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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 2013

PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Briefly . . . The event will be held at the Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave., from 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. The Computer Genealogy User’s Group is sorry for the cancellation but TACOMA — A Coast Guard inspector was check- urges the public to join them for “an interesting ing a barge in Tacoma’s and educational round Commencement Bay on Monday to make sure it table.� can be moved without developing another leak. Taco night tonight If a repair is found to be PORT ANGELES — holding, Coast Guard Fairview Grange, 161 Lake spokesman Nathan Littlejohn said, the barge will be Farm Road, will hold a Taco Tuesday night startmoved to the Schnitzer ing at 5 p.m. tonight. Steel recycling operation All the tacos you can eat about a half-mile away to unload the barge’s load of and ice cream will be availcrushed cars. able for $5. Several of the scrap car Children 12 and hulks fell into the bay Sun- younger will eat for free. day after the barge develFor more information, oped a leak and started phone 360-461-9008. listing. They caused a slight sheen of oil on the Mayor to speak water. SEQUIM –– Mayor Ken The sheen was spotted Hays will speak about curduring an overflight just before nightfall Sunday by rent city issues and the centennial celebration at a HH-65 Dolphin helicopter crew from Coast Guard 10 a.m. today. Air Station/Sector Field Hays will speak to the Office Port Angeles. Sequim Dungeness HospiDivers with Global Sal- tal Guild at St. Luke’s vage and Diving repaired a Episcopal Church, 525 N. cracked hull and stopped Fifth Ave. the leak.

Inspector checks on listing barge

Event postponed SEQUIM — Ray Madsen’s Computer Genealogy User’s Group program “1812 Pension and Bounty Land Files� has been postponed and will be rescheduled at a later date to be announced. In its place, Friday’s program will be a round table discussion on anything related to computers and genealogy, your latest successes, failures, brick walls or new finds in genealogy.

Sequim arts talk SEQUIM — Linda Collins Chapman, a sculptor and potter, will speak during Sequim Arts’ monthly meeting at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 525 N. Fifth Ave., Thursday. Collins Chapman’s free presentation will be at 10:45 a.m., after a business meeting at 10 a.m. It is open to the public. For more information, see www.SequimArts.org or phone 360-683-6894. Peninsula Daily News

JOE SMILLIE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

KSQM personality Dorothy Zapata, host of “Dorothy’s Doo-Wop Drive-in,� helps Hellen Haller Elementary fifth-grader Victoria Lelle introduce a Louis Armstrong tune.

Sharing history via radio Fifth-grade students tell Sequim’s tales on KSQM BY JOE SMILLIE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SEQUIM –– The swinging sounds of the Jazz Age are being piped out to listeners of KSQM 91.5 FM this week thanks to a group of fifth-grade students enlisted to help tell the story of the century of Sequim. Helen Haller Elementary student Daisy Ryan told the tale of Susan B.

Anthony and her fight for the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote. “Wow, that’s pretty important,� she said off-mic to her mother Thursday. With Dorothy Zapata, host of “Dorothy’s Doo-Wop Drive-In,� recording, Ryan and 10 other fifth-graders hit KSQM as disc jockeys Thursday and Friday to record radio spots about the history of sounds, society

and Sequim during the 1920s. Each month has been dedicated to represent a decade of the city’s history during this centennial year. February marks the Roaring ’20s. The spots are airing on the volunteer-run radio station at 7:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. through Friday.

of Louis Armstrong tunes, Victoria Lelle told soon-tobe listeners how jazz exploded during the nation’s celebration over the end of World War I. The scripts were prepared by Patsene Dashiell, community liaison for the Sequim School District, and Al Freiss, a volunteer at Greywolf Elementary who is one of the three nominees for the Chamber of Commerce’s Citizen of the Year award, which will be awarded today. Centennial events continue throughout the year, highlighted by an old-fashioned Fourth of July celebration and street dance, and culminating with the centennial finale at 7 Cedars Casino on Nov. 2.

Tales of the era

Why is Washington state not requiring a social security number to get a driver’s license?

The students read into the radio station’s microphones tales from the era about the city, nation and the music that set the beat. Their stories cover the establishment of Prohibition, the construction of Sequim’s first brick schoolhouse and gymnasium, and the construction of the first ________ highway through town, now called Old Olympic HighSequim-Dungeness Valley Ediway. tor Joe Smillie can be reached at As she introduced a pair 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or at

Senate bill 5012 is sitting in the Transportation Committee in Olympia which could cut down on fraudulent licenses, but the co-chairs refuse to even bring the bill up for hearing.

Church auction to benefit Youth Mission scheduled PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Please help pass this bill by calling Governor Jay Inslee at 360-902-4111 or co-chairs of the Transportation Committee Senator Tracey Eide at 360-786-7658 and Senator Curtis King at 360-786-7626. Tell them you support the bill and you want a hearing. Tell your friends to call! Thanks for your help!

live auction. Live auction items include: a pheasant hunting trip, a monthly flower bouquet for a year from AvantGarde Florist, gourmet Japanese dinner for six guests, a 24-inch-by-30-inch Ross Hamilton print, a driftwood sculpture, a lifesized deer bust and a chance to put a pie in the face of the church pastor.

SEQUIM — Dungeness Community Church will hold a benefit to raise funds for its Youth Mission program at the church, 45 Eberle Lane, on Saturday. Early bidding on silentauction items begins at 6:30 p.m., with a variety show and dessert bar at 7 p.m., followed by a

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A Washington State driver’s license is used as proof of identity to obtain education benefits, DSHS benefits, government housing, medical and dental care (SEAMAR). Benefits to non-citizens are estimated to be $2.7 billion a year in Washington State alone!

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Please call: Governor Jay Inslee at 360-902-4111 Senator Tracey Eide at 360-786-7658 Senator Curtis King at 360-786-7626

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Senate Bill 5012 -Summary“Requires persons obtaining or renewing their state-issued driver’s licenses or related identification to show proof of their United States citizenship or their lawful presence within the United States. Requires the department of licensing to: (1) Maintain records of the applicant’s status as a citizen or non-citizen; (2) Make the records available to the Secretary of State and state and local criminal justice agencies; and (3) Verify the status of an applicant through the systematic alien verification for entitlements program or through verification with the social security administration.�

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