver’s 75th birthday. Fans can join the outing at any of the five stops. The internationally renowned writer of short stories and poetry was only 50 when he died on Aug. 2, 1988. But if the hundreds of poems he wrote in a house by the Strait of Juan de Fuca are any sign, he lived life well here.

Poetry readings “A Rouse for Ray” is the free culmination of the Raymond Carver Festival, a 17-day celebration created by Gallagher, his widow and the caretaker of his writings. A Port Angeles native, she emphasized that any rain won’t dampen the spirit of the outing. The “Rouse” route will start at the intersection of the Olympic Discovery Trail and Strait View Drive, just off U.S. Highway 101 near Morse Creek. Shortly after 11 a.m., Carver’s poem about Morse Creek and the Strait, “Where Water Comes Together with Other Water,” will start the readings. “I love creeks and the music they make,” it begins. “But the big streams have my heart too.

“And the places streams flow into rivers. “The open mouths of rivers where they join the sea.” Then it’s off to the eastside Safeway coffee shop at 2709 E. Highway 101, where a few Carver odes to food and drink will be read. Things grow romantic at the Jasmine Bistro, 222 N. Lincoln, the site of Carver’s marriage proposal to Gallagher. There, love poems will rule. But at the Cornerhouse, 101 E. Front St., where the couple often shared a booth by the window, poems about the working-class life will be read.

‘My Boat’ The Port Angeles Marina parking lot on Marine Drive is the next stop, to feature Carver’s “My Boat,” a joyful piece about bringing his loved ones together on board his vessel. Finally, beside Carver’s grave at Ocean View Cemetery, 3127 W. 18th St., “Gravy” and “Late Fragment,” poems of love and gratitude, will wrap the reading. Then everyone is invited to partake in pie, one of Carver’s favorite foods. For more details about “A Rouse for Ray,” visit cosponsor Peninsula College’s website, www.PenCol.edu. Fans are also invited to contribute a pie, and can arrange to do so by phoning Helen Lovejoy at 360-417-6362 or Charlotte Warren at 360-683-4589. At a Carver Festival poetry reading last Monday night at the Port Angeles Library, Gallagher read from Carver’s collection All of Us, and smiled out at her audience of fellow poets and Carver enthusiasts. “You listeners . . . without you, no fun,” she said. “It’s Ray we’re honoring. And I know he’s here.”

“The Ghost Fish,” Alfredo Arreguín’s ode to Raymond Carver, hangs in the Port Angeles Library.

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FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Not the usual community playhouse fare Ibsen’s ‘The Master Builder’ makes brief run on PA stage a successful builder of churches and houses; one day Hilde, played by Nikkole Adams, shows PORT ANGELES — You could up on his doorstep to alter his go to New York City to see John life forever. Turturro in “The Master Builder,� “Builder� is regarded as one of where tickets run $25 to $105. Ibsen’s most revealing plays, and Or you can see it here with “it’s an intensely emotional Ron Graham, Nikkole Adams, work,� promises Manno. Jim Guthrie and Lola HassanFor the cast, which also feaAdams, among other local thespi- tures Zachary Luke King Moorans, at the Port Angeles Commu- man, Julie Belling and Tim nity Playhouse. For a free-will Macausland, it’s not the usual donation. playhouse/college/community John Manno, theater director, fare. musician and actor, is at it again The cast has done “an amazwith a Second Stage production ing job,� Manno said. of “The Master Builder,� the HenTheir handiwork will arrive rik Ibsen play that opened 120 on stage at 7:30 tonight and Satyears ago in Berlin. urday and 2 p.m. Sunday. That’s it. Manno knows the production Revealing play has a lot of competition on this busier-than-usual weekend in In this weekend’s rendition, Port Angeles. It’s the only time Graham plays Harvard Solness, he could squeeze “Builder� in, what with his schedule this spring. Who’s playing? BY DIANE URBANI

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

John Nelson’s “Live Music� column tells you. Thursdays in

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Playhouse. This “Builder� has an added touch from Manno: live, NorweBusy schedule gian-folk-inspired music for the opening and between the acts. Manno is directing the Find Violist Leah Haworth and violinYour Voice New Play Festival at ist Andrew McInnes will play Peninsula College May 31-June 2, and then will start rehearsing pieces by local composer Neil “Becket� for a July opening at the Paynter. Port Angeles Community Manno noted too that his

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HACIENDA

Sunday, May 26 10:00 am ALL ARE WELCOME! The Peninsula College Jazz Ensemble

staging of Ibsen’s classic differs from the naturalistic style in other productions. His “Builder� is “more avant garde,� he said.

Another kind of theater There is no set admission charge for “The Master Builder,� as Manno simply wants to pro-

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vide access to another kind of theater in Port Angeles. He hopes this play will provoke its audiences to think about what power is, and what it does to the powerful and the weak. For more information about productions at the playhouse, see www.PACommunityPlayers.com or phone 360-452-6651.

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“The Master Builder� arrives tonight at the Port Angeles Community Playhouse for just three performances. The cast is, from left, Jim Guthrie, Julie Belling, Tim Macausland, Nikkole Adams, Ron Graham, Lola Hassan-Adams and Zachary Luke King Moorman.


PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

5

Free reading slated at Writers’ Workshoppe BY DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Pat Taynton’s acrylic odes to horses, like “Hello Christy,” left, and “Pasture Buddies,” are among the works awaiting visitors to the Olympic Art Festival this Saturday at Quilcene’s Olympic Art Gallery.

Olympic Art Fest unveils in Quilcene Variety of creations available PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

■ What: Olympic Art Festival ■ When: Saturday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. ■ Where: The Olympic Art Gallery, 40 Washington

St. at U.S. Highway 101, Quilcene. ■ Admission: Free ■ Info: 360-531-2015 or www.OlympicArtGallery.com creations by Northwest artists of many stripes. Here’s a sampling: ■ turned-wood bowls by Paul Kaiser; ■ watercolors and acrylics by Pat Taynton and Beverley Winther; ■ benches, fences and other metalwork by Charlie and Sally Brown; ■ fused glass art by Melissa Penic; ■ photography by Randy Hopfer; ■ scrollsaw art by Terry Foltz; ■ bronzes by Ratso. Much of the art work is discount-priced for Satur-

day’s event. Other than special occasions like this Saturday, the Olympic Art Gallery is only open by appointment. For information, phone 360-531-2015 or visit www. OlympicArtGallery.com.

www.peninsuladailynews. com Click on “Photo Gallery”

will also engage in a conversation with the audience and Writers’ Workshoppe owner Anna Quinn during Saturday’s event.

‘A love letter’ Yuknavitch is also the author of Dora: A Headcase, a novel she calls “a love letter to nerds, misfits, introverts and arthearts everywhere.” In it she writes: “You know what? Seventeen is no place to be. You want to get

a l Dinner a

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May 31 at 5pm at 7 Cedars Casino Enjoy an evening out! Dinner, live and silent auction. Be a part of the community as we raise funds for Sequim’s new Senior Center.

Keepsakes for sale Purchase a PDN photo — on T-shirts, drink mugs or just the photo itself.

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at the Sequim Senior Activity Center or Pacific Mist Books

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QUILCENE — A particular kind of nature walk beckons at Charlie and Sally Brown’s place. It’s a venture through handforged gates, hand-painted images, photography, watercolors and even scrollsaw art, all inspired by the surrounding flora and fauna. The Olympic Art Gallery, the Browns’ showcase for local artists, will host its seventh annual Olympic Art Festival from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, and as ever admission is free. Visitors to the gallery, 40 Washington St. at U.S. Highway 101, have a chance to browse among

Where & when

PORT TOWNSEND — The unconventional memoirist Lidia Yuknavitch will give a free reading at the Writers’ Workshoppe, 234 Taylor St., at 7 p.m. this Saturday. Yuknavitch is author of 2011’s The Chronology of Water, her memoir chronicling her love of swimming as salvation, her relationship with an abusive father and a silent mother and her own loss of a stillborn daughter. Water is about bodies and gender and pain, according to the Writers’ Workshoppe announcement, but more than anything it is about finding joy amid the mess of life. Yuknavitch, who lives in Portland, Ore.,

out, you want to shake off a self like an old dead skin. You want to take how things are and chuck it like a rock. You pierce your face or tattoo your skin — anything to feel something beyond the numb of home. You invent clothes other people think are garbage. You get high. You meddle with sexuality. You stuff your ears with earbuds blasting music so loud it’s beyond hearing, it’s just the throb and heat and slam and pound and scream of bodies on the edge of adult. You text your head off. You guerrilla film. We live through sound and light — through our technologies. With our parents’ zombie life dope arsenal at our fingertips.” Yuknavitch’s essays and stories have appeared on theRumpus.net and in The Sun magazine; she’s winner of honors including an Oregon Book Award and was a finalist for the Penn Center Prize in nonfiction.


6

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Solarize Sequim Solar PV Bulk Purchasing Program Save $750/kw and qualify for a free EV charging

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The Sierra Leone Refugee All Stars are, in front from left, Makengo Kamara, Ashade Pearce, Reuben Koroma, Christopher Davies, Dennis Sannoh and Kobina Valcarcel; standing behind them from left are Black Nature and Jahson Bull.

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Power of music

Group to sway listeners with its reggae beats, African grooves

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PORT ANGELES — When the rhythm comes, so does relief. The Sierra Leone Refugee All Stars come from a place torn apart. War through the 1990s killed countless innocents in their west African homeland, and forced millions to flee their homes and seek refuge in camps in neighboring Guinea. Yet this band, here for the 20th annual Juan de Fuca Festival of the Arts, is living proof of music’s power. When the Refugee All

Stars start to play, their reggae beats and funky African grooves cause bodies to sway. The sound is buoyant and warm, like an equatorial breeze. For more than 10 years now, the Sierra Leoneans have used music as a salve and a messenger for listeners across the world.

Connections “When you connect, together, you forget [your worries],” one band member says in “Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars,” the 2005 film chronicling the group’s history. Singer-dancer-percus-

sionist Black Nature is one of eight Sierra Leone Refugee All Stars arriving in Port Angeles. “I’m the youngest member of the band,” he said. “I run around, and follow the spirit of the music on stage . . . it’s a very special music: African rhythm, Sierra Leonean rhythm.” And while some of the songs are about life in a refugee camp, this music also celebrates Sierra Leone’s culture. This is the sound of resilience, and its message is a positive one, Black Nature said. And it is for dancing. TURN

TO

POWER/8


PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

7

A LL over

Coyote Grace — Joe Stevens, Ingrid Elizabeth and Michael Connolly — brings their brand of Americana to the Juan de Fuca Festival’s intimate Chamber Stage tonight at 7 and to the main Vern Burton Community Center stage at 2:30 p.m. Saturday.

the

MAP Juan de Fuca Festival brings performers from around the world to Port Angeles Try something new; “it might grow on you. You might fall in love,” she said. The 20th annual festival, to take place PORT ANGELES — Beware of the acts on six stages in and around the Vern Buryou’ve never heard of. Look out for the ton Community rock, the rhythm Center at Fourth and blues, the gospel — and the and Peabody giant squid. streets, starts this Besides the eight afternoon at singer-songwrit4:30 with Califorers, two comedinia-based singer ans, two dance Julia Maguire; companies and 30 Denver hip-hop bands in the Juan artist Mane Rok de Fuca Festival of at 5:30; the Amerithe Arts, there will cana band Coyote a human-powered Grace at 7 p.m. squid, part of the Tears of Joy Theand, headlining at atre show. 8:30 p.m., the Sierra Leone Refuhe Juan gee All Stars. de Fuca Festival aturday runs on RAY KENNEDY brings twin engines: vari- Young bluesman David Jacobs-Strain another 23 ety and surprise. returns to the Juan de Fuca Festival acts, There’s a world of for an After Hours set at the Next including the music and dance Door Gastropub on Sunday night and seven-singer group converging here, a main-stage concert at 2:45 p.m. and much of it will Monday. Groove for be new to festivalThought, the Balgoers. ance Dance Company from Boise and the So taste a few songs from this band or world-fusion band Delhi 2 Dublin. that one, says festival board president TURN TO MAP/8 Nancy Vivolo. BY DIANE URBANI

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Groove for Thought’s seven singers will do a 7 p.m. set Saturday on the Juan de Fuca Festival’s main stage. The jazz vocalists are, from left, Jeff Horenstein, Stephanie Collins, Kelly Kunz, Amanda Kunz, James Niles, Andrea Dilley and Brennan Baglio.

T

The giant squid (Andrew Fridae) attacks the Nautilus in Tears of Joy Theatre’s production of “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.”

WWW.TOJT.ORG

S


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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Power Map: Music, dance, comedy converge CONTINUED FROM 6

CONTINUED FROM 7

You don’t need any special moves. Just nodding your head is a good start. The Sierra Leone Refugee All Stars are slated to give three concerts for Port Angeles-area school children today at the Port Angeles High School Performing Arts Center; then they will headline tonight’s Juan de Fuca Festival lineup with a concert at 8:30 p.m. at the Vern Burton Community Center, 308 W. Fourth St.

Sunday is the day when the Tears of Joy Theatre brings the squid, along with Capt. Nemo and other seagoing creatures, onto the main stage in its rendition of Jules Verne’s “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.” The Portland, Ore., troupe will also haul a 12-foot submarine in for its 1:15 p.m. show.

L

ooking across the lineup of performers from Oregon, California, Idaho, Day or weekend passes Washington, Hawaii, British Columbia, Alberta and Patrons can choose the Africa, festival executive single-day ticket for $20 or director Dan Maguire calls a pass to the entire Juan it “ridiculous,” in a good de Fuca Festival today way. through Monday for $60; There’s music, dance complete details are at and comedy. There’s the www.JFFA.org. Slide Brothers’ gospel set Music and dance, Black at noon Sunday. There’s Nature said, are “the lanGroove for Thought, a guage of the body; the lan- young ensemble doing Steguage of the spirit and the vie Wonder in a jazzy style. language of the people. Maguire booked the group “Just come out, and lisafter seeing them at Seatten.” tle’s Jazz Alley.

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Canadian troubadour Scott Cook will sing on the Juan de Fuca Festival Chamber Stage at 12:30 p.m. Saturday and the Elks Stage at 3 p.m. Sunday.

T

he best way to navigate the festival is with a copy of the Peninsula Daily News’ pullout schedule, available at all festival venues: ■ The Vern Burton Community Center and Chamber Stage, 308 W. Fourth St.; ■ The Elks Naval Lodge, 131 E. First. St.; ■ The After Hours clubs including Bella Italia, 118 E. First St.; Bar N9ne, 229 W. First St.; and the Next Door Gastropub, 113 W. First St. Information about the shows, the workshops and the street fair — which opens at noon today — can also be found at www.JFFA.org. After Hours shows will cap the festivities tonight, Saturday and Sunday, bringing main-stage acts into Bella Italia, Next Door and Bar N9ne at 10:30 p.m. Admission is included with a festival pass. Tickets to the entire fes-

tival, today through Monday, are $60 at the Vern Burton center, while children age 12 and younger get in free. Single-day passes are $20 for today or

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And while the Sierra Leone Refugee All Stars came from West Africa, there are popular hometown acts: Tangoheart, with bandoneon player Bertram Levy of Port Townsend; the Shula Azhar dancers from Port Angeles and the Therapy Session band from Forks, among many others. “It’s extraordinary,” Maguire said, “to have this much talent together in this town.”

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sticking around a stage and giving these unknowns a chance,” unknowns that turned out to be Ray LaMontagne, the Civil Wars and Grace Potter and the Nocturnals. As for Coyote Grace, “I believe that the entertainment value of the show is just as important as the quality of the music,” ElizaMonday and $25 for Saturbeth added. “We all pride day or Sunday. Singer-songwriter Scott ourselves on putting on a Cook of Edmonton, Alberta, really great, engaging, fun, and heartfelt show.” is back at the festival for Groove for Thought’s the second consecutive Jeff Horenstein is all about year. that, too. “A lot of festivals are in “We love to perform a a big field somewhere,” variety of styles: jazz, gossaid Cook, who travels in pel, R & B,” he said. “We’ll his van 10 months out of mix in some classic Stevie the year. “It’s neat to see this one take over a town.” Wonder and Earth, Wind, Ingrid Elizabeth of Coy- and Fire tunes with some jazz standards, all with our ote Grace has strong feelings about music festivals, Groove for Thought spin. “We love all kinds of and about the discoveries music, from classical to they offer. “I have been introduced rock, jazz to pop. That’s what makes a festival like to some of my favorite bands,” she said, “by simply this so great.”


PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Before live studio audience Band invites listeners to recording

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

9

Port Angeles Community Players Second Stage Presents

The Master Builder By Henrik Ibsen Directed by John Manno

BY DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SEQUIM — Lovers of the bluegrass-countryblues sound have a chance to be part of a CD recording session as singer and guitarist Cort Armstrong and his band, FarmStrong, go into Dungeness Community Studios on Saturday, June 1. Armstrong and his wife, stand-up bassist Kia Armstrong, recorded “Live in Dungeness,” their first album together, last December with a live studio audience. With the crowd singing along on the closing track “Will the Circle Be Unbroken,” the CD came out early this year.

New outfit

DIANE URBANI

DE LA

PAZ/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Admission by Donation at the door

Farmstrong, featuring Cort Armstrong, left, and Jim Faddis, is inviting music lovers to a June 1 recording session for a new album. Not pictured are Farmstrong bassist John Pyles and Dobro player Rick Meade. grass player whose bands have included Prairie Flyer; upright bassist John Pyles of Poulsbo and Dobro-banjo-guitar player Rick Meade, newly of Sequim. They are “amazing bluegrass players,” Armstrong said, adding they give the old-time songs fresh flavor. “We’re bringing this chemistry to the studio, to mix with the energy of the live audience,” in two recording sessions at

3:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. June 1. Tickets are on sale at www.BrownPaperTickets. com — search for FarmStrong — at $30 per person including a reception between sessions and a copy of the FarmStrong CD when it comes out.

Thursday gig Listeners also can have a taste of the foursome’s sound at Wind Rose Cellars, the wine bar at 143 W. Washington St., when the

band plays from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Thursdays. “It has taken me some time to get mixed up in a group of this quality. And even though it is brand new, I have high hopes for where [FarmStrong] will go if our stars line up correctly,” said Armstrong. There’s no cover charge for this or other live music at Wind Rose. For more details, phone the venue at 360-681-0690 and visit www.CortArmstrongMusic. com.

Entries sought for wearable art show PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — The first Bring Your Own Wearable Art Show —BYOWAS — is on its way to the Studio Bob event space, and entries are being sought through June 1. Vintage fashions, original wearable art and reconstructed, repurposed and upcycled clothing and jewelry all fit into this June 8 runway show, which is to be a benefit for Serenity House of Clallam County. The entry fee is $20 for up to 10 works of wearable art; entrants must

provide their own models for the show at 8 p.m. at Studio Bob, 1181/2 E. Front St. “We’re hoping to make this an annual event,” organizer Sarah Tucker said, adding that there will be cash prizes for the BYOWAS winners.

Vote with your dollar Richard Stephens, manager of the Serenity House Thrift Store in Port Angeles and a costume designer, will serve as master of ceremonies at the

show, while spectators will vote, with dollars, for their favorite pieces.

Featuring: Nikkole Adams, Julie Belling, Ron Graham, Jim Guthrie, Lola Hassan-Adams, Tim Macausland & Zack Moorman Port Angeles Community Playhouse 1235 E. Lauridsen Blvd. Www.pacommunityplayers.com

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Entry forms Entry forms are available at the Art Up Front gallery adjacent to Studio Bob; at Harbor Art, 110 E. Railroad Ave., and at the Serenity House Thrift Store, 502 E. First St. For more information about entering the BYOWAS, phone 360-7754154 and leave a message or email Sarah@tuckerart.com.

35792109

This time around, the audience will again be invited to take part in the creation of the record. The mix of players is new, though: For this FarmStrong debut album, Armstrong is collaborating with Jim Faddis, a veteran blue-

May 24, 25 7:30pm May 26 2:oo pm

Get home delivery. Call 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 www.peninsuladailynews.com

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10

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

PS

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Nightlife day, 9 p.m.; open mic, Thursday, 9 p.m.

Clallam County

Bella Italia (118 E. First St.) — The Barbary Ghosts (sea chanteys and pub music), tonight, 10:30 p.m.; Shane Philip (world), Saturday, 10:30 p.m.; Damonde Tschritter (comedy), Sunday, 10:30 p.m.

Port Angeles Bar Hop Brewery (124 W. Railroad Ave.) — Locos Only (roots), tonight, 9 p.m. to midnight, no cover. Bar N9ne (229 W. First St.) — Shook Twins (folk), tonight, 10:30 p.m.; LoCura (Latin), Saturday, 10:30 p.m.; The Sam Chase (rock and folk), Sunday, 10:30 p.m.; Karaoke, Wednes-

Castaways Night Club (1213 Marine Drive) — One Shot Molly (rock and blues), Saturday, 8:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.; Country Jam, Thursday,

Front St.) — Jimmy Hoffman Band (country), tonight, 9 p.m.

5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Dupuis Restaurant (256861 U.S. Highway 101) — Bob and Dave (blues), tonight and Saturday, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Fairmount Restaurant (1127 W. U.S. Highway 101) — Dave and Rosalie Secord with Mike Baer (country), tonight, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.; country jam session, Sunday, 5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Front Street Alibi (1605 E.

The Junction Roadhouse (U.S. Highway 101 and state Highway 112, junction) — John Cugno and John McLaughlin (blues), tonight, 8 p.m., cover; Rachael, Mick and Barry (classic rock and country), Sunday, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.; Country Gold, Monday, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.; Joy in Mudville (rock and country), Wednesday, 8 p.m. to 11 p.m.; Ches Ferguson and Friends, Thursday, 7 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Next Door Gastropub (113 W. First St.) — Kate Lynne Logan (singer-songwriter), tonight, 10:30 p.m.; Brooks Robertson (solo guitar), Saturday, 10:30 p.m.; David JacobsStrain (folk and blues), Sunday, 10:30 p.m. Port Angeles Senior Cen-

First came Woodstock...

Send me to school!

Then closer to home–Bumbershoot...

Now here comes

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ter (Seventh and Peabody streets) — Wally’s Boys (ballroom dance favorites), Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., $5, first-timers free. R Bar (132 E. Front St) — Karaoke, Thursday, 8 p.m.

Sequim and Blyn The Cedars at Dungeness Stymie’s Bar and Grill (1965 Woodcock Road) — Rachael and Barry (acoustic), tonight, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. The Oasis Bar and Grill (301 E. Washington St.) — Gil Yslas (singer-songwriter), tonight, 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.; Olympic Big Band Express, Saturday, 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.; Old Sidekicks (classic country), Wednesday, 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Sequim Senior Activity Center (921 E. Hammond St.) — Victor hosts an open mic, Wednesday 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. (sign up 6 p.m.) 7 Cedars Casino (270756 U.S. Highway 101) — Al Harris and Sarah Shea (jazz), tonight, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.; Turner Brothers (rock ‘n’ roll), tonight, 8 p.m. to midnight; Al Harris, Saturday, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.; Unified Culture (reggae), Saturday, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.; Author Unknown (classic Top 40), Sunday, 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.; Comedy Night, Wednesday, 8 p.m. to 9 p.m.; Beer Pong tournament, Thursday, 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.

The Boiler Room (711 Water St.) — Open mic Thursday, sign up 7 p.m., starts at 8, an all ages venue. Ichikawa Japanese Cuisine (1208 Water St.) — Trevor Hanson (classical guitar), Thursday, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Northwest Maritime Center Cafe (421 Water St.) — Steve Grandinetti (solo guitar), Thursday, noon to 2 p.m. The Owl Sprit (218 Polk St.) — Steve Grandinetti (solo guitar), Thursday, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Port Townsend Brewing Co. (330 10th St.) — Scott Pemberton (rock), tonight, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.; Joy in Mudville, Sunday, 3 p.m. to 6 p.m., no cover; Skip Morris Trio (jazz), Wednesday, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., no cover Sirens (823 Water St.) — Toolshed Trio (country and roots), tonight, 10 p.m., $5; Blackberry Bushes String Band (Americana), Saturday, 10 p.m., $7; fiddler jam session, Tuesday, 7 p.m.; open mic, Wednesday, 9 p.m.; karaoke, Thursday, 9 p.m. The Upstage (923 Washington St.) — Soul Katz (soul), tonight, 7:30 p.m.; Hova Burian with Chuck Easton Sextet, 7 p.m., $12 cover; open mic, Monday, 6 p.m. to 11 p.m.; String14 featuring Gilbert Islas and Michael Barr (Americana), Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m., $5 cover.

Wind Rose Cellars (143 W. Washington St.) — Linda Uptown Pub (1016 LawDowdell and Craig Buhler rence St.) — Pies on the Run (jazz), tonight, 6:30 p.m. to (bluegrass), tonight, 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. 8 p.m., no cover; Dream City Roots (reggae), tonight, 9 p.m. Jefferson County to 11 p.m., no cover; Open mic hosted by Meredith, Tuesday, 8 p.m.

Port Ludlow

The Resort at Port Ludlow (1 Heron Road) — Trevor Hanson (classical guitar), tonight, 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Port Townsend Alchemy (842 Washington St.) — Trevor Hanson (classical guitar), Monday, 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.

This listing, which appears each Friday, announces live entertainment at nightspots in Clallam and Jefferson counties. Email live music information, with location, time and cover charge (if any) by noon on Tuesday to news@ peninsuladailynews.com, submit to the PDN online calendar at peninsuladailynews.com, phone 360-417-3527, or fax to 360-4173521.


PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

11

PS At the Movies: Week of May 24-30 From left, Dwayne Johnson, Vin Diesel and Paul Walker star in a scene from “Fast & Furious 6.”

Port Angeles “The Croods” (PG — Animated) — When their cave is destroyed, the Crood family must embark on a comedy adventure into strange and spectacular territory in search of a new home. As if patriarch Grug didn’t already have enough to handle, it goes from bad to worse when they encounter an imaginative nomad named Guy. At Lincoln Theater. Showtimes 4:30 p.m. today through Monday.

Grilled

Cheese

“Epic” (PG — Animated) — When a teenage girl finds herself magically transported into a secret universe, she teams up with an elite band of warriors and a crew of comical, largerthan-life figures, to save their world and ours. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes 5:10 p.m., 7:15 p.m. and 9:20 p.m. daily, plus 1 p.m. and 3:05 p.m. Saturday through Monday. “Fast & Furious 6” (PG-13) — Agent Luke Hobbs enlists Dominic Toretto and his team to bring down former Special Ops soldier Owen Shaw, leader of a unit specializing in vehicular warfare. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes 4:15 p.m., 6:55 p.m. and 9:35 p.m. daily, plus 1:35 p.m. Saturday through Monday.

“Iron Man 3” (PG-13) — Brash-but-brilliant industrialist Tony Stark/Iron Man (Robert

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Where to find the cinemas ■ Deer Park Cinema: East Highway 101 at Deer Park Road, Port Angeles; 360-452-7176. ■ Lincoln Theater: 132 E. First St., Port Angeles; 360-457-7997. ■ The Rose Theatre: 235 Taylor St., Port Townsend; 360-385-1089. ■ Uptown Theatre: Lawrence and Polk streets, Port Townsend; 360-385-3883. ■ Wheel-In-Motor Drive In: 210 Theatre Road, Port Townsend; 360-385-0859.

Downey Jr.) faces down an enemy whose reach knows no bounds. When Stark finds his personal world destroyed at his enemy’s hands, he embarks on a harrowing quest to find those responsible. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes 4:20 p.m., 7 p.m. and 9:40 p.m. daily, plus 1:40 p.m. Saturday through Monday. “Pain and Gain” (R) — Sick of living the poor life, bodybuilder and gym employee Daniel Lugo (Mark Wahlberg) concocts a plan to extort money from a rich Miami businessman. With the help of recently released criminal Paul Doyle (Dwayne Johnson), the “Sun Gym Gang” successfully gets him to sign over all his finances. After surviving an attempted murder, he hires private investi-

gator Ed Du Bois (Ed Harris) to catch the criminals. Based on a true story. At the Lincoln Theater. Showtimes 6:30 p.m. and 9:05 p.m. daily. “Star Trek: Into Darkness” (PG-13) — After the crew of the Enterprise finds an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization, Capt. Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one-man weapon of mass destruction. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes 4:35 p.m., 6:35 p.m., 7:10 p.m., 8:55 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. daily, plus 12:55 p.m., 2 p.m., and 3:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.

Port Townsend “The Great Gatsby” (R) — See synopsis under Port Angeles listings. At Rose Theatre.

Showtimes in 2-D daily at 4 p.m. Showtimes in 3-D daily at 7:10 p.m. plus 12:50 p.m. Saturday through Monday. “Star Trek” (R) — See synopsis under Port Angeles listings. At Rose Theatre. Showtimes in 2-D daily at 4:30 p.m. Showtimes in 3-D at 7:30 p.m. daily plus 1:30 p.m. Saturday through Monday. “Renoir” — It is the summer of 1915, and as the Great War rages to the north, Renoir devotes himself to the female nudes that dominated his late style. Female beauty is his protest, his refuge, his sanity, and Andree becomes his last model and muse. At Rose Theatre. Showtime at 11 a.m. Saturday, Sunday and Monday. “The Hangover: Part III” (PG-13) — See synopsis under Port Angeles listings. At the Uptown Theatre. 5 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. today; 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday; 7:30 p.m. Monday through Wednesday. “42” (PG-13 — ) The story of two men — the great Jackie Robinson and legendary Brooklyn Dodgers GM Branch Rickey — whose brave stand against prejudice forever changed the world by integrating the game of baseball. “The Big Wedding” (R) — Romantic comedy about a charmingly modern family trying to survive a weekend wed-

ding celebration that has the potential to become a full blown family fiasco. At the Wheel-In Motor Movie. Box office opens at 7:30 p.m. with showtime at dusk today through Sunday.

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“The Great Gatsby” (R) — An adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Long Island-set novel, where Midwesterner Nick Carraway is lured into the lavish world of his neighbor, Jay Gatsby. Soon enough, Carraway will see through the cracks of Gatsby’s nouveau riche existence, where obsession, madness and tragedy await. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes 4:15 p.m., 7 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. daily, plus 1:30 p.m. Saturday through Monday.

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“The Hangover: Part III” (R) — This time, there’s no wedding. No bachelor party. What could go wrong, right? But when the Wolfpack hits the road, all bets are off. At the Lincoln Theater. Showtimes (downstairs) 7:40 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. daily, plus 5:30 p.m. today through Monday. Showtimes upstairs are 7:05 p.m. and 9:20 p.m. daily, plus 4:55 p.m. today through Monday.

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PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Leave the ordinary behind. Go extraordinary. The Peninsula’s New Home for Entertainment

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