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Port Angeles-Sequim-West End

October 14-15, 2011

YOUR FRIDAY/SATURDAY WEEKEND PLANNER OUTDOORS:

OUTLOOK: Mix of sun and clouds; chilly

TALES:

SILVER:

Weather to hinder bird hunting

Storytelling fest in Port Angeles

Fine arts center’s 25th anniversary

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Peninsula Spotlight

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Peninsula College’s president to move on Keegan to lead larger Skagit Valley, alma mater By Tom Callis

Peninsula Daily News

Chris Tucker/Peninsula Daily News

Peninsula College President Tom Keegan oversaw unprecedented expansion of the college in his decade-long tenure.

Tom Keegan, who led Peninsula College through an unprecedented decade of growth with new campus buildings and facilities in Port Angeles as well as larger classroom satellites in Port Townsend and Forks, is leaving. Keegan announced Thursday that he accepted the presidency of Skagit Valley College, where he received his associate of arts degree in 1978 and was the lead scorer and captain of its championship soccer team. “I’m honored to be able to lead a great college and the college that set me on my [career] path,” he said during an interview Thursday.

Keegan, 53, was picked Wednesday from an original pool of 40 candidates to lead the much larger college — which also has learning operations on Whidbey Island and into the San Juans — and is expected to start his new job in Mount Vernon sometime early next year.

Appointed 10 years ago He became head of Peninsula College 10 years ago and oversaw the start of its first four-year program and completion of several buildings on the main Port Angeles campus, including newly opened Maier Hall, a new library, state-of-theart soccer complex and The Longhouse. Turn

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First-degree murder charged Man newly back from Texas accused of premeditation

Special bonus in today’s edition THIS WEEKEND’S EDITION of the Peninsula Daily News includes Spry magazine, devoted to a healthier you. This month’s edition features inspiring stories in the conquering of breast cancer.

Inside today

Clallam, ONP war over trail Park’s ‘barriers’ bar wheelchair access, county contends By Rob Ollikainen Peninsula Daily News

By Rob Ollikainen Peninsula Daily News

PORT ANGELES — A man suspected of fatally shooting his next-door neighbor in south Port Angeles four months ago, then moving to Texas, was charged Thursday with first-degree premeditated murder. Clallam County Superior Court Judge George L. Wood set a $1 million bail for Bobby J. Smith, 58. Smith will be arraigned in Superior Court on Friday, on Oct. 21. Port Angeles police said Smith shot Robert Fowler, 63, at 211 Vashon Ave. on June 20. Smith, who lived at the home where the shooting occurred, was not charged until police completed a lengthy investigation. The investigation included a State Patrol crime lab examination of a knife Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News that was found at the scene and other evi- Bobby J. Smith, left, listens as public defender Harry Gasnick speaks dence. on his behalf during Smith’s first appearance in Clallam County Turn to Charged/A5 Superior Court on Thursday.

PORT ANGELES — Clallam County has accused Olympic National Park of stacking the deck against a wheelchairaccessible addition to the Spruce Railroad Trail at Lake Crescent. In a letter to National Park Service Pacific West Regional Director Christine Lehnertz, county commissioners said there are “serious violations” in the park-led National Environmental Protection Act, or NEPA, process. Specifically, the county said the park knowingly released a factually incorrect environmental assessment to the public after the county updated its proposal for the 3.5-mile segment and changed the “purpose and need statement” for the historic Spruce railroad grade at the last minute. “With considerable fanfare, and to their great credit, Olympic National Park has initiated a project to remove two dams on the Elwha River that have been a barrier to salmon migration for almost 100 years,” the letter says, referring to the dismantling of the dams that began last month. Turn

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Sequim vintner joins growing number on Peninsula who crush own grapes

The full press

By Jeff Chew

Peninsula Daily News

SEQUIM — It’s the exciting time of year for winemakers such as David Volmut, who is crushing thousands of pounds of grapes to make wine that will see its sipping time in 2013. “Wine really teaches you patience,” Volmut said while watching the mechanical grape “bladder press” slowly and gently crush the juice out of Primitivo grapes, a large bin of which was

Sequim winemaker David Volmut shovels some Primitivo grapes into the grape press at Olympic Cellars, which loaned the equipment to him for his first crush on the North Olympic Peninsula.

waiting nearby Monday for the annual press. “This is the fun part,” he added. “This is Day One going forward. You’re working for the grapes.” He is crushing about 15 tons of grapes, a mixture of Barbera, Dolcetto, Nebbiolo, Orange Muscat, Pinot Grigio and Viognier. It has involved a lot of planning and 14- to 18-hour work days, he said. Turn

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Jeff Chew/Peninsula Daily News

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UpFront

Friday, October 14, 2011

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Tundra

The Samurai of Puzzles

By Chad Carpenter

Copyright © 2011, 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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Newsroom, sports CONTACTS! To report news: 360-417-3531, or call one of our local offices: Sequim, 360-681-2391; Jefferson County/Port Townsend, 360-385-2335; West End/Forks, 800-826-7714, Ext. 531 Sports desk/reporting a sports score: 360-417-3525 Letters to Editor: 360-417-3536 Club news, “Seen Around” items, subjects not listed above: 360-417-3527

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Peninsula Daily News (ISSN 1050-7000), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Horvitz Newspapers, published each morning Sunday through Friday by Northwest Media (Washington) L.P. 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. Member Audit Bureau of Circulations The Associated Press Contents copyright © 2011, Peninsula Daily News

Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

Actress has book deal with Amazon FILMMAKERACTRESS PENNY MARSHALL has a book deal with a fresh twist: The publisher is Amazon.com. Marshall’s agent, Dan Strone, announced Tuesday that the online Marshall retailer would release Marshall’s memoir My Mother Was Nuts in fall 2012. Marshall is still remembered fondly for co-starring in the 1970s sitcom “Laverne and Shirley,” and she is among the few women directors to have major commercial success in Hollywood, her bigscreen hits including “Big” and “A League of Their Own.” According to Strone, Marshall will also write about ex-husband Rob Reiner, her friendship with John Belushi and her fight against lung and brain cancer in 2009.

The Associated Press

A

new fragrance

American country singer Taylor Swift launches her debut fragrance, “Wonderstruck,” at Macy’s Herald Square on Thursday in New York. “I can’t say I’m excited about the Yankees losing or there not being a basketball season yet, but I am excited about writing this book,” Marshall said in a statement. “People have always asked me how I got from the Bronx to Hollywood, so

I thought it was time to tell how it all happened. I have had many lives — not in the Shirley MacLaine sense — and you will hear about them all. Just don’t expect any recipes. I don’t cook.” Marshall’s memoir will be available as a hardcover and an e-book.

Passings

Did You Win? State lottery results

Thursday’s Daily Game: 9-5-3 Thursday’s Keno: 02-08-09-16-20-23-24-2629-31-34-35-39-44-52-5456-60-64-79 Thursday’s Match 4: 03-14-17-23

WEDNESDAY’S QUESTION: What’s your opinion of the Occupy Wall Street groups? Great message, effort  32.7% Troublemakers

6.8%

Good idea, poor communication  Shut up and go home

21.6% 33.9%

Other  5.0% Total votes cast: 1,296 Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com

By The Associated Press

ARTHUR DUBIN, 88, a leading historian of the golden age of American passenger railroads, when trains bore names like ocean liners and champagne glasses were filled by elegantly attired servers, died Oct. 3 at a nursing home in Riverwoods, Ill. His death was confirmed by his son, Peter. Mr. Dubin, an architect, had been devoted to trains since he watched them, fascinated, as a child as they rumbled near his home in Chicago, many of them luxury trains like the 20th Century Limited, the Silver Meteor and the Prairie State Special that whisked the well-to-do from state to state and across the continent in plush compartments, some with not even a coach for the common traveler. He went on to spend most of his spare time as an adult researching and writing two of the bestknown works on passenger railroads: Some Classic Trains (1964) and More Classic Trains (1974). The books are replete with scores of photographs Mr. Dubin acquired during a lifetime of collecting railroad paraphernalia, includ-

Peninsula Daily News PENINSULA POLL

and played the role of Meg Baldwin in the soap opera “General Hospital.” She also played Mrs. Modell Laura in 1969 Brooks on the primetime soap opera “Peyton Place.” Among her many television other roles, she was a regular on “Twilight Zone,” “Alfred Hitchcock Presents,” “Perry Mason” and “Maverick.” _________ At one point in her PATRICIA MODELL, career, Mrs. Modell had 80, the wife of former NFL appeared on more television team owner Art Modell and shows than any other a longtime television actress, woman in U.S. history. Her record was eventuhas died. ally broken by one of her Mrs. Modell was probest friends, Lucille Ball. nounced dead at around She married Art Modell, 1:30 p.m. Wednesday afterformer owner and president noon, the Baltimore Ravens of the Cleveland Browns announced after being contacted by Mrs. Modell’s son. and Baltimore Ravens, in 1969. She had been hospitalized She retired from acting for around five months. at that time and immersed During a 22-year acting career, Patricia Breslin Mod- herself in her family and community improvement. ell performed on the New Born in New York, Mrs. York stage, in motion picModell was the daughter of tures and on television. Edward and Marjorie BresShe starred in the “People’s Choice” television series lin. with actor Jackie Cooper ing timetables, travel brochures, station signs, menus, dinnerware, carfloor plans, porters’ uniforms and paintings of trains rolling across grand landscapes. Robert S. McGonigal, the editor of Classic Trains magazine, called Mr. Dubin “one of the premier historians” in the field. For Mr. Dubin, something was lost when the plane and the car brought an end to the glory days of the passenger train.

Laugh Lines A TEAM OF American scientists just traveled to Russia to search for the Abominable Snowman. That’s right, a mythical creature that probably doesn’t exist. Or as Republicans call it, “a presidential candidate.” Jimmy Fallon

NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.

Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Rex ­Wilson at 360-4173530 or email rex.wilson@peninsuladailynews.com.

Peninsula Lookback

From the pages of the Peninsula Daily News

1936 (75 years ago)

The summer’s extensive trail construction program in Olympic National Forest is coming to a close, and construction Superintendent A.E. Glover said 40 miles of trail have been constructed or reconstructed and 860 miles more have been maintained. The trails where the greatest amount of work was done: ■  Dry Creek, Black and White Lena Lake and Four Stream in the Hoodsport district. ■  Little Quilcene and Three Forks in the Quilcene district. ■  Skyline-Queets, Six Stream and Wynooche in the Quinault district. ■  Pyramid Peak in the Seen Around vicinity of Lake Crescent. Peninsula snapshots The Aurora-Happy Lake trail has been extended for VISITOR FROM several miles and will ITALY who speaks no Eng- eventually provide a lish buying a hat locally through route from the Sol that fits just right — a Duc River along the Sol Seattle Seahawks hat . . . Duc-Lake Crescent divide to Olympic Hot Springs. 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.

1961 (50 years ago) The SS Fairport of the Waterman Steamship Co.

is scheduled to arrive at the Port of Port Angeles dock on Tuesday to load 1.5 million board feet of lumber for shipment to the Army in Korea. Military cargoes are exempt from the West Coast maritime tie-up currently in force. The lumber was cut by Port Angeles mills and is stacked on the port fills. The Fairport will replace the Greek freighter SS Florentina, which is currently at the port dock loading 350,000 board feet of 4-by-4 squares of rough hemlock, manufactured by Hendricks Lumber Co. west of Port Angeles and bound for Japan.

1986 (25 years ago) In one of the largest displays of Navy power in this area since World War II, the battleship USS New Jersey and the aircraft carrier USS Constellation are scheduled to sail past Port Angeles and Port Townsend this morning. They, four support ships and a contingent of about 8,000 sailors are en route to Seattle for the Navy’s 211th birthday celebration.

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS FRIDAY, Oct. 14, the 287th day of 2011. There are 78 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■  On Oct. 14, 1960, Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kennedy suggested the idea of a Peace Corps while addressing an audience of students at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. On this date: ■  In 1066, Normans under William the Conqueror defeated the English at the Battle of Hastings. ■  In 1586, Mary, Queen of Scots, went on trial in England, accused of committing treason against Queen Elizabeth I. Mary was beheaded in February 1587. ■  In 1890, Dwight D. Eisenhower, 34th president of the

United States, was born in Denison, Texas. ■  In 1912, Theodore Roosevelt, campaigning for the presidency, was shot in the chest in Milwaukee, Wis. Despite the wound, he went ahead with a scheduled speech. ■  In 1939, a German U-boat torpedoed and sank the HMS Royal Oak, a British battleship anchored at Scapa Flow in Scotland’s Orkney Islands; 833 of the more than 1,200 men aboard were killed. ■  In 1944, German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel committed suicide rather than face execution for allegedly conspiring against Adolf Hitler. ■  In 1947, Air Force test pilot Charles E. (“Chuck”) Yeager broke the sound barrier as he flew the

experimental Bell XS-1 (later X-1) rocket plane over Muroc Dry Lake in California. ■  In 1961, the Frank Loesser musical “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying,” starring Robert Morse as J. Pierrepont Finch, opened on Broadway. ■  In 1977, singer Bing Crosby died outside Madrid at age 74. ■  In 1987, a 58-hour drama began in Midland, Texas, as 18-month-old Jessica McClure slid 22 feet down an abandoned well at a private day care center; she was rescued Oct. 16. ■  Ten years ago: As U.S. jets opened a second week of raids in Afghanistan, President George W. Bush sternly rejected a Taliban offer to discuss handing over Osama bin Laden to a third country, saying, “They must have not

heard. There’s no negotiations.” ■  Five years ago: The U.N. Security Council voted unanimously to impose punishing sanctions on North Korea for carrying out a nuclear test. Michael and Sandra Bentler were shot to death along with their three daughters at their southeast Iowa home. Shawn Bentler, the couple’s son, was convicted of killing his family and is serving a life sentence. The Detroit Tigers swept the American League championship with a 6-3 victory over the Oakland Athletics. ■  One year ago: Chile’s 33 rescued miners posed with President Sebastian Pinera and were examined by doctors a day after they were freed from their underground prison.


Peninsula Daily News for Friday/Saturday, October 14-15, 2011

Second Front Page

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Briefly: Nation Hedge fund executive gets stiff sentence

Boehner told Obama that Republicans are willing to address new transportation and infrastructure spending but “in a fiscally responsible way.” The Boehner-Obama conversation took place as Senate NEW YORK — Raj Rajarat- Republicans introduced legislanam, the hedge fund billionaire tion aimed at creating jobs by at the center of the biggest overhauling the nation’s tax insider-trading case in U.S. his- laws, cutting business rules and tory, was sentenced Thursday to boosting offshore oil exploration. 11 years behind bars — the The GOP bill is called the stiffest punishment ever handed “Jobs Through Growth Act” and out for the crime. doesn’t include a single item in “His crimes President Barack Obama’s jobs and the scope legislation, which Senate of his crimes Republicans killed in a Tuesday reflect a virus night vote. in our business culture Iranians blamed that needs to WASHINGTON — President be eradicated,” Barack Obama said Thursday U.S. District that officials at the “highest levJudge Richard Rajaratnam els” of the Iranian government J. Holwell must be held accountable for a said. brazen and bizarre plot to “Simple justice requires a assassinate the Saudi ambassalengthy sentence.” The 54-year-old founder of the dor to the United States on American soil, insisting leaders Galleon Group hedge fund was of the world will believe the U.S. also fined $10 million and ordered to forfeit $53.8 million in case without dispute once they absorb the details. what the judge said were illicit U.S. officials, meanwhile, conprofits from trading on confidenfirmed the Obama administratial corporate information. Prosecutors said Rajaratnam tion has had direct contact with made as much as $75 million in Iran over the allegations. The U.S. ambassador to the all by cultivating a network of United Nations, Susan Rice, friends, former classmates and other tipsters at various compa- met with Iranian officials at Iran’s mission to the U.N. on nies and investment firms who Wednesday — a highly unusual supplied him with early word on contact for two countries that do such things as mergers and not have diplomatic relations. earnings announcements. Obama would not say In return, they received kickwhether Iran’s supreme leader, backs or a chance to get in on Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, or its the action. president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, knew of the alleged plan. Jobs bill talks Yet he called it part of a patWASHINGTON — House tern of “dangerous and reckless Speaker John Boehner and behavior” by the Iranian governPresident Barack Obama talked ment and said people within about jobs legislation Thursday that government were aware of in a 10-minute phone call, the a murder-for-hire plot. Ohio Republican’s office said. The Associated Press

Colorado State Patrol

7 injured as van slams into cattle trailer The Associated Press

KIT CARSON, Colo. — A van driven by a sheriff’s deputy who ran a group home for adopted and foster children collided with an empty cattle trailer Thursday in a highway construction zone, killing him and five children and injuring seven other children. Howard Mitchell, 57, was taking 12 of the children from the home in Kit Carson to Eads at the

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — American drone-fired missiles killed a ranking member of the militant Haqqani network Thursday in northwestern Pakistan, striking a group that Washington claims is the top threat in Afghanistan and is supported by Pakistani security forces, local intelligence officials said. A senior U.S. official confirmed the death of the Haqqani

The survivors of Thursday’s crash include an Australian pilot and a New Zealand pilot, Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said in a statement. The Airlines PNG Dash 8 aircraft crashed while flying from Lae to the resort hub of Madang on the South Pacific island nation’s north coast, Papua New Guinea’s Accident Investigation Commission spokesman Sid O’Toole said. The Associated Press

time of the crash around 7:30 a.m, troopers said. The school district in Eads, about 15 miles away, said on its website that the Mitchell family had close ties to the community. The children who died ranged in age from 4 to 17 and lived in the home for adopted and foster children, said Kiowa County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Chris Sorensen. Seven other children in the van were hospitalized. The truck driver, of Cheyenne, Wyo., was treated at a hospital and released. The accident happened on a stretch of highway south of Kit Carson that has been under repair for the past month. One lane was closed, and the

collision occurred at the back of a line of traffic about 1,000 feet long, said Stacey Stegman, a spokeswoman for the Colorado Department of Transportation. Sorensen said the normal speed limit on the highway is 65 mph, but speeds were reduced because of the construction zone. Meteorologists said weather conditions in the area at the time were clear, no wind and temperatures in the low 30s. Kit Carson is about 130 miles southeast of Denver. U.S. 287, a mostly two-lane highway, cuts across the sparsely populated eastern plains of Colorado and is popular with truckers on northsouth trips through the state.

Royal wedding King Jigme Khesar Namgyal Wangchuck and Queen Jetsun Pema walk together after they were married in Punakha, Bhutan, on Thursday. The 31-year-old reformist monarch of the small Himalayan kingdom wed his commoner bride in a series of ceremonies Thursday in a 17th-century monastic fortress.

2 aid workers kidnapped from Kenya camp

Militant network hit

The Associated Press

Deputy, 5 children die in Colo. plains wreck

Briefly: World commander, identifying him as Janbaz Zadran. The strike came as U.S. special envoy NAIROBI, Kenya — Susto Afghanistan pected Somali militants entered and Pakistan the world’s largest refugee camp Marc GrossZadran Thursday and abducted two man arrived Spanish women working with in Pakistan to improve ties an aid group after shooting and between Washington and Islamwounding their Kenyan driver abad that have been severely — the third kidnapping of Euro- strained by stepped-up Ameripeans in Kenya in six weeks. can claims of Pakistan assisPolice pursued the gunmen tance to the Haqqanis. by land and air, just as they had Two other militants were done following a nighttime kid- killed in the attack close in the napping of a French woman Haqqani stronghold of North from an island resort earlier Waziristan, the group’s main this month. sanctuary along the Afghan borIn September, a British der, said the Pakistani officials woman was abducted — and in the region. her husband was shot to death — at a coastal resort. 28 die in crash The kidnappings by armed PORT MORESBY, Papua Somalis underscore the ease New Guinea — Twenty-eight with which militants can cross people were killed and four othinto Kenya, take hostages and ers survived when their plane return to a land where power is crashed into the remote forests determined by AK-47s and ban- of Papua New Guinea, Austradoliers of ammunition. lian officials said today.

via

A van carrying children is crumpled after colliding with a tractor-trailer rig on U.S. 287 near Kit Carson, Colo., about 130 miles from Denver. Five children and the driver, a sheriff’s deputy, were killed.

The Associated Press

Man accused of Calif. salon rampage in court day before The Associated Press

SEAL BEACH, Calif. — Scott Dekraai’s neighbors considered him one of the friendliest guys on the block, a man who invited them over for pool parties and played catch with his son in his yard. Friends of his ex-wife, though, said she lived in fear of the man now accused of gunning down her and seven other people at the hair salon where she worked. He suffered post-traumatic stress disorder from a 2007 tugboat accident that mangled his leg and left a colleague dead. His marriage to Michelle Fournier was falling apart even before that, and the court battle over their 7-year-old son was still raging Wednesday, when Dekraai

Quick Read

is accused of spraying the Salon Meritage with gunfire. A m o n g those killed was Fournier, his ex-wife. The salon’s p o p u l a r Dekraai owner, Randy Fannin, also died. Fournier’s boyfriend, Michael Warzybok, said that at a court hearing Tuesday, a judge had pressed Dekraai to explain why he needed more time with his son than his current custody arrangement called for. Warzybok said a courtappointed psychologist had found the roughly 50-50 arrangement

was working. “All of a sudden, he didn’t get his way,” said Warzybok, who was interviewed by the psychologist along with Fournier’s co-workers. Dekraai also had asked Fournier to meet for coffee Wednesday, the day of the shootings, but she turned him down. Fournier had indicated to friends and in court documents that she was afraid of her exhusband. Her friend Sharyn White said that just weeks before the killings, she told her that Dekraai had stopped by the salon and threatened to kill her and others. There is no sign that Fournier sought a restraining order against her ex-husband, though other friends agree she was afraid.

. . . more news to start your day

Nation: Air controllers err more often, report says

Nation: House returns to abortion health care issue

Nation: Parolee convicted of home invasion deaths

World: Deadly storm also threatens Mexico games

A REPORT BY a government watchdog says errors by air traffic controllers in the vicinity of airports as well as incidents in which there was an unauthorized plane, vehicle or person on a runway have increased sharply in the past three years. The Government Accountability Office report released Thursday said errors by controllers working at radar facilities that handle approaches and departures within about 30 miles of an airport have more than doubled. The report also said runway incursions at airports with control towers nearly doubled between 2008 and this year.

THE HOUSE ON Thursday returned to an abortion issue that nearly sank President Barack Obama’s health care law last year with legislation that bars an insurance plan regulated under the new law from covering abortion if any of its customers receive federal subsidies. The legislation, which passed 251172, is unlikely to be considered by the Democratic-led Senate and faces a veto threat from Obama. But it gives House Republicans, focused this year on cutting spending and reducing the size of the federal government, a chance to reaffirm their credentials on social conservative issues.

A PAROLED BURGLAR was convicted Thursday of murdering a woman and her two daughters in a gruesome 2007 home invasion in an affluent Connecticut suburb in which family members were tied up, molested, doused in gas and left to die in a fire. He now faces a possible death sentence. Joshua Komisarjevsky, whose accomplice is already on Connecticut’s death row, stood as jurors declared him guilty of all 17 charges he faced, including capital felony killing, kidnapping, arson and sexual assault. He yawned as he was led out of the courtroom.

MEXICAN AUTHORITIES ON Thursday raised to six the death toll from Hurricane Jova, which hit along the Pacific coast as a Category 2 storm, and warned that the storm’s remnants could affect today’s opening ceremonies of the Pan American Games in Guadalajara. Heavy rain falling on Mexico’s west coast also may affect training sessions for the games’ triathlon, sailing and beach volleyball competitions in the resort of Puerto Vallarta just north of where Jova hit land early Wednesday. Farther south, rain on southern Mexico and Central America was blamed for the deaths of 15 people.


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PeninsulaNorthwest

Friday, October 14, 2011 — (C)

Peninsula Daily News

Crush: Little help from friends Continued from A1 It is Volmut’s first crush on the North Olympic Peninsula — his fourth time in Washington — and he is doing it at Olympic Cellars, 255410 U.S. Highway 101 near O’Brien Road. Kathy Charlton, owner and manager of Olympic Cellars, is to thank; she loaned him the equipment. Volmut, owner of Wind Rose Cellars of Sequim, periodically tastes the juice to make sure there is not too much astringency — that harsh, bitter taste that comes from grape seeds. The juice is pumped out of the bottom of the press into a portable 330-gallon tank on the back of Volmut’s pickup truck. He will truck the future wine to age in barrels at his home in Sequim. But he had to find a location and equipment for the crush. “I was looking for a place to do it, and Kathy was open to it,” he said. Charlton said she was happy to loan the equipment to Volmut because her own winemaker was away on sabbatical leave, and the equipment was not being used anyway. Charlton’s grapes are being crushed in Walla Walla, she said.

ALSO . . . ■ For a video of the Wind Rose crush, visit www. peninsuladailynews.com.

But even if they weren’t, she would help Volmut, she added. “Making wine takes a lot of time and a lot of money,” she said, adding that she would continue to help Volmut. “It’s just great that [the equipment] is getting used.”

Watch crushing today Volmut will continue crushing Primitivo grapes at Olympic Cellars today, he said. Anyone interested in watching the process and asking questions can drop by. His winery will be the ninth member of the Olympic Peninsula Wineries group from Port Angeles to Port Townsend by the time of the Red Wine & Chocolate event Feb. 11-12 and Feb. 18-20, Charlton said. The other eight wineries in the group crush grapes from Eastern Washington, Charlton said. Volmut is unique this year in that this is his first crush on the Peninsula. After letting the grapes ferment almost nine days, Volmut started dumping grapes into the press for

crushing over the weekend. It drew a number of questions from curious visitors to Olympic Cellars. Volmut, who learned the craft in Eastern Washington at Yakima Valley Comm­unity Colleges viticulture and enology school in Grandview and interned at Olsen Estates Winery in Prosser, is producing Italian-style wines. Those are what his family drank when he was growing up, he fondly recalled.

Joins other wineries Volmut, who along with his wife and winery partner, Jennifer States, moved in January to Sequim from the Tri-Cities area in Eastern Washington, joined other wineries and cideries now established across the Peninsula. States, who worked for the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, now works for PNNL’s Sequim Marine Research Operation, also known as Battelle, in relationship management for renewable energy. Wind Rose Cellars’ tasting room is at 155 W. Cedar St., Suite B in Sequim, and Volmut said his Bravo Rosso, made from grapes grown at vineyards on Wahluke Slope and Coyote Can-

yon-Horse Heaven Hills, and the Barbera Rose, from Wahluke Slope, Columbia Valley and Red Mountain grapes, are selling well in Seattle. Volmut opened the Wind Rose Cellars tasting room in July. He said he hopes to market his wines more locally and is releasing two new wines Nov. 12: a 2009 Barbera of grapes from Red Mountain and a 2009 Nebbiolo from Wahluke Slope. Both wines are being aged for 22 months in oak barr­els. “Both have a big, bold flavor and are good with food or just to drink,” he said, calling them “the Cabernet of Italy.” Wind Rose Cellars now produces about 700 cases a year, and Volmut said he plans to produce a maximum of 1,200 cases a year. The tasting room’s hours are from noon to 6 p.m. Fridays through Mondays. The tasting room will remain open until Christmas. More information can be found at www.windrose cellars.com, at the winery’s Facebook page or by emailing wine@windrosecellars. com. The wineries in the Olympic Peninsula Wineries group are Olympic Cell­ ars, Harbinger, Camarade-

Jeff Chew/Peninsula Daily News

David Volmut, right, is helped by his brother, Bill, as they pump grapes into a press to crush for a future vintage. rie Cellars and Black Diamond in Port Angeles; Fairwinds, Sorensen Cellars and Eaglemount Wine & Cider in Port Townsend; and Finnriver Farm & Cidery in Chimacum. For more information on the Olympic Peninsula

Wineries, visit www. olympicpeninsulawineries. org.

________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Jeff Chew can be reached at 360-681-2391 or at jeff.chew@ peninsuladailynews.com.

Keegan: President called ‘a visionary leader’ Continued from A1 dent at its next meeting, Nov. 1. Skagit Valley College Also under Keegan’s tenure, Peninsula expanded its has an enrollment of 23,000; learning facilities by mov- Peninsula College has ing into a building of Fort about 8,100 students. Worden State Park in Port Townsend and into a larger Lauds college space in downtown Forks. Keegan lauded Penin“He’s been a visionary sula College for being an leader, and we’ve appreci- innovator in areas such as ated his service,” Peninsula workforce education and College Board of Trustees added that he is proud to Chairwoman Julie have worked with a staff McCulloch said. with a strong sense of comShe said the board will munity and a commitment begin discussing the selec- to education. “It’s the people who tion process for a new presi-

make the college,” he said. “It’s the individuals, their sense of community.” Skagit Valley College board member John Stephens said Keegan was selected to replace outgoing President Gary Tollefson because he was seen as a man with a vision who works well with community groups and leaders. “We’re happy to have seen he’s been able to do so many good things for your community,” he said. “And we’re hoping that he can do the same kind of

things for us.” Stephens said Tollefson is scheduled to leave Jan. 1, but a starting date for Keegan has not been determined. “We want to be fair to Peninsula College,” he said, “so he can make arrangements.” Stephens said Keegan’s pay is still to be negotiated. Jerry Nichols, Peninsula College Foundation board member, and Port Angeles School District Superintendent Jane Pryne both said he will be missed.

Nichols said Keegan was not the kind of administrator who was there to keep the seat warm. “He’s been great, and you can see that in the buildings we have here now,” he said. Pryne called Keegan a down-to-earth but professional college president. “He’s wonderful to work with,” she said. “He’s very professional, and yet he is truly a stellar human being.” Keegan went on from Skagit to earn a master’s degree in education from

Western Washington University and a doctorate in educational leadership and policy studies from the University of Washington. Prior to coming to Peninsula College, he was president of instruction and student services at Columbia Basin College and the vice president for student success at South Puget Sound Community College.

________ Reporter Tom Callis can be reached at 360-417-3532 or at tom.callis@peninsuladailynews. com.

Trail: County’s letter criticizes ONP’s trail efforts Continued from A1 tin declined to comment, said Barb Maynes, park “Quietly however, and to spokeswoman. “We’re still reviewing the their discredit, they appear to be ready to place barriers letter,” Maynes said. “The regional district in the way of making the Spruce Railroad Trail manager will be formulatwheelchair accessible,” the ing a response to the commissioners’ letter says. county.” Clallam County has “The park, evidently, is willing to spend $325 mil- secured $1.3 million in fedlion to remove fish barriers, eral grants to build the secbut unwilling to allow ond phase of the Spruce development of a funded, Railroad Trail on the north universally accessible, sec- shore of the iconic lake. tion of the Olympic Discovery Trail along Lake Cres- Project details cent.” The project, which Olympic National Park includes the rehabilitation Superintendent Karen Gusof two railroad tunnels, will link to a 6.5-mile segment of 10-foot-wide paved trail that the county built furFOR OLD COINS ther to the west in 2009. Once completed, the Spruce Railroad Trail will become a key bridge in the 140-mile-long, multiuse

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Olympic Discovery Trail, which will eventually connect Port Townsend to the Pacific Ocean at LaPush. The idea is to build the trail on the old railroad grade on the north side of the lake to allow bicyclists, hikers, runners, rollers bladers, equestrians and other users to bypass the traffic hazards of U.S. Highway 101 on the south shore. The county intends to make the entire length of the Olympic Discovery Trail compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act. So far, about 40 miles of paved wheelchair-accessible trail has been built. Commissioner Mike Doherty on Tuesday said the four-page letter explains “a few of the concerns we have with the environmental assessment process related to the Olympic Discovery Trail segment at Lake Crescent on the old Spruce Railroad bed.” He said the county hopes

1A5136083

Lehnertz will consider the ally incorrect EA document county’s concerns and “take placed before the public,” action.” the letter says. County officials said Assessment they expected the park to update planning documents A key point of contention with the correct amount of is the environmental fill removed, of trees assessment for the trail. removed, and to change According to the letter, maps to reflect the revised Gustin asked the county to alignment. provide comments for an “You can well imagine administrative review of our consternation to find the assessment by Sept. 9. that Superintendent GusCounty engineer Ross tin and her staff allowed Tyler responded with a the draft EA to go forward revised proposal that the for public comment with county said corrected erro- none of these corrections,” neous environmental the letter says. impact calculations. Tyler said the county’s County proposal modified proposal brings it The county proposes an more in line with the park’s 8-foot-wide paved portion preferred proposal. “This good faith offering for ADA compliance and was an attempt to reestab- safety in the middle of the lish a cooperative relation- railroad grade. There would be a 4-footship with ONP staff,” the letter from the county com- wide gravel path on one side for hikers and horsemission says. “That offer was appar- back riders. The park’s proposal is ently ignored and a factufor a 6-foot-wide paved part and the same-sized hiking and equestrian path. We’ Open Every Furthermore, the county Rou re Year Saturday nd Fre wants to remove soil from a s h! 10am-2pm hillside near the Lyre river to alleviate an 18 percent Don’t wait till the New Year to start eating better! grade in the park’s proposal in a short section of the We’ve got what you need: trail. Fresh seasonal fruits, vegetables, meats and Tyler said 18 percent is fish, artisan breads and cheeses. far too steep for people in Grown and produced locally without herbicides, pesticides or hormones. wheelchairs and many other trail users. Located Downtown at the Gateway County officials said the on the corner of Front and Lincoln park knowingly used the wrong volumes and other outdated information when it hosted a public meeting on the trail project in Port Angeles on Sept. 21. “ONP personnel appear determined to stack the deck against the funded, ADA compliant, county proposal in favor of an unfunded, unsafe and nonADA compliant proposal,”

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the letter says. Commissioners in the letter ask Lehnertz to pull the draft environmental assessment, which the county considers erroneous, off the ONP website and halt the public input process. They also ask that the park revise the draft environmental assessment to incorporate the amended county proposal; revise quantities, calculations and alternative comparison charts contained in the environmental assessment; and “remove the bias in the document.” “The intent of the letter is to get the park to put this [current county proposal] into the public comment forum so that the public has the chance to see the new county alignment and to see how closely it mimics the environmental impact that the park’s proposal has,” Tyler said in a Wednesday interview. Meanwhile, Peninsula Trails Coalition President Andy Stevenson told the Peninsula Daily News last week that the park’s proposed trail would be too narrow to be shared by bicyclists and pedestrians and too steep in places for disabled users. Teri Tucker, park environmental protection specialist, said the smaller trail avoids having to remove landslides that have fallen the former railroad grade. The railroad grade is eligible for placement on the National Historic Register, meaning the park is legally required to preserve it as much as possible, Tucker has said. County officials counter that the park’s proposal would reverse the goals and policies in the park’s general management and Lake Crescent management plans.

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Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be reached at 360-417-3537 or at rob. ollikainen@peninsuladailynews. com.


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Peninsula Daily News

(C) — Friday, October 14, 2011

A5

Restaurants donate portion of funds Peninsula Daily News

Dining out today and Saturday in Port Angeles and Sequim could help the United Way of Clallam County. Forty-six restaurants in Port Angeles and Sequim began participating Thursday in the United Way of Clallam County’s 22nd annual Restaurant Days, which extends over three days this year. Forks restaurants plan a separate Restaurant Day on Saturday, Oct. 22. During Restaurant Days, establishments donate a portion of their proceeds to United Way. “During your breakfast, lunch or dinner on Thursday, Friday or Saturday, you can help your community by eating at your favorite restaurant or stopping in for coffee or dessert,” said Tom Baermann, who is cochairing this year’s campaign with his wife, Jackie Baermann. “Each year, restaurants and small businesses all over Clallam County make generous contributions in support of United Way,” Tom Baermann said.

“The generosity of these businesses helps support the quality of life within our community.” United Way has raised $106,300 toward its $1,002,011 goal for this year’s campaign. Funds will be distributed throughout 2012 to 25 nonprofit agencies, United Way Community Initiatives — including the new “Great Beginnings” early learning initiative — and other nonprofit organizations as requested by donors. “After four years of a down economy, we all know someone who is struggling, maybe even ourselves for the first time in our lives,” said Randy Riggins, Port Angeles Restaurant Day chairman. “By giving to United Way, we can support local community members in ways that can make a huge difference,” he said. Stephen Rosales, chairman of the Sequim Campaign and Sequim Restaurant Day — as well as a candidate for the Sequim School Board — said: “As so many community members struggle to survive, United Way provides a way for the

Charged: Jail Continued from A1

According to the police report, Smith detailed how he shot Fowler several times with a 45.-caliber Colt pistol until Fowler stopped moving on his living room floor. Smith said he shot Fowler in the head from close range. An autopsy report found that Fowler was rendered incapacitated by gunshot wounds before a fatal gunshot wound to the brain stem. Smith told investigators that Fowler had demanded money, grabbed a knife and tried to cut Smith’s throat. While in Texas, Smith’s daughter applied for a protection order against him, citing her father’s “violent temper” and verbal abuse.

Smith had already moved to the Amarillo, Texas, area when Clallam County Superior Court Judge S. Brooke Taylor issued a bench warrant for his arrest Sept. 23. A team of Texas Rangers served the warrant a few days later and booked Smith into the Potter County jail. Port Angeles police traveled to Texas on Sunday to gather more evidence and bring Smith to Clallam County. Smith was extradited Wednesday. He remained in the Clallam County jail Thursday night. Smith appeared in court wearing handcuffs and a Fiance thanks police yellow Baylor shirt. Fowler’s fiance, Karla Confused Pennington of Port Angeles, He appeared confused at thanked the Port Angeles times, asking the judge to Police Department before repeat portions of his rights the hearing. She said Detectives Kori and his attorney’s last Malone, Kevin Spencer and name. Clallam County Deputy Jesse Winfield; Officer John Prosecuting Attorney John Nutter; Sgt. Tyler Peninger; Troberg requested a $1 mil- and others were “so suplion bail based on the sever- portive” of her and Fowler’s ity of the charge, the fact family throughout the that he had to be extradited ordeal. “They went above and from Texas and his large beyond to be there for us,” collection of firearms. The bench warrant also Pennington said. “Every one of them put a had a $1 million bail. Defense attorney Harry lot of time into this and Gasnick of Clallam Public effort. They were extremely Defender said Smith coop- thorough. They were just erated with authorities, had spectacular, and I’ll be forthe right to possess firearms ever grateful to them.” As for Smith’s arrest, and did not flee. “If my client would have Pennington said: “I’m glad been sent a simple postcard, that it came out this way he would have returned to because I knew Robert deal with these matters didn’t do anything wrong. “I’m hoping that justice straight up,” Gasnick said. will be done.” Judge Wood set the bail ________ as requested based on the severity of the charge and Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be “alarming” statements that reached at 360-417-3537 or at rob. ollikainen@peninsuladailynews.com. Smith made to police.

Blitz has placed Live United T-shirts on all the downtown Port Angeles sidewalk sculptures. entire community to work together on local solutions and local support.” Participating restaurants and coffee stands are: ■  Port Angeles — All About Pizza, Baskin Robbins, Bella Italia, Bella Rosa Coffee House, Bushwhacker, Blackbird Coffee

House, Cafe Garden, C’est Si Bon, Chestnut Cottage, Downriggers, Dynasty Chinese, First Street Haven, Fiesta Jalisco, Frugal’s, Granny’s Cafe, Itty Bitty Buzz, Joshua’s, Kokopelli Grill, Lake Crescent Lodge, Michael’s Steak and Seafood, Necessities & Tempta-

Peninsula Daily News

PORT ANGELES — Peninsula College’s new Maier Hall has been awarded a Design Citation in a juried competition by the 2011 American School & University Architectural Portfolio. The portfolio is the premier showcase celebrating the best in education design. The only other post-secondary citation was awarded to Chandler-Gilbert Community College, Ironwood Hall, Chandler, Ariz. The 2011 jury said of Maier Hall, a $36 million building dedicated Sept. 23: “There is a loft-like quality to the interior spaces that is pleasingly articulated with the structure and materials.” The architects for Maier Hall are Schacht Aslani Architects from Seattle. They were also the architects for Peninsula College’s new library. “Maier Hall is a striking example of how architecture can contribute to the teaching and learning process and provide the essential spaces needed for education,” said Peninsula College President Tom Keegan. “Schacht Aslani Architects worked closely with college faculty and staff throughout the entire process, from design to final construction, and the result is a facility that is not only striking in appearance, but one that is uniquely fitted to meet the needs of the coll­ege and our communities.” The 62,950-square-foot building, which opened for

Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News

Peninsula College guests enter the foyer of Maier Hall on the school’s Port Angeles campus after dedication ceremonies for the building Sept. 23.

M

other buildings. The Architectural Portfolio jury selected 137 projects to be profiled in the 2011 American School & classes Sept. 26, houses Maier Hall, completed in University Architectural writing, math, computer April, replaces the old Portfolio, which will be puband foreign language labs; a Maier Hall and three lished in November. ground-floor ceramics lab and third-floor art studios; classrooms for courses in English, math, the social sciences and humanities; and faculty offices. It also includes a 131seat performance hall and has a number of sustainable features that include geothermal energy, daylight harvesting, natural ventilation, wetland restoration The City of Port Angeles’ Voluntary Peak Power Project and an innovative moss puts energy-saving equipment in 600 volunteers’ homes, roof.

aier Hall, completed in April, replaces the old Maier Hall and three other buildings.

giving a new way Voluntary to reduce electricity use. The City them of Port Angeles’ Peak Power Project

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bill costs. The project takes advantage of the new AMI (Advanced MeteringVoluntary Infrastructure) systemProject and is will supported through a grant by thesoBPA The Peak Power test three new technologies, the (Bonneville Power Administration). N Ehow X Tto help customers control their utility City of Port Angeles can learn

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Call for volunteers

Hall Council Chambers For Voluntary PeakCity Power Project information or 321 East 5th Street to volunteer: go to www.cityofpa.us/drpower.htm, email jcurrie@cityofpa.us, call 360-417-4715, or see the inserts in your September utility bill. For Voluntary Peak Power Project information or toTo volunteer: to www.cityofpa.us/drpower.htm, get AMI go system information: email jcurrie@cityofpa.us, call 360-417-4715, or www.cityofpa.us/newmeters.htm, see the inserts in your September utility email newmeters@cityofpa.us or bill. call 360-417-4595. To get AMI system information: www.cityofpa.us/newmeters.htm, email newmeters@cityofpa.us or call 360-417-4595.

1A5134074

CLE ELUM — A glider has crashed in Cle Elum, fatally injuring the pilot. The Kittitas County Sheriff’s Office told KINGTV that the glider started to take off from the airport in Cle Elum late Thursday afternoon but then rolled and landed in some small trees. The male pilot was not immediately identified. KING said a production company was shooting a commercial in the area, and the glider was part of the shoot. The National Transportation Safety Board has been notified, as has the Federal Aviation Administration. The Associated Press

Call for volunteers

195133968

VANCOUVER, Wash. — The Washington State Patrol said a driver towing a 30-foot boat on Interstate 5 in Vancouver, Wash., lost control and crashed through a concrete median barrier, temporarily disrupting traffic in both directions. A dispatcher told The Columbian that traffic was once again moving both northbound and southbound shortly before 9 p.m. Thursday. The northbound driver lost control at about 7 p.m., smashing through the median into southbound lanes. The collision left debris in the southbound lanes, blocking traffic in both directions. Tow trucks were called

to clear the roadway.

Glider crashes

Espresso, Double Eagle Steak & Seafood, Dynasty Chinese, El Cazador, Islander Pizza & Pasta Shack, Kettel’s Deli, Lippert’s, Jose’s Famous Salsa, Moon Palace, Sergio’s Hacienda, Sunshine Cafe, The Oak Table and Wasabi Japanese.

Peninsula College’s Maier Hall gets design award

Briefly: State Crash with towed boat disrupts I-5

tions Espresso, Plunkin’ Shack, Rick’s Place, Sabai Thai, Sergio’s Hacienda, Smuggler’s Landing, Toga’s Soup House, Traylors, Woodfire Grill and Wine on the Waterfront. ■  Sequim — Alderwood Bistro, Applebee’s, Bento Teriyaki, Cracked Bean


A6

PeninsulaNorthwest

Friday, October 14, 2011

Peninsula Daily News

Missing woman’s identification card found Police seek man who turned in ID By Arwyn Rice

Peninsula Daily News

PORT ANGELES — Police are seeking a man who turned in an identifica­ tion card belonging to Jenn­ ifer Pimentel, a 26-year-old developmentally disabled woman who has been miss­ ing since Monday. The card was turned in Tuesday afternoon as lost

property at the Jeffer­ son County Sheriff ’s Office in Port Had­ lock by a man wear­ ing road- Pimentel crew-type clothing, said Brian Smith, Port Angeles deputy police chief, on Thursday. The unidentified man told the receptionist he had found it in a roadside ditch, Smith said. Smith said law enforce­ ment officers are looking for that good Samaritan to get

more information about exactly where the card was found. Smith said that at the time, it seemed no different than any other found prop­ erty, so no one asked his name or got more informa­ tion about where he had found the card. They later realized the card belonged to the miss­ ing woman.

Seeking Samaritan Authorities are hoping the man who found the card will step forward with more information on where and

how he found it, Smith said. The man is urged to phone the Port Angeles Police Department at 360452-4545 or the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office at 360-385-3831. Pimentel, who is men­ tally about 12 years old, was last seen at Dairy Queen at 128 E. Railroad Ave. in Port Angeles at about 12.30 p.m. Monday. She is 5 feet 9 inches tall and weighs 126 pounds. She has brown hair and brown eyes and was wear­ ing a red and white jacket. Pimentel had been dropped off by friends at

The Gateway transit center and had purchased a Dungeness Bus Lines ticket to SeaTac. She never got on the bus, according to the Port Ange­ les Police Department. Anyone who has seen Pimentel or has informa­ tion on her whereabouts should immediately phone the Port Angeles Police Department at 360-4524545. Pimentel is a former Port Angeles resident who moved to SeaTac about a year ago. She is well-known in town and has family in both

the Port Angeles and SeaTac areas, said her step­ mother, Tammy Pimentel. The missing woman was reported to be in the com­ pany of a person who police believe to have been staying at the Street Outreach Shelter, 520 E. First St. The missing woman’s stepmother said she had a cellphone with her but that it has been turned off or is otherwise not operational.

________ Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-417-3535 or at arwyn.rice@peninsuladailynews. com.

Bail set for man who climbed Protest against tree to escape law enforcement food altered genetically set By Arwyn Rice

Peninsula Daily News

PORT ANGELES — Bail was set Thursday at $35,000 for Damon L. Foust, a 36-year-old Port Angeles man who was found hiding in a tree by a police dog after a Wednesday morning chase. Foust appeared in Judge George Wood’s courtroom for the bail hearing. He is scheduled to return to court Friday, Oct. 21, for a review hearing. Foust is charged with attempting to elude a police vehicle, obstructing a law enforcement officer, posses­ sion of a controlled sub­ stance and possession

of marijuana. The chase, which began after a Port Angeles police officer tried to pull over Foust for investigation of speeding in a school zone near Jefferson Elementary School, led police into Olym­ pic National Park and resulted in a search that involved several law enforcement agencies. When the truck hit boul­ ders at a dead end on old Mount Angeles Road, Foust and his passenger, Kather­ ine L. Roberts, 30, also of Port Angeles, abandoned the truck and ran into the forest, police said. Foust was tracked to a tree by Port Angeles police

dog Jag, and Roberts was warrant, two pay-or-appear found a half-hour later, warrants and for investiga­ tion of eluding a police vehi­ police said. cle, obstructing a law enforcement officer, possess­ Drugs found ion of a controlled substance When the vehicle was and possession of 40 grams searched, officers found or less of marijuana. baggies with white powder Roberts’ bail was set at and green leafy materials, $750. which field kit tests indi­ She had an outstanding cated were methamphet­ pay-or-appear warrant and amine and marijuana, Offi­ was booked into Clallam cer Sky Sexton said in a County jail for investigation of eluding a police vehicle sworn statement. The baggies were found and obstructing a law in a backpack that also con­ enforcement officer. tained a card addressed to ________ Foust and a picture of him, Reporter Arwyn Rice can be Sexton said. reached at 360-417-3535 or at Foust was taken into arwyn.rice@peninsuladailynews. custody on a felony bench com.

Rally part of World Food Day events By Jeff Chew

Peninsula Daily News

SEQUIM — A second street-side rally against genetically modified organisms in food — this time in conjunction with rallies, forums and gath­ erings worldwide on World Food Day — takes place in downtown Sequim on Sunday. The GMO Awareness Group of Sequim, which drew about 100 to its last informational rally in March, will host the Sun­ day rally from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the parking lot on the northeast corner of Washington Street and Sequim Avenue. The Garden Bistro & Bakery is sponsoring the rally site. The goal is to raise awareness about geneti­ cally modified organisms, also known as GMOs, in the food supply and to protest the idea that GMOs are a safe technol­ ogy that will feed the world.

Salvation Army gets offers of help after theft By Arwyn Rice

Peninsula Daily News

PORT ANGELES — After the theft of 2,000 pounds of food early Wednesday morning, the Port Angeles Salvation Army’s food program is making a comeback. “We received several phone calls this morning with offers to help replenish our canned and dry foods,” said Cherilee Ramsey, asso­ ciate pastor of the Port Angeles Salvation Army church, on Thursday.

An officer from the Port Angeles Police Department arrived at the church Thursday morning, and a report was filed, Ramsey said. The theft, discovered Wednesday, was not reported until Thursday because Ramsey thought a volunteer had done so, and the volunteer thought she had, she has said. Two-thirds of the food the Salvation Army had stockpiled for holiday food distributions and soup kitchen meals was taken

overnight from a trailer parked behind the offices at 206 S. Peabody St. in Port Angeles. It was the third theft from the organization in the past year, Ramsey said. The Salvation Army pro­ vides food for about 1,200 families or individuals each month.

Not enough left

Cash donations will be used to replace what was lost, and donations from neighborhood or workplace food drives are always accepted, she said. Food to replace that which was taken can be donated at the Salvation Army offices at 206 S. Pea­ body St. For more information, phone 360-452-7679.

________

The theft meant there Reporter Arwyn Rice can be wouldn’t be enough to dis­ reached at 360-417-3535 or at tribute to those in need, arwyn.rice@peninsuladailynews. Ramsey said Wednesday. com.

Briefly: State Fisherman’s body found in Green River

Collecting signatures

waders filled with water. Several people tried to rescue him by reaching out with fishing poles. At least one person jumped in but was unable to reach him in the swift water.

convicted her of homicide by abuse and first-degree manslaughter in the boy’s death and sentenced her to 27 years. The court rejected her petition Thursday, ruling AUBURN — A King that the conviction was County sheriff’s spokes­ easily supported by the evi­ man said his department’s Petition denied dence. marine unit has recovered OLYMPIA — The state The case ultimately led the body of a fisherman Court of Appeals has to a review of how the state who was swept away in the rejected a personal handles foster children. Green River at Auburn. restraint petition filed by The boy had spent 14 Sgt. John Urquhart said an Ephrata woman con­ months in foster care and the body was found Thurs­ victed of killing her suffered numerous injuries day afternoon. 25-month-old son. The Sheriff’s Office said Maribel Gomez claimed while in his mother’s care, the 35-year-old Tacoma she may not have been con­ including broken legs, skull man was wading in the victed in the 2003 death of fractures, bruises and burns. river with a friend Wednes­ her son “Raffy” had her day evening when he lost lawyer done a better job. Veterans hospital his footing and his hipA Grant County judge SPOKANE — Legisla­ tion has been introduced in Congress to rename the peninsuladailynews.com Veterans Affairs Medical

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Peninsula Daily News

PORT ANGELES — The Seattle Foundation has awarded Volunteers in Medi­ cine of the Olympics a $38,000 Capacity Building Grant. The foundation recog­ nizes the contributions VIMO has made in provid­ ing medical care to the uninsured.

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GMOs are plants or ani­ mals whose DNA or genes have been modified or manipulated in a labora­ tory in a way that would never happen in nature. While biotech companies and commercial food pro­ ducers continue to sell and promote genetically modi­ fied seeds and foods as a solution to feeding the world, a recent United Nations report, based on the evidence of scientific studies, refutes this claim, Armstrong said. “There’s more and more studies coming out from all over the world refuting the corporations’ claims about GMOs being safe,” Arm­ strong said. The U.S. leads the world in commercialized geneti­ cally modified crop produc­ tion. Genetically modified salmon is the next food item slated for public consump­ tion, Armstrong said.

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Signatures will be col­ lected on a petition call­ ing for the labeling of genetically modified foods in the U.S. Armstrong said the Sequim group has turned in more than 2,000 sig­ natures and hopes to send in more after Sun­ day’s rally. ________ “I couldn’t believe how Sequim-Dungeness Valley Edimany people don’t know tor Jeff Chew can be reached at that they are participat­ 360-681-2391 or at jeff.chew@ ing in a giant GMO peninsuladailynews.com.

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Center in Spokane for two Medal of Honor winners from the Lilac City. The bills seek to rename the hospital for Private Joe E. Mann and Sgt. Bruce A. Grandstaff. Both were awarded the nation’s high­ est military decoration posthumously, Mann for action in World War II and Grandstaff in Vietnam. U.S. Rep. Cathy McMor­ ris Rodgers, R-Wash., has introduced the bill in the House, and Sen. Patty Murray, D-Bothell, has introduced companion leg­ islation in the Senate. The hospital would be called the Mann-Grand­ staff Department of Veter­ ans Affairs Medical Center. The Associated Press

experiment that puts their health at risk,” said rally organizer Kia Armstrong, who is marketing director and advocate for Nash’s Produce in Dungeness. “We talked to so many folks at the rally that wanted information and wanted to know what GMOs were,” she said. “Once they found out, they were outraged. “We have to keep this education going,” she added. “The time is now to send a message to our government that we want these foods labeled.”

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The grant is intended to by VIMO to increase its impact on community health through capacity building. “Our mission is to improve the health of our patients, not just to provide visits,” VIMO Executive Director Dr. Larry Little said. “We need to make sure what we are doing is effec­ tive in helping our patients. “We also need to build sustainability. We will meet the requirements for this grant if we can improve our organizational structure, define a path to more sus­ tainability and able to pro­ vide improved medical out­ comes for our patients. “The grant funds are not intended to be used for ordi­ nary day-to-day operations but rather to improve the organization, which will result in better day-to-day operations.”

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PeninsulaNorthwest

Peninsula Daily News

Friday, October 14, 2011

A7

Watershed proposals to be outlined By Jeff Chew

Peninsula Daily News

BLYN — Olympic National Forest officials are expected to discuss action plan possibilities for the Upper Dungeness River watershed Monday. Forest officials have since May led a broadbased volunteer group and public discussion for Piper recommendations on how to restore fish and wildlife habitat and improve roads and recreational opportuni- Yoshina ties in the watershed. The Jamestown S’Klallam tribe is hosting a workshop Monday at the

tribe’s Community Center in Blyn to talk about several action plan recommendations. The workshop, which is open to the public, will begin at 10 a.m. at the community center, 1033 Old Blyn Highway. Olympic National Forest representatives with the Quilcene-based offices of the Hood Canal District are reaching out to the public to create a priority list of Dungeness watershed projects in national forest lands south of Sequim and Carlsborg.

Group since July Since July, a group of volunteer collaborators representing the U.S. Forest Service, recreational user groups including off-road vehicle and habitat and water protection interests, have been conducting phone conferences. After Monday’s workshop, a final public hearing

will be scheduled so the action plan can be finalized by the end of the year, said Hood Canal District Ranger Dean Yoshina. “I think in terms of different user groups coming together, people are really concerned about what is in their watershed,” Yoshina said, adding that at this point, “very few projects have the funding, but we are aware of possible funding avenues that we can pursue in the future.” Clallam County’s Dungeness River Management Team has also been a part of the collaborative effort. Discussions Monday will include watershed condition, proposed restoration activities and high-ranking project, aquatic habitat, road decommissioning, road upgrades, road closure and unclassified road obliteration. Aquatic habitat discussion will include fish passage and large woody debris placement, young tree

stand thinning, native and invasive plants, and recreation. Susan Piper, Olympic National Forest Dungeness Watershed Action Plan team leader, said that so far, at least one of nearly 60 recommended aquatic restoration projects has generated interest. “We had one trail system that we proposed for decommissioning, and we heard from a number of people,” Piper said of the Maynard Burn Trail to Tyler Peak. “It’s a very popular trail.”

decommissioning and obliteration proposals are also recommended to help improve fish and wildlife habitat. “I am very interested in improving the health of the watershed in the Dungeness,” said Mike Anderson, who will discuss the next steps and wrap up the Monday discussion in Blyn.

Recreation projects

tem in the Bear Mountain, Mount Zion and Schmidt Knob areas that would include a parking area. Also recommended was an upgrade to a parking area, adding a vault toilet and a road decommissioning past parking area but leaving public trail access to Silver Lake. Another recommendation: Remove, repair or fence the Ned Hill Lookout historic structure. Also recommended were 10 native plant and young tree restoration projects in the middle and upper Dungeness River areas. “We have a range of projects that really move the watershed along in terms of being restored and protected,” Yoshina said, projects that help salmon and wildlife habitat.

There are 10 recreation projects proposed so far, including the former Eddy Creek road decommissioning for making it into a Forest Service system trail to provide nonmotorized recreation for mountain biking and horseback riding. Recommended was securing a trail easement through the Tubal Caine Mine private inholding ________ within the Buckhorn Wilderness. Sequim-Dungeness Valley EdiThe Back Country tor Jeff Chew can be reached at Horsemen of Washington 360-681-2391 or at jeff.chew@ have urged a loop trail sys- peninsuladailynews.com.

Aquatic habitat When it comes to aquatic habitat, other areas of concern expressed include stretches of Canyon Creek, Pats Creek and Silver Creek. Other proposals include large woody debris placement on the Dungeness and Gray Wolf rivers. Forest Service Road 2880-area road upgrades,

Proposal on recycling Prescribed fires begin fees falls flat at meet soon in national forest By Tom Callis

Peninsula Daily News

PORT ANGELES — A proposal to lower garbage hauling fees for those who don’t recycle may soon be tossed out. The Port Angeles Utility Advisory Committee voted 3-1 Tuesday to recommend that the City Council not adopt the staff proposal. Each City Council member who sits on the committ­ee — Mayor Dan Di Guilio and members Brooke Nelson and Cherie Kidd — voted against the idea. The motivation behind their votes appeared to be a lack of public support and the appearance that the city wouldn’t be supporting recycling if adopted. But none appeared opposed to the idea. And if

Peninsula Daily News

the proposal is struck by the council, there is supp­ort for broaching the issue again in the future. “We just need more time to massage it and work with them [residents],” said Kidd. Currently, the city charges $27.20 per month for weekly garbage and recycling pickup and $19.75 for biweekly pickup. The staff have proposed keeping the charge the same for those with recycling bins and lowering it to $23.35 and $15.90 per month for those who only use the garbage-hauling service. The reason was to reflect the actual cost of the service in the bills, staff said. Larry Dunbar, deputy power systems director, said recycling has been on

the decline even though more people have recycling bins. He suggested that separating the rates may lead to more use of the recycling bins since there would be another charge for having them. Committee member Dean Reed voted against the motion. The council will consider what to do with garbage and recycling rates Tuesday. Council members also will consider adopting a $5.50-per-month electric rate increase then. The meeting will be at 6 p.m. in council chambers at City Hall, 321 E. Fifth St.

________ Reporter Tom Callis can be reached at 360-417-3532 or at tom.callis@peninsuladailynews. com.

The smoke you see in Olympic National Forest may be from a fire that was intentionally set. Prescribed fires in Clall­am, Mason and Grays Harbor counties may begin as early as this week and could continue through November, said Donna Nemeth, Forest Service spokeswoman. This year’s planned ignitions are pile burns designed to reduce hazardous fuels, she said. Four locations are proposed in the Hood Canal Ranger District. Both the Cougar Weather Station and the Maynard Repeater site are located northwest of Mount Zion in Clallam County. The South Fork of the Skokomish River at the Dennie Ahl Seed Orchard

R

esidents and visitors may see or smell smoke, and glowing embers may be visible at night. Smoke may settle into lowerelevation areas, particularly at night and in the early morning hours. and on Forest Service Road 2350, one-half mile from the junction with Forest Service Road 23, are in Mason County. One site is proposed in the Pacific Ranger District. The Boulder Gravel Pit, located just off U.S. Highway 101, a short distance south of the turnoff to Lake

Quinault on Forest Service Road 2273, is in Grays Harbor County. Residents and visitors may see or smell smoke, and glowing embers may be visible at night. Smoke may settle into lower-elevation areas, particularly at night and in the early morning hours. The fires will be monitored closely by qualified personnel, Nemeth said, and local authorities will be notified prior to ignition and kept informed throughout the burn. Prescribed fires are planned ignitions designed with specific objectives in mind. The fires are started only when environmental conditions such as wind, fuel moisture levels and relative humidity are favorable, Nemeth said.

Briefly . . . Occupy Wall Street rallies set in PA, PT

Peninsula Spotlight Every Friday in Peninsula Daily News

Library friends PORT ANGELES — The Port Angeles Friends of the Library will consider replacements for three board members when it meets next month. The annual meeting of the Port Angeles Friends of the Library will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 9,

Couple found safe

in the Carver Room of the Port Angeles Library, 2210 S. Peabody St. The current terms for three board members, Diane Kaufman, Larry Welch and Fowler Stratton, will expire, and Friends members will be asked to nominate and vote for their replacements. Members also will hear about the state of the trust that enables the Friends to support library activities such as the children’s and young adult programs and the growth of the Friends’ bookstore.

LEAVENWORTH — Searchers in north-central Washington have found an elderly Dutch couple in good health on a remote dirt road after they got a flat tire and ran out of gas. Chelan County Sheriff Brian Burnett said 82-year-old Jan Mulders and 81-year-old Bertha Imelman were on foot when searchers found them at about 1 p.m. Thursday near Entiat, more than 20 miles from where they were last seen Wednesday and nowhere near their

intended destination. They said they spent the night in their car and started walking out to seek help at about 8 a.m. In the area to visit their son, the couple were reported overdue after they failed to return Wednesday from what was supposed to be a short sightseeing drive. People who saw them Wednesday provided clues on their possible route. Burnett said the couple had just one bottle of water to share, no food and no cellphone. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press

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rally, visit www.moveon.org. For more information about the Port Angeles rally, phone Cone at 360683-0867. To participate in Sunday’s carpool, phone Mark Stevenson at 360-385-9037.

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Occupy Wall Street rallies are planned in Port Townsend today and in Port Angeles on Saturday. The Port Townsend rally, organized by Jefferson and Clallam counties’ MoveOn councils, will be from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 a.m. in the triangle in front of JPMorgan Chase Bank at Kearney Street and Sims Way. The rally is for “Jobs/ Not Cuts.” Music, speakers and a string of Burma-Shavestyle signs along Sims Way are scheduled, along with informational handouts and petitions to Congress calling for an end to corporate tax breaks and demanding budget decisions that will create jobs and strengthen social safety net programs, said Carol Gallup of the Jefferson County MoveOn council. Unemployed people will find information at the table about an upcoming free class for those seeking a job or help in starting a small business, she said. Participants in Port Angeles will gather at Veterans Park on Lincoln Street, just north of the Clallam County Courthouse, at 11 a.m. Saturday and walk to Chase Bank at 101 W. Front St. No specific speakers are

scheduled, said Nelson Cone, an organizer, though he said some participants may address those gathered there. On Sunday, a carpool will take people from Port Townsend to Seattle for the ongoing urban rally there, which is one of many in the nation in support of the Occupy Wall Street protest in New York City. A carpool from Clallam County to Seattle was conducted Thursday. For more information about the Port Townsend rally, phone Gall­up at 360379-4795. To sign up for the

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Peninsula Daily News for Friday/Saturday, October 14-15, 2011

Commentary

PAGE

A8

Moderation — even in critter rescues A THIN, GRAY and white kitten, abandoned by someone evicted from a neighborhood apartment, turned up Tuesday at the Serenity House of Clallam County administrative office where I work. After visiting Heather Martha M. Kaplan at Ireland Olympic Veterinary for shots, flea-treatment and worming, kitty went home with me that evening. Free kitties are expensive, and spaying is yet to come. Purchasing through a shelter or rescue agency is far more affordable. Upon meeting the new feline, my husband, Dale, said I’m becoming a “crazy cat lady.” Not so. We’ve never had more than three cats at a time, and this kitty, now named Zipper, brings the current tally to a mere two. (Crazy cat ladies have far more.)

Cricket, a beautiful black kitty who came to us in June of 2010, is highly offended by the young interloper. Cricket will adapt. From the start, Cricket chose Dale as her person and has never gotten beyond barely tolerating Dixie dog and me. Dixie, a border-collie type now about 7 years old, loves cats — especially this kitten, who rubs against her and purrs while being bathed with doggie kisses. All three are rescues, as are the two horses in my barn and numerous others that have passed through. I even fostered a couple of Olympic Peninsula Humane Society horses in 2008. But when it comes to rescuing critters, I have my limits. The day after I brought Zipper home, a nice Peninsula Friends of Animals volunteer named Linda phoned. The Humane Society had given her my name as a possible foster home for a 5-year-old steer that’s in danger of being slaughtered. I offered to give her Steve Morgan’s phone number (360-

the sole remaining local cut-andwrap butcher in the two counties. But . . . the steer is a pet, Linda protested. Cattle are livestock, not pets, I replied, voicing what appears to be a moderate view of animal rescue. Center Valley Animal Rescue in Quilcene lists pigs and sheep among its rescues but no bovines. Only seven rescue cows are listed nationwide at www.petfinder. com, including two in the SnoZipper homish County town of Sultan. Peninsula Friends of Animals 452-7823). Morgan is the only remaining local mobile slaughter majors in cats, plus small dogs. Getting roped into trying to service serving Clallam and Jefre-home a steer was an aberraferson counties. tion for that corps of dedicated Steers exist to provide meat. volunteers. At 5 years old, it’s past its I think we can all agree that prime but would still make good ground beef to help replace some domestic animals — pets and of the 2,000 pounds of provisions livestock alike — deserve to be treated kindly and have their stolen Wednesday from the Salbasic needs met. Beyond that, vation Army, which feeds about 1,200 households in Port Angeles there’s lots of room for debate. If you Google “end livestock each month. raising,” you’ll find vegans strateCharities can affordably convert livestock donations to excel- gizing to end all animal-based agriculture. lent protein at the low cost of If you Google “keeping pets is Morgan’s $100 slaughter fee plus 55 cents per pound for processing tantamount to slavery,” you’ll disat Sunrise Meats in Port Angeles, cover plots to eradicate domestic

Peninsula Voices Spruce Trail At a public meeting on Sept. 21, Olympic National Park personnel presented a 250-page plan to improve the Spruce Railroad Trail around Lake Crescent. As part of the 145-mile long Olympic Discovery Trail, the Spruce Railroad Trail will allow bicyclists and others to avoid the hazardous, winding, narrow, noshoulder section of U.S. Highway 101 that is currently the only way around Lake Crescent. The four-mile long, World War I-era abandoned railroad bed is ideally suited for use by bicyclists, hikers, handicapped people, etc. In fact, the park is legally required to provide handicap access where possible. However the current plan ignores proposals by Clallam County (see the “Current Issues” section of www.clallam.net) which reduce the steep 18 percent grade at the east end of the trail to the 8 percent necessary for ADA access. Additionally, the park plan paves only 6 feet of the 10½-foot railroad bed, thus

making the trail ineligible for existing Olympic Discovery Trail funding, which requires at least eight feet of paved width to comply with national safety standards. To not disturb 0.41 more acre on the eastern end, the trail plan prevents wheelchair-bound veterans and others from accessing most of the trail. To avoid clearing of two more feet of the original 16-foot-wide railroad way, nationwide safety standards will be violated and existing funding will be unavailable. Ask your government to fix these two serious flaws in their Spruce Railroad Trail plan. Follow the Olympic National Park link at http://parkplanning.nps. gov/srt. The comment period closes today. Jim Bettcher Sequim

Campaign needs Can someone please explain to me how Obama can spend millions of taxpayers’ money in these dire economic times to have Secret Service, pilots, ground

Our readers’ letters, faxes

security, two Air Force One jets, support aircraft to carry his limo plus security vehicles to fly around the country to raise money for his reelection campaign — when the bottom line is the only job he is interested in saving is his own? I guess he’s getting used to government housing. He should be riding in that $4 million bus he apparently used only once. This country cannot sur-

dogs and cats, along with demands to set all pets free — all in the name of “ethical treatment of animals.” A targeted survey on the animal slavery question revealed: n Dixie, who spent a year as a wild dog, wants more car rides, walks and more time with me. n Cricket, who was on her own for months, favors freedom for all other animals, but never wants to go outside again. n Having just been rescued from a few days of abandonment, Zipper just cuddled up and purred. Personally, I enjoy being owned by two cats and a dog. Dale, however, sometimes wishes he had his freedom.

________

Martha M. Ireland was a Clallam County commissioner from 1996 through 1999. She is on the administrative staff of Serenity House of Clallam County, co-owns a Carlsborg-area farm with her husband, Dale, and is active in the local Republican Party, among other community endeavors. Her column appears every other Friday. Email: irelands@olypen.com.

and e-mail

vive another four years of Obama. Maurice “Joe” Jester, Port Angeles

state that the Air Force pays all costs for the use of the aircraft, but that the government must be reimbursed for airfare, food, lodging and other expenses incurred durEDITOR’S NOTE — ing whatever portion of the The minimum domestic trip is political — in travel package for the presiObama’s case, this is done by dent consists of one Boeing the Democratic National 747 which serves as Air Force One, one back-up plane Committee. But reimbursement for and one C17 cargo plane. White House travel rules, political activities involves a which were developed under tricky formula, and actual reimbursements typically the Reagan administration,

come nowhere close to compensating the government for the cost of such trips. Secret Service costs, for one, are always footed by the government. And it’s become routine for the sitting president and vice president to schedule another event on their travel schedules that is part of their public duties, and then to make a campaign stop a side trip or a brief part of a visit to an area. A 2006 report for the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform found that during 2002, political campaigns reimbursed the federal government for $198,000 of the $6.5 million in flight expenses racked up by campaign-related stops made by President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney. That’s 3 percent of the total cost. Taxpayers paid the remaining $6.3 million. “The president and vice president can legally participate in campaign and fundraising events for candidates,” the report said. “But when they do so, the taxpayer bears most of the cost.”

Why we should be great neighbors By Tim Hockett SADLY, OUR COMMUNITY’S combined effort to address poverty is needed more than ever as the economy takes its toll on more and more people. A few days ago it was reported by the U.S. Census Bureau that the poverty level had reached 15.1 percent in America, representing 46.2 Hockett million people — the highest number of Americans living in poverty since the bureau started keeping that statistic. The report says 22 percent of children under the age of 18 lived in poverty in 2010. Here on the North Olympic Peninsula, approximately 15,010 people live in poverty — more than 4,000 in Jefferson County

POINT OF VIEW and nearly 11,000 in Clallam County. These are our neighbors. One really disturbing thing about this percentage is that it is right about where it was in 1964, when our nation launched its “War on Poverty.” The picture gets bleaker when you consider the notion that the federal poverty line seems ridiculously low. For a family of four, the poverty line is $22,350 per year, or one person earning $10.75 per hour (pre-tax) — again to feed, clothe, house and provide child care and medical care to four people. If that family’s breadwinner makes $11 per hour, they are not considered “in poverty.” Then too, remember the inequities in our economy. The bottom 40 percent of America’s households earn only 12 percent of the nation’s income.

Peninsula Daily News John C. Brewer Editor and Publisher

360-417-3500

n

john.brewer@peninsuladailynews.com

Rex Wilson Executive Editor 360-417-3530 ■ rex.wilson@peninsuladailynews.com Michelle Lynn

Circulation Director

360-417-3510 michelle.lynn@peninsuladailynews.com

Dean Mangiantini Production Director

360-417-3520 dean.mangiantini@peninsuladailynews.com

Ann Ashley

Newspaper Services Director

360-417-7691 ann.ashley@peninsuladailynews.com

Sue Stoneman

Acting Advertising Director

360-417-3555 sue.stoneman@peninsuladailynews.com

Bonnie M. Meehan

Business/Finance Director

360-417-3501 bonnie.meehan@peninsuladailynews.com

We all pay $3.50 to $3.80 for a gallon of gas — wealthy and poor — but the poor get hit hardest. High costs disproportionately hit those who are already struggling. Other heavy costs, like childcare and medical care, hit lowincome families really hard. The average fees paid for a 4-year-old in a family childcare home full-time is $600 per month. Most impoverished households have small children at home — those children need care while Mom or Dad is at work. If grandparents or friends are not available to provide affordable or free childcare, the way out of poverty is blocked. How about health care costs? If you are not insured, a trip to the emergency room can quickly reach $1,000. Similarly, a trip to the dentist can quickly reach that amount. Did I mention that the same report from the U.S. Census

Bureau states that 50 million Americans (yeah that’s right, 50 million) are without health insurance? Here at Olympic Community Action Programs — OlyCAP — we are trying to address the effects of poverty, helping people survive it and even helping some to rise above it. In 2010, we actually helped 11,500 of those more than 15,000 struggling people. Need is growing, and resources are dwindling. I am personally disappointed that as a nation we are not doing better. But I am proud to be involved with our OlyCAP team in work that actually provides meaningful help. We just need more of our neighbors to join us in lending a hand. We need more community builders. My challenge to the community is this:

News Department Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ Leah Leach, managing editor/news, 360-417-3531 ■ Brad LaBrie, sports editor; 360-417-3525 ■ Diane Urbani de la Paz, features editor; 360-417-3550 ■ General information: 360-417-3527 or 800-826-7714, Ext. 527 News fax: 360-417-3521 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com Sequim office: 150 S. Fifth Ave., Suite 2 (98382) ■ Jeff Chew, Sequim/Dungeness Valley editor, 360-681-2391; jeff.chew@peninsuladailynews.com Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way (98368) ■ Charlie Bermant, Jefferson County reporter, 360-385-2335; charlie.bermant@peninsuladailynews.com

Dave Weikel

Computer Systems Director

360-417-3516 dave.weikel@peninsuladailynews.com

Follow the PDN online

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n Start with being a great neighbor. Be generous and kind — do not judge folks who are hurting. n If you or someone you know is struggling, please know that there are many community resources that can help. See www.olycap.org, and click on the “Get Help” tab. n Donate time and money to organizations like OlyCAP, United Way of Clallam County, United Good Neighbors of Jefferson County, Salvation Army, food banks and others. These are major community efforts working to stabilize and strengthen families. But most importantly, reach out and help someone.

________ Tim Hockett is executive director of OlyCAP, the No. 1 emergency care agency in Jefferson and Clallam counties. Contact Hockett at THockett@ olycap.org, or 360-452-4726 or 360-385-2571.

Have Your Say ■ Rex Wilson and Paul Gottlieb, commentary editors, 360-417-3536 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. RANTS & RAVES for the Sunday editions can be recorded on the Rants & Raves hot line at 360-417-3506 or sent to the above addresses and fax number.


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Tempestuous family of Steve Jobs ABDULFATTAH “JOHN” JANDALI is a casino manager outside Reno, so he knows about odds. And he must wonder sometimes: What are the odds of a Sunni Muslim immigrant from Syria producing two dazzling American talents — a son who transformed the world of technology and a daughter who lit up the world of literature — and ending up estranged from both? Of the many memorable phoMaureen tos that have been published Dowd since Steve Jobs died, the most poignant was in The Wall Street Journal on Monday. The picture itself wasn’t anything special, not like the intimate portraits of Jobs by Diana Walker that appeared in Time magazine. This was just a head shot of Jobs staring out, with rimless glasses, aquiline nose, receding hairline and intense brown eyes. It mesmerized because of its juxtaposition to a head shot of Jandali, Jobs’ 80-year-old biological father, who stared out with the same rimless glasses, aquiline nose, receding hairline and intense brown eyes. Jandali told The Journal that over the last year, he periodically sent some emails to the son he never met, wishing him happy birthday or better health. He said he got a couple of short replies, including a “Thank you.” But a Jobs family friend disputes that. Jandali, a widower, reads books on an iPad and uses an iPhone 4. But the father of Jobs never met the father of Apple. The closest he got was downloading videos of Jobs introducing Apple products. He didn’t even learn Jobs was his son until around 2005. When Jandali was pursuing his doctorate in political science at the University of Wisconsin in

the early ’50s, he fell in love with a fellow graduate student named Joanne Schieble. She became pregnant, but her family did not approve of her relationship with a Syrian, so she put up her son for adoption. The boy was raised by Paul Jobs, a highschool dropout and machinist for a laser company in Los Altos, Calif., and Clara Jobs, an accountant. Once Joanne’s disapproving father died a couple of years later, she married Jandali. They had a daughter, who grew up to be Mona Simpson, the novelist. The couple divorced after a few years and Joanne and Mona lived in Green Bay, Wis., feeling as though Jandali had abdicated his role in their lives. Jandali told The Journal that he had tried to reach Mona after he heard of Jobs’ death, but she did not respond. He keeps a publicity shot of his daughter that he downloaded from the Internet framed on his desk. “If I talked to him,” he said of his son, “I don’t know what I would have said to him.” Like Shakespearean drama, where fathers haunt and where siblings are swept apart by a shipwreck only to learn later that the other is still alive, Steve and Mona met only in their mid-20s. Jobs began the hunt for his biological mother in his teens and was ready to give up, he told The New York Times’ Steve Lohr, when he finally discovered at age 27 that he had a younger sister. He was thrilled that she was an artist because he liked to think of himself as one. The computer whiz kid and the literary whiz kid grew close. Simpson mined the theme of missing fathers for her critically acclaimed novels Anywhere But Here and The Lost Father. She also wrote a novel inspired by her famous brother, A Regular Guy, which casts a gimlet eye on Jobs, who specialized in hot-cold emotional roller-coaster rides. It’s about an emotionally disconnected, fruit-loving Silicon Valley biotech entrepreneur named Tom Owens, “a guy in jeans, bare-

foot in the boardroom.” He lives in a barely furnished mansion once owned by a copper baron, as Jobs did; he loses control of his company to suits, as Jobs did; he tried to decide whom to marry by asking friends which of his two girlfriends was more beautiful, as Jobs did; he belatedly forms a relationship with his outof-wedlock daughter, as Jobs did. Simpson begins with the simple devastating sentence: “He was a man too busy to flush toilets.” She focuses on the painful central question: How does the abandoned become the abandoner? When he cast off his own infant daughter, he was the same age his parents were when they cast off him. Three years after the novel came out in 1996, Lisa BrennanJobs, the daughter Jobs had with an old girlfriend, wrote a searing piece for The Harvard Advocate about how it took her two years to get up the courage to read her aunt’s book, which contains details like Jane (Lisa’s doppelganger) forging her father’s signature on her Harvard application. “He was away on business, and it had to be done,” Lisa writes, adding about Mona: “It is a rare experience to find that someone unexpected has been holding captive moments of my past. She watched me when I was younger, sneaking contraband miniskirts and makeup into my locker, and later, during middle and high school, she was one of my primary confidants. “I didn’t know that as I sought her consolations and took her advice, she, too, was taking. It was apparently a trade.” The roman à clef jangled nerves in the family, but Mona and Steve were close again when he was dying. Beyond the gushing encomiums for the Prospero of Palo Alto, there roiled a family tempest that might have even shocked Shakespeare.

________

Maureen Dowd is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The New York Times. She appears in the PDN every Friday. Email: http://tinyurl. com/dowdmail.

You’re talking trash at Occupy sites THE TRASH GENERATED by the “Occupy Wall Street” protests keeps piling up. So do the bills. Liberal media outlets claim the anarchic, anti-capitalist movement is more popular than the tea party. But wait until Americans across the country get a full picture of the costs of the aimless occupiers. In New York City, governMichelle ment officials estimate the Malkin monthlong siege of Zuccotti Park has now imposed $3.2 million in overtime police costs on the public. On Thursday, as Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s office pressured left-wing activists to vacate the park for cleaning, Occupy Wall Street urged sympathizers to flood the city’s customer services lines: “Call 3-1-1 and tell Bloomberg not to evict us!” (See related story, Page C5 today.) In Philadelphia, Mayor Michael Nutter told the press that demonstrators outside City Hall have incurred $164,000 in overtime public employee costs and $237,000 in regular time. “At the current rate, if Occupy Philly continues to the end of the month, the city would spend another nearly $690,000 on police overtime alone,” the local NBC affiliate reported. “Besides the extra police presence being dedicated to the Occupy Philly protests, other city departments have also incurred costs.” In Seattle, police have so far billed $30,000 in overtime, and the parks department racked up nearly $4,000 in additional costs related to the protests there. Occupiers have blocked traffic, assaulted an officer and pitched illegal tents. Merchants in the area have been hurt as the riffraff deter customers. One business owner in Westlake Park, where hundreds of

protesters remain camped out, told Seattle TV station KIRO: “There’s definitely fewer people you can identify as people out, just walking through the area.” Seattle’s pushover mayor, Democrat Mike McGinn, now faces even greater demands from the insatiable mob — which wants a “guaranteed parking space near City Hall Plaza that allows for around-the-clock parking,” “24-hour access to the first floor of City Hall for restroom access and a written statement from the mayor approving the protesters’ long-term occupancy of City Hall Plaza.” In Boston, City Council President Stephen Murphy anticipates a $2 million hit to taxpayers if the protests refuse to disband by the end of October. The local Fox affiliate notes the tab represents 8 percent of the yearly budget for police overtime. “While we’re all sympathetic with our protesters down there,” Murphy said, “Wall Street isn’t picking up the tab on this thing. “It’s the Boston taxpayers.” When fiscally conservative tea party activists held protests over the past two years, they filed for all the required permits and paid for their own power. Occupy Boston, by contrast, neither sought nor obtained any proper permits at any level, according to the Boston Globe. Instead, city and park officials have been cowed into providing them gratis electricity and camp space lest there be “conflict.” Many of these occupiers are primarily occupied as paid renta-mobsters for unions, left-wing think tanks and the radical Working Families Party. While one collective hand soaks the taxpayers, the other hand is busy soliciting free stuff. Occupy Los Angeles activists took to Skype on their laptops to solicit donations of iPhones and iPads. Occupy Wall Street members on Twitter organized an ongoing “#needsoftheoccupiers” drive for everything from batteries and tarps to “gently used” coats and sweaters, wool socks, sleeping bags and energy bars. Occupy Austin organizers publicized their wish list, includ-

ing a free barbecue grill, portable toilets, extension cords, a Bobcat forestry cutter for clearing brush and network cameras for a live stream. These are not principled advocates of fiscal responsibility. They are professional freeloaders. Unlike tea party activists who focused like a laser beam on politicians in both parties responsible for redistributing wealth to Big Business cronies by force, the Occupy Wall Street movement is everywhere and nowhere. The entitled Kamp Alinsky Kids are poaching WiFi and trespassing on private property under the guise of “social justice” but in plain service of themselves. Their T-shirts and speeches glorify Marxist radicals Che Guevara, Emiliano Zapata and Chairman Mao. They lionize convicted death row cop killer Troy Davis and WikiLeaks collaborator Bradley Manning. They condemn “Nazi Bankers,” Jews, Fox News, the American Legislative Exchange Council, Wisconsin GOP Gov. Scott Walker, the Koch family and the New York Police Department (“Pigs!”). They promote the illegal alien DREAM Act and 9/11 Trutherism. They spout bumper-sticker profanities and inanities: “F**k banks.” “Unf**k the world.” “Free education.” “Smash nationalism.” “People not profits.” They flash peace signs while celebrity supporter Roseanne Barr calls for beheading financial industry workers, and fellow marchers call explicitly for “violent revolution” or for Obama to “Send SEAL Team 6” to Wall Street. Then they huff and puff (preferably in a creepy uniform chant they call the “human microphone”) that we just haven’t taken the time to understand what they’re all about — as they hawk $20 “Eat the Rich” polo shirts and license their protest photos to Getty Images. Viva la revolucion! Up with people! Stop the greed! (Chaching. Cha-ching.)

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

Friday, October 14, 2011

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PeninsulaNorthwest

Friday, October 14, 2011

Peninsula Daily News

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Peninsula Daily News for Friday/Saturday, October 14-15, 2011

Sports

S E CT I O N

B

COMICS, DEAR ABBY In this section

Outdoors

Bird hunting opener is set IF THERE’S ONE group that welcomes the gray days of autumn, it’s the bird hunters. Nothing stirs up a flock of Matt geese or ducks quite like blusSchubert tery fall weather. Unfortunately, those looking to participate in this weekend’s early hunts will get very little of that. The weatherman predicts mostly sunny, mild conditions during the next five days. Thus, hunters shouldn’t expect birds to be moving around too much when things get started Saturday. While that might not affect the opener, it could lead to a few uneventful days after that, Bob Aunspach of Swain’s General Store (360452-2357) in Port Angeles said “Anytime it’s blue-bird weather, it always puts a little damper on that,” Aunspach said. “Duck hunting is always best when it’s cold and windy. “But the first day when the season starts, they are pretty gullible, so the opening will still be pretty strong. “The second day will be tougher if it’s still blue-bird weather. Once they realize the pressure is there, that will slow them down until the weather brings them back in.” The Dungeness Valley area has long been one of the more popular duck hunting spots on the North Olympic Peninsula. Last year, the state Department of Fish and Wildlife opened a new 140-acre plot west of Dungeness River near the mouth to public hunting Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays. Many of the Peninsula’s other public hunting areas can be found near the Hoh, Quillayute Prairie and beaver ponds of the Pysht. The beach near Graysmarsh Farm in Jamestown usually opens to the public on Wednesdays and Sundays, too, and parts of the Coyle Peninsula can produce a few birds. “[The birds] are starting to move,” Bob Gooding of Olympic Sporting Goods (360-374-6330) in Forks said. “Lots of geese go over [on the West End], but they are about 1,000 feet high and going south. “We do get some around here but not very many, not like east of the mountains.” Duck hunters did well for themselves in Clallam County in 2010 with the second-best harvest (9,147 birds) of the past 11 years. They also got 709 Canada geese in another above average season. Things weren’t quite as good for Jefferson County bird hunters, who had an average duck harvest (2,270) and a terrible Canada goose take (18). Duck season opens for five days starting Saturday. After a brief closure, it reopens Oct. 22 through Jan. 29. Canada Geese are fair game Saturday through Oct. 27 and Nov. 5 through Jan. 29.

More hunting As the weather cools down around the Peninsula, expect deer to start acting a little strange. The rut may not be on in full force at this point, but there should still be a few randy bucks stomping around when the modern firearm deer season starts Saturday. “They are falling into their fall pattern,” Aunspach said. “Things are damp and wet out there. “They are definitely going to be moving around, early in the morning and right before dark.” The early modern firearm season for deer will run from Saturday through the end of the month throughout the area. As I’ve alluded in the past, the best spots to scout out the bucks are in the eastern half of the Peninsula, most specifically in the Olympic Game Management Unit (GMU). The Pysht is also productive out west. Turn

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Schubert/B3

Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News

Sequim’s Sarah Hutchison, center, fights for the ball with Port Townsend’s Jewel Johnson (8) as Brenna Latchford (14) of Port Townsend looks on in an Olympic League girls soccer match at Memorial Field in Port Townsend on Thursday night.

PT beats Sequim 3-1 Redskins help playoff cause with league win Peninsula Daily News

PORT TOWNSEND — The Port Townsend girls soccer team’s playoff hopes received a much-needed boost with a 3-1 victory over Olympic League rival Sequim on Thursday. Reigning Olympic League MVP Irina Lyons netted two goals and Audrey McHugh one as the Redskins claimed their second straight win on a cool night at Memorial Field. “We played very well,” Redskins assistant coach Steve Shively said. “We’re just glad with a win versus North Mason on Tuesday and one versus Sequim today that we’re keeping our head above water as best we can.” The win puts Class 1A Port Townsend (2-4-0 in league, 5-7-0 overall) in fifth place among the Olympic League’s 2A schools.

But it was tempered by the loss of starting central defender and senior captain Megan Gambill to a severe knee injury in the 60th minute. “She’s a leader in more ways than one,” Shively said, “so that was a big punch in the gut.” Man marked almost the entire game, Lyons managed to open up the scoring in the 21st minute off an assist from Lily Murock. After the two teams battled back and forth, Lyons found the back of the net for a second time in the 51st minute, this time off a Jewel Johnson assist. McHugh added her goal in the 75th minute before Sequim’s Vianey Cadenas kept the Wolves (1-4-0, 2-9-0) from going scoreless with a goal in the 80th minute. The loss was Sequim’s third in a row since beating North

Preps Mason 1-0 for its first league win since 2008. Shively lauded the defensive play of Gambill, Alex Akins, Chelsea Whipple and Taylor Mills in the back line, as well as freshman keeper Mia Henderson.

same Rochester team earlier in the season. “Our keeper Anastashia Fleck played incredible,” Spartans coach Andrew Peterson said. “[The Warriors] were pressing the whole game, so it was a massive improvement from our girls from Tuesday until now. “I was very pleased.” Forks (0-10, 0-12) hosts Montesano on Tuesday.

Port Townsend 3, Sequim 1 Sequim 0 1 — 1 Port Townsend 1 2 — 3 Scoring Summary First half: 1, PT, Lyons (Murock), 21st. Second Half: 2, PT, Lyons (Johnson), 51st; 3, PT, McHugh, 75th; 1, SE, Cadenas, 80th.

Rochester 6, Forks 0 ROCHESTER — Two days after falling 12-0 to Elma, the Spartans put on a competitive performance in a Southwest Washington League loss to the Warriors on Thursday. Forks goalkeeper Anastashia Fleck came up with 32 saves in the defeat, which was four goals better than a 10-0 setback to the

Crucial game for PA Riders host title-hungry North Kitsap

Rochester 6, Forks 0 Forks Rochester

0 0 — 0 3 3 — 6

Port Angeles 3, North Mason 0 PORT ANGELES — The Roughriders took a step closer to the playoffs with the dominating Olympic League win Thursday at Civic Field. Kaitlin Boston was named the offensive player of the match for one goal and two assists while Brittany McBride and Kathryn Moseley scored one goal each. Turn

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Preps/B2

Playoffs

Brewers nip Cards; series even The Associated Press

By Matt Schubert

Peninsula Daily News

PORT ANGELES — The Port Angeles football team is down to one last major hurdle before its much-anticipated showdown with archrival Sequim. As that game lurks just two weeks from ALSO . . . today, the unbeaten ■ Sequim Roughriders wins; prep host the football North Kitsap capsules/B3 Vi k i n g s tonight in a contest with serious Olympic League championship implications. Win, and ninth-ranked Port Angeles (4-0 in league, 6-0 overall) locks up the league’s No. 2 seed to the Class 2A preliminary state playoffs at the very least. Lose, and the team’s clear path to a league title matchup at Sequim gets a little hazy with North Kitsap (3-1, 3-3) suddenly back into the mix. Throw in a little extra homecoming motivation, and today’s 7 p.m. kickoff at Civic Field couldn’t get much bigger. That’s a fact that’s not certainly lost on Port Angeles head coach Tom Wahl. “There’s a lot riding on this game,” said Wahl, whose team has a game at last-place Klahowya between tonight’s matchup and the one in Sequim

Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News

Cameron Braithwaite of Port Angeles, right, stands up after being tackled by Kingston’s Bobby Reece, left, in an Olympic League game played Sept. 25 at Civic Field. Braithwaite, the top receiver on the team, will miss tonight’s homecoming game against North Kitsap.

Preview on Oct. 28. “This is a big game, and it’s big because of the homecoming game, too. We take that seriously. “The football team gets to go out and defend the pride and the honor of the community and really set the tone of the community as a whole.” Unfortunately for the Riders, they must take on that task at less than full strength tonight.

Port Angeles will be without top wide receiver Cameron Braithwaite (22 receptions, 421 yards), who is likely to miss the next three weeks because of a knee injury suffered in last week’s 27-20 win over North Mason. And while the Roughriders are getting receiver/linebacker Eli Fiscalini back from his own injury, it’s just the second time in four weeks he will start both ways. Turn

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Riders/B3

ST. LOUIS — Power pitching often dominates in the postseason. Soft tosses by Randy Wolf got the Milwaukee Brewers back to even in the NL championship series. The 35-year-old lefty outfoxed the St. Louis Cardinals for seven innings to earn his first postseason win and the Brewers got two more hits from Ryan Braun in a 4-2 victory Thursday night that evened the NL championship series at 2-all. In the American League, the Detriot Tigers shaded Texas 7-5 to stay alive. The Rangers lead the series 3-2. The Brewers, meanwhile, stayed in the thick of things with their victory. “It was a big feeling just to be back out there again after my last start,” said Wolf, hit hard by Arizona to force a deciding Game 5 in the first round of the playoffs. Flipping some pitches in the mid-60s mph, Wolf allowed two runs and six hits, striking out six with one walk. Matt Holliday and Allen Craig homered for the Cardinals, representing their only runs in the last 16 innings. “I think it’s classic because playing each other so many times, we’re dead even,” manager Tony La Russa said. “It comes down to that day, who makes the pitch.”


B2

SportsRecreation

Friday, October 14, 2011

Today’s

Bowling

Today Football: Lopez at Crescent, 1 p.m.; North Kitsap at Port Angeles, 7 p.m. (Homecoming); Forks at Rainier, 7 p.m.; Tulalip at Clallam Bay, 7 p.m.; Charles Wright at Chimacum, 7 p.m. (Homecoming); Highland Christian at Neah Bay, 7 p.m.

Saturday Football: Lummi at Quilcene, 1 p.m. (homecoming); Port Townsend at Cascade Christian (Sumner High School), 1 p.m. Boys Tennis: Port Angeles and Sequim at subdistricts, TBA. Women’s Soccer: Peninsula College at Lower Columbia, 2 p.m.

Area Sports Golf CEDARS AT DUNGENESS GOLF COURSE Women’s 18-Hole Group Tuesday First Division: Pat Conway, 76. Second Division: (Tie) Bonney Benson and Lillie Gomes, 73 Closest to the Pin (First Division) 8th hole: Carolyn Hill 11th hole: Pat Schumacher Putts First Division: Pat Conway, 33 Second Division: Betty Kettel, 33 PENINSULA GOLF CLUB Men’s Club Better Nine Tuesday Gross: Steve Callis 38. Net: Ray Dooley 32, Lawrence Bingham 33, Daryl Jensen 34. Team Gross: Gene Middleton-Steve Jones 76, Gene Middleton-Dave Boerigter 76. Team Net: Steve Jones-Dave Boerigter 61, Jack Munro-Andy Vanderweyden 66, Lawrence Bingham-Jerry Sparks 66.

can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.

LAUREL LANES Lakeside Big Four Wednesday Men’s High Game: Frank Carpenter 279. Men’s High Series: Frank Carpenter 733. League-Leading Team: Road Hogs by 6 points. Birch’s Molar Bowlers Wednesday Men’s High Game: George Hamlin 224. Men’s High Series: George Hamlin 618. Women’s High Game: Ginny Bowling 195. Women’s High Series: Aleta Smith 519. League-Leading Team: Madronas. Laurel Lanes Seniors Tuesday Men’s High Game: Rod Melville 197. Men’s High Series: Dick Roper 542. Women’s High Game: Sherri Zindel 188. Women’s High Series: Hazel Vail 504. Mixed Up Mix Tuesday Men’s High Game: Rich Lindstrand 225. Men’s High Series: Calen Walz 618. Women’s High Game: Jess Edgmon 192. Women’s High Series: Jess Edgmon 551. League-Leading Team: The Young and the Rest of Us by .5 point. Tuesday Brunch League High Game: June Larsen 182. High Series: Deb Campion 489. First-Place Team: Quilted Strait.

Preps Girls Soccer Olympic League Team League Pts Overall Bremerton(3A) 5-0-1 16 9-1-2 North Kitsap 4-1-1 13 7-1-5 Klahowya 4-1-0 12 7-2-2 Port Angeles 2-1-2 8 6-4-3 Kingston 2-3-0 6 5-4-2 Port Town.(1A) 2-4-0 6 5-7-0 Olympic 1-2-2 5 5-4-3 Sequim 1-4-0 3 2-9-0 North Mason 0-5-0 0 0-10-0

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

Thursday’s Games Port Townsend 3, Sequim 1 Port Angeles 3, North Mason 0 Bremerton 1, Olympic 0 North Kitsap 1, Kingston 0

Volleyball Olympic League League Overall North Kitsap 6-0 10-1 Port Angeles 5-0 11-0 Sequim 4-1 9-2 Kingston 3-2 5-5 Olympic 3-2 7-4 Klahowya 1-4 5-6 North Mason 1-4 2-9 Bremerton(3A) 1-5 3-9 Port Town. (1A) 0-6 0-12 Thursday’s Games Sequim 3, Port Townsend 0 Port Angeles 3, North Mason 0 Olympic 3, Bremerton 0 North Kitsap 3, Kingston 0 Klahowya 3, Crescent 1 1A Nisqually League League Overall Vashon Island 9-0 10-0 Life Christian 7-1 10-1 Cascade Christian 4-4 4-4 Seattle Christian 3-5 3-5 Orting 3-6 4-6 Charles Wright 2-5 3-7 Chimacum 1-8 3-9 Thursday’s Games Vashon Island 3, Chimacum 0 Life Christian 3, Orting 0 Southwest Washington League Evergreen Division League Overall Montesano 9-0 9-0 Onalaska 8-1 8-1 Forks 6-4 7-4 Tenino 6-4 6-4 Hoquiam 5-4 5-4 Rochester 2-8 2-8 Rainier 2-7 2-7 Elma 0-10 0-10

Thursday’s Games Forks 3, Rochester 2 Tenino 3, Elma 1 Onalaska at Montesano, not reported Hoquiam at Rainier, NR North Olympic League League Overall Crescent 3-0 9-1 Neah Bay 1-2 3-2 Clallam Bay 1-3 4-6 Thursday’s Games Neah Bay 3, Clallam Bay 2 Klahowya 3, Crescent 1

Baseball MLB Playoffs LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) American League All games televised by Fox Texas 3, Detroit 2 Saturday, Oct. 8: Texas 3, Detroit 2 Sunday, Oct. 9: Detroit at Texas, ppd. rain Monday, Oct. 10: Texas 7, Detroit 3, 11 innings Tuesday, Oct. 11: Detroit 5, Texas 2 Wednesday, Oct. 12: Texas 7, Detroit 3, 11 innings Thursday, Oct. 13: Detroit 7, Texas 5 Saturday, Oct. 15: Detroit (Scherzer 15-9) at Texas (Holland 16-5), 5:05 p.m. x-Sunday, Oct. 16: Detroit (Fister 11-13) at Texas (Lewis 14-10), 5:05 p.m. National League All games televised by TBS St. Louis 2, Milwaukee 2 Sunday, Oct. 9: Milwaukee 9, St. Louis 6 Monday, Oct. 10: St. Louis 12, Milwaukee 3 Wednesday, Oct. 12: St. Louis 4, Milwaukee 3 Thursday, Oct. 13: Milwaukee 4, St. Louis 2 Today: Milwaukee (Greinke 16-6) at St. Louis (Garcia 13-7), 5:05 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 16: St. Louis at Milwaukee, 1:05 or 5:05 p.m. x-Monday, Oct. 17: St. Louis at Milwaukee, 5:05 p.m.

Preps: Neah Bay holds off Bruins Continued from B1 “Kaitlin had a great game,” coach Scott Moseley said. Paxton Rodocker also had an assist as the Riders improved to 2-1-2 in league and 6-4-3 overall. Port Angeles outshot the Bulldogs 36-1. Rodocker was picked as the defensive player of the game while Kylee Jeffers as named transition player. The Riders are fourth in league and third in Class 2A. The top five 2A teams advance to the playoffs. The Riders next play at Sequim on Tuesday.

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Vashon Island 3, Chimacum 0

CHIMACUM — The Cowboys played the Nisqually Leagueleading Pirates tough in the first game but then fell apart. It got easier for Vashon in each game, 25-20, 25-15, 25-4. “We were passing well and we were staying with them in the first game but then we ran out of steam,” coach Sally Dankert said. The Cowboys are 1-8 in league and 3-9 overall. Alyssa Gale led the Cowboys with eight digs, four kills and two aces while Lauren Thacker had six digs, four kills and was 9 of 9 serving. Volleyball Olivia Baird led the defense with nine digs while Kiersten Neah Bay 3, Snyder was 100 percent serving. Clallam Bay 2 Chimacum next plays at SeatCLALLAM BAY — This North tle Christian on Monday. Olympic League barn-burner between the two archrivals came Forks 3, right down to the wire with the Rochester 2 Red Devils pulling it out 25-10, ROCHESTER — The Spar13-25, 25-17, 18-25, 17-15. “Both teams were just on tans improved their chances for a [Thursday night],” Clallam Bay playoff berth with the barncoach Cheryl Erickson said. “It burner of a win. The scores were 25-22, 21-25, was fun.” “It went back-and-forth, back- 25-22, 22-25, 15-12. Forks now is 6-4 in SWL-Everand forth,” Neah Bay coach Shagreen Division and 7-4 overall. ron Kanichy said. “We’re looking good,” coach The Bruins are now 2-2 in league and 5-5 overall while the Jennifer Neel said. Sydney Christensen led the Red Devils improved to 2-2 in Spartans with 11 kills, two blocks league. For Neah Bay, Rebecca Thomp- and two stuffs while Casey Wilson led the way with six serving liams was right behind with 10 aces and three kills while Kaela kills, three blocks and three aces. Setter JIllian Raben dished Tyler had two blocks, two aces out 25 assists in the match. and a kill and Courtney Winck The Spartans next will host had a monster match with five Montesano on Tuesday. blocks, a kill and an ace. “We’re improving with every Sequim 3, game,” Kanichy said. Port Townsend 0 Jeddie Herndon, Clallam Bay’s libero, had an outstanding match PORT TOWNSEND — The while Jazzmine Randall had a Wolves had an easy time in the strong serving match, Erickson Olympic League match, winning said. 25-7, 25-10, 25-11 on Thursday. Jamie Parker was strong on Sequim played everybody to defense while Melissa Willis con- improve to 4-1 in league and 9-2 trolled the net for the Bruins. overall. “Melissa is an animal around The Wolves now will prepare the net,” Erickson said. “She won’t for archrival Port Angeles, the let anything get by her.” only team to beat them in league The Red Devils next host Cres- play, at home Tuesday. cent on Tuesday while Clallam Haleigh Harrison led the Bay next hosts Crescent next Wolves against the Redskins with 15 kills, eight digs and three stuff Thursday.

blocks while Hannah Hudson had a match-high 10 digs with five aces and three perfect passes. Setter Taylor Balkan spread around 23 assists and had eight digs to go along with her 21 of 22 serving and seven aces. Lex Besand had six kills, three perfect passes and an ace.

Klahowya 3, Crescent 1 SILVERDALE — The Loggers were dealt their first loss of the season in a tough nonleague road match against the 2A Eagles on Thursday night. Crescent went toe-to-toe with the Olympic League squad before falling 25-22, 18-25, 25-19, 25-21. “It was a hard-fought match. The games were there for the taking,” Crescent coach Alex Baker said. “The Loggers made a few mistakes they shouldn’t have made. This was a match we could have won.” Rachel Bowen led the Loggers with 12-of-13 serving, two aces, 21 assists and two tips. Shannon Williams was also deadly at the service line for Crescent, putting away five aces while also coming up with nine blocks, two tips and three kills. Sara Moore was 9 of 10 serving with one ace, one tip and nine kills, while teammate Bonny Hazelett was 9 of 10 serving with two tips and five kills. “The Loggers played well tonight, they just fell a little short,” Baker said. Crescent next heads to Neah Bay on Tuesday for a North Olympic League showdown. A win would clinch an NOL title for the Loggers (3-0, 9-1).

Port Angeles 3, North Mason 0 PORT ANGELES — The Riders ran roughshod over the Bulldogs for a 25-15, 25-7, 25-8 win in Olympic League action Thursday night. The victory kept Port Angeles (5-0, 11-0) unbeaten while also setting up a critical matchup at Sequim (4-1, 9-2) next Tuesday. “Our passing was good and our hitting was on,” Rider coach Christine Halberg said. Kiah Jones led the Rider

charge with 15 kills, seven digs, one block and three aces. Darian Foley added seven kills, two digs and three blocks, while Danielle Rutherford served 21 for 21 with five aces, four kills, three blocks and four digs. Emily Drake had 19 assists, one kill and one dig, and Lauren Norton had 10 digs.

Girls Swimming Port Angeles 137, Kingston 46 PORT ANGELES — The Roughriders concluded their home season by swamping the Buccaneers in Olympic League action Thursday. The Riders, 5-1 in league and 5-2 overall, earned a state qualifying time in the 200-yard freestyle relay and now has three relays qualified for state before the end of the regular season. The 200 free relay captured first with a state-qualifying time of 1:47.11 with Tracie Macias, Ashlee Reid, Brooke Sires and Tarah Erickson. Earning district qualifying times were Tracie Macias in the 100 breaststroke (first place) in 1:17.51 and Lexie pankowski in 200 individual medley (fourth) in 2:47.33. The Riders won 11 of the 12 events and outscored Kingston in all 12 events. Tracie Macias and Kaitline Fairchild were double winners with Macias taking the 50 free as well as the 100 breast and Fairchild winning the 200 IM and the 100 butterfly. Other Port Angeles winners were the 200 medley relay team, Kelly Winn in 200 free, Allison Hodgin in diving, Reid in 100 free, Kelsey Macias in 500 free and the 400 free relay. Nine swimmers competed in their final home meet including four-year athletes Erickson, Fairchild, Stephanie Lindquist, diver Hodgin and Ruby Jackson. Also in their final home meet were Kelsey Macias, three years; Katelyn Noard, two years in diving; and Woo-Seong Shinn and Nora Krebs, one year each. The Riders’ final league meet is at North Kitsap in Poulsbo next Thursday.

Today 6 a.m. (47) GOLF EPGA, Portugal Masters, Site: Oceânico Victoria Clube de Golfe - Vilamoura, Portugal 11 a.m. (47) GOLF PGA, The McGladrey Classic, Site: Sea Island Golf Club - St. Simons Island, Georgia Noon (27) ESPN2 Auto Racing NASCAR, Dollar General 300 Miles of Courage, Nationwide Series 1:30 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Auto Racing NASCAR, Bank of America 500 Sprint Cup Series 3 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Auto Racing NASCAR, Bank of America 500 Sprint Cup Series 4:30 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Auto Racing NASCAR, Dollar General 300 Miles of Courage Nationwide Series 5 p.m. (28) TBS Baseball MLB, Milwaukee Brewers at St. Louis Cardinals in NLCS Game 5. 6 p.m. (26) ESPN Football NCAA, Hawaii vs. San Jose State 7:30 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Soccer MLS, Real Salt Lake vs. Colorado Rapids, Site: Dick’s Sporting Goods Park Commerce City, Colo. 7:30 p.m. (25) ROOT Soccer MLS, Houston Dynamo vs. Portland Timbers, Site: Jeld-Wen Field Portland, Ore.

Saturday 4:40 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Soccer EPL, Manchester United vs. Liverpool, Site: Anfield Road - Liverpool, England 6 a.m. (47) GOLF EPGA, Portugal Masters 9 a.m. (26) ESPN Football NCAA, Michigan vs. Michigan State 9 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Football NCAA, Indiana vs. Wisconsin 9 a.m. (48) FX Football NCAA, Baylor vs. Texas A&M 11 a.m. (47) GOLF Golf PGA, The McGladrey Classic 12:30 p.m. (4) KOMO (26) ESPN Football NCAA, Ohio State vs. Illinois or Oklahoma State vs. Texas 12:30 p.m. (7) KIRO Football NCAA, Louisiana State vs. Tennessee 12:30 p.m. (25) ROOT Football NCAA, Colorado vs. Washington 2 p.m. (5) KING Horse Racing NTRA, The Queen Elizabeth II, Site: Keeneland - Keeneland, Ky. 3 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Football NCAA, Alabama vs. Mississippi 4 p.m. (2) CBUT Hockey NHL, Winnipeg Jets vs. Phoenix Coyotes 4 p.m. (26) ESPN Football NCAA, Florida vs. Auburn 4:30 p.m. (4) KOMO Auto Racing NASCAR, Bank of America 500 Sprint Cup Series 4:30 p.m. (13) KCPQ Baseball MLB, Detroit Tigers at Texas Rangers in ALCS Game 6. 4:30 p.m. (25) ROOT Football NCAA, Kansas State vs. Texas Tech 6:15 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Football NCAA, Oklahoma vs. Kansas 7 p.m. (2) CBUT Hockey NHL, Vancouver Canucks vs. Edmonton Oilers 7:15 p.m. (26) ESPN Football NCAA, Arizona State vs. Oregon 7:30 p.m. (25) ROOT Football NCAA, BYU vs. Oregon State

Briefly . . . McCartney, Dacko are top athletes PORT ANGELES — Katherine Dacko and Hayden McCartney were named Port Angeles High School athletes of the week for Sept. 26 to Oct. 1. Dacko is a senior cross country runner. At the Fort Worden Invitation last

weekend, Dacko sprinted through the course with a time of 22:02, which is a 3 minute, 38 second improvement from last year and 41 seconds improvement from her Fort Worden meet time three weeks ago. Along with Dacko’s dedication to cross country, she also is a strong student, keeping her grades high and challenging her intellect with a heavy course load.

McCartney is a senior boys tennis player. He has been the Roughriders’ No. 1 singles player all season. McCartney qualified for state last year in doubles, and has spent the early part of this season preparing and practicing to get back. He is a great combination of skill and competitive spirit. McCartney wants to win at everything he does and

that intensity and focus has helped him improve his game on a daily basis.

Talking Rain PORT ANGELES — Port Angeles Parks and Recreation Department is hosting the 22nd annual Talking Rain Classic for men’s and women’s basketball teams on Nov. 5-6. There is a four-game guarantee and a $250 team entry fee.

For more information or to register call Dan Estes at 360-417-4557 or email at destes@cityofpa.us.

Twisters open gym PORT TOWNSEND — Twisters Gymnastics invites the public to an open gym this Saturday (and the third Saturday of every month). Ages 6 and older are from 1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m., ages 5 and young with an

adult are 2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Open gym gives youngsters the chance to try out the gym and tumble, bounce, balance, swing, practice skills and/or play on equipment without the structure of a class. Cost: is $10 per child. The gym is located at 1322 Washington St. on the second floor of the U.S. Post Office building. Peninsula Daily News


SportsRecreation

Peninsula Daily News

PDN Weekly Football Picks

Friday, October 14, 2011

Sequim rips Olympic Wolves move to 7-0 with dominating league victory

Brad LaBrie Sports Editor

This weekend’s games (Day) High School Lopez at Crescent, 1 p.m. (Fri.) North Kitsap at Port Angeles, 7 p.m. (Fri.) Forks at Rainier, 7 p.m. (Fri.) Tulalip at Clallam Bay, 7 p.m. (Fri.) Charles Wright at Chimacum, 7 p.m. (Fri.) Highland Christian at Neah Bay, 7 p.m. (Fri.) Lummi at Quilcene, 1 p.m. (Sat.) Port Townsend at Cas. Christian, 7 p.m. (Sat.) College Colorado at Washington, 12:30 p.m. (Sat.) Stanford at Washington St., 4:30 p.m. (Sat.) Arizona State at Oregon, 7:15 p.m. (Sat.) NFL San Francisco at Detroit, 10 a.m. (Sun.) Buffalo at NY Giants, 10 a.m. (Sun.)

Matt Schubert Sports Reporter

Mike Carman Golf Columnist

Crescent Port Angeles Forks Clallam Bay Chimacum Neah Bay Lummi Cascade Christian

Lopez Port Angeles Forks Clallam Bay Charles Wright Neah Bay Lummi Cascade Christian

Lopez Port Angeles Forks Clallam Bay Charles Wright Neah Bay Lummi Cascade Christian

Washington Stanford Oregon

Washington Stanford Oregon

Washington Stanford Oregon

Detroit NY Giants

Detroit NY Giants

Detroit NY Giants

Record: 62-17

Record: 62-17

Record: 63-16

Week 7 Football Capsules Lopez at Crescent ■ Time: Today at 1 p.m. ■ Last meeting: Crescent 84-68 win in Joyce, Oct. 31, 2009. ■ Records: Crescent 3-2 in league, 4-2 overall; Lopez 4-0 in league and overall. ■ At stake: The Loggers host a rare Friday home game when Lopez comes to town today. Crescent can maintain its grip on one of the four Northwest Football League playoff spots with a win against the first-place Lobos. Lopez has rebounded nicely from being unable to field a team in 2010, starting out this fall with four straight victories, all coming by 30 points or more.

Forks at Rainier ■ Time: Tonight at 7. ■ Last meeting: Rainier 29-7 win in Forks, Oct. 15, 2010. ■ Records: Rainier 1-3, 2-4; Forks 2-2, 2-4. ■ At stake: Forks, coming off a 55-8 loss to secondranked Montesano, takes on a Rainier team reeling from back-to-back doubledigit losses to Elma and Hoquiam. A win here puts the Spartans in prime position to compete for one of the SWL-Evergreen Division’s four playoff spots. They play two teams currently above them in the standings — Tenino and Elma — in the final two weeks of the regular season.

Charles Wright at Chimacum ■ Time: Tonight at 7. ■ Last meeting: Chimacum 38-7 win in Tacoma, Oct. 15, 2010. ■ Records: Chimacum 1-3, 1-5; Charles Wright 3-1, 4-1. ■ At stake: Chimacum may have turned around its season with a 35-14 upset at Vashon Island last week. A year ago, the Cowboys used a win over the Pirates to catapult them to a fourgame win streak to finish the regular season. Repeating that certainly won’t be easy this fall, especially given the talent the Tarriers bring to tonight’s homecoming tilt between 1A Nisqually League foes. But with the Cowboys running for a season-high 194 yards last week at Vashon, there is reason for optimism.

Highland Christian at Neah Bay ■ Time: Tonight at 7. ■ Last meeting: Neah Bay 46-0 win in Arlington, Oct. 15, 2010. ■ Records: Neah Bay 4-0, 4-1; Highland Christian 1-4, 1-5. ■ At stake: The thirdranked Red Devils figure to be heavy favorites when the Knights come calling to Cape Flattery tonight. Neah Bay has scored three straight mercy-rule victories — a forfeit was sandwiched between — since opening up the season with a two-point loss to topranked Lummi. Highland Christian,

meanwhile, has yet to win a game on the football field. Its lone win came from a forfeit.

Lummi at Quilcene ■ Time: Saturday at 1 p.m. ■ Last meeting: Lummi 56-22 win in Bellingham, Oct. 15, 2010. ■ Records: Quilcene 2-2, 3-2; Lummi 4-0, 6-0. ■ At stake: The Rangers couldn’t have picked a more challenging homecoming opponent than the defending 1B champion Blackhawks. Lummi’s high-powered offense is averaging 58.5 points per game and enters Saturday’s contest on a 17-game win streak. Quilcene is coming off a 58-44 road win over Muckleshoot Tribal.

Port Townsend at Cascade Christian ■ Time: Saturday at 1 p.m. at Sumner High School ■ Last meeting: Cascade Christian 48-8 win in Port Townsend, Oct. 15, 2010. ■ Records: Port Townsend 0-4, 0-6; Cascade Christian 3-1, 4-2. ■ At stake: It’s bad enough Port Townsend’s youth-infused roster has to take on defending 1A champion Cascade Christian on the road Saturday. The Redskins will also have to deal with a Cougars squad looking to right the ship following a stunning 20-14 loss last week to Cedar Park Christian, their first league setback since 2006. Matt Schubert

Peninsula Daily News

SILVERDALE — The Sequim football team didn’t need any fourth-quarter heroics this week. Six days after getting pushed to the limit by Kingston in a 27-13 win, the Wolves rolled to a 35-8 victory over Olympic on Thursday night to remain unbeaten on the season. Quarterback Frank Catelli ran for two touchdowns and threw for another to help put the fourth-ranked Wolves (4-0 in league, 7-0) all alone on top of the Olympic League, for at least one day. Port Angeles, which is a half-game behind Sequim in the standings, plays North Kitsap tonight. “[The Kingston game] was a good wake-up call, which was good to have,” said Sequim coach Erik Wiker, whose team held off the Bucs with a late goalline stand last week. “I think we prepared really good this week, and for the most part we played really well. It was a real good response.”

“Most people are going to try to hunt clear cuts in the morning and late evening when they are trying to feed,” Brian Menkal of Brian’s Sporting Goods and More (360-683-1950) in Sequim said. Added Aunspach, “Some of your younger bucks will get killed this weekend. “Your big, mature trophy-type bucks will come more toward the end of the season as that urge comes on to follow that doe.”

Continued from B1 concerns on offense, much of the practice time this That means the Riders’ week has been spent getshotgun spread attack may ting ready for North Kitlean even more on all- sap’s multiple-formation everything senior quarter- offense. “They are doing the back Keenen Walker, the team leader with 1,556 wing-T probably as their base formation, but they yards of total offense. “It’s hard to tell what’s are doing all kinds of stuff,” going to happen [without Wahl said. “They are probably one Braithwaite],” said Wahl, of the most versatile hinting that the team might emphasize the run game a offenses that we’ve seen this season as far as multilittle more tonight. ple sets and plays that they “We’re just going to feel have. It’s a pretty big scout that out and see what sheet. seems to be most effective. “It’s taken the full week “It was pretty obvious for sure to prepare for all from last week . . . that the stuff they are showing.” Keenen had to take over. Vikings quarterback A.J. We had to put a lot of pres- Milyard is a capable passer, sure on him and run him having thrown for 929 more than we’d like to. yards, 11 touchdowns and “We’d like to balance four interceptions with a things out [tonight].” 57-percent completion rate. If such is the case, the North Kitsap also feaRiders will need big contri- ture a couple of explosive butions from receivers Sky- playmakers in running ler Gray (17 receptions, 240 back Dan Mitchell (40 yards) and Riley Hannam rushes. 410 yards) and as well as running back receiver Andrew Urquhart Dylan Brewer (67 carries, (20 catches, 541 yards). 460 yards). Coming off a shocking Yet even with all of the 34-28 overtime loss to

Fishing for salmon Fall salmon season has arrived on the West End. Silvers are flooding into the Quillayute system and Hoh river. And once the Dungeness River opens Sunday, anglers will have a whole lot of options across the Peninsula. “There’s quite a few fish around,” Gooding said of the West End. “If [the rivers] are dropping and getting clear, you better get your butt out there because it’s going to be smoking. “Last weekend the Quillayute [Tribe] got like 80,000 pounds, and people still caught fish. There was just so many. They were coming in waves.” The Sol Duc Hatchery reported 1,200 coho reaching its traps in the past week, many chrome bright. While the numbers aren’t as big on the Dungeness — 450 coho made it to the hatchery this week — there still figures to be plenty of salmon swimming around in time for the traditional Oct. 16 opener.

nine catches for 129 yards. He was one of six Wolves to catch a pass on the night, with Michael Ballard and Nick Ramirez also grabbing four receptions each. Backup quarterback Cody Field was impressive in relief of Catelli, completing 6 of 10 passes for 103 yards and one touchdown. Jack Wiker added a rushing touchdown of his own in the first quarter. “Our intensity level was quite a bit better this week,” Erik Wiker said. Sequim travels to North Kitsap next Friday. Sequim 35, Olympic 8 Sequim Olympic

7 7 14 7— 35 0 0 0 8— 8 First Quarter S—Wiker 2 run (Campbell kick) Second Quarter S—Catelli 4 run (Campbell kick) Third Quarter S—Catelli 14 run (Campbell kick) S—Miles 34 pass from Catelli (Campbell kick) Fourth Quarter S—Lidstrom 7 pass from Field (Koonz kick) O—Grier 21 pass from Howard (Grier run) Individual Stats Rushing— OL: Grier 16-55, Howard 14-55. SE: Catelli 10-55, Wiker 6-38, Field 5-17, McElrath 4-26. Passing—OL: Howard 19-34-2, 170. SE: Catelli 15-26-2, 167; Field 6-10-0, 103. Receiving—OL: McInnis 5-80, R.J. Neal 6-28, Fullilove 3-23, Smelser 2-11, Grier 2-21, Tyson 1-7. SE: Forshaw 9-129, Ballard 4-48. Ramirez 4-36, Miles 2-49, Field 1-8, Lidstrom 1-7.

Olympic last week, the Vikings absolutely must have this game if they want to win a league title. Port Angeles, meanwhile, is gunning for its second straight 7-0 start to a season in addition to everything else. No other Rider team has done that since the 1967 edition went undefeated at 9-0. Given that the team won its last two games by just 13 and 7 points over Olympic and North Mason, respectively, getting to that point doesn’t figure to be easy tonight. “It’s good to be used to winning, and I want the guys to be confident in that,” said Wahl, whose team clinched a second straight playoff berth Thursday by virtue of Olympic’s loss to Sequim. “I think the guys realize that every week is important when you’re winning. “If there is any point made in the last two weeks, it’s that everybody is shooting for us.”

Fish Counts Saltwater Fishing (July 11-17) Ediz Hook Wednesday, Oct. 5 — 17 boats (31 anglers): 46 coho; Thursday, Oct. 6 — 28 boats (48 anglers): 65 coho; Saturday, Oct. 8 — 41 boats (82 anglers): 3 chinook, 68 coho, 1 chum; Sunday, Oct. 9 — 35 boats (68 anglers): 1 chinook, 37 coho, 1 pink; Port Angeles West Ramp Friday, Oct. 7 — 14 boats (26 anglers): 28 coho, 1 chum; Saturday, Oct. 8 — 18 boats (36 anglers): 27 coho, 3 chum; Sunday, Oct. 9 — 24 boats (62 anglers): 1 chinook, 30 coho, 1 chum; Cline Spit Ramp Monday, Oct. 3 — 1 boat (1 angler): No fish reported; Cline Spit Beach Monday, Oct. 3 — 2 anglers: No fish reported; Friday, Oct. 7 — 1 angler: No fish reported; Point Wilson Beach Monday, Oct. 3 — 6 anglers: No fish reported;

Where is the Mania? DEAR PENINSULITES, I need your fungi. Thus far, “Mushroom Mania: A Fungus Festivus” has generated less interest than a Port Townsend drum circle. Translation: The annual mushroom photo contest is dire need of submissions. There are three categories to choose from: largest mushroom, prettiest mushroom and mushroom most resembling a notable figure. All photos must be emailed by Nov. 7 to matt.schubert@ peninsuladailynews. com. Full contest rules are here: http://tinyurl. com/6dd39xr. Matt Schubert

Catelli accounted for 222 yards of offense on the night, throwing for 167 on 15-of-26 passing while running for another 55 on 10 carries. The senior signal caller scored on runs of 4 and 14 yards between the second and third quarters, his last putting the Wolves ahead 21-0 early in the second half. He found Christian Miles for a 34-yard touchdown pass later in the quarter to essentially put the game away at 28-0. That was due in large part to a defense that held the Trojans’ spread offense scoreless until late in the fourth quarter. “It was a pretty good defensive effort,” Wiker said. “A lot of good film work for the kids. They knew what was coming at them. “Playing smart helped us quite a bit.” Wide receiver Tyler Forshaw, last week’s hero with an 80-yard kickoff return for a touchdown in the fourth quarter, had a big game for the Wolves with

Prep Football

Riders: Homecoming

Schubert: Fish Continued from B1

B3

Port Angeles resident Dan Engelbertson, left, and his son, Kevin, show off their salmon catch taken out of the Sol Duc River last Friday.

steelhead river fishing class this Tuesday and next Tuesday at its Sequim shop, 542 W. Washington St. The class will run from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. both nights. ■ Puget Sound AnglersNorth Olympic Peninsula chapter will hold its monthly meeting this Thursday. “Of course, it will be com- Also . . . The meeting will start at bat fishing extraordinaire,” 7 p.m. at the Trinity Meth■ The return of recreMenkal said. “There’s great odist Church, 100 S. Blake ational crabbing to the access points all along the Ave. Strait and most of Area 9 river, and the easier the Details on the guest was met with so-so results. access the more people are speaker were unavailable. Predictably, the best going to be there. ■ The Hurricane Ridge “The people who want to returns seemed to be near Gear Swap and Olympic Sequim at Dungeness and walk a little farther, they Peninsula Outdoor Sports Sequim bays. Those around Expo comes to Port Angeles will get away from everyPort Angeles encountered a High School next Saturday, body else, but you’ve got to hit-or-miss fishery. walk a ways.” Oct. 22. “Guys seem to be doing Those who still have a The gear swap/expo will little salt in their blood may OK,” Menkal said. “It’s not run from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., super-hot like it was the consider heading out into with admission $3 per perfirst week of July, but they Marine Area 6 (eastern son or $7 for a family pass. are consistently getting Strait of Juan de Fuca). Anyone is welcome to Anglers around the Port their crab.” drop off equipment and Angeles area have hooked a ■ Brian’s Sporting Goods clothing for sale between 9 number of straggler coho and More will host a free a.m. and 10:30 a.m. the day coming through the Strait. of the event. two-session salmon and “Sunday was pretty poor, and then it really picked back up again on Monday,” Aunspach said. Some of those fish are likely to pass by Port Townsend in Area 9 (Admiralty Inlet) as well. Hopefully they aren’t suffering from lockjaw at that point.

Reports are provided by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife reports are taken randomly and do not reflect all fish caught.

There will be two showings of a Warren Miller ski and snowboard film that night at 6 and 8 at the Port Angeles High School auditorium. Admission is $10. ■ Dungeness River Audubon Center will hold a free presentation for beginning birders and newcomers to the area from 9:30 a.m. to noon on Saturday at Carrie Blake Park. The presentation will help familiarize participants with area birds and birding techniques. To pre-register, contact Dave Jackson at 360-683-1355 or djackson@ wavecable.com. ■ Washington Trails Association extended the deadline for its annual Northwest Exposure Photo Contest to this Monday. The photo contest includes five categories: wild landscapes, flora and fauna, hikers in action, families on trail and offbeat outdoors. For more information, visit http://tinyurl.com/ yj29nxg.

■ The first razor clam digs of the fall are set for Oct. 28 and 29 at four ocean beaches. Long Beach, Twin Harbors, Copalis and Mocrocks will all open to afternoon digs on those dates. There is still no word on when, or if, digs will commence at Kalaloch Beach.

Send photos, stories Want your event listed in the outdoors column? Have a fishing or hunting report, an anecdote about an outdoors experience or a tip on gear or technique, why not share? Send it to me, Matt Schubert, Sports Department, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362; phone, 360-417-3526; fax, 360-4173521; email matt.schubert @peninsuladailynews.com.

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Matt Schubert is the outdoors columnist for the Peninsula Daily News. His column appears on Thursdays and Fridays.


B4

Friday, October 14, 2011

Fun ’n’ Advice

Peninsula Daily News

Son dishes dirt, then reconciles

Dilbert

DEAR ABBY: When my son, “Lyle,” told my husband and me that his wife, “Becky,” was leaving him and taking their kids where he would not be able to see them, we were shocked. Lyle consulted an attorney, filed for divorce that day and got a restraining order to keep Becky from running off with the kids. We begged them to go to counseling. As things progressed, Lyle learned about several of Becky’s affairs, her drug use and her chronic lying, and told us every awful, shocking detail. He also made sure our entire family knew about his lying, cheating, conniving wife. As talk began to circulate around our family, my husband told Lyle he knew from the beginning that all the things he had been told about Becky were true. Well, today my son announced to us that he and Becky are back together! We are stunned. Abby, please warn people who are considering divorce to keep their mouths shut because spreading dirt helps no one and can cause real problems later. Any advice on how to deal with this mess now? Wish We Were Never Told

For Better or For Worse

Pickles

Frank & Ernest

Dear Wish: While I’m not a doctor, I am prescribing a healthy dose of collective amnesia for your family. It’s the only way you’ll be able to look Becky in the eye. Your son was lining up allies when he trashed her. Whether or not what he said about her was true or exaggerated, no one will regard her — or him — quite the way they did. What a shame. Dear Abby: My mother-in-law, “Bernice,” hasn’t spoken to me since her son and I were married four years ago. We got along well prior to the wedding, but because I didn’t let her make major decisions in the wedding, she stopped speaking to me. I have done everything I can to mend our relationship — sent her letters of apology, birthday gifts, etc. — still no response. My husband is in the middle. I have really had it with Bernice and don’t want to try to mend fences with her any longer, but my husband

Garfield

Momma

Abigail

Van Buren

is very close to his mom and wants me to keep trying. What can I do? Please help. Daughter-inLaw Dilemma

Dear Daughter-in-Law: Your husband isn’t in the middle. His mother has been trying to push you out in left field for four years, and he is unwilling to put his foot down and stop her. If you’re smart, you will take the high road and continue with the gifts on special occasions. With luck, she’ll continue to ignore them, and you won’t have to tolerate her. A mother-in-law who carries a grudge and thinks her “suggestions” are ironclad is a bona fide burden. Be glad you don’t have to suffer her presence, and keep your fingers crossed. Dear Abby: My wife and I are the parents of three young boys — ages 11, 8 and 3. My wife often walks around our bedroom and bathroom naked or topless with lacy underpants. I feel it is inappropriate for her to walk around in this manner and that she should take care to cover up, especially in front of the older boys. What do you think? Blushing in San Jose, Calif. Dear Blushing: Although families have different standards regarding nudity, I think a touch of modesty is the best policy. If your wife enjoys being nude or topless in the confines of your bedroom and bathroom, she should keep the door shut and ask that the boys knock and ask permission before entering.

_________

Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.

The Last Word in Astrology By Eugenia Last ARIES (March 21-April 19): Put greater effort into your partnerships. Even if you don’t agree with someone, be diplomatic. Avoiding confrontation will ensure opportunity. Love is highlighted. Enrich a new or old relationship with a show of affection. 3 stars TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Criticism will lead to trouble. Look for the positive in every situation and you can avoid an argument. Too much of anything will be frowned upon by someone who is important to you. Keep track of your time and your spending habits. 3 stars

Rose is Rose

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Take care of matters that can affect your finances. Don’t leave important documents for someone else to handle. Deal with institutions or government agencies with speed and accuracy. Hard work, coupled with originality, will help you excel. 3 stars

Elderberries

CANCER (June 21-July 22): An opportunity will arise if you offer your services to an organization you respect. Love is in the stars, and mingling with other singles or doing something special with your current partner will enhance your love life. Go shopping and update your image. 4 stars

Dennis the Menace

DEAR ABBY

Doonesbury

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Don’t make assumptions, or you will be disappointed. Promises are not likely to be kept. As charming as you may be, someone will find fault with what you do or say. Fix up your surroundings, but stay within your budget. Protect your assets. 2 stars VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You need to get away and explore new people, places and things. Socializing and participating in events will help you gain confidence. An opportunity to impress someone special will lead to personal rewards. Consider making a residential or lifestyle change. 5 stars LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Someone from your past may offer to help you out, but find out what’s expected in return before accepting. Work hard and reap rewards based on your own merit. Your success will overrule someone who tends to brag. 3 stars SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Let your charm and experience shine through. Love is highlighted, and taking time to reinforce your feelings for someone will pay off. Someone will surprise you with unusual information that can alter your current professional status. Don’t feel you have to make a hasty decision. 3 stars

The Family Circus

Now you can shop at www.peninsuladailynews.com!

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): It’s time to consider making some alterations that will help you financially, emotionally or physically. Cutting down your overhead or investing in something that will grow in value should be your goal. Don’t overindulge or overspend on luxury items. 3 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Take any opportunity you get to bring loved ones closer together. Make changes to your home that will encourage everyone to participate in your plans. Travel will not bring you the results you hoped for. Do whatever needs doing from the comfort of home. 5 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Work toward your goal, even if someone you love complains. It’s vital that you don’t take on too much. Someone will misinterpret what you say if you aren’t specific. Don’t take chances when dealing with people looking for a handout. 2 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): An opportunity to hook up with someone from your past will pay off. A financial opportunity is apparent. Making a change to the way you live or do things will also help to lower your overhead and increase your intake. Love is in the stars. 4 stars


Peninsula Daily News for Friday/Saturday, October 14-15, 2011 SECTION

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Our Peninsula

FAITH, BUSINESS, DEATHS and WEATHER In this section

Unfolding of an ancient tradition Festival of storytelling shares tales

Peninsula Weekend

The art of storytelling was on the verge of death in the early 1990s. Peninsula Daily News “If you had asked me 20 years ago, I would have PORT ANGELES — Ten storytellers will weave said yes, storytelling is endangered,” Trebon said. their magic for listeners “Since then, there has this weekend, sharing stobeen a resurgence in interries and tales that bridge est in storytelling,” she said. cultures and traditions at There is still sometimes the 17th annual Forest Stoa struggle between storyrytelling Festival. tellers and the modern Their stories will begin to unfold today at 7:30 p.m. electronic world, she added, saying that it is difficult to at Peninsula College’s Litget young people to experitle Theater, 1502 E. Lauence storytelling events for ridsen Blvd. the first time. The festival celebrates the tradition of storytelling, an art that combines thePosted stories ater and literature, with Some individual artists performances by six internationally known storytell- have posted their stories to ers as well as four Olympic video-sharing websites such as YouTube.com, and Peninsula artists. groups, such as the Seattle A full weekend pass to Storytellers Guild, post an the festival costs $75, and audio file featuring one of individual events cost $12 to $20. Children ages 10 to their storytellers on group websites, she said. 16 and Peninsula College A recent event at Peninstudents pay half-price. sula College, which many students were required to Free events attend for class credit, was a major success, she said. Two events will be free Many of the students and open to the public. walked in with little interOn Saturday, the Open est in storytelling but left Mic Story Swap begins at with enthusiasm for the 12:15 p.m. art, she said. Some storytellers, The festival always opens including one of this year’s with an event for area schoolfeatured artists, Ingrid children, which is offered this Nixon, got their start duryear to home-schoolers, stuing open mic events, said dents at Queen of Angels, Cherie Trebon, Forest Stoand students at Hamilton rytelling Festival director. Elementary School. A Concert of InspiraThe Story People of tional Stories at 10 a.m. Sunday will also be free to Clallam County started as a guild in 1992 to promote the public. By Arwyn Rice

Annie Tiberio Cameron Photography

Paul “Che Oke’ Ten” Wagner is a member of the Wsaanich (Saanich) tribe of southern Vancouver Island and is an ambassador of the traditional songs and stories of his Coast Salish tribal ancestors. the art of storytelling on the Olympic Peninsula. Festival Story People performers will include Leslie Slape, Dennis Duncan, Rebecca Hom and George Neiswanger. Six internationally known storytellers are featured. ■ Charlotte Blake Alston has performed at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, the Smithsonian Institution, detention centers and a refugee camp in northern Senegal. Turn

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Fill weekend with festivals, whales Peninsula Daily News

Autumn entertainment on the North Olympic Peninsula ranges from fall festivals to a conversation on civility to a whale of a welcome in Port Townsend this weekend. Arts and entertainment events appear in Peninsula Spotlight, the Peninsula Daily News’ weekly entertainment guide, appearing in this edition. Other weekend events are in the “Things to Do” calendar, available online at www.peninsuladaily news.com. Here are some of this weekend’s other highlights:

Presbyterian in Clallam Bay, Dungeness Valley Lutheran and Congregation B’nai Shalom. For more information or to make a reservation to attend, phone 360-4522323.

Vision-loss fair

Charlotte Blake Alston, a storyteller who has performed at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., and at refugee camps in Senegal, comes to Port Angeles today for the Forest Storytelling Festival.

The free classes are sponsored by the Volunteers in Medicine of the Olympics free clinic. For more information, phone 360-457-4431 or email info@vimoclinic.org.

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PORT ANGELES — Peninsula Pre 3 CooperaPORT ANGELES — A tive will host its 14th Vision Loss Info Fair for annual Harvest Carnival those with noncorrectable vision-loss problems will be at the Vern Burton Community Center, 308 W. held at the Vision Loss Center on the lower level of Fourth St., from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday. the Armory Square Mall, There will be games, 228 W. First St., from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. prizes, face-painting, crafts, a photo booth, concessions, Informational booths will be staffed by organiza- a cake walk, four raffle baskets and a silent auctions who serve members of the low-vision and blind tion. Port Angeles Cost is $3 for children, community. The state Department of $4 for adults and $14 for a Civil discourse family of four or more. Services for the Blind, For more information, members of the National PORT ANGELES — A phone April Amundson at Federation for the Blind, forum on civil discourse will be held at St. Andrew’s Clallam Transit, low-vision 360-504-2365 or email april@raygruver.com. support groups and Guide Episcopal Church, 510 E. Dogs for the Blind will all Park Ave., from 9 a.m. to Seniors dance set be at the fair. noon Saturday. “We are trying to get the Retired state legislator PORT ANGELES — A Lynn Kessler will open the word out that these Timeless Memories Seniors resources are available to forum. Dance will be held at the residents of the North Kessler, who retired in Port Angeles Masonic Olympic Peninsula who are Lodge, 622 S. Lincoln St., 2010 after 18 years as a dealing with noncorrectrepresentative of the 24th from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. SatDistrict, received a national able vision-loss problems,” urday. organizers said. award for her practice of The dance, presented by The event is being held civil discourse during her the Esther Chapter of the as part of the National time in Olympia. Order of the Eastern Star, Peninsula Dispute Reso- Federation for the Blind’s will feature music from the Meet the Blind Month and lution Center mediators 1940s and 1950s plus White Cane Awareness will hold a workshop durmusic by a local combo. Day 2011. ing the second hour to Appetizers, hot cider For more information, allow participants to pracand punch will be served. tice speaking and listening phone 360-457-1383. Advance tickets are $25 per couple or $15 for sinto each other. Free diet classes gles and at the door will be The final hour will fea$30 for couples and $20 for ture Paul Benz, co-chairman PORT ANGELES — and lobbyist for the newly Certified diabetes educator singles. To purchase tickets, formed statewide interfaith and registered dietician phone Vickie Larson at coalition Faith Action NetAmy Ward will hold sepawork: A Partnership for the rate classes on eating skills 360-457-9444. Common Good. for those with hypertension Free adoptions set He will address upcomand those with diabetes ing issues in the state Legis- today. PORT ANGELES — lature. The classes will be at the The Olympic Peninsula The event is co-sponPort Angeles Library, 2210 Humane Society is running sored by Holy Trinity S. Peabody St., with the a special “Catober” adopLutheran Church, St. hypertension class running tion event through SaturAndrew’s Episcopal from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. and day. Church, Prince of Peace the diabetes course running Turn to Events/C3 Lutheran in Forks, First from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m.

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Benefit concert honors Clallam musician Funds raised to help music programs at Crescent School By Diane Urbani de la Paz

Peninsula Daily News

JOYCE — When Roger Baller went to his son Brad’s wedding, he saw — and heard — a sound that stirred a sweet memory. It was a big band made up of “old-timers he used to play with,” recalled Brad. “That was the best money I ever spent,” he added of the band he hired for his wedding reception. “Everybody danced.” Soon after, Roger Baller picked up his trumpet again. He was 70 at the time and living in Joyce — and after sharpening his chops, he joined the Stardust Big Band and the Sequim City Band. He also took a music course at Peninsula College and sat in with the school’s jazz ensemble. “He played a sweet trumpet,” recalled Bobbie Usselman, a friend of Baller’s and the clarinetist

and tenor saxophonist with Stardust. “He was quite a musician, [but] he was very humble,” added Craig Buhler, Stardust’s leader. “He was a joy to be around.”

Dance concert Baller’s friends plan to spread that joy in a dance concert at the Crescent Grange, 50870 state Highway 112, from 2 p.m. until 4 p.m. Saturday. The public is welcome. The 17-piece Stardust Big Band will play in honor of Baller, who died of cancer Aug. 7. Admission is by donation, and proceeds will go toward restoration of the Crescent School District music program. Staffing for the school band and other music classes was cut two years ago because of the state’s budget crisis, said Crescent Principal Tom Anderson.

The late Roger Baller, seen here playing with the Stardust Big Band, took up his trumpet again at age 70 after a long hiatus. He played with jazz bands around Clallam County until his death, at age 82, in August. “We were deeply sadAlthough he didn’t estidened,” he said. “We would mate when that might haplove to reinstate the band pen, Anderson said the program.” Baller benefit will help pro-

vide funding for future cho- Service in Tacoma. rus and band classes. With great fondness, Brad remembers how his Loved ‘Stardust,’ Joyce father found devoted friends Baller’s family felt that among his fellow players — Crescent School would be and even after he became the ideal beneficiary ill, Baller practiced a good because, Brad said, Star- four hours a day. “That kept him alive,” dust and Joyce were two things his dad enjoyed to his son believes, “longer the fullest. than anything else.” “He loved everybody he Baller lived to be 82. met in Joyce,” he said. When asked what his “He thought it was the father’s favorite songs were, best place in the world to Brad replied that the list live.” would be endless. Baller began playing “They go on forever,” he trumpet as a boy growing said. up in Hoquiam. His family Those who would like to later moved to Bellingham, and Baller got to playing in support music education at big bands while still in high Crescent School can also mail checks to Crescent school. He traveled the world School District, P.O. Box 20, with the U.S. Navy Band Joyce, WA 98343, with and then returned to the “music program, Baller” on Puget Sound region to raise the memo line. his sons, Brad and Brian, For more information, both of whom became musi- phone Brad Baller at 206cians. 933-6335 or email brad Brad plays violin and baller@comcast.net. mandolin, among other ________ instruments, while Brian is a banjo man and guitarist. Features Editor Diane Urbani Baller retired and moved de la Paz can be reached at 360to Joyce in 1995 after retir- 417-3550 or at diane.urbani@ ing from the U.S. Postal peninsuladailynews.com.

Briefly . . . Book group to meet up at PA Library PORT ANGELES — The Samurai’s Garden by Gail Tsukiyama will be discussed by the Reading PALS book group at the Port Angeles Library, 2210 S. Peabody St., at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 26. The event is open to the public, and no registration is required. In the book, 17-year-old Stephen leaves his home in Hong Kong just as the Japanese are poised to invade China. He is sent to Tarumi, a small village in Japan, to recuperate from tuberculosis.

His developing friendship with three adults and a young woman his own age brings him to the beginnings of wisdom about love, honor and loss. Reading PALS will meet again at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 30. The book to be discussed in November will be Have a Little Faith by Mitch Albom. For more information, visit www.nols.org and click on “Events” and “Port Angeles,” phone Lorrie Kovell at 360-417-8514 or email lkovell@nols.org.

Ship rebuild talk PORT TOWNSEND — Tim Lee will discuss the rebuilding of the AK Ilen, Ireland’s sole surviving and largest original seagoing sailing ship, at a meeting of

PORT ANGELES – The popularity of Halloween continues to rise year after year among adults looking for a good time and wanting to escape from reality for a night. But if you’re driving an old car that has become your worst nightmare, this Halloween sale might just be your chance to escape for good! Here’s why. Local car dealer, Mark Ostroot, General Sales Manager of Price Superstore, is at it again and is giving Port Angeles residents who hate their old car a real treat… a way to escape and drive a nicer, newer car even if they owe more than it’s worth or even if it’s in frightful condition and needs to “rust in peace.” In response to the success of Halloween as an adult escape holiday, Price Superstore has put together their Old Car Escape Plan, which is going on only for the month of October. They are planning on helping 77 local residents escape from their old car and drive home in a nicer, newer car, SUV, minivan or truck. Using the Old Car Escape Plan, Price Superstore will completely pay off your current lease or loan on the car that’s getting under your skin so you can drive a nicer, newer car you’ll love. If you’re driving an old monster, the Old Car Escape Plan can get you $4,000* more for your old car than it’s actually worth. This gives you the opportunity to make something out of almost nothing and will allow you to drive a car you’ll be proud to own.

Nightmares Just Don’t Happen While You’re Sleeping

“Many times people buy a car and they absolutely

the Point Wilson Sail and Power Squadron on Tuesday. The meeting will be held at the Port Townsend Yacht Club, 25 Washington St., with a potluck at 6 p.m. and Lee’s presentation at 7 p.m. Traditional boatbuilding skills kept alive here in Jefferson County are showcased around the world. Lee, chief instructor at the Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding in Port Hadlock, spent July and August in Ireland as part of a “train the trainers” program associated with the rebuilding of the AK Ilen. The 56-foot ketch, launched in 1926, was used commercially until 1997 in the Falkland Islands and is now back in Ireland. An Irish nonprofit orga-

nization is overseeing the reconstruction. Point Wilson Sail and Power Squadron is an informal group of sailors, rowers, fishermen and cruisers dedicated to providing public boating education, improving boating skills and enjoying social activities. The event is open to the public. Those attending the potluck should bring a dish to share. For more information, phone Bob Miller at 360385-9585.

Monthly movie set SEQUIM — The city of Sequim and Olympic Theatre Arts have partnered to present a monthly movie program the third Wednesday of each month. The next movie, “Some

love it, then a few years later it becomes their worst nightmare. They just start to hate the thing. Maybe it’s not reliable anymore, maybe it doesn’t feel comfortable or they hate the way it drives or looks. Maybe it’s the payments. Something’s just not right about that old car and they can’t stand it anymore. They feel trapped in the car and they want out,” explained Ostroot. A solution to this problem is not common but, as Ostroot told us, neither is he and what they do at Price Superstore. “I’ve read that a lot of people use Halloween as an escape from reality and that got me thinking. Part of what they are escaping from is everyday problems, like issues with their car. Halloween can help them escape for a night, but I can help them escape for good,” Ostroot exclaimed. “My Old Car Escape Plan lets us pay off current loans or leases by giving $4,000* more than cars are currently worth. And believe it or not, used cars are worth more right now than ever before. So your car’s value may really surprise you. With slowdowns in vehicle production and natural disasters affecting the supply of cars from the manufacturers, the used car market is hot. It’s a great time to score a big deal and that’s a real treat.”

Don’t Be Cursed By Bad Credit

Mark Ostroot says his Old Car Escape plan is perfect for people who have had credit challenges in the past and think they can’t get approved for a nicer, newer car. “My For The People® Credit Approval Process is like waking up from a nightmare. You no longer have to run and hide from past credit problems,” Ostroot said. “We have ways of making the banks really understand your situation. We bring the person into the process. We tell your specific story. We don’t just quote credit scores and send pay stubs. With my process the lenders see you as a person where traditionally they just see a bunch of stats. That’s what

Like it Hot,” will be screened at Olympic Theatre Arts, 414 N. Sequim Ave., at 7 p.m. Wednesday. Doors will open at 6:30 p.m. and will close at 7:10 p.m. once the movie has started. Attendees are encouraged to come dressed to fit the movie. Admission is $5 per person. Individuals 16 years of age and younger must be accompanied by an adult. Upcoming movies in the series include “North By Northwest” on Nov. 16 and “Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory” on Dec. 21.

College night set CHIMACUM — The Jefferson Education Center

and Chimacum High School are hosting a regional College Night on Wednesday, Nov. 2. The event will be held in the Chimacum High School commons, 91 West Valley Road, at 6:30 p.m. Representatives of local and distant colleges and universities will attend, providing an opportunity for high school students and their parents on the Olympic and Kitsap peninsulas to meet with college representatives and learn about programs, degrees, financial aid and college life. Doug Breithaupt of the College Planning Network will present “The Money Maze Workshop” at 7:30 p.m. Peninsula Daily News

makes my program so different and so much more effective.”

Tell Us Your Horror Story

As a fun addition to their Old Car Escape Plan, Price Superstore is running a cool contest. If you visit Price Superstore and share your “old car horror story” they’ll record it put it on YouTube and Facebook. The video story with the most comments and likes will win a flat-screen TV. It’s a fun way to take part in this spooky but lucrative holiday promotion. Some important facts you should know: ➢ It’s completely free to have your personal situation evaluated by the experts at Price Superstore and to take advantage of the Old Car Escape Plan… ➢ Their transparent trade appraisal process guarantees you’ll get a “more than fair” offer to take over your current payments especially since the used car market is HOT RIGHT NOW… ➢ There’s absolutely no obligation to buy a car… ➢ Because Mark Ostroot is a Dealer For The People® there will never be any high-pressure tactics involved… ➢ This offer is good until close of business on October 31… Ostroot says, “There are no games here. I believe everyone deserves to drive a nicer, newer car and never be stuck in a car they hate. So come on in, and let me put my Old Car Escape Plan into action for you so you can drive a nicer newer car even if you’ve had credit problems.” As a final treat, Price Superstore’s Old Car Escape Plan will pay off your existing lease or loan in full or give you $4,000* more than your old car is worth…even if it’s worth nothing… so you can drive home in a nicer, newer car you’ll love to own and look great driving. To take advantage of this generous offer, visit Price Superstore in Port Angeles or call (360) 457-3333 to schedule an appointment to create your customized Old Car Escape Plan.

Price SuperStore

1527 E. Front St., Port Angeles • (360) 457-3333 Disclaimer: With approved credit. Rebates to dealer. On select models. With purchase at retail. Some negative equity may be refinanced. *See dealer for complete details. 1A5136861


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Peninsula Daily News

Friday, October 14, 2011

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Briefly . . . Tribal grant writing class scheduled NEAH BAY — The Potlatch Fund will present “Journey to Successful Fundraising” at the Makah Marina Conference Center from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday. The forum, designed for new Native American grant writers and fundraisers, will help attendees learn how to start a new nonprofit organization and develop grant proposals. The class includes a grant program workbook, group discussions, native networking and presentations from experienced Native fundraisers. Cost is $20 for tribal members and students and $35 for nonprofit groups and tribal employees. Limited scholarships are available. To register, phone Heather Miller at 206-624-6076.

Jobs seminar set PORT TOWNSEND — The Port Townsend Public Library Jobs Center will present “Transition Yourself: Finding Your Work Path in Hard Times” on Tuesday and Thursday from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at First Baptist Church, 1202 Lawrence St., Port Townsend, next to the Port Townsend Library. To register, email swilson@cityofpt.us. Those attending should bring a lunch. The Transition Yourself course takes participants through a step-by-step process that covers budgets, exploring job search beliefs, developing an employment toolkit and marketing strategies. Participants can receive additional support and assistance in overcoming the challenges by attending

weekly discussion meetings held Tuesdays at 9:30 a.m. Email questions to swilson@cityofpt.us.

Boat safety class PORT TOWNSEND — The Point Wilson Sail & Power Squadron will hold an eight-hour boating seamanship and safety course Wednesday and Wednesday, Oct. 26. The course will be held at the Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding, 42 N. Water St., from 5:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. each day. This is an approved course for qualifying for the Washington State Boater’s Education Card that is mandatory for boaters 35 years of age and younger who operate a 15-horsepower-driven vessel. Topics range from safety issues for sail and power boats, navigational rules, seamanship such as anchoring, handling emergencies at sea, using a VHF radio, trailering and charting positions. Waffler and lefse are made at last year’s Thea Foss No. 45 Daughters of Norway Scandia Fall Fest. The class is $35, with a discount for another family The annual celebration of all things Scandinavian will be held at Blue Heron Middle School on Saturday, Oct. 22. member to share the text and other materials. To register or for more information, phone Bob Miller at 360-385-9585.

Collection closed PORT TOWNSEND — The Jefferson County Historical Society Research Center, 13692 Airport Cutoff Road, is closed through Nov. 1 to facilitate reorganizing the collections in the newly expanded facility. The research center will reopen Nov. 2. Hours are from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. The center holds more than 500,000 documents related to Jefferson County history as well as the collections of the Jefferson County Genealogical Society. Peninsula Daily News

Fall Fest to bring taste of Scandinavia to Peninsula Peninsula Daily News

PORT TOWNSEND — The Thea Foss No. 45 Daughters of Norway Scandia Fall Fest will be held at Blue Heron Middle School, 3939 San Juan Ave., from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 22. The fest is free and open to the public. Events held in the Blue Heron Commons (school lunchroom) include:

■  Children’s storytime — Karen Lopez will read stories of trolls, billy goats, Lucia and kings and queens at 11 a.m. ■  Scandinavian music — The Gladan Band will perform at 11:45 a.m. ■  Knitting and Nordic sweaters — Knitters at work and a fashion show of Nordic sweaters. After the narration, the Gladan Band will play and lead a Sweater Parade in and

through the gymnasium. Scandinavian demonstration dances with Dick and Roxanne Grinstad and music by the Gladan Band will be held in the gym from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Vendors will have Nordic cultural items, books, sweaters and baking tools and cookbooks in the gym all day long. An informal learning center will feature demonstrations of spinning, weav-

ing and band weaving. Homemade pea soup will be served from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., and desserts, coffee and punch can be purchased throughout the event. A bake sale of Nordic desserts, including cookies and kaker, will also be held. There will also be baking demonstrations of waffler, krumkake and lefse.

Events: PA Library to show family-friendly flick Continued from C1 and popcorn. “The program is part of All spayed or neutered the library’s ongoing efforts cats and kittens will be to provide opportunities for available for free as long as free family-friendly fun,” the adopter donates a said Lisa Musgrove, branch 40-pound bag of dog food or manager. “Movies can highlight a large bag of nonclumping cat litter and a large pack- how literature can translate to excitement on the age of paper towels. Preferred dog food big screen and encourage brands are Kirkland Signa- reading. “We want the matinee ture, Purina, Iams or Scimovies to draw attention to ence Diet. All adoptions include the North Olympic Library spay/neuter, a rabies vac- System’s large collection of cine, a microchip and a free movies. “This should be a fun vet check. The Humane Society thing to do during those office at 2105 W. U.S. High- cloudy days of fall.” For more information, way 101 is open to the public from noon to 4:30 p.m. phone 360-417-8502, visit www.nols.org or email today and Saturday. youth@nols.org.

Harvest Festival

Fall plant sale

Olympic Peninsula Railroaders Train Show and Swap Meet is planned Saturday and Sunday. The show will be from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday at the Sequim Prairie Grange, 290 Macleay Road. The show and meet are free and open to the public. Railroad items will be available for sale, display and operation. Various door prizes and gift certificates will be awarded. For more information, phone Lauren Scrafford at 360-379-3280 or email e78milrd@q.com.

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Guild fundraiser SEQUIM — The Sequim Guild of Seattle Children’s Hospital will host its annual Fall Regional Outreach Meeting as a fundraiser for Seattle Children’s Hospital today. The luncheon will be at 11:30 a.m. at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 525 N. Fifth Ave. Reservations were due by Wednesday. The focus of this year’s meeting will be on autism. Jason Russo, a registered nurse in the Autism Center at Seattle Children’s, will be the featured speaker.

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PORT ANGELES — Olympic Cellars Winery owner Kathy Charlton will host a meet-and-greet for Olympic Medical Center hospital commissioner District 3 candidate Jack Slowriver on Saturday. The free event will be held at Olympic Cellars, 255410 U.S. Highway 101, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. and will include wine.

PORT ANGELES — A get-together for a singles group for those older than 40 is planned at Downriggers on Saturday. Dinner will be at 7 p.m. at the restaurant at 115 E. Railroad Ave. After dinner, participants will go to Wine on the Sequim Waterfront, said organizer Mark Mulcay. Train show People can mingle in a casual, relaxed atmosphere SEQUIM — The North

Family Flicks PORT ANGELES — The Port Angeles Library, 2210 S. Peabody St., will launch Family Flicks, a monthly movie series for families, at 2 p.m. Saturday. Offered the third Saturday of each month, the free program, which is sponsored by the Port Angeles Friends of the Library, will feature children’s movie classics, discussion

Meet-and-greet set

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PORT ANGELES — The Port Angeles Garden Club’s second annual fall plant sale will be Saturday. The sale will be from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at 31 Stephanie Lee Place, Port Angeles. Club members will provide plants — trees, bulbs, perennials, shrubs vines and others — from their gardens for sale to the pubOktoberfest benefit lic. Proceeds from the sale PORT ANGELES — The will support club projects. Port Angeles Moose Lodge will hold an Oktoberfest Harvest fest slated benefit at the club, 809 S. Pine St., today. PORT ANGELES — The The event will include Montessori Garden School, an authentic German meal, 242694 U.S. Highway 101, beer, raffles and prizes, and will hold a Harvest Festival live music from The Toll from noon to 2 p.m. Saturday. City Trio. The event will include Food will be served start- apple cider pressing, zucing at 5 p.m. and will be chini car-making and -racavailable until it runs out. ing, pumpkin painting, a Music will begin at 7:30 p.m. Admission is by donation. Proceeds will be donated to Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County.

Singles group meets

and find common interests and friends, he said. For more information, phone Mulcay at 815-6773903.

1A5135997

PORT ANGELES — The Airport Garden Harvest Festival will be held at Airport Garden, 2200 W. Edgewood Drive, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. The event will include kids’ games, crafts, a petting zoo and concessions. Proceeds from the event will support the Silver Spurs 4-H Club.

fresh menu, family portraits, a hay bale maze and music. Tickets are available for each activity and are $1 each or 12 tickets for $10. Proceeds benefit the school scholarship fund. For more information, phone 360-457-6610.

…helping people live better


C4

FaithReligion

Friday, October 14, 2011

Peninsula Daily News

Eleventh hour is near for world

Religious leaders talk gay adoption The Associated Press

RICHMOND, Va. — Hundreds of opponents and supporters weighed in on proposed regulations that would allow state-licensed groups to turn down prospective adoptive and foster parents because of their sexual orientation. The Virginia Board of Social Services opened a 30-day public comment period last month after gayrights advocates complained about new regulations that were approved in April that didn’t bar discrimination based on sexual orientation, political beliefs, age, physical disability and family status. Critics said the board stripped the protections from the proposed regulations without much public notice and that the board discussed the issue in closed session without opportunity for public consideration. Equality Virginia, the ACLU and other groups said the state should restore the protections. Roman Catholic and other church leaders said organizations said they should not be forced to violate their religious beliefs. Virginia allows married couples and single people to adopt or become foster parents, regardless of sexual orientation, but bars unmarried couples — gay or straight — from doing so. Then-Gov. Timothy Kaine’s Democratic administration added the anti-discrimination provision in 2009, but it didn’t become a flashpoint for public debate until this year, when conservative legislators and groups complained.

I WAS IN J.C. Penney buying gloves for my father. When I checked out at the register, the pretty young clerk looked at my ticket and said, “Weird!” To this I responded, “Yeah, it’s Jan. 11, 2011, at 11 minutes after 1 o’clock! Just wait until November, and there will be more number ones!” I rather wish I had thought to notice the earlier time of 11 minutes after 11 o’clock that very day, but that historical moment had already passed into eternity. Her comment didn’t catch me totally unprepared for our oldest son is a Jan. 1 baby, and I had written on his birthday card that this year, he was very much our “No. 1 son.” In our sojourn in Taiwan, I realized I am not the only person who is intrigued with number quirks.

Father’s Day There, they celebrate Father’s Day on Aug. 8 — the eighth day of the eighth month. In Chinese, the number eight is pronounced “ba,” so Father’s Day comes out as “Ba Ba” Day. Taiwan also enjoys a national holiday on double-10, Oct. 10 (10th month, 10th day). It makes me wonder where I will be this year at 11 minutes after 11 o’clock on Nov. 11, 2011. (I don’t know if I can count that many ones, but it looks to me like at that minute, there must be about 10 of them.) According to the calendar, it is truly an “eleventh hour.” If you stop to think about it, the implications are sobering. One doesn’t have to be a Jeopardy champion, a Nobel Prize winner or a brain surgeon to suspect that our world is ripe for some big event. We don’t have to understand the prophecies of Daniel 2 or be able to recite Matthew 24 to conclude that our world needs —

The Associated Press

In

honor of

Virgin

of

Zapopan

A man wearing traditional indigenous clothes attends a celebration honoring the Virgin of Zapopan in Guadalajara, Mexico, on Tuesday.

Earth Centered Traditions Guide Us To Live In Harmony With The Rhythms Of Nature

SUNDAY 9:30 a.m. Sunday School 10:45 a.m., 6:30 p.m. Worship WED. & SAT.: 7 p.m. Eve. Service Mass: Saturday Vigil 5 p.m. Sunday 8:30 and 11 a.m. Tuesday 6 p.m. Wed. thru Sat. 8:30 a.m. Confession: Half hour before all Masses & 4-5 p.m. Saturdays Youth Religious Ed Classes: Sundays 9:35-10:35 a.m. at Parish School Life Teen Night: Sunday 6-7:30 p.m. at Parish Hall Eucharistic Adoration: Fri. 9:00 a.m. to 8 a.m. Sat.

Worship Hours: 8:30 & 11:00 a.m. Nursery Provided: Both Services Sunday School: 9:45 a.m.

“Finding Favor”

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

Olympic Unitarian Universalist Fellowship 417-2665 www.olympicuuf.org 73 Howe Rd., Agnew-Old Olympic to N. Barr Rd., right on Howe Rd. October 16: 10:30 AM Rev. Roger Kuhrt

Service, new class slated for PA church

www.thecrossingchurch.net

Pastor Neil Castle Services: Saturday at 1 p.m.

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

Teaching the principles of Science of Mind SUNDAY 10 a.m. Services

Services: Sunday 8:00 and 10:00 a.m. Godly Play for Children 9:00 a.m. Monday 8:15 p.m. “Compline”

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

Wednesday 11:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist

To know C hrist and to m ake H im know n www.standrewpa.org

(Disciples of Christ)

SUNDAY

Sunday Worship at 9:30 a.m. Nursery Provided Sunday School at 10:45 a.m. Radio Broadcast on KONP 1450 at 11 a.m. most Sundays

A Christ–Centered message for a world weary people. SUNDAY 9:30 a.m. Sunday School 10:45 a.m. Worship

SUNDAY Childcare provided 8:30 & 11 a.m. Worship 9:45 a.m. Sunday School for All Weekly Youth Activites Contact Church for Details portangelesumc@tfon.com www.gbgm-umc.org/portangelesfumc

Saturday Vigil: 5:00 p.m. Sunday, 8:30 & 10:30 a.m. Daily Mass: Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri., Sat., 8:30 am Confessions: 1/2 hour before all masses and 4 - 5 p.m. Saturday

9:00 a.m. Adult Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Worship

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

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Sunday 9:45 a.m. Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Worship 6:00 p.m. Praise and Fellowship Wednesday 7:00 p.m. Prayer Meeting

and will have — Byers the intervention of God. Atomic war­fare, water pollut­ion, earth­ quakes, tsunamis, floods, an AIDS epidemic, economic fragility and more demand consideration. Yet even in this aging, tottery world, we can still find hope. That hope is not an “H” word, but a “J” word.

Caroline

‘Redemption’ The good book states it this way: “When these things begin to take place, stand up and lift up your heads, because your redemption is drawing near” (Luke 21:28). Yes, Jesus our Redeemer is our hope, our only hope. In times like these, at this eleventh hour of history, we can still find security in him. If we haven’t made plain our loyalties, there may not be much time left, but there is enough. When Jesus was crucified, two thieves shared his fate. Realizing his time was short, one thief confessed his faith in Jesus, saying, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom” (Luke 23:42). Jesus responded, “You will be with me” (Luke 23:43). That beautiful assurance can be ours as well. At 11:59 p.m., how is it with you?

_________

Issues of Faith is a rotating column by seven religious leaders on the North Olympic Peninsula. Carolyn Byers, an active leader in the Sequim Seventh-day Adventist Church, is in charge of its Sabbath School study program as well as the published author of several children’s books and numerous articles for church papers. Her email address is cfbyers@tfon. com.

Briefly . . .

Casual Environment, Serious Faith

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

ISSUES OF FAITH

PORT ANGELES — Margaret Denstad, a licensed Unity teacher, will be the speaker at the Sunday celebration service at Unity in the Olympics. The talk title is “The Turning Point.” Service time will be from 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. There will be a special meditation time in the sanctuary prior to the service from 10:15 a.m. to 10:25 a.m. Fellowship time will immediately follow service with coffee and treats. All are welcome. Also at Unity, a new class will start next week called “Spiritual Economics.” The class will focus on working with the flow of life instead of against it and developing a prosperous attitude. It will start at about noon and last for 90 minutes. This will be offered on a love-offering basis. All are welcome. Unity in the Olympics is located at 2917 E. Myrtle St. in Port Angeles. For more information, phone 457-3981 or visit www.unityintheolympics. com.

India’s dilemma NEW DELHI — Wor-

peninsuladailynews.com

ried about its dwindling numbers, the Roman Catholic Church in southern India is exhorting its flock to have more children, with some parishes offering free schooling, medical care and even cash bonuses for large families. The strategy comes as India’s population tops 1.2 billion, making it the second most populous country in the world after China, and runs counter to a national government policy of limiting family size. But in the southern state of Kerala, where Catholics have long been a large, important minority, church authorities believe the state’s overall Christian population could drop to 17 percent this year, down from 19.5 percent in 1991. While they don’t have precise numbers for the Catholic population, they believe it is also dropping sharply. “The Christian community in Kerala is dwindling. We realized that if the numbers decreased further, it would have a negative impact on the community,” said Babu Joseph, spokesman for the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India in New Delhi. Christianity is widely thought to have come to India in the year 52, when St. Thomas came to Kerala after the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. The state’s Muslim population grew by 1.7 percent between 1991 and 2001, while the Hindu and Christian populations have fallen. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press


Peninsula Daily News for Friday/Saturday, October 14-15, 2011

Business

PAGE

C5

Politics and Environment  $ Briefly . . . Spa grand opening set for today

Real-time stock quotations at

peninsuladailynews.com

SEQUIM — Tranquility, a business offering spa pedicures, massage, gel nails and facial waxing, will hold its grand opening from noon to 5 p.m. today. The business is located at 164 E. Bell St. Appetizers and beverages will be served, and drawings for free services will be held. Customers can meet owners Andrea Sivertsen and Jenny Hays. For more information, phone Sivertsen at 360775-5940.

Open house set

Celebrating

new

PA

CARLSBORG — Fern Hollow, a gathering site for groups and organizations at 1195 Taylor Cutoff Road, will have a vendor open house Saturday. The event is from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Bill and Patti Kimler own Fern Hollow. They can be contacted at www.fernhollowvenue. com.

business

From left, Barbara Frederick, Dana Siebel, Leslie Fisher, Beth Witters, Mary Sue French (with scissors), Tori Lucier Miller, Betsy Wilkin and Howard Fisher celebrate the official opening of Cabled Fiber Studio, 106 N. Laurel St., in downtown Port Angeles with a ribbon-cutting. Frederick, Siebel, Fisher, Wilkin and Fisher are Port Angeles business ambassadors. French, Witters and Miller operate Cabled Fiber. To learn more about their products and upcoming classes, visit www.cabledfiberstudio.com.

Lawmakers seek probe on new debit card fees By Marcy Gordon

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Democratic lawmakers are asking the Justice Department to investigate whether Bank of America and other major banks improperly worked together to charge customers new monthly fees for using their debit cards. Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vt., and four other Democrats said Thursday they’ve asked Attorney General Eric Holder to see if big banks violated antitrust laws before announcing the fees. Welch said the lawmakers have no evidence of collusion, but he said the timing of the fees merits an investigation.

“You don’t have a competitive marketplace,” Welch said at a news conference. Bank of America said last month it would charge its customers $5 a month if they use their debit cards for purchases. Customers who use their cards only at ATMs will not have to pay the fee.

Monthly fees Chase and Wells Fargo are also testing $3 monthly debit card fees in select markets. SunTrust, a regional bank based in Atlanta, began charging a $5 debit card fee in June for customers with basic checking accounts. Regions Financial, based

in Birmingham, Ala., started charging a $4 fee Oct. 1 for accounts that don’t meet higher balance requirements. The fees have sparked public outrage and helped fuel anti-Wall Street protests. Many have criticized the banks for charging to use debit cards after those same banks received hundreds of billions of dollars in taxpayer-funded bailouts. Bank of America, Chase, Wells Fargo, SunTrust and Regions were among the recipients of rescue funds. Bank of America, the nation’s largest bank, said the monthly charge was necessary because the Federal Reserve this year capped the fees that it can charge merchants for swip-

McComb at event

ing debit cards. Congress directed the Fed cap swipe fees under the financial overhaul law. On Thursday, representatives for Bank of America, Chase, SunTrust and Regions declined to comment on the lawmakers’ request for a probe. A representative for Wells Fargo wasn’t immediately available for comment. Justice Department spokeswoman Gina Talamona said: “We have received the letter, and we will respond as appropriate.” Also requesting the investigation were Democratic Reps. John Conyers of Michigan, Keith Ellison of Minnesota, Mike Honda of California and Raul Gri-

The Associated Press

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“They’re going to use the cleanup to get us out of here,” said Justin Wedes, 25, a part-time public high school science teacher from Brooklyn. “It’s a de facto eviction notice.” Police officers escorted representatives of the company as the notices were passed out to demonstrators. The notice from Brookfield Properties stated the 12-hour, section-by-section cleaning is slated to begin at 7 a.m. and is part of daily upkeep.

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The notice lists regulations including no tents, no tarps or sleeping bags on the ground, no lying on benches and no storage of personal property on the ground. All those practices have been common at the park, where protesters have lived, slept and eaten for nearly a month.

NEW YORK — Spot nonferrous metal prices Thursday. Aluminum - $0.9987 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper - $3.3632 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper - $3.3905 N.Y. Merc spot Wed. Lead - $2009.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $0.8749 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1656.00 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1681.30 troy oz., NY Merc spot Wed. Silver - $31.655 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $32.754 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Wed. Platinum -$1538.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum -$1550.50 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Wed.

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out a notice to protesters saying they would be allowed back in the park after the cleanup if they abide by park regulations.

SEQUIM — Glamorous Salon, owned by Sarah Cary Krieger, has moved to 375 W. Bell St. Krieger is Gene Juareztrained and has 20 years of experience. She will be celebrating the first year of her business in November.

195132206

NEW YORK — The owner of the private park where Wall Street protesters are camped out gave them notice Thursday that after it power-washes the space it will begin enforcing regulations, which prohibit everything from lying down on benches to storing personal property on the ground. The protesters’ response was to plan a demonstration for an hour before they are supposed to evacuate

Zuccotti Park while it is cleaned with power washers Friday morning. They believe the effort is an attempt to end the protest, which triggered a movement against unequal distribution of wealth that has spread across the globe. Protest spokesman Patrick Bruner sent an email to supporters Thursday asking them to join the protesters at 6 a.m. today to “defend the occupation from eviction.” The owner, Brookfield Properties, earlier handed

Salon on the move

Realtor honored

Protesters wary of NYC park cleanup plan By Meghan Barr and Verena Dobnik

SEQUIM — McComb Gardens’ co-owner Neil Burkhardt attended the recent Wholesale Nursery Growers of America Kick the Dirt Tour in Oregon. The educational program and nursery tours were sponBurkhardt sored by the Grower Division of the American Nursery and Landscape Association in collaboration with the Oregon Association of Nurseries and the Farwest Show. The keynote speaker was University of Georgia Horticulture Department professor Michael A. Dirr. Dirr is the author of Manual of Woody Landscape Plants and is considered an authority on woody trees and shrubs in the United States.

Month title is earned by producing the highest amount of business transactions in one month’s time. For more information, phone Irvine at 360-4172797 or email Jean@olypen. com.


C6

PeninsulaNorthwest

Friday, October 14, 2011

Peninsula Daily News

Events: Hospice to host benefit Zumbathon Continued from C3 crop rotation over the past several years. The Class Act at WoodPatrick McCready, now an 18-year-old senior at cock Garden series is sponSequim High School, and sored by the Master GarFoundation of his mother, Cathryn dener McCready, will show a Pow- Clall­am County. The final Sequim-based erPoint presentation and reveal the numerous hur- plant clinic for the 2011 dles in the road to success. season will be held followFor years, Seattle Chil- ing the presentation from dren’s Hospital played an 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Trained Master Gardenimportant role for the McCready family, and they ers will be on hand to are willing to share their answer questions about gardening issues. story to help others. For more information, Hospital trustees also phone 360-417-2279. will speak at the event. Lunch is $16 and will be served at noon, with the Hospice benefit program following the meal. SEQUIM — Volunteer The guild will have sales Hospice of Clallam County tables available for shop- will host a Zumbathon ping. dance fundraiser at CalFor more information, vary Chapel, 91 S. Boyce phone Barbara Loska at Road, from 9 a.m. to 360-582-0090. 11:30 a.m. Saturday. There will be door prizes, Sprout film fest light refreshments and a SEQUIM — Snap, a silent auction. A donation of $15 is suglocal nonprofit for people with developmental disabil- gested. Volunteer Hospice of ities and their families, will sponsor the free Sprout Clallam County has served Film Festival on Saturday. the community since 1978, The event will be at relying solely on donations, Olympic Theatre Arts, 414 community fundraisers and N. Sequim Ave., with pro- small grants for its income. Zumba is a Latingrams at 1 p.m. and inspired, calorie-burning 3:30 p.m. Snap is presenting The dance and fitness exercise. The Zumbathon will proSprout Touring Film Festivide a selection of dance val from New York City. In addition, Snap will steps including swing, show “Wretches & Jabber- tango, samba, cumbia, ers” at its fundraising event merengue and reggae. For more information, that day at 6 p.m. at the phone 360-683-8887. same place. Tickets are $25 for this event, which includes appetiz- Thrift shop open ers, a silent auction and wine. SEQUIM — The Sequim For more information, Dungeness Hospital Guild phone Jenell DeMatteo at Thrift Shop, located at Sec360-379-8934 or email ond and Bell streets, will be dematteo@olypen.com. open from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. Plant a terrarium Halloween items, fall SEQUIM — Washington clothing, dishware and State University Master many accessories for the Gardener Rita Dinger will home will be featured. All white-tagged items close the 2011 season of the Class Act at Woodcock Gar- will be marked at half-price den educational series by during this sale. The shop is in need of demonstrating how to plant volunteers. a terrarium Saturday. For more information, The talk will be at 10 a.m. at the Master Gar- phone 360-683-7044. dener Demonstration GarOktoberfest event den, 2711 Woodcock Road. Dinger will discuss the SEQUIM — Suncrest origin of terrariums, how to Village, 251 S. Fifth Ave., select a container and what will hold its second annual types of plants are appropriate for the environment Oktoberfest celebration created in the glass garden. benefit from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Dinger was recognized Saturday. The event will offer as the 2010 Clallam County Master Gardener of the entertainment, a tradiYear and has provided more tional Bavarian buffet comthan 1,500 hours of volun- plete with a beer garden, teer work at demonstration fresh pretzels, free kids’ gardens, plant clinics and in meals and a silent auction. A $10 donation is public education. She is the Sequim Plant requested. Proceeds will benefit the Clinic manager and the culinary herb garden man- Sequim Senior Meals Proager at the Woodcock Gar- gram. den and has taught numerSuncrest Village, Olymous classes and written pic Community Action Pronewspaper articles on gar- grams and the larger lic, herbs, sustainable vege- Sequim community are table garden planning and working together to raise

Fred’s Hobbies & Guns Plastic Models

Model Rockets

funds to ensure that vulnerable elders receive meals five days per week. For more information, to donate or to volunteer, phone Marie Maxted, activity director, at 360-6813800.

Growing up in dairies SEQUIM — Lifelong area residents Doug McInnes and John Jarvis will discuss “Growing Up Dairy Farming” at the Dungeness Schoolhouse today. The presentation will be at 10 a.m. at the historic building at 2781 Towne Road in Sequim. It is the first in a series of oral history sessions offered by the Museum and Arts Center in the SequimDungeness Valley. “Then & Now: Old Timers’ Perspectives” will be presented the second Friday of the month at the Dungeness Schoolhouse through December. “Sequim Wartime Memories” is scheduled in November, while “Holiday Traditions” is set for December. The cost is $10 for MAC members, $12 for non­ members and $1 for students 17 or younger. Program fees support continued MAC programming.

Pumpkin patch SEQUIM — The Sequim Pumpkin Patch along U.S. Highway 101 at KitchenDick Road is open for the season. The patch is open every day at 9 a.m., closing at dark on weekdays and running until 11 p.m. or midnight (if there are customers, they will stay open “reasonably late”) on Fridays and Saturdays. Evening maze adventures and the patch’s Haunted House are open at 7 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays. The cornfield maze is $5 for youths ages 12 and younger, $10 for ages 13 and older. Horseback rides are available for $5, a pumpkin launch will allow participants to use a propelled launch to send three pumpkins flying for $5 for a chance at a $100 prize, and there is a straw maze for $5 for youths and free for adults Fridays and Saturdays. Visitors can pick up a U-pick pumpkin, and field trips and birthday parties can also be planned. For more information, phone Theresa Lassila at 360-461-0940

SHS Band fundraiser SEQUIM — The Sequim High School Band will hold a carwash fundraiser in the parking lot of Tarcisio’s, 609 W. Washington St., from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. Proceeds will help pay for band trips to events in Victoria, around the state and in Anaheim, Calif.

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PORT TOWNSEND — An open house at the Port Townsend Marine Science Center will “Welcome the Whales” on Saturday. The open house will be from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the Marine Exhibit at Fort Worden State Park. Entrance is included with regular admission. Early October marks the time of year when the Southern Resident orcas begin their frequent fall feeding forays into the lower Salish Sea, following

the chum salmon as they return to spawn in their home streams. “We will be offering salmon and orca crafts, activities on stream health and salmon habitat, studies of local salmon runs, information about how orca and salmon habitats interface, and we’ll talk about recent sightings of orcas,” said Chrissy McLean, the center’s marine program coordinator. “This year, we’re proud to partner with the North Olympic Salmon Coalition,” she added. “Jac Entringer, their outreach and volunteer coordinator, will be joining us for some extra ‘fishy fun.’” Admission is $5 for adults, $3 for youths and free to center members. For more information, phone 360-385-5582, email info@ptmsc.org or visit www.ptmsc.org.

Silent auction PORT LUDLOW — The Community Enrichment Alliance of Port Ludlow will host a silent auction to benefit Tri-County Domestic Violence and Sexual Abuse Victims on Saturday. The auction, which has the theme “The Beauty of Autumn,” will be from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the Bay Club, 120 Spinnaker Place, Port Ludlow. A $5 entrance fee will be credited toward any winning bid of one item. Wine and appetizers will be served while a musician serenades participants. For more information, phone event co-chair Mary Stuart at 360-437-8140.

Centrum gala set PORT TOWNSEND — Centrum’s 21st annual Gala Dinner and Auction will held in the Fort Worden Commons starting at 5:30 p.m. Saturday. The event raises funds for programs and youth scholarships. This year’s gala is sponsored in part by First Federal and Port Townsend Paper Corp. Dinner reservations closed earlier this week. Dinner, live entertainment and a look back at the 2011 season will be paired with silent and live auctions of getaways, items and experiences donated by Centrum supporters. A sample of more extravagant auction items includes an African safari adventure, a seven-day cruise and a winemaker’s dinner for eight. A full list of items up for bid is available at www. centrum.org/gala. Music will be provided by Suzy Thompson, artistic director of the Festival of American Fiddle Tunes; violinist Peter Evasick; and keyboardist/accordionist George Radebaugh. Two students who benefited from Centrum scholarships in 2011 will also perform. Fort Worden Commons chef Dusty Cope has planned a four-course dinner that includes an appetizer course prepared by the chefs of Ichikawa Japanese Cuisine and Castle Key Restaurant.

Apple Festival CHIMACUM — Finnriver Farm will host a free Apple Festival from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. Finnriver Farm is located at 62 Barn Swallow Road, off Center Road. The event will include hot cider, face-painting, workshops, the ability to meet cider apple growers, booths, family fun and games, music, sweet treats

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and a Cape Cleare salmon focus on education and how it is impacted by funding. cart. AAUW is open to those For more information, who hold an associate phone 360-732-4337. degree or higher from an Young professionals accredited institution. For more information, PORT TOWNSEND — email porttownsend@ A test lab on what role aauw-wa.org or visit www. young professionals can aauwpt.org. play in re-creating waterborne transportation infra- ‘The Tenant’ screened structure will be hosted PORT TOWNSEND — today by the Jefferson County Chamber of Com- The Port Townsend Film merce’s Young Profession- Institute will present the Brazilian film “The Tenant” als Network. It will be from 6 p.m. to as part of the institute’s 7:30 p.m. at the Port Global Lens Series on SatTownsend Community Cen- urday. The film will be screened ter, 620 Tyler St. It is free to chamber at the Rose Theatre, 235 members and $5 for others. Taylor St., at 10 a.m. Admission is $5. Tim Caldwell, former The movie deals with Port Townsend Chamber of Commerce general man- Sao Paulo resident Valter, ager and longtime propo- whose relatively peaceful nent of passenger-only ferry life with his family is disservice (POF), will make a turbed when three young brief presentation on why criminals move in next door. such service is making a comeback in many Puget Genealogical event set Sound communities. CHIMACUM — GenealCaldwell is a member of ogist Eileen Johnson will the Port Townsend Main Street Transportation Com- answer the question “Is Your Internet Research a mittee. “Our ongoing invest- Shot in the Dark?” when ments in our waterfront, she addresses the Jefferson marinas, transit service County Genealogical Sociand visitor centers have ety’s monthly meeting Satbrought the necessary POF urday. The meeting will be at support services to the water’s edge,” said Caldwell. 9:30 a.m. at the Tri-Area “We have positioned our- Community Center, 10 West selves to develop a profit- Valley Road. As more family history able business model to directly link our communi- and genealogical informaties to our I-5 corridor mar- tion becomes available online, Internet searches ket.” This is the second in a can be productive and also series of Jefferson County more of a challenge. Johnson will explain Chamber of Commerce’s how searching can be less Young Professionals Nettedious and more rewardwork workshops designed to ing by using searches tarhelp facilitate communicageted for specific needs. tion and problem-solving. An active member of the Each addresses common Jefferson County Genealogbusiness struggles and comical Society, Johnson is a munity issues. frequent contributor and presenter at family history Donate life jackets programs. The meeting is free and PORT TOWNSEND — Coast Guard Auxiliary Flo- open to the public. For more information, tilla 47 will collect new or gently used life jackets to visit www.wajcgs.org. the Point Wilson Lighthouse at Fort Worden State Ukuleles Unite Park from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. PORT TOWNSEND — each Saturday through Ukulele players of all skill October. levels are invited to the first The collection is part of meeting of Ukuleles Unite the auxiliary’s “Lend a Life at the Quimper Grange, Jacket” program. 1219 Corona St., from They collect the life jack12:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Satets and distribute them for urday. public use at the Port The group was formed Townsend Boat Haven. by George Yount, Germaine Auxiliary members will Arthur and Bruce Cowan. give tours of the lighthouse Loaner ukuleles are in exchange for the life jackavailable, and no experiets at the collection events. ence is necessary. For more information, Grieg discussed phone Yount at 360-385CHIMACUM — 0456 or Cowan at 360-385Research specialist Carol 5147. Pease of Seattle will discuss Norway’s famous composer, Homebuyer class Edvard Grieg, on the occaPORT TOWNSEND — sion of the 150th anniverA free homebuyer educasary of his death. tion class, which will proThe event is sponsored vide participants with a by Thea Foss No. 45 of the certificate required for Daughters of Norway and many new homebuyer prowill be held at the Tri-Area grams, is set Saturday. Community Center, 10 West The class will be from Valley Road, at 1 p.m. Sun10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at day. Mountain View Commons, Grieg developed a style 1925 Blaine St., Port unique to Norway’s mounTownsend. tains, waterfalls and fjords, It is sponsored by Homeincorporating their sounds ward Bound in partnership and spirit into his music. with Eagle Home Mortgage. Pease will focus on his The class will teach dramatic, melodic “Peer aspects of the homebuying Gynt Suite.” process and fulfill requireShe will present photos ments of the U.S. Departand sounds, with the Royal ment of Housing and Urban Symphonic Orchestra of Development with a certifiLondon cate issued by the state The public is invited to Housing Finance Commisthis free presentation. sion. Scandinavian refreshTo register, phone ments will be served. Melinda Szatlocky at For more information, Homeward Bound at 360phone 360-379-1802. 460-5533 or 360-565-2068, or email info@homeward Tharinger to speak bound.org. PORT TOWNSEND — State Rep. Steve Tharinger West End will speak to the American Association of University Benefit dance set Women’s Port Townsend JOYCE — The Roger chapter Saturday. The meeting will be at Baller Memorial Benefit Quimper Unitarian Univer- Dance featuring the Starsalist Church, 2333 San dust Big Band will be held Juan Ave., with refresh- at the Crescent Grange ments at 9:30 a.m. and the Hall, 50870 state Highway meeting running from 112, from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Donations will benefit Current and prospective the Crescent School District members are welcome Tharinger serves the Music Program. Refreshments will be 24th District, which includes all of Clallam and provided. Baller, who died in Jefferson counties and a portion of Grays Harbor August, was a music lover who instilled his passion for County. He is also a Clall­am music in his two sons. County commissioner. For more information, Tharinger was elected to phone Brad Baller at 206the Legislature in 2010. 933-6335 or email brad His presentation will baller@comcast.net.


PeninsulaNorthwest

Peninsula Daily News

Storytelling Festival schedule (Events in Peninsula Paul Wagner; $20. ■  10:30 a.m.: WorkCollege’s Little Theater, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd., shops with Charlotte Blake Alston or Patrick Port Angeles)

Tonight ■  7:30 p.m.: Featured storytellers. $12. Saturday ■  9 a.m.: Workshops with Reno Harrell or

Ball; $20. ■  12.15 p.m.: Open Mic Story Swap. Free. ■  1:30 p.m. : Patrick Ball with Story People of Clallam County member Leslie Slape; $20. ■  2:45 p.m.: Story performance by Paul Wagner with Story

People member Dennis Duncan; $20. ■  3:45 p.m.: Story performance by Blake Alston with Story People member Rebecca Hom; $20. ■  7:30 p.m.: Featured Storytellers, $12. Sunday ■  9:45 a.m.: Silent auction closes.

■  10 a.m.: A Concert of Inspirational Stories with guest storytellers and Story People member George Neiswanger. Free. ■  Noon: Story performance by Ingrid Nixon; $15. ■  12:30 p.m.: Story performance by Reno

Harrell; $15. ■  1:15 p.m.: Quilt drawing and festival close.

Festival: Storytellers from

around world to share tales Continued from C1

She also was a featured artist at the Presidential Inaugural Festivities in Washington, D.C., and was host of Carnegie Hall’s Family Concert Series. ■  California-born Patrick Ball, a Celtic harp player, tells tales in the Celtic tradition. He has recorded seven instrumental and three spoken word albums, which won national awards in both the music and spoken word categories. ■  Michael Reno Harrell is an award-winning songwriter and author from the southern Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina. He has been a Featured Teller at the National Storytelling Festival and also Teller In Residence at the International Storytelling Center. ■  Port Angeles native Ingrid Nixon’s tales include the epic adventures of Antarctic explorers such as Sir Ernest Shackleton. She currently lives in interior Alaska where she leads interpretation and education programs for the National Park Service in Denali National Park. She has written, hosted and/or narrated numerous films about national parks and won several national awards for her work. ■  Paul “Che Oke’ Ten” Wagner is a member of the Wsaanich (Saanich) tribe of southern Vancouver Island, British Columbia, and is an ambassador of the traditional songs and stories of his Coast Salish

Ingrid Nixon’s work in expedition tourism has propelled her about the planet: from Antarctica to Greenland and Madagascar to Easter Island. tribal ancestors. His teachings of the sacred tradition of his people are interwoven with Native American flute and traditional drum songs. ■  An accomplished storyteller, Pat Peterson is a master of ceremonies who encourages and guides performers to bring forth their finest work. She has told traditional and original tales to audiences of all ages for more than 25 years.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Briefly . . . Fitness tests for seniors scheduled Olympic Medical Center’s physical therapy department is holding free senior fitness tests this month in Sequim and Port Angeles. Port Angeles testing will be held at the Port Angeles Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh St., from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Thursday. Sequim tests will be held at the Olympic Medical Center Sequim campus in the Medical Services building’s second-floor conference room, 840 N. Fifth Ave., from 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 28. The tests consist of six simple activities to test basic fitness levels, including lifting light weights and a walking-speed test. Results will provide participants with the knowledge of how their fitness level compares with other seniors. For more information, phone 360-417-7728 (Port Angeles) or 360-582-2601 (Sequim).

June 10, 1943 October 7, 2011 Beloved wife, mother, grandmother, sister and friend, Darlene Holcomb, passed away October 7, 2011, in the arms of her husband from an extended battle with cancer. Darlene was born June 10, 1943, to Delbert and Dorothy Raymond in Yakima, Washington. She spent her childhood years traveling with her parents between Yakima and Port Angeles. In June 1958, at a local dance, she met her future husband, Denis Holcomb. From their first dance, it was obvious they were meant to be dance partners for life. They spent many nights during their courtship dancing the night away at the Masonic Temple in Port Angeles. Darlene married Denis on October 13, 1962.

Death Notices Capt. Donald ‘DJ’ Aites, U.S.C.G. retired March 15, 1938 — Oct. 11, 2011

ANN SCHULTZ May 20, 1924 October 3, 2011 Ann Schultz of Sequim passed away quietly on October 3, 2011, following a stroke three days earlier. Ann was born Ann Catherine Ambord on May 20, 1924, in San Francisco. She was the first of her siblings to be born in the United States when her parents emigrated from Switzerland to run a dairy operation. Her first language was German, and she learned English at school. She matured into a beautiful young woman and caught the eye of Howard George Schultz. They were married in August 1941 and were blessed with four sons. After the passing of her husband, Howard, in May 2000, Ann was fortunate to find love a second time with Roy Tackett, and they celebrated their commitment in Sep-

California-born Patrick Ball is one of the premier Celtic harp players in the world and a captivating storyteller in the Celtic tradition. For more information, phone Cherie at 360-4175031 or email forestfest@ yahoo.com or phone Rebecca at 360-866-6308 or email rebhom@baclroadteller@

gmail.com.

________

Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-417-3535 or at arwyn.rice@peninsuladailynews. com.

Darlene and Denis stayed in Port Angeles working and raising their three sons, Joe, Tim and Ricky. The family enjoyed motorcycle riding, camping, clamming, fishing and the great outdoors. After her children were raised, Darlene and Denis enjoyed traveling to Mexico, Hawaii and Alaska. Darlene was happiest when she was with her family; there was nothing

more important to her than family. She was an amazing mother and grandmother. She loved unconditionally and would always put her family first before anything else. The family home was always full of love, laughter and a full cookie jar. Darlene also enjoyed work over the years at Kentucky Fried Chicken, PayLess Drug Store and Something to Crow About. Darlene also enjoyed working outside in her yard and would often be seen on her riding lawnmower with her grandchildren following behind on their quads and motorcycles. She also loved to watch her grandchildren play their sports, and up until the time she became ill, she never missed a baseball or soccer game or school event. Some of the things she will be forever remembered for will be the beautiful smile she always had, seeing her and Denis on the dance floor and the

love she showed to her family. Her life was truly a gift to all of us, and her grace and courage has inspired us all. Darlene is survived by her husband, Denis; sons and daughters-in-law Joe and Jennifer Holcomb, Tim and Lori Holcomb of Port Angeles and Ricky and Kim Holcomb of Arlington, Washington; grandchildren Stephanie Holcomb, Dylan Holcomb, Tori Holcomb, Shianne Holcomb, Peyton Holcomb and Keyton Holcomb; great-grandson Camron Lee Holcomb; and sister Dolores Stephens of Bellingham, Washington. A celebration of life will be held Sunday, October 16, 2011, at Rexford’s Outback, 85 Peele Road (off Black Diamond Road) in Port Angeles, from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. The family requests any memorials be made to Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County, 540 East Eighth Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362.

tember 2005. Ann was preceded in death by her parents, Vitus Ambord and Anna Ambord-Gemmet; husband Howard Schultz; brother Mark Ambord; granddaughter Nicole Schultz; and great-grandson Noah Vides. Ann is survived by her husband, Roy Tackett of Sequim; brother Walter Ambord and wife Bridget of San Clemente, California; brother Alfred Ambord of Chino Hills, California; sons Howard Schultz and wife Janet of Sequim, Donald Schultz and wife Donna of Sequim, Robert Schultz and wife Max of El Dorado, California, and Randall Schultz of Sequim; nine grandchildren; 12 great-grandchildren; two great-greatgrandchildren; and many nieces and nephews. Ann was beloved by all those who knew her well, and her passing is keenly felt by her family. She will be cherished in their hearts and minds forever.

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. Photos and ornamental insignia are welcome. Call 360-417-3556 Monday through Friday for information and assistance and to arrange publication. A convenient form to guide you is available at area mortuaries or by downloading at www.peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.” ■  Death Notices, in which summary information about the deceased, including service information and mortuary, appear once at no charge. No biographical or family information or photo is included. A form for death notices appears at www.peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.” For further information, call 360-417-3528.

Things to Do online The daily Things to Do calendar, the North Olympic Peninsula’s most comprehensive listing of public events of all kinds updated daily, appears exclusively online at . . .

http://tinyurl.com/pdnthings . . . or via the QR code above for smartphones or tablets. Submitting items of events open to the public is easy and free: ■ EMAIL: Send items to news@ peninsuladailynews.com or via the “Things to Do” link at peninsuladailynews.com. ■ U.S. MAIL: PDN News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. ■ FAX: 360-417-3521.

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Capt. Donald “DJ” Aites died in Sequim of age-related causes. He was 73. A full obituary will follow. Services: A memorial service will be held at the Sequim Elks Lodge, 143 Port Williams Road, at 4 p.m. Friday, Oct. 21. Sequim Valley Funeral Chapel is in charge of arrangements. www.sequimvalleychapel. com

Mrs. Holcomb

Poet speaks at PC

Death and Memorial Notice

Death and Memorial Notice DARLENE HOLCOMB

created for the Longhouse: a carved and painted lectern and a dressing screen. An artist’s reception honoring Price will be held at 2 p.m. in the Peninsula College Longhouse Art Gallery. Price is the featured Longhouse guest artist for the 2011 fall quarter. Both events are free and open to the public. Gallery hours are from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesday through Friday. For more information about the exhibit and other college activities, visit www.pencol.edu or www. facebook.com/Peninsula College.

PORT ANGELES — Peninsula College’s Foothills Writers Series will welcome award-winning Seattle poet Carolyne Wright on Tuesday, Oct. 25. The free reading will be held in Maier Performance Hall, Room E-130, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd., at 12:35 p.m. Wright has published eight books and chapbooks of poetry, including an investigative memoir of her life in Chile during the presidency of Salvador Allende and translations of women writers she Studium Generale Bengali became familiar with durPORT ANGELES — Port ing the years she lived in Gamble S’Klallam tribal art- India and Bangladesh. ist Jimmy Price will talk Wright’s memoir of her about his work and creative experiences in Chile, The process at Peninsula ColRoad to Isla Negra, lege’s Studium Generale received the PEN/Jerard program Thursday. Fund Award and the CrossThe program will be ing Boundaries Award from held in the college’s Little International Quarterly. Theater, 1502 E. Lauridsen For information, visit Blvd., at 12:35 p.m. www.pencol.edu or www. Price will center his pre- facebook.com/Peninsula College. sentation on two new perPeninsula Daily News manent installations he

Quilt raffle A special feature of the festival includes the annual quilt raffle. This year’s quilt, made and donated by Phyllis Luther, features a log cabin pattern in forest shades of browns, tans and rusts. A complete schedule is available on The Story People website at www.dancing leaves.com.

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C8

WeatherNorthwest

Friday, October 14, 2011

Peninsula Five-Day Forecast Today

TonighT

SaTurday

Sunday

Yesterday

Monday

TueSday

High 51

Low 37

52/35

53/41

55/40

57/42

Sun and clouds.

Mostly cloudy.

Partly sunny.

Times of clouds and sun.

Partial sunshine.

Partly sunny.

The Peninsula A weak area of high pressure will remain in place across the region today, but an onshore flow will keep temperatures below seasonal Victoria averages as sunshine mixes with clouds at times. Tonight will be 58/39 mainly cloudy as a surface low pressure center brings a few Neah Bay Port spotty showers southeast of the Peninsula. On Saturday, 54/41 Townsend high pressure will build back in from the northwest, and Port Angeles 55/41 an offshore flow will promote higher temperatures and 51/37 periods of sunshine. Sunday will offer more clouds mixSequim ing with sun as a cold front moves south from British 56/40 Columbia. Forks

Port Ludlow 56/41

58/38

Olympia 55/39

Seattle 52/41

Spokane 58/43

Yakima Kennewick 63/39 66/44

Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. © 2011

Marine Forecast

Times of sun and clouds today. Wind from the west at 12-25 knots. Wave heights 1-3 feet. Visibility unrestricted. Mostly cloudy tonight. Wind from the west at 8-16 knots. Wave heights 1-3 feet. Visibility clear. Partly sunny tomorrow. Wind from the west at 12-25 knots. Wave heights 2-4 feet. Visibility clear. Sunday: Times of clouds and sun. Wind from the west at 8-16 knots. Wave heights 1-3 feet. Visibility clear. Today

Table Location High Tide LaPush Port Angeles Port Townsend Sequim Bay*

2:27 a.m. 1:55 p.m. 5:36 a.m. 3:37 p.m. 7:21 a.m. 5:22 p.m. 6:42 a.m. 4:43 p.m.

Tomorrow

Ht

Low Tide

Ht

7.3’ 8.2’ 6.7’ 6.4’ 8.1’ 7.7’ 7.6’ 7.2’

8:10 a.m. 8:47 p.m. 10:50 a.m. 10:52 p.m. 12:04 p.m. ----11:57 a.m. 11:59 p.m.

2.3’ -0.1’ 4.4’ -0.3’ 5.7’ --5.4’ -0.4’

High Tide Ht 3:08 a.m. 2:24 p.m. 6:20 a.m. 4:05 p.m. 8:05 a.m. 5:50 p.m. 7:26 a.m. 5:11 p.m.

7.1’ 8.1’ 6.8’ 6.2’ 8.2’ 7.5’ 7.7’ 7.1’

8:45 a.m. 9:25 p.m. 11:34 a.m. 11:30 p.m. 12:06 a.m. 12:48 p.m. 12:41 p.m. -----

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Detroit 63/45 San Francisco 78/59

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2.6’ 0.1’ 4.7’ -0.3’ -0.4’ 6.1’ 5.7’ ---

High Tide Ht 3:50 a.m. 2:54 p.m. 7:09 a.m. 4:34 p.m. 8:54 a.m. 6:19 p.m. 8:15 a.m. 5:40 p.m.

6.8’ 7.9’ 6.8’ 6.1’ 8.2’ 7.3’ 7.7’ 6.9’

Low Tide Ht 9:20 a.m. 10:06 p.m. 12:24 p.m. ----12:44 a.m. 1:38 p.m. 12:37 a.m. 1:31 p.m.

3.0’ 0.3’ 4.9’ ---0.4’ 6.4’ -0.4’ 6.0’

Oct 26

Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice

Full

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Nov 10

World Cities Today City Hi Lo W Athens 73 61 sh Baghdad 92 62 s Beijing 63 47 s Brussels 56 43 s Cairo 83 67 s Calgary 49 30 pc Edmonton 49 24 pc Hong Kong 81 74 sh Jerusalem 75 56 s Johannesburg 80 53 pc Kabul 79 39 s London 61 43 s Mexico City 72 52 pc Montreal 70 55 r Moscow 40 32 sh New Delhi 97 65 s Paris 59 41 s Rio de Janeiro 92 74 pc Rome 72 46 s Stockholm 46 34 s Sydney 71 59 r Tokyo 72 63 pc Toronto 64 49 r Vancouver 54 39 pc Weather (W): prcp-precipitation, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, r-rain, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

DIESEL

2002 FORD F-250 SUPERCAB LARIAT

Nov 2

Washington 74/51

New York 74/53

Kansas City 67/43 Atlanta 74/52 El Paso 84/56

Moon Phases New

Chicago 63/43

Denver 72/48

Los Angeles 88/63

Sunset today ................... 6:28 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow ............ 7:33 a.m. Moonrise today ................ 7:27 p.m. Moonset today ............... 10:22 a.m. Last

Minneapolis 58/42

0s

City Albuquerque Anchorage Astoria Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Bend Billings Bismarck Boise Boston Buffalo Charleston, SC Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Coeur d’Alene Corvallis Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit Eugene Fairbanks Helena Honolulu Houston Juneau

Houston 86/54 Miami 86/76

Fronts Cold Warm

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities.

Stationary 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s

National Cities Today Hi 77 49 57 74 73 72 68 55 57 75 72 68 79 64 63 66 57 66 87 72 62 63 66 38 59 86 86 44

Lo W 52 s 40 r 43 c 52 s 53 r 51 t 37 c 39 pc 32 pc 52 pc 56 r 47 r 53 s 45 s 43 pc 44 pc 43 c 47 c 58 s 48 s 41 s 45 sh 47 c 24 pc 43 c 74 pc 54 s 35 sh

City Kansas City Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Philadelphia Phoenix Portland, OR Raleigh Reno Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Sioux Falls Sun Valley Washington, DC

Hi 67 92 80 88 86 54 58 74 82 74 80 64 88 98 74 100 62 78 82 84 72 74 89 77 78 60 66 74

Lo W 43 pc 67 s 52 s 63 s 76 pc 43 pc 42 pc 47 s 61 s 53 r 51 s 38 s 65 s 69 s 52 t 70 s 48 c 49 t 48 s 55 s 45 s 52 s 58 s 63 s 59 s 35 s 46 pc 51 t

National Extremes Yesterday (For the 48 contiguous states)

High: 105 at Hemet, CA

Low: 20 at Daniel, WY VERY

DURAMAX

LOW MILES!

1999 SUBARU LEGACY OUTBACK AWD Auto, Steering Wheel Mounted Controls, Tach, Fog Lamps, Luggage Rack, Alloys, Pwr Windows, Locks & Mirrors, AM/FM/CD/ Cass, AC, Cruise & More! Stk#P2250A

2003 CHEVY SILVERADO 2500HD CREW CAB 4X4 V8 Diesel, Auto, Bedliner, Tow Pkg, Topper, Running Boards, Pwr Windows, Locks, Mirrors & Seats, Leather, OnStar, Keyless Entry, AM/FM/CD, AC & More! Stk#9752A

2006 MERCEDES-BENZ C230 SPORT SEDAN

V6, Auto, Pwr Rear Window Shade, Rear Fog Lights, Tilt/ Tele, Rain Sensing Wipers, Pwr Sunroof, Heated Leather Seats, All Power! Security Sys, Cruise, AC & More! Stk#9765A

2003 MERCURY MOUNTAINEER AWD

V6, Auto, Pwr Windows, Locks, Htd Mirrors, Running Boards, Tow Pkg, Alloys, Pwr Adj Pedals, 7 Passenger, Keyless Entry, Rear AC, AM/FM/CD/Cass & More! Stk#9862A

Add only tax, license and a negotiable $150 documentation fee. Vehicles are one only & subject to prior sale. VINs posted at dealership. Vehicles pictured are for illustration purposes only. Expires 10/31/11.

1A5135598

SUBARU

Sunday

Low Tide Ht

*To correct for Dungeness Bay subtract 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.

CHEVROLET

Seattle 52/41

Sun & Moon

Oct 19

Everett 54/41

Shown is today’s weather.

Tide

National Forecast

Friday, October 14, 2011

Statistics are for the 24-hour period ending at 5 p.m. yesterday High Low Prcp YTD P. Angeles 54 37 0.00 11.79 Forks 58 39 0.01 88.87 Seattle 59 43 0.00 27.61 Sequim 56 39 0.01 11.68 Hoquiam 60 44 0.00 51.87 Victoria 55 39 0.00 23.63 P. Townsend* 56 47 0.00 12.73 *Data from www.ptguide.com

-10s -0s

Bellingham 52/35 Aberdeen 55/41

Peninsula Daily News

Now you can place your classified ad 24/7! Try our new Classified Wizard — www.peninsuladailynews.com

- $16,500 Must Go!

1A5133824


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Classified

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2011

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D2

Classified

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2011

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Peninsula Pe ninsula MARKETPLACE Reach The North Olympic Peninsula & The World

IN PRINT & ONLINE

Place Your Ad Online 24/7 with Photos & Video PLACE ADS FOR PRINT AND WEB:

Visit | www.peninsulamarketplace.com 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 •

T O DAY ’ S H O T T E S T N E W C L A S S I F I E D S !

ADORABLE DORKIE PUPPIES Out of our Yorkie and dapple Mini-Dachshund. Tiny, first shots and dewormed. $300-$450. 452-3016. AIDES/RNA OR CNA Best wages, bonuses. Wright’s. 457-9236. ALF GRASS: $5/ bale. Grass, $4. In barn, no rain. 683-5817. AUTO TECHNICIAN Career Opportunity! Email your resume arlin_lidstrom@ wilderauto.com

CASH FOR: Antiques and collectibles. 360-928-9563 Delivery Driver Wanted Part-Time or Possible FullTime. Part-time delivery driver to the greater Seattle area. One or two round trips each week driving a van delivering light weight parts. Driver must have current Washington Class C CDL and clean driving record. Position could be expanded to full-time with additional in-house non-driving work. If interested please contact hr@acti.aero for employment information. DINGY: Very sturdy, white fiberglass. Custom manufactured by Matteus Zoetem (in Los Angeles). With oars. $250. 683-2743.

LUMBER: 6 doz. 4x4 old growth cedar, 8’ long, some or all. $7.50 ea. 374-5085. MOVING Sale: Sat. only, 9-2 p.m., 817 Madeline St., between 10th and Milwaukee. Furniture, wood swing set, hot tub and more. OPEN HOUSE: Oct. 15-16, 1-4 p.m., 1313 16th St. For sale by owner, 03 Port Townsend home 3 Br., 2 ba, 1,500 sf, vaulted ceilings, skylights, carport. $210,000. 379-1372. P.A.: 1801 W. 16th. 3 Br., 2 bath. No smoke/pets. $800, first, last, dep. 457-4196 P.A.: 2 ered large $900.

Br., 1 ba, covparking with storage room. 670-6160.

P.A.: 1 Br. $600 mo., $250 dep., util. incl No pets. 457-6196. Retail Associate. Local company needs an energetic, problem solver with a great attitude for customer service. General const. knowledge, sales & forklift exp helpful. Lift 100 lbs and have a valid driver’s license. Mail resume to P.O. Box 4112, Sequim, WA 98382. SALE: Sat. only, 9-2 pm 123 Hancock Ave., P.A. Slumped bottles at discounted prices. SNOW TIRES: (4) Michelin non-studded, used 1 season Sequim to PA. 225/60R18. $500. 683-7789

Harrison Sold His Ford In The Peninsula 23 Classifieds.

Lost and Found

FOUND: Female dog. 385-3763

Place your Ad With The New Classified Wizard Pick your ad package and rate that works for you. Type your ad how you would like it to read. See your ad before it runs exactly how it will publish. Add a border, graphic, picture, Yellow on Sunday

6A113352

PENINSULA CLASSIFIED

LOST: Dog. Missing from Hwy 101 and east side Safeway area, PA. White boxer, approx 40 lbs., may have purple collar. Answers to Fancy. Not spayed. 206-940-5098 LOST: Glasses. Dark framed reading glasses with yellow tape, Sequim area on Wed., Oct. 12. 683-6280 LOST: Woman’s wallet. Black and purple, two zipper pouches, in P.A. Call Kaycee at 360-912-1152 MISSING: Bikes. Specialized Hard Rock with yellow extra large frame, front suspension. 1 Eastern Element, white, green wheels. $200 for information leading to or return of. Missing from E. 11th Street, P.A. 477-6856 or 779-7917.

STUDIO: Dungeness, view, util incl. $550, 6 mo. lease. No pets. Refs. Available Nov. 683-4503 WHEELS: (4) Dodge Charger 18”x8” polished, caps, and lug nuts. $400. 683-7789 Wonderful housecleaning. Experienced, references. Call Esther 775-9513 YARD Sale: Fri.-Sat.Sun., 9-3 p.m. 423 Fredricks St., turn east on Fredricks from Hwy. 19, go straight heading towards water, on to gravel road, house on left, Port Townsend. Nice things. Priced to sell. ZERO CLEARANCE PROPANE FIREPLACE “HeatnGlo.” Complete, excellent cond. Handsome oak mantle. $375/obo. 457-6127.

Lost and Found

FOUND: Ponies. 681-3087 FOUND: Shop Vac. Alley behind Rudy’s Automotive. 457-0700 FOUND: Wedding Ring. Parking lot of Safeway, P.A. 565-2314 LOST: (2) garden gnomes. 1 small white ceramic, 1 large plastic with solar panel, near East 11th and Albert St., P.A. Small reward. 452-2516. LOST: Binoculars. Sat., 10/8 at Lower Elwha Dam construction viewing platform, P.A. 457-5937

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

31 Help Wanted 32 Independent Agents 33 Employment Info 34 Work Wanted 35 Schools/Instruction

31

Help Wanted

AUTO SALESPERSON Koenig Chevrolet Subaru is looking for a highly motivated individual for our Auto Salesperson position. Excellent pay program and benefits. Contact Bill Koenig Chevrolet Subaru 457-4444 AUTO TECHNICIAN Career Opportunity! Email your resume arlin_lidstrom@ wilderauto.com Caregiver Needed Great pay, DOE. Light house keeping/cooking. Refs req. Send resume to 181 Green Meadows Drive, Sequim, WA 98382. Case Manager-PATH Program for WEOS Full-time This position involves outreach to persons who are homeless and who have mental health/substance use issues. Additional duties include working with our housing support team in providing supportive services and developing housing resources. Bachelors degree in social sciences, social work or related area and 2 years mental health treatment experience preferred. Closely related experience may be substituted for education and/or mental health experience preference. The pay range is DOE Send resumes to Gena @ genab@forkshospital.org. CNA for Long Term Care Full-time and Part-time Washington State Certification required The pay range is $10.56 – $15.12 Send resumes to Gena @ genab@forkshospital.org.

31

Help Wanted

AIDES/RNA OR CNA Best wages, bonuses. Wright’s. 457-9236.

CNA/NAR Due to growth, new positions available. 408 W. Washington Sequim. 360-683-7047 office@ discoverymc.com Delivery Driver Wanted Part-Time or Possible FullTime. Part-time delivery driver to the greater Seattle area. One or two round trips each week driving a van delivering light weight parts. Driver must have current Washington Class C CDL and clean driving record. Position could be expanded to full-time with additional in-house non-driving work. If interested please contact hr@acti.aero for employment information. Development Mgr for First Step 25 hrs. wk. For req/full desc or to submit resume email fstep@olypen.com EOE HANDYMAN: Reliable repairman. Rent/ wages. 620-0482. HOME HEALTH DEPARTMENT DIRECTOR Full-time Mon.-Fri., with rotating weekends. Prior management and durable medical equipment/ billing exp. a MUST. Needs to be a good organizer, multi-task oriented and have excellent management skills. Pick up application at Jim’s Pharmacy, 424 E. 2nd St., P.A. EOE. LABORER: License/ transportation needed. 683-9619 or 452-0840. MA: Per diem, medical experience required, wage DOE. Send resume to SSDS, 777 N. 5th Ave., Sequim. PAINTER/PREPPER Wages DOE. Pick up application at Evergreen Collision, 820 E Front St., P.A. PENINSULA DAILY NEWS is seeking a Part-time Reporter to work 20 hours per week covering news and events in Port Townsend and East Jefferson County. Prior newspaper experience required. Reply with a resume to Leah Leach, managing editor at leah.leach@peninsula dailynews.com

RECEPTIONIST For busy office. MUST be great with people and be able to multitask. Send resume: Peninsula Daily News PDN#234/Reception Pt Angeles, WA 98362

Olympic Rehabilitation of Sequim

Now Hiring Bath Aides & Restorative Aides Avamere Olympic Rehabilitation of Sequim is looking for 3 Bath Aides & Restorative Aides to complete our care team. Please call Heather Jeffers at 582-3900 for more information.

TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507 VISIT: WWW.PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM OR

E-MAIL:

CLASSIFIED@PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM DEADLINES: 4:00 the weekday before publication. ADDRESS/HOURS: 305 West First Street/P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays CORRECTIONS AND CANCELLATIONS: Corrections--the newspaper accepts responsibility for errors only on the first day of publication. Please read your ad carefully and report any errors promptly. Cancellations--Please keep your cancellation number. Billing adjustments cannot be made without it.

31

Help Wanted

Retail Associate. Local company needs an energetic, problem solver with a great attitude for customer service. General const. knowledge, sales & forklift exp helpful. Lift 100 lbs and have a valid driver’s license. Mail resume to P.O. Box 4112, Sequim, WA 98382. ROOFER: Experienced, valid license, own transportation, wage DOE. 683-9619/452-0840 SCHEDULER Schedule clinical appointments. Exper req’d. FT with benefits. Resume & cvr ltr to PCMHC, 118 E. 8th St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. www.pcmhc.org EOE

34

Work Wanted

34

Work Wanted

BROTHER & SISTER TEAM. Looking for caretaker position-home, farm, business. Quiet, drug free, responsible and trustworthy, late 50s. Love animals, do maintenance, give you more freedom while keeping your property safe. Small salary with separate, private small quarters or larger salary if not. Personal references available. Karen Donny 360-808-0698 EDDY’S REPAIR Small engine repair. Mower, trimmers, chainsaws. Pick up and delivery for a fee. 360-681-3065. Enrich your garden. Fall program. Prune, weed, feed, mulch. Outstanding results. Sunshine Gardening 452-9821 HANDYMAN: Sequim area, references, $15 hr. 775-7364. HOME CLEANING Reliable, dependable, flexible. Call Meredith 360-461-6508.

Young Couple, Early Sixties. available for moss removal, fall clean-up, garden restoration, fence and deck repairs. Excellent references. Chip & Sunny’s Groundskeeping Services 360-457-1213

51

Homes

Wonderful housecleaning. Experienced, references. Call Esther 775-9513 Yard cleanup, hedges, fire wood, misc. 452-3076 Mark.

41 Business Opportunities 42 Mortgages/Contracts 43 Money Loaned/Wanted

41

3 bed, 1.75 bath, 1,096 sf on large corner lot. Large kitchen. New carpet. Bathrooms newly remodeled with tile shower and granite countertops. Peek-a-boo water view and mountain view. 1 car attached garage, detached 27x20 shop with wood heat. Fenced backyard with large patio. $199,000. 360-460-7503

Business Opportunities

www.kbsilverandgold wealth.com

WSDOT is currently seeking to fill a permanent Maintenance Technician 2 position Located in Sekiu. For more information please visit the following internet address: http://bit.ly/q2dcI1

Housecleaning, pet walking, errands. Mature, reliable. 683-4567 195135153

Pay for your ad on our secure site.

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SEQUIM/ CARLSBORG 3 Br., 1.75 ba, fenced, all appliances, W/D, wood stove, wood floors/ceilings, new windows/blinds. $950 mo., 1st, last, no smoke, pet ok. 683-3863

23

22 Community Notes 23 Lost and Found 24 Personals

And you can sell your car in the Peninsula Classifieds even if you’re selling your Chevy and your name is Chase.

ROUND 2 Sale: Sat.Sun., 9-4 p.m. 820 W. 6th St., in alley between A & B St. Lots of new stuff added! Crafting supplies, material, holiday stuff, children’s books, household items, teen, you and baby clothes, plus more! Mary Kay products available on hand and to order.

Lost and Found

5000900

Caregiver Needed Great pay, DOE. Light house keeping/cooking. Refs req. Send resume to 181 Green Meadows Drive, Sequim, WA 98382.

DISCOVERY BAY Beach front, like new, 2 Br., 2 ba, all appl. $1,000. 460-2330. FIREWOOD: 35 rounds white fir, 16”x15”, you pick up. $60. 681-0721. GARAGE Sale: Sat., 9-3 p.m. 43 Haven Wood Lane, North of Sequim, off Towne Rd. and Madrona to Haven Wood Lane. Tools, sports equipment, clothes, and more! GARAGE Sale: FriSat., 9-5 p.m. 1071 Woodcock Road. Exercise equipment, pants and jeans, dive fins, over 200 karaoke discs, and lots of misc. GARAGE Sale: Sat., 8-2 p.m., Sun., 9noon, 131 Lois Lane. Rain or shine. Fishing gear, household, kitchenware, furniture, car bed, toys and lots of designer clothes, baby to adult sizes, .25¢ ea or $2 a bag. HONDA: Fat-Cat. New battery, new oil, fresh tune up, carburator rebuilt, rack to haul out your deer. $1,600 cash 683-8263 HYUNDAI: ‘09 Sonata Limited. Black beauty, all the options plus tinted windows and navigation system, extra set of wheels and tires. $17,800. 477-3191. LOVING TORTIE SEEKS SINGLE CAT HOME. 3 yr old fixed female shorthair. Ideal companion. Serious inquiries only. 460-8785. P.A.: 1 Br., 1,200 sf, new carpet, incl. W? G. $625. 457-8438

23

51 Homes 52 Manufacured Homes 53 Open House 54 Lots/Acreage 55 Farms/Ranches 57 Recreational 58 Commercial Publisher’s Notice The Fair Housing Act makes it illegal to advertise any sale or rental of real estate with preference, limitation or discriminatory language based on race, color, religion, sex, age, national origin, handicap or familial status. Also, local laws forbidding discrimination in real estate ads prohibit discrimination based on marital status, political ideology, sexual orientation or a renter’s qualification for subsidy support. The Peninsula Daily News will not knowingly accept any advertising which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Housing for the elderly may be exempt from the Fair Housing Act if specific criteria have been met.

51

Homes

10 ACRE RANCH Tucked away in the Elwha Valley the beautiful ranch is a short distance to the Elwha River, close to riding trails, and 1.5 miles to the park entrance. The home features upgraded kitchen and baths, large master suite with separate shower and jetted tub. The main barn features a 1 Br., 1 bath apartment, horse stalls, workshop, and tack room. Pastures have electric fencing. $385,000. ML260930. Tom Blore Peter Black Real Estate 683-4116

A PANORAMIC WATER, ISLAND & MOUNTAIN VIEW HOME overlooks P.A., Strait, Vancouver Island and Victoria. Borders Nat’l Park. Great home. Photos at: bitly.com/PAhome FSBO. $238,000. 360-452-8770

Compose your Classified Ad on

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TIPS Always include the price for your item. You will get better results if people know that your item is in their price range. Make sure your information is clear and includes details that make the reader want to respond. Since readers often scan, include a catchy headline and/or a photo or graphic. Highlight your ad in Yellow on Sunday to help it stand out. You are a reader, so make sure the ad looks appealing and is clear to you. PENINSULA CLASSIFIED

91190150

ATTENTION ADVERTISERS: No cancellations or corrections can be made on the day of publication. It is the Advertiser's responsibility to check their ad on the first day of publication and notify the Classified department if it is not correct. Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., is responsible for only one incorrect insertion. All advertising, whether paid for or not, whether initially accepted or published, is subject to approval or rescission of approval by Northwest Media (Washington), L.P. The position, subject matter, form, size, wording, illustrations, and typography of an advertisement are subject to approval of Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., which reserves the right to classify, edit, reject, position, or cancel any advertisement at any time, before or after insertion. Neither Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., nor Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., investigates statements made directly or indirectly in any advertisement and neither makes any representations regarding the advertisers, their products, or their services or the legitimacy or value of the advertisers or their products or services. In consideration of publication of an advertisement, the Advertiser and any advertising agency that it may employ, jointly and severally, will indemnify and hold harmles Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., and Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., their officers, agents, and employees against expenses (including all legal fees), liabilities, and losses resulting from the publication or distribution of advertising, including, without limitation, claims or suits for libel, violation of privacy, copyright or trademark infringement, deception, or other violations of law. Except as provided in this paragraph, neither Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., nor Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., shall be liable for any damages resulting from error in or non-publication of ads, whether paid for or not, including but not limited to, incidental, consequential, special, general, presumed, or punitive damages or lost profits. The sole and exclusive remedy against Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., and Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., for any error in, or non-publication of, an ad shall be a refund of the cost of the ad or the printing of one make-good insertion, at the discretion of the Publisher; provided that Advertiser and/or its agency has paid for the ad containing the error or which was not published; otherwise, the sole remedy shall be one make-good insertion. No claim for repetition shall be allowed. No allowance shall be made for imperfect printing or minor errors. Neither Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., nor Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., shall be liable for failure to print, publish, or circulate all or any portion of an advertisement or of advertising linage contracted for, if such failure is due to acts of God, strikes, accidents, or other circumstances beyond the control of Northwest Media (Washington), L.P. Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., and Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., shall not be liable for errors in or non-publication of advertisements submitted after normal deadlines. Any legal action arising from these terms and conditions or relating to the publication of, or payment for, advertising shall, if filed, be commenced and maintained in any court situated in King or Clallam County, Washington. Other terms and conditions, stated on our Advertising Rate Cards and Contracts, may apply. This service is not to be used to defraud or otherwise harm users or others, and Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., reserves the right to disclose a user's identity where deemed necessary to protect Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., or others or to respond to subpoenas or other lawful demands for information.


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

51

Homes

AFFORDABLE Adorable water view home in Port Angeles. See Victoria, Ediz Hook, the Coho and ships go by. All new light fixtures and newer windows and laminate flooring. Nice fenced backyard with alley access. $170,000. ML261557 Sheryl Payseno Burley 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East BEAUTIFUL 2006 custom built home on 1.24 acres with commanding views of the Olympic Mountains and Straits of Juan De Fuca. 2 Br. (1 up and 1down), plus a large office with 2 1/2 baths in 2,488 sf. Home is in “like new” condition with oak hardwood floors, lots of cabinets, coriantype countertops, heat pump, and a wood fireplace. Bathrooms have tiled floors. Both front and back yards are on timed sprinklers. 3rd level is an eagle’s nest with huge water views. $439,000. ML261697/260710 Dave Stofferahn 477-5542 and Heidi Hansen 477-5322 COLDWELL BANKER TOWN & COUNTRY BEST KEPT SECRET Price was reduced by $25,000. 4 Br., easy living, new roof, paint, fenced side yard, granite counters, new carpet, off street parking and main level has 2 Br., and 2 baths. Sits on 2 corner lots, unique water feature under entry walkway. Lower level entry has 2 Br., bath and family room with wet bar. Nice mountain view and tall evergreens. Don’t overlook this home. $299,900. ML252056 Becky Jackson 417-2781 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

WHY PAY SHIPPING ON INTERNET PURCHASES? SHOP LOCAL

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. SCHEDULING YOUR LIFE Solution: 8 letters

By Gene Newman

DOWN 1 Eucharist liturgy 2 Suffix pertaining to size 3 Phillips who played Livia on “I, Claudius” 4 Niche 5 “The Simpsons” leisure suit wearer 6 Small amount 7 Violinist’s direction 8 Urgent prompting 9 Act with diligence 10 Cabaret singer’s favorite food? 11 Frequent Carson stand-in 12 Blasting site 14 Coup target, perhaps 18 One of the Gulf States 22 It may be comic 24 Show petulance 26 “I had to visit my sick aunt,” e.g. 27 Blabbed Homes

Country Living Ranch Home On Acreage For Sale By Owner. Beautiful end of the road privacy on 2.5 acres with optional adjacent parcels available up to 20 acres. 3 spacious bedrooms, 2 full baths, 1996 custom built 1825 sf home. $295,000 Jerry 360460-2960. ENJOY COUNTRY LIVING 3 Br., 2.5 bath home on just under 2 acres. Custom cherry cabinets and hardwood floors. Large wraparound deck. Nicely landscaped with raised beds and greenhouse. Bonus room over garage. $419,500 ML253317/261533 Team Schmidt 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND FANTASTIC PRICE! Home located in the Resort at Port Ludlow. Established neighborhood, close to all amenities. 3 Br., 1.5 bath. Propane fireplace, carport. $199,500. ML279629. Nancy Rathke 360-437-1011 Windermere Port Ludlow GREAT AREA, GREAT HOME! Spacious 2 Br. home on quiet dead-end street by high school. Home features large bedrooms, vaulted ceilings, great garage/ workshop and newer roof and windows. Don’t miss this one! $139,000 ML261941/277414 Jennifer Holcomb 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. HOME SWEET HOME This home has been in this family for 3 generations. Great back yard for gardening and enjoying mountain view. Generous living space in the living room and parlor. Conveniently located on bus line and close to grocery. You’ll love the vintage touches throughout. $149,000. ML261890. Pili Meyer 417-2799 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY If you’ve been waiting for a large home with dual views in a central neighborhood, here’s your chance to have a great home for less than you could build it! The rooms are ample with a large lower level family room and upper level living room with gorgeous water views. $200,000 ML261965/278378 Doc Reiss 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A.

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A C C O M P L I S H A R E R A

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C M V E C I O H C S I M P L E

S F V E F O L D E R I O E E Z

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I T A V E S O E T B L N I N G

A S N L E R R M I K I D S I O

www.wonderword.com

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R S N M E N I E I R D R A G E

E I S A E I L T V R I I A A P M S E L O T Y A R S T Y G ҹ G T W O E G A ҹ N ҹ A Y R N L D R O I ҹ G J E U K U U N T C I S N I A D T I N R E M R E T R O L E L

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Accomplish, Adjust, Appointments, Assign, Choice, Comfort, Courage, Daily, Easier, Flexibility, Folder, Frame, Free, Goal, Guide, Improve, Inner, Invest, Kids, Learning, Leisure, Lists, Love, Manage, Organizing, Overcome, Plans, Play, Post, Recognize, Reminders, Role, Routine, Save, Share, Simple, Solve, Term, Times, Tracking, Weekly, Year, Yoga Yesterday’s Answer: Kansas City

Thursday’s Puzzle Solved

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

VAROB ©2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

MAGOE (c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

28 Tennis great’s favorite food? 29 Weapons seen on pistes 31 Quitter’s words 32 Packs, as a set of mixing bowls 35 Camping support 38 Hear about 42 Disposed to laugh 44 Hull fastener 45 Jargons

Homes

INCREDIBLE 180º MTN VIEW Almost new (2010) 5 acres. Partially fenced. Custom built. Chef’s kitchen, stainless steel appliances, wall oven and gas cooktop. Granite counters and eating bar, 2 master suites. 6’ glass block shower. Large den. Fireplace, covered deck, patio. 2 car attached garage. RV parking. $489,000. ML261579. Carol Dana 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East LOVE TO GARDEN? Amazing landscaping featuring an array of fabulous perennials, ornamentals and trees in a fully fenced setting with pond. This tri-level home with large deck and hot tub offers spectacular views of Discovery Bay and Cape George. $259,000 ML260711/206519 Helga Filler 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. NORTHWEST STYLE Great split level home with 2 Br., 2 bath and 1,828 sf has been well maintained and is located in Sunland. On a large lot, spacious interior, beautiful brick fireplace and all of the Sunland amenities (tennis, swimming, clubhouse, beach). $225,000. ML261689. Mike Fuller Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim 683-3900 OUT OF THE TENSION ZONE On 5 acres off a quiet lane set amidst meadows and woods is a 4 Br., 3.5 bath, 3,059 sf home. Intricate detailing, formal and family dining areas, quiet music or TV room, 3 car attached garage and 2 car detached garage/workshop. Adjacent to state land and near public beach access. Possible seller financing available. A place to unwind naturally at a relaxing price. $495,000. ML260969. Sheryl Payseno Burley 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East ‘P’ IS FOR POSSIBILITIES Single story house on .28 acre with light industrial zoning opens up a world of business possibilities. Large rooms, many upgrades, located mere seconds from downtown Port Angeles. Bring your imagination! $99,900. ML261887. Eileen Schmitz 452-1210 JACE The Real Estate Company

51

Homes

SPACIOUS 1,832, sf home in a great Port Angeles neighborhood. Beautiful hardwood floors, brick fireplace and a recently updated Kitchen. $179,500 Jim Hardie U-$ave Real Estate 775-7146 SPACIOUS RAMBLER On oversized west side lot. 3 Br., 2 bath, family room with fireplace, formal dining room plus nook. A private south side patio and much more! $225,000. ML261905 Chuck Turner 452-3333 PORT ANGELES REALTY SPARKLING NEW Manufactured home in beautiful Dungeness Meadows on your own land. Includes clubhouse, golf course, swimming pool and trail on dyke. Detached garage 572 sf, expanded decking. Security patrol. Come and be close to the Dungeness River and all it offers. $139,000. ML261972. Linda Ulin 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East SUNLAND SALTWATER VIEW CONDO 4 Br., 3 bath plus den, chef’s kitchen with granite counters, large rec room, teak hardwood floors, master bath with jetted tub and tile shower, across from the Sunland Clubhouse. $424,000. ML231952/261204 Kim Bower 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND SUNLAND TOWNHOME New designer kitchen. 1,831 sf 3 Br., 2 bath, northwest murphy style bed in guest Br. Built in 1990, on the 10th fairway. $299,900 ML231504/261183 Deb Kahle 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND THE PRICE IS RIGHT And the time is right to buy this new listing! a 1990, single level 3 Br., 2 bath home located in a quiet neighborhood on a large lot. A smart investment! $175,000. ML261908. Kathy Brown 417-2785 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY LONG DISTANCE No Problem! Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714

10/14/11

48 Rubbish 50 Add to the service 53 Casino reward 54 Big do 55 They’re pros 56 Hurrying, maybe 58 Flightless birds 59 “Waterloo” group 60 Comedy club sound 63 Com lead-in

51

Homes

52

SWORYD

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

Print your answer here: Yesterday’s

Manufactured Homes

THIS PERFECTLY LOCATED HOME Sits on 2 city lots. Its design boasts lots of square footage and offers mountain views. The home includes 4 Br., 2 baths, a spacious family room, fireplace, extra storage, and a large shop off the garage. $167,500 ML261523/254600 Lynn Moreno 477-5582 COLDWELL BANKER TOWN & COUNTRY

Light and bright, super good cents, 28x48 home in a peaceful, 55+ park. ADA ramp access with attached carport and wood storage shed. New Formica counter tops, hot water heater and entry doors. Updated with porcelain sinks, newer carpets and laminate flooring. $54,000 ML261451/246908 Holly Coburn 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A.

VIEWS! Excellent 3 Br., 2 bath, 1,590 sf home centrally located, fenced backyard, living room and family room. Two decks one on each level facing the water and mtn views, too! Family room features expansive water views, balcony, tongue-in-groove ceiling and two bright skylights. Home offers a lot of storage including large crawl space that you can enter and walk into. New interior paint, hardwood floors just refinished and brand new carpet in living room, family room and stairs. $166,900. ML261611. Brooke Nelson 417-2812 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

53

52

Manufactured Homes

EASY LIVING IN HENDRICKSON PARK Open floor plan, 2 Br., 2 bath, kitchen with breakfast bar, dining room, living room. Master with large walk-in closet, master bath with 2 closets. Low maintenance yard, 10x12 storage shed in back yard with power, close to Safeway, SARC, stores, Olympic Discovery Trail. Located at back of cul-de-sac so very little road noise. $79,000. ML261616 Jan Sivertsen 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East

Open House

OPEN HOUSE: Oct. 15-16, 1-4 p.m., 1313 16th St. For sale by owner, 03 Port Townsend home 3 Br., 2 ba, 1,500 sf, vaulted ceilings, skylights, carport. $210,000. 379-1372.

54

Lots/ Acreage

Nice sunny level parcel with many improvements is ready for your new home. The well is in at 71ft and gets 30gpm per the well log. The septic site registration has been completed for a sand filter to pressurized drain field and the permit expires 6/28/2014. Awesome mountain view plus pastoral views. $96,000 ML261527 Michaelle Barnard 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. ‘W’ IS FOR WATER FRONT Amazing new prices on premium waterfront parcels between Sequim and Port Angeles. Owner financing available. Views of the islands, ships, eagles and whales. Power to the property and community water available. $124,900. ML252079 Jace Schmitz 452-1210 JACE The Real Estate Company

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Commercial Printing Services 417-3520

(Answers tomorrow) LEMUR AGENDA FAKING Jumbles: TWINE Answer: When the presidential candidate went jogging, he took this — HIS RUNNING MATE

55

62

Farms/ Ranches

SHOW HORSE TRAINING FACILITY This working horse ranch has almost 18 acres of fenced and cross-fenced pasture, a new state of the art 11,520 sf barn with a 7,200 sf arena, 15 stalls, office, bath, wash and grooming area, 2 houses-each with separate water share and septic. $795,000. ML260905. Marc Thomsen 417-2782 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

58

Commercial

FOR SALE OR LEASE This building on Front Street with Commercial Arterial zoning allows for many types of businesses. Currently set up as a hair salon, (salon chairs and hair dryers are negotiable). 5 paved parking spaces in the back off of the alley. $129,900. ML260036. Terry Neske 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A.

Apartments Unfurnished

CENTRAL P.A. Clean, quiet, 2 Br. in well managed complex. Excellent references required. $700. 452-3540 CENTRAL P.A.: Clean quiet, upstairs 2 Br., in well managed complex. Excellent references required. 457-7149 CLEAN, SPACIOUS 2 Br., W/D. $600 plus dep. 1502 C St., P.A. No smoking/ pets. 360-452-3423 COLLEGE P.A.: 1 Br., 1 ba. No pets. $500. 457-1611 P.A.: 1 Br. $600 mo., $250 dep., util. incl No pets. 457-6196. P.A.: 1 Br. private apt., remod., great location. $700. 452-6714 P.A.: Central, newer 2 Br., DW, W/D, no smoke/pets. $650. Lease, credit check. 360-796-3560 P.A.: Newer west side studio apt., utilities incl., W/D, no smoking. $575 mo., $500 dep. 670-9329.

CLASSIFIED can help with all your advertising needs: Buying Selling Hiring Trading Call today!

61 Apartments Furnished 62 Apartments Unfurnished 63 Duplexes 64 Houses 65 Share Rental/Rooms 66 Spaces RV/Mobile 67 Vacation 68 Commercial Space

61

Apartments Furnished

WINTER SPECIAL Motel weekly, $179. Continental breakfast, microwave, refr., bathtub, Wi-Fi. Clean. 457-9494.

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

WE CURRENTLY HAVE ONE-BEDROOM APARTMENTS AVAILABLE AND EXPECT TO HAVE OUR NEXT OPENING IN FEBRUARY, 2012. Our lovely one-bedroom apartments include: Beautifully landscaped grounds with garden areas for tenants, lean bright facilities, friendly knowledgeable staff, two meals served daily in our dining room, light housekeeping service biweekly, transportation on our modern minibus, and a lively activity program. Our rents are subsidized based on your income. If you are interested, please call for more information.

Discovery View Retirement Apartments 360-385-9500.

360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714 www.peninsula dailynews.com

62

Apartments Unfurnished

P.A.: 1 Br., 1,200 sf, new carpet, incl. W? G. $625. 457-8438 Properties by Landmark. portangeleslandmark.com STUDIO: Dungeness, view, util incl. $550, 6 mo. lease. No pets. Refs. Available Nov. 683-4503 WEST P.A.: 1 Br. $550 + dep. 460-4089. mchughrents.com

63

Duplexes

SEQUIM: 2 Br. + den, 2 ba, W/D, no smoke, pets neg., 1 yr. $875. 452-4701. SEQUIM: 219 Matriotti, 2 Br., 1 ba, W/D, no pets/smoking, 1st, last, dept. $650. 681-4809

64

Houses

1725 W. 5th P.A. 2 Br. $600, no smoking/pets. 457-1632. 20 MIN. TO SEQ. OR P.T.: 3 Br, 2 ba, water view, lg. deck, 3-car gar., all appl., boat ramp near by, cr. ck, ref $1,100. 683-2799 AGNEW: Private, wooded 1 Br. on 5 ac. $725. 460-9710. CENTRAL P.A.: Country in the city, 2 Br., 2 ba, updated with computer room. $825/$850. Drive by 415 S. Valley then call 460-7652. Country Cottage Nice view, animal friendly, lg fenced yd. 1 Br., no smoke. Credit check. 3121 Mt. Pleasant Rd., P.A. $695 mo. $695 dep. 808-2677.

OPEN HOUSE SAT. OCT. 15 - 1-3:30 PM

145 JOHN JACOBS ROAD, PORT ANGELES WELL MAINTAINED mfg. home on 4.90 acres of partially cleared land. Beautiful sweeping view of the Strait and Mts. What else could you ask for? Efficient floor plan with 2 BR/2 full BA. Nice shop/barn w/enclosed garage with storage and bathroom. Seasonal pond w/lovely landscaping. This is a must see! Only $235,000 MLS#261838

DIRECTIONS: Hwy 101, S. on O’Brien Rd. to John Jacobs Rd. L. to address. ®

Patti Morris 1A5137127

peninsula dailynews.com

By DAVID OUELLET

1A407747

CAREFREE LIVING Dominion Terrace condo, immaculate 1 Br., 1 bath unit. Upgraded flooring and appliances. Cozy den addition, too many amenities to list. $94,500. ML172278/260131 Terry Peterson 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND

51

D3

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ACROSS 1 __ Verde: Colorado national park 5 Gobs 10 It might be slippery 13 Inclined 15 Ruth’s number 16 __ gratia 17 Mike Hammer portrayer’s favorite food? 19 Place to retire? 20 Perón title 21 In close combat 23 Distillery equipment 25 What a frosh studies to be? 26 Estrange 30 Gift for dad 33 Book after Exod. 34 Plumbing supplies 36 Instant 37 It’s always 13Across: Abbr. 39 Attained 40 Cry of dismay 41 Flub 43 Fire blight victims 46 Army member 47 Like some decorative furniture 49 They’ll take you up 51 Gaelic tongue 52 “The Blackboard Jungle” author Hunter 53 Threat to Crusoe 57 Make beloved 61 “Our remedies __ in ourselves do lie”: “All’s Well That Ends Well” 62 Sportscaster’s favorite food? 64 Diagnostic proc. 65 Deceive 66 Dive, in a way 67 House dealer? 68 Ruhr city 69 Old autocrat

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2011

360.461.9008 pmorris@wavecable.com 1234 E. Front St. Port Angeles


D4

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2011

64

Houses

64

DISCOVERY BAY Beach front, like new, 2 Br., 2 ba, all appl. $1,000. 460-2330.

Classified 64

Houses

SEQ: Exc. water view 2 Br. $765. tourfactory.com/397357

JAMES & ASSOCIATES INC. Property Mgmt.

SEQUIM 150 Deytona St. 2 Br. single wide and outbuildings on fenced half acre. No smoking, pets negotiable. Annual lease $675 + util. Drive by, Olypenhomes.com or call 452-4258.

360-417-2810

More Properties at www.jarentals.com P.A.: 1801 W. 16th. 3 Br., 2 bath. No smoke/pets. $800, first, last, dep. 457-4196 P.A.: 2 Br. house, $895. 3 Br. duplex, $795. 452-1395. P.A.: 2 ered large $900.

SEQUIM: New, 2 Br., 2 car gar., granite/ hardwoods, yard maintained. $1,150 mo. 460-0432.

65

HOUSES/APT IN P.A. H 1 br 1 ba......$500 A 2 br 2 ba......$750 H 2 br 2 ba......$895 H 4 br 2 ba....$1050 H 3 br 2 ba....$1100 H 4 br 1 ba....$1200 HOUSES IN JOYCE H 2 br 1 ba......$500 H 3 br 1 ba......$850 H 4 br 2 ba....$1100 H 3 br 2 ba....$1500

SEQUIM/ CARLSBORG 3 Br., 1.75 ba, fenced, all appliances, W/D, wood stove, wood floors/ceilings, new windows/blinds. $950 mo., 1st, last, no smoke, pet ok. 683-3863

Share Rentals/ Rooms

ROOM: $200. Female must be over 60 and non smoking. 928-1090

67

MEXICO: 2 luxury units, Pueblo Bonito Blanco resort in Cabo San Lucas, $600 per unit. (A Steal!). Nov 7-14, 6 nights. 457-0151.

Commercial Space

W.SIDE HOUSE AND SHOP.3+BD,1BA., 3BAY garage (RV) w/ storage. Fully fenced yard. No smoking. Bkgrd. check req. $1,000 per mo. + utilities. Call 360-457-8126

FENCING

TRACTOR

WINDOW WASHING

Lund Fencing

BBob’s ob’s TTractor ractor SService er vice

Window Washing

Specializing in; Custom Cedar, Vinyl Chain Link

Specializing in: Field Mowing, Rototilling, Landscaping. Lawn Prep, Back Hoe, Drain Works, etc., Post Holes, Box Scraper, Small Dump Truck, Small Tree and Shrub Removal

P.A.: Available now, 2 Br. deluxe town house, 1,400 sf. 1.5 bath. $800. No pets. 457-6181 P.A.: Pvt 2 Br., 2 bath, pics ezpa.net, 1,400 sf. $675. 452-5140. Properties by Landmark. portangeleslandmark.com

SEQUIM: 4 Br., 3 ba for rent now. $1,150/mo. 1 year lease. No smokers. Ref's req'd. Scott: 360-388-8474

Office/Workshop/ Storage Spaces available. 300 sf up to 2,500 sf 360-683-3737 PEABODY PLAZA 1 or 2 person, 7th and Peabody. $375 mo. 452-1232 ext. 11 PROPERTIES BY LANDMARK 452-1326

72

Furniture

BED: Full size mattress and box springs, plush eurotop, in great shape. Over $800 new. Selling for $300/obo. 681-3299 BUNK BED: Complete unit with desk, chair, shelves, wardrobe, mattresses, bunky boards, good condition, paid $1,400. Sell for $575/obo. 775-1035. DINING SET: Dining table and 6 chairs, solid cherry, double pedestal table. 2 capt. chairs, 4 side, upholstered seats. Perfect condition. $700. 504-2017.

Vacation

LOOKING FOR SPACE! Do you have an empty warehouse or space that you want to rent out for a few days for an event? We need 10,000+ sf of flat ground with room for parking for the weekend of November 11th. Please email portscandalousroller derby@gmail.com or call 360-670-9840, leave msg.

P.A.: 3 Br., lg fenced lot. Corner of 6th and G. $900. 775-6944.

72

Commercial Space

WEST END P.A. $300 plus ult. No pets. 477-7036

68

Br., 1 ba, covparking with storage room. 670-6160.

68

Houses

71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79

Appliances Furniture General Merchandise Home Electronics Musical Sporting Goods Bargain Box Garage Sales Wanted to Buy

71

Appliances

MISC: 25 cf refrigerator side-by-side, front door ice and water, excellent, $650. Upright freezer, 15 cf good condition, $150. 452-3200

CHECK OUT OUR NEW CLASSIFIED WIZARD AT www.peninsula dailynews.com

FURNITURE SET Sunroom furniture set, 5 piece deluxe, like new. Includes love seat, chair, tables, stool, and lamp. $500. 681-6076.

Place your ad with the only DAILY Classified Section on the Peninsula!

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

73

Furniture

Couch/Love seat set. nice condition. matching set. Dark colors. $175. 477-8484

ASSORTED ITEMS Large blonde pedestal dining table and 4 chairs; (2) coffee tables; assorted table lamps; (2) TVs. From $15-$150. Call for info. 417-7685

MISC: 83” sofa, red and gold plaid, exc. cond., $400. Cherry queen headboard, $150, matching mirrors, $75. (2) occasional tables, $75 and $50. 582-0954. MISC: Floral French provincial love seat, like new. $225. Recliner, lg., grayish green, excellent condition, $125. 477-1328, 457-4756

BOX TRAILER: ‘06 24’+. Excellent shape. $6,500. 683-8162 CANOPY SHELVING Made by Leer, to fit inside pickup bed camper shell. Used with side doors. Call for details. $500. 683-8810 CAR TRAILER: 6’x12’ single axle small car trailer. Also works great for ATVs. $400. 460-0262, 681-0940 CASH FOR: Antiques and collectibles. 360-928-9563 CEMETERY PLOT: 1, Sequim View Cemetery, space #3, Lot 507, division 3, value approx. $1,200. Asking $750. 452-5638, evenings.

MISC: Oak (inlay) coffee and (2) end tables, $300. 1940s Winthrop secretary, $800. Singer sewing machine in cabinet, $300. 775-220-9611. MISC: Pine china hutch, $250. Pine armoire, $500. (2) Flat screen projection Sony tvs, $250 ea. Light wood dining table with leaf, 6 chairs, $125. 452-1003, call after 5. SOFA BED: Single, in very nice oak cabinet, cost $1,400. Sell $450. 452-7745.

PENINSULA CLA$$IFIED 360-452-8435 or 1-800-826-8435 peninsula dailynews.com

General Merchandise

SOFA/LOVE SEAT Matching set, tan and Navy floral. $100 both/obo. 681-8694.

Visit our website at www.peninsula dailynews.com Or email us at classified@ peninsula dailynews.com

SOFA: Natuzzi leather sofa, light tan, 75” long, 1 yr old. Excellent condition. $550. 385-4320

73

General Merchandise

CEMETERY PLOTS (2) Plots in Dungeness Cemetery, lot 133. Retail $1,900 each, both $2,500. 509-341-9082 FIREWOOD: $179 delivered SequimP.A. True cord. 3 cord special for $499. Credit card accepted. 360-582-7910. www.portangeles firewood.com

FLATBED TRAILER 20.5’x8’ deck, dual 3,500 lb. axles with new brakes, wiring, runaway brake battery, wheel bearings and paint. Licensed and ready for your choice of decking. Must selll! $1,200/obo 477-0903 LOOKING FOR SPACE! Do you have an empty warehouse or space that you want to rent out for a few days for an event? We need 10,000+ sf of flat ground with room for parking for the weekend of November 11th. Please email portscandalousroller derby@gmail.com or call 360-670-9840, leave msg.

73

General Merchandise

FIREWOOD: 35 rounds white fir, 16”x15”, you pick up. $60. 681-0721. FIREWOOD: Cord $160, delivered. Proceeds to P.A. Senior Class ‘12. 417-4663. FIREWOOD: Seasoned, ready to burn, come see quality.$175+. 461-6843 FRONTIER WOOD STOVE Take 16” wood. $450. 360-732-4328 MISC: Flat screen monitor, Acer 20”, new in box, $100. 3 piece wicker set, 2 chairs, love seat (needs paint), $40. Dishes, spring, fall, winter, $15-$50. 928-3483 MISC: Max Weider Crossbow (like Bow Flex), used very little, paid $500, will sell for $200. Nice treadmill, $50. Peavy Powered speaker, 15”, very little use, $200. Call 460-4938, ask for Lecia. MISC: New trex accents decking madera color, $2.70 ft. Diamond plate truck toolbox, $150. New RV cover, 34' class A, $200. 5th wheel louvered tailgate fits chevy, $125. 6' tilt angle 3 point blade, $175. 360-683-2254

1A5136085

461-4609

360 Lic#buenavs90818

HANDYMAN

JP

294752 Hwy 101 Quilcene

360-765-3146

Larry’s Home Maintenance

GEORGE E. DICKINSON

Grounds Maintenance Specialist • Mowing • Trimming • Pruning • Tractor Work • Landscaping • Sprinkler Installation and Repair

Residential and Commercial Excavating and General Contracting

Thomas O. McCurdy Bagpiper

Larry Muckley

(360) 683-7655 (360) 670-9274

CONSTRUCTION, INC.

Family operated and serving the entire Olympic Peninsula since 1956

(360) 683-8332

REPAIR/REMODEL

s Handyman Services

In sid e , O u ts id e , A ny sid e

Licensed Cont#FOXPAP*981JN

155122063

457-6582 808-0439

• Tile • Kitchen & Bath • Custom Woodwork • Water Damage/Rot

(360) 477-1805 Every Home Needs “A Finished Touch”

ASBESTOS

WANTED: Wind Damaged

& Leaky Roofs

G

D

ARLAN ROOFING

457-5186

www.OlyPenAsbestos.com

TREE SERVICE SPECIALIZING IN TREES

ANTHONY’S SERVICES

Small Jobs A Specialty

360-452-2054 Kenneth Reandeau, Inc.

FREE S ATE ESTIM

Contr#KENNER1951P8

(360) 460-0518 165122885

anthonystreetop@gmail.com Licensed • Bonded • Insured Cont #ANTHOS*938K5

Washers • Dryers • Refrigerators • Ranges 72289323

Full 6 Month Warranty

452-9995

Contractors Lic. GARLACM*044ND

EXCAVATING/LANDSCAPING

YOUR LOCAL FULL-SERVICE DEALER & PARTS SOURCE Please call or visit our showroom for lowest prices on:

Reconditioned Appliances • Large Selection

360

0A5100969

155120082

Biodegradable Cleaners Commercial @ Residential Licensed @ Bonded

Quality roofing at a reasonable price Honest & Reliable

75289698

Strait View Window Cleaning LLC

914 S. Eunice St. PA • 457-9875

Inspections - Testing Surveys

ROOFING

Cash Struxness 360.477.0014 cell cashstruxness@gmail.com

M-F 8-5 Sat. 10-3

• Fences • Decks • Small Jobs ok • Quick, Reliable

Asbestos

WINDOW CLEANING

APPLIANCES

• Doors/Windows • Concrete Work • Drywall Repair

COLUMC*955KD

Reg#FINIST*932D0

360452-8435 or 1-800826-7714

Quality Work

360-775-6678 • 360-452-9684

125111256

Painting & Pressure Washing

Free Estimates • Senior Discounts Licensed Bonded • Insured

360452-8435 or 1-800826-7714

Columbus Construction

86313195

FOX PAINTING

Call NOW To Advertise

78289849

PAINTING

Call NOW To Advertise

Interior/Exterior Painting & Pressure Washing

115108502

JPSHAHS92BE

(360) 457-1032 (360) 457-5131

AIR DUCT CLEANING

John Pruss 360 808-6844

Weddings Special Occasions Memorials

Septic Systems • Underground Utilities Roads • Driveways • Rock Retaining Walls Land Clearing • Building Site Prep Building Demolitions

Locally Operated for 24 years Contractor # GEORGED098NR

LARRYHM016J8

PAINTING

“Need something fixed?” Call Me!

(360) (360)

Free initial Check Engine Light Inspection! Free Estimates!

BAGPIPER

195134780

Lic#BOBDADT966K5

Moss Prevention

Maintenance Detail • Repair Diagnostics Propane • Tires Complimentary Wash & Vacuum

EXCAVATING/SEPTIC

9C5066307

360-670-1350 360-670-1350

Roof & Gutter Cleaning

Call Bryan or Mindy

93313234

76289935

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w will ill m meet e e t oorr bbeat eat m most o s t eestimates stimates

Pressure Washing

LAWN CARE

115105618

452-0755 775-6473

+e W We

27 Year Certified Master Service Tech

195133749

Chad Lund

A M D Auto,Inc.

085092331

www.LundFencing.com

Small jobs is what I do!

AUTO REPAIR

LANDSCAPING

Driveway - Drainage Systems - Clearing Brushing - Demolition - Site Prep - Park Outs Rock Walls - Concrete Removal - Stump & Brush Removal - Brush Hog - Field Mowing Crushed Rock - Fill Dirt

Design & Installation Maintenance & Renovation - Hard Scapes Custom Rockeries - Stone Terraces - Paths Patios - Irrigation - Lawn Restoration Top Soil - Bark - Compost - Landscape Boulders

025073138

We buy, sell, trade and consign appliances.

EXCAVATING

DIRT WORK JK DIRTWORKS INC. 360/460•9824

SERVICES

PAINTING

JJami’s ami’s

Davis Painting

PROPERTY P ROPERTY MAINTENANCE MAINTENANCE

Specializing in bookkeeping solutions for your small business.

Owner: Steve Davis Over 25 Years Experience

Licensed, Bonded, Insured - DAVISP*926KZ

Done Right Home Repair

Jim Green Painting

360-460-6176 Decks & Fences

Remodels Handicap Access Painting

Windows & Doors Concrete

If it’s not right, it’s not Done Right Glen Spear, Owner

Lic#DONERRH943NA

EXT./INT. RESIDENTIAL/COMM.

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LANDSCAPING

LIC#RSSCHSS8950F Bonded/Insured

OUT ON A LIMB

Landscape Services WE CAN HELP 12 years in the PA/Sequim Area

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• • • •

Fall Planting On-site Garden Coaching Create an Action Plan Garden Cleanup

Call Kristina Today!

(360) 457-8479

www.OutOnALimbLandscape.com

195134212

SERVICES

155121476

683-8328

360-452-5334 Fax: 360-452-5361

HOME REPAIR

LIC

CALL FOR ESTIMATE

195134825

Expert Pruning

3430 Hwy 101 E., Suite 23 Port Angeles, WA 98362 lwas@olypen.com

contact@jkdirtworks.com

GUTTER CLEANING PRESSURE WASHING DEBRIS HAULING • CARPET CLEANING

165122599

(360) 457-8102

JOHN KIMMEL-OWNER

945036615

FREE Estimates

195133545

Mole Control

• Income Tax Preparation • QuickBooks Training & Support • Small Business Start-ups/Consultation • Payroll and Payroll Taxes • Excise Tax Returns (B&O)

Interiors, Exteriors, Drywall Repair Pressure Washing, Sandblasting New and Existing

MOLE/PRUNING

WINDOW CLEANING

Accounting Services, Inc.

165124112

5 582-0384 82-0384

RS SCHMIDT ENTERPRISES Lena Washke

Residential • Commercial Industrial • Marine

No job to small! Serving Diamond Point, Clallam & Jefferson Counties

WINDOW CLEANING

1A5136085

195134677

Yard Service • Odd Jobs Hauling • Property Clean up Moving • Brush Removal Hedge Trimming Roof/Gutter Cleaning Tree Pruning Accepting New Contracts

ACCOUNTING SERVICES

• Small Excavating • Brush Mower on Small Rubber Track Excavator • Utility Install & Lot Clearing • Spring & Storm Clean-up • Post Holes & Field Mowing • Help with Landscaping


Classified

& &

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

GARAGE GARAGE YARD SALES YARD SALES

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2011

D5

For Better or For Worse

On he e ni iin ns s ul lla a On tth h he e Pe Pen n ni n ns su u ul a

78A

Garage Sales Central P.A.

GARAGE Sale: Sat., 9-4 p.m., 234 E. Vashon Ave., in alley between Park and Vashon. (2) cook tops in excellent cond., one gass, one electric. Household items, tools, gardening supplies, juniors size 00 clothes, men’s clothing, shoes, surf board, ‘66 Cadillac, and more! Indoor Moving/ Garage Sale. October 15th and 16th Multi-Family Sale. Household items, furniture, children’s items, fish tank, 1/2 size Cello, Luggage set, and much more. 3002 Oakcrest Loop 7 AM to 3 PM Saturday. 8 AM to noon on Sunday. INDOOR Sale: Sat.Sun., 9-4 p.m., 220 E. Orcas in the alley. Upright freezer, lots of this and that, framed arial photos, Noritake china in the box, upright shelving as it empties. LAST CHANCE SALE Sat., 9-2 p.m. 208 Dolan Ave., located off Laurel St. behind Albertsons. Multifamily garage sale. Youth sleeping bags, sporting equipment, tents, new baby monitor, baby items, men, women and children’s clothing and shoes, junior jeans, prom dresses, window-unit air conditioner, luggage, a quad rim, lamps, artwork, TVs, VHS tapes, books, housewares, and more. SALE: Sat. only, 9-2 pm 123 Hancock Ave., P.A. Slumped bottles at discounted prices.

78B

Garage Sales Westside P.A.

ESTATE Sale: Fri.Sat., 8-4 p.m. 1206 W. 15th St., P.A. Books, Barbies, collectibles, TV/ speakers, bed, table, chairs, entertainment center, hutch, couch, book case, Christmas, house plants, exercise equipment, women’s clothing/ shoes, many other kitchen, cleaning, office, gardening and household items. GARAGE Sale: Sat., 9-1 p.m. 1221 W. 10th St., in alley. Leather couch, lift chair, plus size clothes, lots of this and that.

73

General Merchandise

LUMBER: 6 doz. 4x4 old growth cedar, 8’ long, some or all. $7.50 ea. 374-5085. MISC: Trash burner, $140. Upright heavy duty Kirby vacuum, w/attachments and carpet cleaning attach., $150. 7 quart Presto canner, $50. 12” cement patio blocks, 50¢ each. 360-379-1099 MISC: Washer/dryer, $200. XXXL leather jacket, $200. (2) twin beds, $80. Rear hitch carrier, $225. 457-8376 Mobility Scooter Rascal 600 Model, red, almost new, 2 baskets. $899. 452-5303 POWER CHAIR Jazzy, 1103 Ultra, with power seat, 300 lb. weight capacity, used very little only in house. $3,300 681-2346 PROM DRESS: 2 short and 1 long, like new, $25 each call for sizes and color. And prom shoes 7 ? and 8 $10 each. Call 452-9693

78B

Garage Sales Westside P.A.

GARAGE SALE *Rain or shine* 1638 W 12th St Corner of 12th & “K” St ~IN THE ALLEY~ Fri.-Sat.-Sun. Oct. 14, 15, & 16 9a.m. – 4p.m. 30 years of family storage to be sold in 3 big days. Browse 3 BIG Tents! Furniture, dressers, bookshelves, dining room table, Lincoln School desks, Roosevelt auditorium seats. Toys, Toys, Toys, baby stuff, toddler stuff, riding toys & Lil’ Tikes! Antiques, store displays, bed/ play house, storage racks, storage drawers, shaker style chairs, antique bedroom set, sofa & love seat, small appliances, Christmas items. Oh ya, There’s more!... MOVING Sale: Sat. only, 9-2 p.m., 817 Madeline St., between 10th and Milwaukee. Furniture, wood swing set, hot tub and more. ROUND 2 Sale: Sat.Sun., 9-4 p.m. 820 W. 6th St., in alley between A & B St. Lots of new stuff added! Crafting supplies, material, holiday stuff, children’s books, household items, teen, you and baby clothes, plus more! Mary Kay products available on hand and to order.

78D

Garage Sales Eastside P.A.

MULTI-FAMILY Sale: Sat., 8-2 p.m., Sun., 8-1 p.m., 1001 First St. No early birds. Coolers, area rugs, teen clothes and misc.

78E

Garage Sales Sequim

AMAZING Indoor Estate Sale Fri.-Sat., 9-3 p.m. Pioneer Memorial Pk 387 E. Washington St. Sporting goods, crafts, collectibles, dolls, books, small appliances, ivory jewelry, household, glassware, vintage bar mirrors, cake decorating, electronics and yard misc. Too much to list. HUGE BARN SALE Fri.-Sat., 8-3 p.m., 171 Business Park Loop. Furniture, pillows, glass, fabric, outdoor.

73

General Merchandise

SHOP SMITH: With jigsaw attachment. $200. 477-4573. Tools/Shop Equip. Saws, sanders, drills, and more. $25$300. 681-2908 for details. Sale is in Rural Sequim Area. ZERO CLEARANCE PROPANE FIREPLACE “HeatnGlo.” Complete, excellent cond. Handsome oak mantle. $375/obo. 457-6127.

75

Musical

GUITARS REDUCED! Squire Stratocaster electric guitar, black, comes with soft case, extras, $175. Washburn electric guitar, tremolo bar, multiple pick ups, electric blue, smaller size, perfect for beginners, replacement strings, $125. Both in new condition, great sound! Make an offer! 477-0903.

78E

Garage Sales Sequim

Business Liquidation. Oct 14-16 FriSun 8-4. Restaurant equipment, magnetic induction cooktop, commercial refrigerators, freezer and convection oven, stainless steel sinks tables, faucets, kitchen items, mixers, soup warmer, china, plates, tea cups, saucers, tea pots, flatware, serving items, tiered serving trays, shelves, book cases, display cabinet, furnishings, lighting, decor, cash register, Nurit card machine, a/c unit, printer, comp desk, mirror, butcher block kitchen island. Antique loveseat Wingback chairs. Everything goes some personal stuff too. Bring your own boxes, bags and strong backs. 645 W. Washington STE 3. Cafe Blossom ESTATE SALE Please join us on Saturday, October 15th, from 9-3 at 103 Olympus Ct. (Sunland) for a fabulous sale! We will be offering for your consideration Shabby Chic/Asian/ Danish Modern/ Mid-Century Modern furniture and furnishings, appliances, books, crafts, Christmas, jewelry, designer clothes, original artwork, Persian carpet, 1995 White Buick Regal (114,000 miles), household, lawn & garden, and so much more! Please park courteously. See you there. . . Swallow’s Nest Antiques & Estate Sales www.swallowsnesta ntiques.weebly.com We will be collecting non-perishable food items for the Salvation Army Soup Kitchen. GARAGE Sale: FriSat., 9-5 p.m. 1071 Woodcock Road. Exercise equipment, pants and jeans, dive fins, over 200 karaoke discs, and lots of misc. GARAGE Sale: Thurs.-Fri., 9-3 p.m., 40 Meadow Drive. Recliners, sofa, end tables, Holiday items, household items and so much more.

75

Musical

BASS GUITAR: EMG acoustic electric bass, stand, gig bag, and amp. $225. 457-1289 LAP HARPS: (2) never used brand new. Stoney End Isabella Cross String, $900/obo. Mideast Heather, hand carved, $450. Both with padded cases and extra new set of strings. 808-8608. PIANO: Samick upright, ebony black, used once. $2,000. 681-0227 PIANO: Spinett, good condition. $500. 452-6661

76

Sporting Goods

GOLF CART: Electric with side curtains and doors. Good condition. $950/obo. 477-1625

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78E

Garage Sales Sequim

GARAGE Sale: Sat., 8-2 p.m., Sun., 9noon, 131 Lois Lane. Rain or shine. Fishing gear, household, kitchenware, furniture, car bed, toys and lots of designer clothes, baby to adult sizes, .25¢ ea or $2 a bag. GARAGE Sale: Sat., 9-3 p.m. 43 Haven Wood Lane, North of Sequim, off Towne Rd. and Madrona to Haven Wood Lane. Tools, sports equipment, clothes, and more! MOVING Sale: Fri.Sat.-Sun., 9-4 p.m., 123 Foxtail Lane. MOVING Sale: Sat., 9-4 p.m. 151 Misty Glen Lane, across from Robin Hill Park. It all goes! MULTI-FAMILY Sale: Saturday & Sunday 9-3 p.m. 22 Soaring Hawk Lane, next to Blue Mt Animal Clinic. Silver, tiara, dishes, princess house crystal, old lab glass, housewares, women’s clothing. Stop by check us out, what have you got to lose? OFFICE & DRAFTING FURNITURE SALE Sat., 10/15 through Wed., 10/19. 9 a.m. Quadra Engineering, 240 W. Cedar St. Office and drafting supplies, copier, printer, free books, marine Hardware, more. 683-7019

76

Sporting Goods

83

Farm Animals

RELOADING EQUIP. Redding Boss Press, Dillon CV-500 Vibratory tumbler, 4 bags, Corn cob media and polish, Redding #2 scale and extras. $300 all. 457-6845

ALF GRASS: $5/ bale. Grass, $4. In barn, no rain. 683-5817.

REVOLVER: Ruger GP100, 4” barrel, caliber 327 federal mag, new in box, $450. 460-4491.

84

RUGER: M77 Tang Safety 7mm mag, new Leupold VX-III, 6 boxes ammo, sling, case, custom stock. $1,000 firm 417-2165 WANTED: Guns, ammo, scopes. The older the better. Worn or broken ok. 683-9899

77

Bargain Box

CHICKS: Young hen and rooster, and layers. Start at $2.50 up to $20. 460-9670.

Horses/ Tack

QUARTER HORSE 7 yrs. old, sure footed, well trained, trail riding horse, 14.4 hands, soral colored, beautiful must see. $900/obo. Text message or call 360-912-1122 Please Serious inquires only

85

Farm Equipment

79

Wanted To Buy

Marine

BAYLINER: ‘69 17’, 120 I/O. Orig. owner, garaged, elec. winch, fish finder, full top, E-Z Loader trailer w/spare. $3,200. 360-385-3350 BOAT: 12’ aluminum with trailer, 6 hp motor and accessories. $1,500/obo. 808-0156 BOAT: 14’ aluminum with trailer, 10 hp Honda O/B. $2,500. 681-6162 BOAT: 14’6” fiberglass, with paddles. $750. 683-4523. DINGHY: Mint condition sailing nesting dinghy including trailer, motor, mast, boom, sails, canvas cover. $3,200. 360-379-1616 DINGY: Very sturdy, white fiberglass. Custom manufactured by Matteus Zoetem (in Los Angeles). With oars. $250. 683-2743.

FISHING POLES: (8), 2 with reels, 8’-10’. $150 all. 582-3132. HEARTH: For woodstove. Beige tile 49”x 49”. $100. 582-3132

93

'69 Flatbed Dump Ford. V8, 4 speed man. Metal lined. $2,000 cash, or cashier's check. 360-385-6088 after 9:30 a.m. Gregg.

HEWESCRAFT: 14’ with trailer, 9.9 Mercury O/B, low hours, fish finder. $2,000. 360-681-4293

BOOKS WANTED! We love books, we’ll buy yours. 457-9789

JET SKI: ‘97 Kawasaki SS Waverunner 750. With ‘96 Spirit trailer. $1,500. 670-3256

WANTED: Old flat head Ford parts, speed equip. 452-8092.

LARSEN: 14.5’ Lapline. Nice, extras. $1,900/obo. 452-9445

Garage Sales Jefferson

LIVINGSTON: 12’, 18 hp Nissan O/B, covered steering station. $1,600. 452-6714.

Collectibles! ESTATE. FURS, Furniture, kitchenware, jewelry, porcelain, crystal, pottery, ceramics, glass, lamps, mirrors, art, hospital bed, clothing, linens.Victorian thru 60's VISA/MC NO EARLY BIRDS PLEASE. Friday Sunday (10/1410/16) 9-3 p.m. 13502 Cutoff Road Park on Romans Rd. Port Townsend.

LIVINGSTON: 14’ w/ trailer, elec. crab pot puller, 20 hp Evinrude, 2 seats, 6 crab rings, misc. equip. $3,000. 683-1957.

78F

YARD Sale: Fri.-Sat.Sun., 9-3 p.m. 423 Fredricks St., turn east on Fredricks from Hwy. 19, go straight heading towards water, on to gravel road, house on left, Port Townsend. Nice things. Priced to sell.

76

Sporting Goods

GUN SHOP at the P.A. Antique Mall, 109 W. 1st St. Taking guns on consignment, 1 low fee. Buying/trading/selling guns, rifles scopes, binoculars, spotting scopes Special order new guns, dealer plus 10%. We do scope mounting, also buying gold/silver. Call 452-1693 or 457-6699 GUNS: Model Tech 9mm with 2 clips, $325. Hi-Point, model 995, 9mm, $225. Sell both for $500. 460-9080. HAND GUN: Taurus, model 617-Titanium, 7 shot, .357 magnum, collectors item, factory ported, super light, 4 speed loaders. $600. 360-509-6763 MISC: XD .45 with laser, $550. Mako Shark .22, $395. Marlin .17 HMR, $450. 360-452-6363. POOL TABLE: Coin operated, good condition. $1,000/ obo. 461-1746.

81 82 83 84 85

Food/Produce Pets Farm Animals Horses/Tack Farm Equipment

82

Pets

ADORABLE DORKIE PUPPIES Out of our Yorkie and dapple Mini-Dachshund. Tiny, first shots and dewormed. $300-$450. 452-3016. FREE: To good home. Female Lutino Cockatiel. Must bring own cage to pick up. If you want more info please call Kathy Barnes at 683-5796. LOVING TORTIE SEEKS SINGLE CAT HOME. 3 yr old fixed female shorthair. Ideal companion. Serious inquiries only. 460-8785. MINI-DACHSHUND Puppies, 2 black and tan smooth coats and 1 black and tan long coat, males, 1st shot and wormed. $400. 452-3016. Northwest Farm Terrier Puppies. Versatile, medium-sized, healthy, intelligent. Born 7/21/11, $350 for males, $400 for females, price includes papers, flea and tick treatment, vaccinated and wormed twice. Great dogs! 360-928-0273. sg1953@yahoo.com PUPPIES: 2 beautiful male Mini Schnauzer puppies. 16 weeks. Outstanding no-shed coats. Very loveable and attentive. Tails cropped, dew claws removed, 3 times wormed, first, second and third shots. Leash and potty training started, well puppy vet checked. Both parents on site. $475. 681-7480.

91 Aircraft 92 Heavy Equipment/Truck 93 Marine 94 Motorcycles/Snowmobiles 95 Recreational Vehicles 96 Parts/Accessories 97 Four Wheel Drive 98 Trucks/Vans 99 Cars

92

Heavy Equipment/ Trucks

DOZER: ‘94 550 Long track Case. With brush rake. $15,000. 683-8332. DUMP TRUCK: ‘00 WS. Exc. condition, 3406 Cat, all new brakes, new 10-12 yd box, hydraulics, plumbed for pup, possible part time job. $42,000/obo, may trade. 460-8325 MISC: Cat 12 grader, 99E, $8,500. Detroit 4-53 engine, $2,500. Deutz BF6L913 engine, $1,500. Ranco end dump trailer, $17,000. ‘87 Peterbuilt 10 WH tractor, $16,000. Utility 40’ flatbed trailer, $6,000. (4) 17.5x25 loader tires, $1,000. 18” and 14” steel beams, .30¢/lb. 360-379-1752 PETE-377, $160,000 in 1999, 550 Cat, 18 sp, 3.55, 244”, Studio sleeper, 640,000 mi. $19,000, less without drop, sleeper and rack. 732-4071. SKID STEER: ‘02 Gehl 5635. 1,846 hours, 80 hp 2 spd turbo, foam filled tires and tracks, comes w/bucket and pallet forks. $12,500/obo. Char at 425-220-7618

93

Marine

ALUMINUM BOAT: 17’ Bass Tracker, 100 hp Mercury, Calkins trailer, motor serviced by Anchor Marine and runs great, trailer new in ‘02, great fishing and crabbing boat. $2,400. 681-4684.

LUND: 12’ with EZ Loader trailer, 8 hp 4 cycle Honda motor, like new. $2,975. 683-5382 RAYSON CRAFT: ‘66 17’ V drive flat bottom, 326 Pontiac with trailer. $4,700. 457-5921

94

Motorcycles

HARLEY DAVIDSON 1995 Fat Boy. All custom, new tires, chrome with a Jim’s Drag motor with blower. Must see. $14,000 452-2275 HARLEY: ‘02 Low Rider. Loaded, 15K mi. $10,000 firm. 460-4950 HARLEY: ‘06 Sportster. 7K mi., like new. $6,900. 452-6677. HARLEY: ‘49 Pan Head Chopper. Completely restored, have all receipts, beautiful bike. $17,000. 360-731-0677 HARLEY: ‘90 SportsterXLH 883. Cust. pearl paint w/ wolf/moon emblem, Screaming Eagle pkg, Corbin saddle, windshld, fwd contrls, saddlebags w/ quick-release brackets, Kuryakyn ISO grips, more. Stock seats, svc manual, HD sissybar/rack incl. Lots of power and modified gearing for hwy speeds. 20,900 mi. $3,600. 360-683-2182 HD ‘03 1200 SPORT 5 spd, lots of extras! 12K miles! VIN431230 Expires 10/19/11 $4,900 Randy’s Auto Sales 457-7272 HD ‘05 DYNA-WIDE GLIDE FXDWGI, 5 spd, 88 cu in, a must see! Tons of chrome! VIN310963 Expires 10/19/11 $10,950 Randy’s Auto Sales 457-7272 HD ‘05 SOFTAIL SPRINGER FLSTSCI, 88 cu in, 5 spd, bags, windshield, lots of extras! Only 13K miles! VIN061251 Expires 10/19/11 $10,950 Randy’s Auto Sales 457-7272

RENKEN: ‘80 17’. 90 Merc, new water pump, 2 downriggers, never in salt water. $2,500. 681-3714

HONDA: ‘03 XR 80R. Like new. $1,500. 477-2633

SAILBOAT: 22’ Columbia. 9.9 Merc ob. Well maint. $3,400. 206-397-9697

HONDA: ‘04 750 Aero Shadow. Gorgeous black and silver. $4,500. 452-0837.

SAILBOAT: 30’ Sloop fiberglass, head, galley. $10,500. 360-457-0684

HONDA: ‘04 Shadow 650. Showroom condition, low miles, lots of extras. $2,800. 457-8376

SAILBOAT: ‘73 29’ Ericson. New diesel, new electronics. Roller furling. Health forces sale. Slip Q15. Take as is, $10,000. 760-792-3891 SEA SPORT: ‘92 22’ Rebuilt engine w/200 hours. 9.9 Honda, radar, video sounder, GPS, vhf radio, stereo, Scotty downrigger, porta potti, sink, rod holders, anchor, dual batteries, trailer. $33,000. 206-914-3276 SEARAY: 18’ 120 hp 220 Chev 4 cyl., Mercruiser O/B, new water pump, needs engine work, EZ Load trailer in great condition. $600/obo. 206-794-1104 TROPHY: ‘87 20’. In great shape. New electronics and custom canvas. Many extras, including fishing reels and rods, and crab pots. Asking $8,000. 457-4384

94

Motorcycles

ATV: ‘07 Eton 150. 2WD, Viper, as new. $2,200. 683-6203.

HONDA: ‘03 XR100R. Excelelnt condition. $1,500. 808-3953.

HONDA: ‘71 Trail 90. Runs great. 4 cycle, hi/lo gear change. $950. 385-0096. HONDA: ‘79 GL 1000. Ready for touring with vetter fairing handbags and trunk, runs great with only 39,197 actual mi. $2,250/obo. 460-7874

HONDA: ‘84 Goldwing 1200. 30K mi. $2,700. 461-2627.

94

Motorcycles

HONDA: Fat-Cat. New battery, new oil, fresh tune up, carburator rebuilt, rack to haul out your deer. $1,600 cash 683-8263 HONDA: Trail 90. New tires, runs great! $750. 460-1377. KAWASAKI: ‘01 Vulcan 1500 Nomad Fi. Cruiser. Exc. cond. $3,800 360-640-9670 KAWASAKI: ‘84 ZX1100. New paint, tires, brakes. Runs good. 120 hp. $2,800. 457-1942. KAWASAKI: ‘93 KLX 650. $1,800. 460-3530 Moto Guzzi 2004 California Stone Touring VERY LOW MILES. Bought New, always garaged ridden only 2,200 miles (not a misprint).Gorgeous big V-twin.Only $4,800. Call Randy at 360-821-1107. In Port Ludlow. QUAD: ‘06 Kymco 150cc. Low hours/ miles. $1,500/obo. 452-3051 QUAD: Suzuki 250 Quad Sport, reverse, like new. $2,500 firm. 452-3213 SCOOTER: ‘05 Honda Reflex. Like new condition, very low mi., 50+ mi. to the gal., Versahaul, other extras. $2,600. 360681-7102 for appt. SCOOTER: ‘09 200 cc Kymco. Like new. $1,999/obo. 582-0841 SUZUKI: ‘04 Bergman 650. Only 700 miles, like new. Dual trans. $5,000. 452-6643. SUZUKI: ‘06 Boulevard C90T. 342 mi., like new, many extras, always garaged $9,500. 461-1911. TRIUMPH ‘05 ROCKET III 2298CC, 3 cyl, 140 hp, 5 sp, only 7,800 miles! VIN20105 Expires 10/19/11 $8,450 Randy’s Auto Sales 457-7272 TRIUMPH: ‘05 Bon. Exc. cond., extras. $5,500. 460-6780. YAMAHA: ‘08 4x4 Rhino 700cc. Green Rhino, windshield, roof and sound system. Asking $8900/ obo. For more info call 360-477-6165. YAMAHA: ‘08 TW200. 2,300 mi. $3,000. 457-3701. YAMAHA: ‘82 Virago. Clean. $1,500. 477-2633

95

Recreational Vehicles

5TH WHEEL: ‘07 37’ Sandpiper F37SP toy hauler by Forest River. 2 slide outs, dbl axle, 2 sun panels, aftermarket A/C unit. $24,500. 460-8222

HONDA: ‘86 200 TLR trials bike. Unique, factory street legal. $750. 461-2627. HONDA: ‘86 Goldwing trike. $5,900. 360-683-9175 HONDA: ‘87 Goldwing. Looks/runs great. $2,200/obo. 457-1533 HONDA: ‘90 XR250. New tabs. $1,200/ obo. 683-6561. HONDA: ‘99 Night Hawk 750cc. Black chrome 10.7K miles new battery excellent condition $2,800. 360-457-5012, or cell, 559-642-8200.

5TH WHEEL: ‘11 30’ Crossroads Cruiser Patriot. 3 slides, fireplace, 2 recliners, 16” wheels. Asking $42,000 incl. 6’ slider hitch. 683-5682 or 541-980-5210 CAMPER: ‘03 10.6’ Bigfoot truck camper. 2500 series, color bamboo, model 25C106E. Highest quality, excellent condition. $9,000/obo. 360-379-1804

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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2011

95

Recreational Vehicles

5TH WHEEL: ‘02 34’ Big Sky Montana. 3 slides, W/D, used to live in. Great storage. $20,000. 477-7957. 5TH WHEEL: 33’. New hot water tank, etc. $700 775-6075 CAMPER: ‘74 Conestoga. Stove, fridge, port-a-potty, sleeps 4, no leaks. $800. 461-6615. CAMPER: ‘94 8’6” Lance Squire Lite, Fully provisioned, good cond. $3,500. 360-683-4830 or 360-460-3946 CAMPER: ‘99 8’ Lance. Crank jacks, excellent cond. $5,000/ obo. 732-4779. MOTOR HOME: ‘02 Itasca 32V. 31,500 miles, good condition, 2 slide outs, sleeps 6, 2 tvs, queen bed, DVD player, V10 engine, generator and built in A/C. $40,000. Tow car and hitch available. 582-0617.

MOTOR HOME: ‘03 Newmar Dutch Star. 40 ft, 3 slides, 330 Cat Diesel, Allison Trans, solar battery charger, pressure regulator, water filter, slide toppers, 10,000 lbs. hitch, micro/ conv. oven, 3 burner stove, sliding shelf pantry, 2 Sony flatscreen TV's, Sat Dome, Sony AM/FM/ CD VHS player, computer/printer table, light oak interior, washer/drier hookup, memory foam mattress, 6KW generator, leveling system, gently used, non smokers. Low mileage 22,000. $99,500. 683-3887. MOTOR HOME: ‘06 Lexington GTS 28. 3 slide-outs. $50,000. 681-7601 MOTOR HOME: ‘75 Newell Coach 35’. Aerodynamic aluminum body, Original, not a conversion, Cat, many featurs, updates. $18,500/obo. 460-6979 MOTOR HOME: ‘91 30’ Allegro Bay. 85K, runs/drives well, new brakes, satellite King Dome, very clean. $12,500. 477-9436. MOTOR HOME: ‘94 19’ Falcon Sport recreational van. 35K, fully loaded, exc. cond. $8,600. 452-2215 TENT TRAILER: New ‘10 Coleman Yuma. $7,900. 683-2457. TRAILER: ‘07 30’ Denali. Dbl. slide, like new. $25,000. 808-5182, 452-6932 TRAILER: 19’ Terry. Very clean, well maint. New tires. $1,950. 379-6868 or 360-301-5507 TRAILER: ‘80 17’ Alpenlite. Very clean, everything works. $3,500. 797-3326. TRAILER: ‘82 19’ Terry. New 13’ awning, refrigerator, A/C, everything works, must see. $3,300. 683-1032 TRAILER: ‘88 26’ Shasta Riviera. Air, needs interior work. $1,000/obo. 206-794-1104 TRAILER: ‘94 Terry. $4,900. 681-7381

29’

TRAILER: ‘94 30’ Komfort Travel Trailer. Great shape, living room slide-out, A/C, micro, refrigerator/freezer. $4,000. Brinnon area. 360-535-2078 TRAILER: ‘99 24’ Mallard. New cond. $6,500/obo. 797-3730 TRAILERS: Older 21’ Roadrunner. Completely redone inside. New tires. $3,200. ‘98 28’ Komfort. Excellent shape. Large slide out. New tires. Large Tanks. $7,900. 683-8162.

Winnebago 2010 Era Limited 170X, 24' Class B, Mini Motor Home Fully Equipped. Quiet fuel-efficient Mercedes-Benz turbo diesel engine, 1824 mpg, under 8,000 mi. Private seller. www.erarv.com $69,895 Call 360-460-8889

101

Legals Clallam Co.

Notice is hereby given that the Annual Meeting of the Members of First Federal will be held in the Home Office of the Association located at 105 W. 8th Street, Port Angeles, Washington, in accordance with its Bylaws at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, October 19, 2011, for the purpose of the Managing Officer’s Annual Report, the election of directors, to consider and vote upon a Plan of Charter Change for First Federal to change from a federally chartered mutual savings and loan association to a Washington chartered mutual savings bank, including the adoption of Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws of the Washington chartered mutual savings bank, and such other business as may properly come before the meeting. Pub: Oct. 7, 14, 2011

96

Parts/ Accessories

Classified 97

4 Wheel Drive

CANOPY SHELVING Made by Leer, to fit inside pickup bed camper shell. Used with side doors. Call for details. $500. 683-8810

CHEV: ‘94 Silverado 2500. Good cond. $6,500. 683-4830.

ENGINE: ‘87 Subaru engine. $150. 460-0262

CHEV: ‘96 Suburban. CD, leather, exc. $3,650. 461-2627.

ENGINE: Ford 351 M, complete rebuilt small block, new oil pump and gaskets. $1,300. 683-1032.

CHEV: ‘97 Tahoe. 4x4, leather interior, air conditioning, tow pkg., runs/drives great, must sell. $3,995. 775-9648.

FORD: ‘97 Escort LX. 4 dr, parting out. $5$500. 206-794-1104 JEEP: ‘76 CJ model. No engine or trans. $400. 460-0262 or 681-0940 SNOW TIRES: (4) Michelin non-studded, used 1 season Sequim to PA. 225/60R18. $500. 683-7789 STUDDED TIRES Like new Mud Terrian LT 265/75 R16 studded snow tires, mounted on set of custom wheels for F250 or F350 Ford ‘00 or newer truck. $500. 460-5974. WHEELS: (4) Dodge Charger 18”x8” polished, caps, and lug nuts. $400. 683-7789

CHEV: ‘90 Suburban. $4,000/obo. 360-683-1967

DODGE ‘03 RAM 1500 SLT 4x4 automatic, air, cruise, 5 disc CD, black leather, split bench seats 6, power windows, locks and mirrors, bed liner, hitch. Why Pay more? We have the lowest in-house rates! Military discounts! 90 days same as cash. $10,995 The Other Guys Auto and Truck Center 360-417-3788 DODGE: ‘05 Dakota Laramie. 30K mi., V8, loaded! $14,900. 452-5402

WHEELS: (4) MKW 20”, chrome. All four for $500. 808-2563.

FORD: ‘02 Explorer XLT. 4WD, exc cond, loaded, V6, tow, CD changer, 3rd seat, more. 122K, books $7,740. Sacrifice $6,900. 457-4363.

97

FORD: ‘05 Expedition. 1 ownr, low mi., exc. cond. $12,000/ obo. 683-9791, 942-9208

4 Wheel Drive

CHEV: ‘00 Tahoe. Low miles, lots of extras. Good tires. $8,500. 360-928-3440 CHEV: ‘01 Blazer. 4x4. 144K mi., runs great. $4,500. 460-8155. CHEV: ‘03 Tahoe 4WD 4.8 liter V8, runs great, cloth interior excellent shape, power seat, windows, locks, newer tires, custom rims. $9,900. 460-7901. CHEV: ‘04 AWD full size contractor van. $7,850. 452-5803.

CHEV: ‘11 Silverado 2500 HD 4WD LT Ext Cab. Vortec 6L V8 gas engine. Estate truck 3,125 miles. Includes interior plus pkg and convenience pkg. Loaded with back up camera to trailer pkg, remote start, heated mirrors, too much to list. $38,500. 683-2342. CHEV: ‘86 SUV. Runs well, 7 passenger, snow tires. $2,495. 477-0710

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Legals Clallam Co.

FORD: ‘08 Super Duty F350 4x4 crew cab. 6.4L V-8 diesel King Ranch. 16K miles, 20K in options. Exc. cond., never smoked in. Dealer maintained. Power Glide removable 5th wheel hitch. $39,900. Ron at 360-477-9659 FORD: 87 F250. 4x4 standard, 4.9 liter diesel. $3,200. 457-5649 FORD: ‘88 F-150 super cab. Tow pkg, 5.0 L, canopy, 1 owner. $2,495. 360-374-3259 FORD: ‘89 F250 4WD. 101K mi. $5,000. 808-5182, 452-6932 FORD: ‘91 F250 Lariat 110K, blue ext., lots of extras, good cond $2,500/obo. 457-4347 FORD: ‘93 Explorer. Runs good. $1,900. 582-9006, 565-6100 FORD: ‘98 Explorer. runs great. $2,500/ obo. 206-794-1104.

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No. 11-4-00273-0 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM Estate of THERESE V CAMERON, 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 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 nonprobate assets. DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: 10-14-2011 Personal representative: RONALD ROY CAMERON Attorney for Personal Representative: ROBERT W. STROHMEYER Attorney at Law Address for Mailing or Service: 1125 E. First Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362 Telephone: (360) 457-9525 Pub: Oct. 14, 21, 28, 2011 No. 11-2-00499-9 SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. UNKNOWN HEIRS OF RUTH ANN TOMPKINS; WILLIAM HAMMOND; CHARLES STROHM; KAREN KAY; JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION; WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES; Occupants of the Premises; and any persons or parties claiming to have any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real property described in the complaint, Defendants. TO THE DEFENDANTS Unknown Heirs of Ruth Ann Tompkins; Charles Strohm; Occupants of the Premises; and any persons or parties claiming to have any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real property described in the complaint: You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty (60) days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to wit, within sixty (60) days after September 23, 2011, and defend the real property foreclosure action in Clallam County Superior Court, and answer the complaint of JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, (“Plaintiff”). You are asked to serve a copy of your answer or responsive pleading upon the undersigned attorneys for Plaintiff at its office stated below. In case of your failure to do so, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. The purpose of this lawsuit is to obtain a judgment, and if not immediately paid, to be satisfied through the foreclosure of real property located in Clallam County, Washington, and legally described as follows: LOTS 29 AND 30, BLOCK 65 OF PUGET SOUND CO-OPERATIVE COLONY'S SUBDIVISION OF SUBURBAN LOT 23 OF THE TOWNSITE OF PORT ANGELES, CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED IN VOLUME 1 OF PLATS, PAGE 1, RECORDS OF CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON. Commonly known as: 523 East 4th Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362. DATED this15 day of September, 2011. ROUTH CRABTREE OLSEN, P.S. By Janaya L. Carter, WSBA #32715 Lauren Davidson Humphreys, WSBA #41694 Valerie I. Holder, WSBA #42968 Attorneys for Plaintiff 13555 SE 36th Street, Ste 300 Bellevue, WA 98006 Pub: Sept. 23, 30, Oct. 7, 14, 21, 28, 2011

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GMC ‘04 SONOMA SLS CREW CAB 4X4 4.3 liter Vortec V6, auto, alloy wheels, new tires, bedliner, tow package, rear sliding window, privacy glass, keyless entry, power windows, door locks, and mirrors, cruise, tilt, air, CD stereo, information center, dual front airbags. Kelley Blue Book value of $12,945! V6 gas mileage in a crew cab! Clean inside and out! Loaded! Stop by Gray Motors today to save some bucks on your next truck! $11,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com GMC: ‘88 Suburban 3/4 ton 4x4. 5.7L V8, 198K miles. Solid engine and trans. 4x4 works great. Gutted inside. Was used for camping and hauling fire wood. Extra set of 17” tires, wheels and lug nuts included. $900. Jason, 452-3600 KIA ‘03 SORENTO Blue 4x4 automatic, power windows and locks, air, CD, hitch. Very clean! Lowest in-house financing guaranteed! Military discounts! 90 days same as cash. $6,495 The Other Guys Auto and Truck Center 360-417-3788

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FORD: ‘99 F250. 7.3L diesel. 154K, 4 dr. $13,500. 912-2323. JEEP: ‘01 Laredo. Red, 4WD, 121K, all power, leather, heated seats, fully loaded, CD/stereo, excellent mechanical shape, garaged. $6,500/obo. 928-9988 NISSAN ‘03 FRONTIER XE KING CAB 4X4 PICKUP 3.3 liter V6 engine, 5 speed manual trans, alloy wheels, new tires, spray-in bedliner, rear sliding window, air, tilt, CD stereo, dual front airbags. Only 46,000 original miles! Immaculate cond. inside and out! Stop by Gray Motors today to save some bucks on your next truck! $13,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com NISSAN: 01 Pathfinder. 134K, 6 cyl., auto, air, tilt, cruise, all power, sun/moon roof, AM/FM CD iPod, tow pkg., nonsmoker. $7,400. 457-3891 TOYOTA: ‘88 4WD. V6, new exhaust/ tires, runs good. $2,700/obo. 681-0447 TOYOTA: ‘93 extended cab pickup. SR5 4x4. $3,500. 460-1481

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Pickups/Vans

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Pickups/Vans

FORD: ‘94 F150. $1,000. 452-2615. FORD: ‘95 Aerostar. 170K, 4x4, lots new parts, good cond. $1,300/obo. 457-4347 FORD: 96 Ranger XLT. Long bed, 131K mi. $2,950. 417-5460. HONDA: ‘00 Odyssey. Runs great, nice body, forest green, captains chairs. $4,500. 385-2012. MAZDA: ‘84 B2000 pickup. New tires/ clutch, 110K, 30+ mpg. $1,800. 683-7173 TOYOTA: ‘08 Tacoma SR5 ext. cab. 4 cyl, auto, all pwr. CD stereo, 1 owner. 14,680 original miles. $18,000/obo 417-8291 TOYOTA: ‘87 ‘350’ Chev motor and tranny, 8” Ford rear end, MSD ignition, 16’ slide deck trailer. $5,000 both. 460-2127, 504-2535

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ACURA: ‘90 Acura Integra LS. Barbie Pink. 5 speed. 133,000 mi. Runs and drives great! Cruise control, underglow, sunroof, exhaust, much more! Minor body damage. $5,500/obo. See online add for more info. 360-461-4154.

NISSAN ‘02 XTERRA SE SPORT UTILITY 4X4 3.3 liter V6, auto, alloy wheels, Goodyear mud terrain tires, running boards, tow package, roof rack, privacy glass, power windows, door locks and mirrors, cruise, tilt, air, 6 CD stereo, compass/temp. display, dual front airbags. Priced under Kelley Blue Book value! Sparkling clean inside and out! Ready for adventure! Stop by Gray Motors today! $8,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

CHRYSLER: ‘03 Town & Country Ltd. DVD, loaded. $6,500. 808-0825 DODGE: ‘05 Caravan. Limited Edition, DVD player, AM/FM radio/ cassette, great shape, 90,500 mi. $7,500/obo. 360-640-9756 FORD: ‘74 F250 Camper Special. Body and interior are exc. 390 eng w/auto. $900/obo. 477-1949 FORD: ‘84 F150 SL. Red and black, long bed, ‘351’ Winsor V8 124K, new tires, well maintained, $1,500/ obo. 360-301-1911. FORD: ‘92 Econo 150 van work truck, 185K, runs god. $2,100. 452-9363.

BUICK ‘05 LACROSSE SEDAN 3.8 liter Series III V6 engine, auto trans, alloy wheels, keyless entry, power windows, door locks, mirrors and drivers seat, cruise control, tilt, air, CD stereo, OnStar, dual front airbags. Kelley Blue Book value of $13,015! Sparkling clean inside and out! One owner! Only 29,000 miles! Stop by Gray Motors today! $10,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

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Legals Clallam Co.

Legals Clallam Co.

Notice of Trustee's Sale Pursuant To the Revised Code of Washington 61.24 et seq File No. 2009-0058779 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Trustee RECONTRUST COMPANY N A on October 21, 2011 at 10:00 AM The main entrance to the Clallam County Courthouse 223 East 4th St Port Angeles WA 98362 State of Washington (subject to any conditions imposed by the trustee to protect the lender and borrower) will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder payable at time of sale the following described real property situated in the county(ies) of Clallam State of Washington Tax Parcel ID no 05 30 08 570225 LOT 6 BLOCK B FOUR SEASON S RANCH ACCORDING TO PLAT THEREOF RECORDED IN VOLUME 5 OF PLATS PAGE 36 RECORDS OF CLALLAM COUNTY WASHINGTON SITUATE IN CLALLAM COUNTY STATE OF WASHINGTON Commonly Known as 432 STRAIT VIEW DR PORT ANGELES WA 983628471 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 01/22/2008 recorded on 01/28/2008 under Auditor's File No 2008 1215335 and Deed of Trust rerecorded on - under Auditor's File No records of Clallam County Washington from THOMAS M BAUMSTARK AN UNMARRIED MAN AS HIS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY WHO ALSO APPEARS OF RECORD AS TOM BAUMSTARK as grantor to LS TITLE OF WA as Trustee to secure an obligation in favor of COUNTRYWIDE BANK FSB as beneficiary the beneficial interest in which was assigned by COUNTRYWIDE BANK FSB to COUNTRYWIDE BANK FSB under an Assignment/Successive Assignments recorded under Auditor's File No 2009127851 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 Grantor's or Borrower's default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust IIl The Beneficiary alleges default of the Deed of Trust for failure to pay the following amounts now in arrears and/or other defaults A Monthly Payments $74,607.62 B Late Charges $302.01 C Escrow Deficiency $5,415.84 D Suspense Balance ($.00) E Other Fees $120.00 Total Arrears $80,445.47 F Trustee s Expenses (Itemization) Trustee s Fee $675.00 Title Report $924.82 Statutory Mailings $141.21 Recording Fees $178.00 Publication $2,355.20 Posting $400.00 Total Costs $4,674.23 Total Amount Due $85,119.70 Other potential defaults do not involve payment of the Beneficiary. If applicable, each of these defaults must also be cured. Listed below are categories of common defaults, which do not involve payment of money to the Beneficiary. Opposite each such listed default is a brief description of the action/documentation necessary to cure the default. The list does not exhaust all possible other defaults; any defaults identified by Beneficiary or Trustee that are not listed below must also be cured. Other default, Action necessary to cure Nonpayment of Taxes/Assessments Deliver to Trustee written proof that all taxes and assessments against the property are paid current Default under any senior lien Deliver to Trustee written proof that all senior liens are paid current and that no other defaults exist. Failure to insure property against hazard Deliver to Trustee written proof that the property is insured against hazard as required by the Deed of Trust. Waste Cease and desist from committing waste, repair all damage to property and maintain property as required in Deed of Trust. Unauthorized sale of property (Due on Sale) Revert title to permitted vestee. IV The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is Principal Balance of $324,793.84 together with interest as provided in the note or other instrument secured from 10/01/2008 and such other costs and fees as are due under the Note or other instrument secured and as are provided by statute V The above described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of the sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute The sale will be made without warranty express or implied regarding title possession or encumbrances on 10/21/2011 The default(s) referred to in paragraph III together with any subsequent payments late charges advances costs and fees thereafter due must be cured by 10/10/2011 (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 the close of the Trustees business on 10/10/2011 (11 days before the sale date) the defaults(s) as set forth in paragraph III together with any subsequent payments late charges advances costs and fees thereafter due is/are cured and the Trustee s fees and costs are paid The sale may be terminated any time after 10/10/2011 (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale by the Borrower Grantor and Guarantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance paying the entire balance of principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust plus costs fees and advances if any made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust VI A written notice of default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the address(es) enclosed THOMAS M BAUMSTARK 3853 N St Elias Or Mesa AZ 85215 1034 THOMAS M BAUMSTARK 3853 N St Elias Cir Mesa AZ 85215 1034 TOM BAUMSTARK 3853 N St Elias Cir Mesa AZ 85215 1034 THOMAS M BAUMSTARK 432 STRAIT VIEW DR PORT ANGELES WA 98362-8471 TOM BAUMSTARK 432 STRAIT VIEW DR PORT ANGELES WA 98362 8471 by both first class and either certified mail return receipt requested or registered mail on 05/08/2009 proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee and on 05/11/2009 Grantor and Borrower were personally served with said written notice of default or the written notice of default was posted on a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above and the Trustee has possession of such service or posting VII The Trustee whose name and address is set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it a statement of all foreclosure costs and trustee s 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 right title and interest in the abovedescribed property IX Anyone having any objections to the 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 X 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 m accordance with RCW 61 24 060 and/or any applicable Federal Law DATED: 7-19-11 ReconTrust Company, N.A. By: Steven Arredondo Its Authorized Signer ReconTrust Company, N.A. P.O. Box 10284 Van Nuys, CA 91410-0284 Phone: (800) 2818219 This firm is attempting to collect a debt. Any information obtained will be used for that purpose. The debt set forth on this notice will be assumed to be valid unless you dispute the debt by providing this office with a written notice of your dispute within 30 days of your receipt of this notice, setting forth the basis of your dispute. If you dispute the debt in writing within 30 days, we will obtain and mail verification of the debt to you. If the creditor identified in this notice is different than your original creditor, we will provide you with the name and address of the original creditor if you request this information in writing within 30 days. ASAP# FNMA4046772 09/23/2011, 10/14/2011 Pub.: Sept. 23, Oct. 14, 2011

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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Cars

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Cars

CADILLAC: ‘00 El Dorado ETC. 80K, black/black, leather, beautiufl, must see. $7,800. 681-3093.

FORD: ‘76 LTD. 2 dr, 351, good cond., runs exc., very dependable, some new. $950. 460-6979.

CADILLAC: ‘84 El Dorado. Exc. 60K. $10,500. 452-7377.

FORD: ‘79 Fairmont. Good condition, new brakes, great transportation vehicle, one owner. Asking $1,200. 582-9227.

CADILLAC: ‘97 Catera. Well maintained, sunroof, leather. $4,150. 461-1160 or 457-1419 CHEV: ‘67 El Camino. 400/T400. $12,000. 707-241-5977 CHEV: ‘68 Impala. 327 cid, 400 at. $7,500. 450-3767. CHEV: ‘91 Z28 Camero. Red t tops, excellent condition. $4,200. 928-1170. CHEV: ‘94 Suburban. 3/4 ton. 2 owner, larger ‘454’ engine, tow pkg., 120K. $3,500. 808-3374. CHEV: ‘99 Malibu LS. 1 owner, only 86K miles. Very nice car. $3,465 360-912-3901 DODGE: ‘96 Caravan. Runs and drives super. Well maint. with records, 159K. $2,400. 457-1104. FORD: ‘02 Mustang GT convertible. 8 cyl., 2 tone gray, 36K, great condition. $12,000/obo. 452-7745 FORD: ‘03 Mustang convertible. $10,000/ obo. 808-1598. FORD: ‘65 Fairlane 500 Sport Coupe. ‘289’ 225 hp, auto, bucket seats, real nice car. $6,900. 457-6540

WHY PAY SHIPPING ON INTERNET PURCHASES?

FORD: ‘86 Taurus. Runs great, clean. $600/obo. 681-3313. FORD: ‘98 Mustang GT. V8, 5 sp, leather int., all power. $4,000 477-1805 FORD: ‘99 Ford Escort. 156,000 miles, 35 MPG, excellent condition, has many repairs, good tires 4 extra rims, have receipts, owner Chilton manuals. $2,500/obo. 360-461-6214 360-912-2858 HONDA: ’06 Civic Hybrid. 112K hwy. mi., tinted windows, nice wheels, mounted snow tires, very clean. Just retired. $9,500/obo 360-731-0677 HONDA: ‘89 CRX HF. $2,500. 683-1006. HYUNDAI: ‘09 Sonata Limited. Black beauty, all the options plus tinted windows and navigation system, extra set of wheels and tires. $17,800. 477-3191. MAZDA: ‘06 Miata MX5 Touring. Red, leather, 10K. $14,500/obo. 681-0863

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Cars

MERCURY: ‘99 Grand Marquis. $4,000/ obo. 681-0353. MG: ‘65 Midget. 85,672 orig. mi., mostly orig. interior. In running cond. $4,800. 417-2606. MG: ‘79 BCV series. Color blue, excellent condition. $7,000. 683-5614 MGB: ‘76 Under 80K, new carb, exhaust, alternator, fuel pump and more. $2,950/ OBRO. 417-2165. OLDS: ‘65 98 LS 4 dr Sedan. 2 owner in great condition, int. like new, 83K. $6,000. 582-0208. PLYMOUTH: ‘74 Duster. Classic, fun, fast, auto or stick. $11,950. 683-7768. PONTIAC: ‘02 Grand Am GT. 122K miles, V6 auto, leather, power seats, windows, mirrors with sun roof, iPod/USB connection, Pioneer Radio, new tires, recent brakes. Bright red, super clean $6,500 firm. 360-683-7577 PONTIAC: ‘78 Trans Am. Lots new, nice. $4,800/obo. 477-3180 STUDEBAKER: ‘62 Lark Cruiser. 289 Packard V8, body pretty good, but project. Time and money. $1,200/obo. 460-4963 TOYOTA: ‘08 Scion XB. Excellent, dark blue, extras $18,000/ obo. 928-3669. VW: ‘04 Passat GXL. 2 yr. warranty, 65K mi. $9,500. 681-7381. VW: ‘74 Super Beetle. Show quality. $10,000. 457-7184.

SHOP LOCAL

MERCEDES: SLK 230 Kompressor. Hard top power convertible, loaded, priced to sell. $7,995. 582-9966

peninsula dailynews.com

MERCURY: ‘95 Grand Marquis. Good transportation. $1,850. 457-5500.

VW: ‘75 Super Beetle. Fuel injected, runs well, 30+ mpg, nice paint, good tires, new floor pan, Pioneer stereo, CD player. Price reduced! $2,295/obo. 775-9648

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Legals Clallam Co.

Legals Clallam Co.

Legals Clallam Co.

Notice of Trustee's Sale Pursuant To the Revised Code of Washington 61.24 et seq File No 2009-0008245 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Trustee RECONTRUST COMPANY N A on October 21, 2011 at 10:00 AM The main entrance to the Clallam County Courthouse 223 East 4th St Port Angeles WA 98362 State of Washington (subject to any conditions imposed by the trustee to protect the lender and borrower) will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder payable at time of sale the following described real property situated in the county(ies) of Clallam State of Washington Tax Parcel ID no 04 30 34 1200750000 THAT PORTION OF THE SOUTH HALF OF THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 34 TOWNSHIP 30 NORTH RANGE 4 WEST W M CLALLAM COUNTY WASHINGTON LYING WEST OF COUNTY ROAD KNOWN AS HOOKER ROAD SET FORTH AS THE SANFORD TRACT AS DENOTED AND DESCRIBED ON SURVEY RECORDED ON DECEMBER 1 1980 IN VOLUME 6 OF SURVEYS PAGE 12 UNDER AUDITORS FILE NO 514420 RECORDS OF CLALLAM COUNTY WASHINGTON Commonly Known as 1780 HOOKER ROAD SEQUIM WA 98382 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 09/07/2007 recorded on 09/11/2007 under Auditor's File No 2007 1208788 and Deed of Trust re recorded on - under Auditors File No records of Clallam County Washington from RONALD J TISDALE AND ERICA TISDALE HUSBAND AND WIFE as grantor to OLYMPIC PENINSULA TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY as Trustee to secure an obligation in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS INC as beneficiary the beneficial interest in which was assigned by MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS INC to BANK OF AMERICA NA SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO BAC HOME LOANS SERVICING LP FKA COUNTRYWIDE HOME LOANS SERVICING LP under an Assignment/Successive Assignments recorded under Auditor s File No 2011 1268139 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 Grantor s or Borrower s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust III. The Beneficiary alleges default of the Deed of Trust for failure to pay the following amounts now in arrears and/or other defaults: A. Monthly Payments $65,624.04 B. Late Charges $142.72 C. Escrow Deficiency $3,359.59 D. Suspense Balance ($.00) E. Other Fees $3,156.12 Total Arrears $72,282.47 F. Trustee's Expenses (Itemization) Trustee's Fee $540,00 Title Report $682.92 Statutory Mailings $259.47 Recording Fees $178.00 Publication $2,516.48 Posting $400.00 Total Costs $4.576.87 Total Amount Due: $76,859.34 Other potential defaults do not involve payment of the Beneficiary. If applicable, each of these defaults must also be cured. Listed below are categories of common defaults, which do not involve payment of money to the Beneficiary. Opposite each such listed default is a brief description of the action/documentation necessary to cure the default. The list does not exhaust all possible other defaults; any defaults identified by Beneficiary or Trustee that are not listed below must also be cured. Other default, Action necessary to cure Nonpayment of Taxes/Assessments Deliver to Trustee written proof that all taxes and assessments against the property are paid current Default under any senior lien Deliver to Trustee written proof that all senior liens are paid current and that no other defaults exist. Failure to insure property against hazard Deliver to Trustee written proof that the property is insured against hazard as required by the Deed of Trust. Waste Cease and desist from committing waste, repair all damage to property and maintain property as required in Deed of Trust. Unauthorized sale of property (Due on Sale) Revert title to permitted vestee. IV. The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: Principal Balance of $193,155.11, together with interest as provided in the note or other instrument secured from 09/01/2008 and such other costs and fees as are due under the Note or other instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. V The above-described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of the sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute The sale will be made without warranty express or implied regarding title possession or encumbrances on 10/21/2011 The default(s) referred to m paragraph III together with any subsequent payments late charges advances costs and fees thereafter due must be cured by 10/10/2011(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 the close of the Trustee's business on 10/10/2011 (11 days before the sale date) the defaults(s) as set forth in paragraph III together with any subsequent payments late charges advances costs and fees thereafter due is/are cured and the Trustee s fees and costs are paid The sale may be terminated any time after 10/10/2011 (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale by the Borrower Grantor and Guarantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance paying the entire balance of principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust plus costs fees and advances if any made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust VI A written notice of default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the address(es) enclosed RONALD J TISDALE 2021 E 5th Ave Port Angeles WA 98362 9013 RONALD J TISDALE 1780 HOOKER ROAD SEQUIM WA 98382 RONALD J TISDALE 2021 E 5th Ave Port Angeles WA 98362 9013 ERICA TISDALE 1780 Hooker Rd Sequim WA 98382 ERICA TISDALE 2021 EAST 5TH AVE PORT ANGELES WA 98362 RONALD J TISDALE 1780 Hooker Rd Sequim WA 98382 RONALD J TISDALE 2021 EAST 5TH AVE PORT ANGELES WA 98362 ERICA TISDALE 2021 E 5th Ave Port Angeles WA 98362 9013 ERICA TISDALE 1780 HOOKER ROAD SEQUIM WA 98382 ERICA TISDALE 2021 E 5th Ave Port Angeles WA 98362 9013 by both first class and either certified mail return receipt requested or registered mail on 02/02/2009 proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee and on 02/03/2009 Grantor and Borrower were personally served with said written notice of default or the written notice of default was posted on a conspicuous place on the real property described m paragraph I above and the Trustee has possession of such service or posting VII The Trustee whose name and address is set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it a statement of all foreclosure costs and trustee s 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 right title and interest in the above-described property IX Anyone having any objections to the 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 X 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 and/or any applicable Federal Law DATED: Jul. 20, 2011 ReconTrust Company, N.A. By: Cheryl Lee Its Authorized Signer ReconTrust Company, N.A. P.O. Box 10284 Van Nuys, CA 91410-0284 Phone: (800) 2818219 This firm is attempting to collect a debt. Any information obtained will be used for that purpose. The debt set forth on this notice will be assumed to be valid unless you dispute the debt by providing this office with a written notice of your dispute within 30 days of your receipt of this notice, setting forth the basis of your dispute. If you dispute the debt in writing within 30 days, we will obtain and mail verification of the debt to you. If the creditor identified in this notice is different than your original creditor, we will provide you with the name and address of the original creditor if you request this information in writing within 30 days. ASAP# FNMA4046444 09/23/2011, 10/14/2011 Pub.: Sept. 23, Oct. 14, 2011


PA Chamber Orchestra concerts | This week’s new movies

Peninsula

PA Fine Arts Center’s ‘25! A Silver Milestone’

Alfredo Arreguin’s portrait of poet Tess Gallagher graces the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center beginning Sunday.

Peninsula Daily News

The week of October 14-20, 2011


2

Friday, October 14, 2011

Peninsula Daily News

Tomlinson in PT, finally

Architecture walk slated in Victoria

Audience energizes performer

inside the gallery, as does “The Further VICTORIA — A free Adventures of Girl,� an walking tour of Victoria’s exploration of how architecture will start at national identity and 1 p.m. Saturday in conjunc- militarism are reflected tion with “Modern Eye,� an in popular culture. “Furexhibition at the Art Galther Adventures� closes lery of Greater Victoria. this Sunday, while “ModTo go on the walking ern Eye� stays through tour, meet at the Atrium Nov. 27. The Emily Carr building at the corner of show of paintings and Blanshard Street and Pan- ceramics stays until dora Avenue in downtown June 2013. Victoria; architect Nathan Admission to the galFlach is your guide. lery is $13 for adults, “Modern Eye,� a show $11 for students and for highlighting Canadian seniors age 65 and older, craft and design from 1940 $2.50 for youth age 6 to through 1980, is just one of 17 and free for children the exhibitions at the Art 5 and younger. Gallery of Greater Victoria For more details, at 1040 Moss St. “Emily phone 250-384-4171 or Carr: On the Edge of visit the gallery’s webNowhere� also awaits site, www.AGGV.ca. Peninsula Spotlight

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By Diane Urbani de la Paz

Peninsula Spotlight

PORT TOWNSEND — Michael Tomlinson’s folkrock and jazzy pop arrived on the Northwest radio airwaves a good 24 years ago. Songs such as “The Climb� — which he gave to Seattle station KEZX on a homemade cassette — led to his first album, “Run This Way Forever,� selling 100,000 copies nationwide in the late 1980s. Tomlinson went on to host “A Gathering of Friends,� a yearly retreat at Fort Worden State Park, through the 1990s. So here’s the irony: He’s never given a concert in Port Townsend. 0B5102605

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10 albums, 20 years Tomlinson, who has 10 albums and 20 years of crisscrossing the country to his credit, makes his debut here Saturday night at The

“There is a lot of spiritual content to my music. Not any kind of religion, but a lot of beautiful feelings, and a lot of laughter through the evening,� stitching together the old and the new. His set lists survey his CDs, from 1987’s “Dawning on a New Day� to his latest record, “The Way Out West.� “I always spend the intermission out in the audience,� Tomlinson added. “I want to be out there where the fun is,� as people exchange their stories.

to make his living on the road; he’s played at Seattle’s Woodland Park Zoo, the Telluride Bluegrass Festival, Wolf Trap outside Washington, D.C., the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco and more recently in Sedona, Ariz.

Giving it away

At the same time, he makes particular songs available free via www. MichaelTomlinson.com. “I decided to start giving away a lot of my music,� he said, “just for the energy aspect of it. I started putting a message on my webFor Jimmy Carter site that if you have a Singer-songwriter One song Tomlinson will friend, someone you love, Michael Tomlinson definitely sing Saturday: who is going through a difarrives at The Upstage “Seeds of Love,� a tribute ficult time in life, I would in Port Townsend on he wrote for former Presilove to send them a song.� Saturday. dent Jimmy Carter. He was People were “shy at asked to compose it for an first,� Tomlinson said. But Upstage, 923 Washington Atlanta event honoring now they’re responding: My St. Show time is 7 p.m. and Carter earlier this year. daughter’s husband just tickets are $20; details Rather than focusing on died, or my friend just lost await at www.Upstage his time in the White his job. Restaurant.com and 360House, “I wrote about his “I’m just thinking this is 385-2216. love of his wife [Rosalynn], a genuine gesture, and for “My concerts are a mix- his dedication to doing it to arrive in someone’s ture of songs and stories, good work in the world and email . . . just that tiny and whatever comes up in his sense of wonder,� Tomthing can make a differconversation with the audi- linson said. He has since ence.� ence,� Tomlinson said this received a personal letter The song available now week in an interview from of thanks from Carter. is “Things That I Don’t his home in Seattle. Tomlinson, 58, continues Know,� a reflection on the changing of the seasons. “Of course when I give a song away, I hope they will come and buy an album,� - Now 1/2 price bottle of wine with dinner. Tomlinson said. “But I also hope the energy of this will create some open doors.� - Now Happy Hour all day throughout the

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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: ■E-mail it to news@peninsuladailynews.com in time to arrive 10 days before Friday publication. ■Fax it to 360-417-3521 no later than 10 days before publication. ■Mail it to Peninsula Spotlight, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 in time to arrive 10 days before publication. ■Hand-deliver it to any of our news offices at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles; 1939 E. Sims Way, Port Townsend; or 150 S. Fifth Ave., No. 2, 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 360-417-3550 weekdays.

Peninsula Spotlight


Peninsula Spotlight

Peninsula Daily News

Friday, October 14, 2011

PA Chamber Orchestra aims to rouse passion in listeners Seattle pianist to join concerts By Diane Urbani de la Paz

Peninsula Spotlight

Adam Stern leads the Port Angeles Chamber Orchestra — as well as playing piano — in concert tonight in Port Angeles and Saturday in Sequim.

Conductor Adam Stern says he’ll try not to blush overmuch as he takes the stage tonight. In a pair of Port Angeles Chamber Orchestra performances this week, Stern was slated to unveil a new orchestral work. This was to be the world premiere of Stern’s composition, “but in the tradition of several other premieres in the history of classical music, it has been delayed,” Stern said Tuesday. “I will explain to the audience,” he added, “I just wasn’t sure it was the piece I wanted to present.” But “rest assured, you’ll hear it in January,” at the chamber orchestra’s concerts on the 13th and 14th. For now, the players will give themselves over to other composers and to music Stern considers some of the most beautiful made. Beginning at 7 p.m. today and Saturday, the Port Angeles Chamber Orchestra will play Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 2, Ravel’s “Mother

Goose Suite” and Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 3, plus Haydn’s Symphony No. 30, which replaces the postponed Stern premiere. Seattle pianist Judith Cohen is the guest artist in these concerts, tonight at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 301 E. Lopez Ave., Port Angeles, and Saturday at the Sequim Worship Center, 640 N. Sequim Ave. All tickets are $12 at Port Book & News, 104 E. First St. in downtown Port Angeles, and BeeDazzled at the Buzz, 130 N. Sequim Ave. in Sequim; they will also be sold at the door of both venues.

‘Being an athlete’ Making live music is “like being an athlete,” said Cohen, who has been playing the piano since she was 5. After studying at the Chicago Musical College until age 18, Cohen went on to give recitals from Mexico City to Budapest, Hungary, and has recorded a CD of Bela Bartok’s solo piano works. The concerto she’ll play in Port Angeles and

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Pianist Judith Cohen will join the Port Angeles Chamber Orchestra tonight and Saturday night. Sequim isn’t Beethoven’s longest; nor is it one of his well-known works for a big orchestra. Nonetheless, Cohen said, “There is a big, fiery personality behind it. “With the chamber players, you get to really hear this piece in a more intimate setting. You’re closer,” than in a symphony hall. And Beethoven’s music is easily accessible, easily loved, Cohen added; it’s not only tuneful but also filled with rhythm and vitality. About the Bach and the Ravel on the program,

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Stern is likewise inclined to gush. “I am amazed by the passion that gets aroused in the players, and in me,” by Bach’s Brandenburg concerti, he began. “Bach is an all-out romantic, and I play him that way.” The conductor also reminds his orchestra that Bach was an energetic man, with 21 children from two wives. As for the Ravel, his “Mother Goose” is Stern’s single favorite piece of music for children; “it is so poetic,” he said. Stern will perform “Goose” with Cohen, and then Cohen will turn to the Beethoven. This piano concerto, Stern added, shows how the composer was influenced by Mozart but following his own path. Finally, Stern quoted the late piano legend Glenn Gould, who said the concerto is Beethoven’s “greatest orchestral work, period.” To learn more about these and other events in the 2011-2012 Port Angeles Symphony season, visit www.PortAngelesSymphony. org, stop by the symphony office at 216-C N. Laurel St. in downtown Port Angeles or phone 360-457-5579.

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Friday, October 14, 2011

Peninsula Daily News

Peninsula Spotlight

Elwha River flows through novel Author to give reading at Port Townsend Library By Diane Urbani de la Paz

Peninsula Spotlight

PORT TOWNSEND — The novel West of Here, a fictional trip up the Elwha River, saw a stream of mixed reviews when it came out earlier this year. Bainbridge Island author Jonathan Evison, who has been camping on the Olympic Peninsula since he was a boy, enjoyed a short stay on the New York Times best-seller list and a nationwide promotional tour that included a book-signing in Port Angeles last March. And now that the massive Elwha River restoration and dam removals have actually begun — ceremonies were held Sept. 17 at the Elwha Dam — Evison is returning to the Peninsula for another reading and, he hopes, the selling of

some more books. Evison will appear at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Port Townsend Library, Evison 1220 Lawrence St., for a discussion of West of Here. Admission is free, while copies will be available for purchase.

Set in Port Bonita The 496-page epic is obviously set in Port Angeles, but Evison calls the place Port Bonita because, he has said, West of Here is no history text. He peoples the town with oddballs: boozy Native Americans, prostitutes, drug-addled youths, Sasquatch hunters. The novelist takes his readers back and forth through time,

9

Yet Evison calls his story “a hopeful page in history. With the death of the logging industry . . . Two dams too many Port Angeles hasn’t had a Two dams would be too hopeful page in a long much, to his mind, though time.” he apparently did not conAnd as the Elwha dams sider his big, motley cast of come down, “the eyes of the 19th- and 21st-century world are on [the Penincharacters excessive. While the people in the sula],” Evison added. book are Evison’s inven“Port Angeles is, once tions, many of the places again, like a leader. I think aren’t: The Elwha River, it’s really cool.” the Klallam people, HollyFor details about this wood Beach, the Bushand other activities at the whacker Restaurant and the Olympic Mountains are Port Townsend Library — which is open seven days a all named in West of Here. “I didn’t want to write a week — visit www.PT PublicLibrary.com or phone historical novel; I wanted to write about history,” Evi- 360-385-3181.

Jonathan Evison of Bainbridge Island comes to the Port Townsend on Tuesday night to read from West of Here, his fictitious work about the damming of the Elwha River.

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son said. “I wanted all the little people to tell their stories.” As for the less-thanglowing reviews, he read them with relish. “I want to know what the conversation is; I want to know what I’ve wrought,” he said.

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into the Olympic Mountains and up and down the Elwha. Through the eyes of “Port Bonitans” living in 1890 and in 2006, we see the rise and fall of many dreams, two cultures — and just one dam. Evison opted not to write about the factual Glines Canyon and Elwha dams because he “couldn’t have two central metaphors in the novel,” he told the Peninsula Daily News last February.

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Peninsula Spotlight

Peninsula Daily News

Friday, October 14, 2011

5

Swinging from Red Vines ‘Music Live with Lunch’

presents area organist

Singer/songwriter set to perform at Peninsula College Peninsula Spotlight

PORT ANGELES — The man with the Red Vines will swing into the Pirate Union Building, aka the PUB at Peninsula College, this Tuesday afternoon. Jonathan Kingham, a freestyle rapper and folk singer from Seattle, will give a free performance at 12:35 p.m., and based on previous appearances here, he’s expected to bring a huge tub of red licorice. It’s a signature move that, along with his songs and stories, makes him a hit in cafes, theaters and college campuses around the country.

Peninsula Spotlight

SEQUIM — The next “Music Live with Lunch” gathering brings organist Elwood “Woody” Bernas into St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 525 N. Fifth Ave., this Tuesday. Bernas, whose CD recordings include “Resounding Joy” and “Live in Stockholm,” will play at noon, and then everyone can stay for a hot lunch at 12:30 p.m. in the parish hall. Admission, which includes the music and the meal, are $10, and a vegetarian lunch is available. Tickets are available at St. Luke’s between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays, while concert-goers are asked to

Jonathan Kingham brings his music and his Red Vines licorice to the PUB at Peninsula College this Tuesday. The free concert will get going at 12:35 p.m.

thing,” a record on which he moved into jazz. Songwriting acclaim “I’m a lucky dog who for Kingham has also won the last few years has abundant acclaim for his made my living making songwriting: first place music,” Kingham writes on honors in the Telluride his MySpace page. Troubadour contest, a topThe singer and guitarist five ranking in the John has shared the stage with Lennon Song Contest two musicians such as Shawn years in a row and the Colvin, Michael McDonald, grand prize in the USA Vanessa Carlton and David Songwriting Competition, Wilcox, and has toured with which saw 33,000 entries such diverse acts as Julio from around the globe. Iglesias Jr. and Glen Phillips His latest album is of Toad the Wet Sprocket. “Smooth Out the Line,” For more information on while earlier efforts include this and other events on “That Changes Everythe college’s main campus

at 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd., visit www.pencol. edu or www.facebook.com/ PeninsulaCollege.

phone 360683-4862 before coming to pick them up. This event is a rare chance, said coordi- Bernas nator Carolyn Braun, to enjoy live music by a man who has performed in cathedrals and churches from St. Paul, Minn., to Stockholm, Sweden. Bernas “is one of the little-known treasures of our area,” Braun said, adding that the organist has served as soloist at First Presbyterian Church in Port Townsend. The Music Live with Lunch series returns to St.

Luke’s every third Tuesday of the month from now till May, except for December. Proceeds go to local charities.

Keep up with the sights and sounds on the North Olympic Peninsula.

Peninsula Spotlight Every Friday in Peninsula Daily News

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6

Friday, October 14, 2011

Peninsula Daily News

Jeff Tocher

Artist Andrea Larson and her daughter, River, take a break after painting the mural at First Step Family Support Center in Port Angeles. Larson is the featured artist at tonight’s Second Friday Art Rock gathering at Bar N9ne.

Fusing art, music Second Friday event to benefit PA Food Bank By Diane Urbani de la Paz

Peninsula Spotlight

PORT ANGELES — Gams, cans, paint and can-can converge tonight, courtesy of a band of local artists. It’s another episode of Second Friday Art Rock, aka 2FAR, starting at 8 p.m. at Bar N9ne, 229 W. First St. downtown. This time around, patrons are invited to bring donations of nonperishable food for the Port Angeles Food Bank. Andrea Larson of Port Angeles will start the party with a slide show depicting her diverse artwork; then Daniel Rapport, a member of the Seattle band the Gems,

A petroglyph vessel created by the revered Northwest glass artist William Morris is part of “25! A Silver Milestone,” the exhibition debuting this weekend at the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center.

Peninsula Spotlight

D

PA F its 25

By Diane Urbani

Peninsula Spotlight

PORT ANGELE into the conversatio you. It’s like hearin change tempo. First, we’re talki How the Port Angel ter struggles with t Between 2008 and

will step up to mix solo guitar and special effects in jazz, blues and what’s known as “world music.” At 9 p.m., Cirque du Boheme, a circus troupe based in Port Angeles, will take the stage to dish up some French cancan dancing.

meantime, will be treated to Cirque du Boheme’s burlesque show, as well as the evening’s final event, a concert by the Gems. This band “lays down deep, danceable grooves,” Lieberman promised, with “synthesized mayhem, unlike anything you’ve ever heard.” The Can-can for cans Gems will play from 10 This is an irreverent p.m. till 11 p.m., and bunch, according to 2FAR those thirsty for more coordinator Dan Liebercan hear songs from their man, and their can-can is debut CD at www.Gems about thanking people Music.com. for their canned-food conThe 2FAR cover tributions. charge tonight is $3 to The donated goods support the musicians will go to the Port Angeand the featured artist. les Food Bank to help For information, phone prepare for Thanksgiving Bar N9ne at 360-7971999. on Nov. 24. The donors,

Charlotte Watts

“Ceremony” by Charlotte Watts is among the works in “25! A Silver Milestone,” the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center’s 25th anniversary show opening this Sunday.


Peninsula Spotlight

Peninsula Daily News

Friday, October 14, 2011

7

Days of silver

Fine Arts Center celebrates 5th anniversary with exhibit de la

Paz

t

ES — A few minutes on, the contrast hits ng a tune suddenly

ing about money. les Fine Arts Centoo little of it: 2009, the city of Port Angeles cut its contribution from $57,000 to $24,750. That amount stayed the same this year, leaving the center to raise nearly $150,000 to keep its staff of two, and to continue the art exhibitions, lectures and concerts coming. That’s the grim report this week from Jake Seniuk, the director and curator for 22 years. But it’s not what he really wants to talk about as the center marks its 25th anniversary with a historic show. Opening this s Sunday is “25! A Silver Milestone,” an exhibition of

work by 29 Pacific Northwest artists, from glass blowers to renowned painters to fine art photographers. Each has displayed their best efforts at the arts center over the past quarter-century, and each is part of the sweeping survey to open this weekend. The show starts with a public reception, with many participating artists in attendance, from 2 p.m. till 4 p.m. Sunday. Then “25!” will be open Wednesdays through Sundays through Nov. 27. Admission is free to the center, perched on what’s known as Beaver Hill at 1203 E. Lauridsen Blvd.

‘Beautiful show’ “It is a beautiful show,” Seniuk said in an altogether new tone. There is “Point of the Arches,” by the late sculptor and sumi painter George Tsutakawa, whose show was the center’s first in 1986. Sharing the space with “Arches” are the bizarre and the beauteous, including: ■  the “Culture Vulture” sculpture by Richard Cook; ■  a gouache of “Anima,” the female archetype, by Charles Stokes; ■  “A Penny for Your Thoughts,” an interactive, multimedia creation by Barbara Slavik, the center’s longtime education director; ■  Alfredo Arreguin’s portrait of Port Angeles-born poet Tess Gallagher; ■  A pair of bronze cormorants, slightly smaller than the ones on Port Angeles’ City Pier, shaped by Duncan McKiernan. Seniuk’s own “Olympic Crossing,” a tryptych of photographs, is here, too. The pictures from his solo run across

Olympic National Park in 1994, five years after he became director of the fine arts center. Seniuk has been a long-distance runner since, seeking grants, working on fundraisers — and bringing art of all kinds to this far corner of the continent. The Port Angeles Fine Arts Center is the Olympic Peninsula’s contemporary art museum, built on land bequested by Esther Barrows Webster, the late owner of the Port Angeles Evening News that later became the Peninsula Daily News. Webster gave the property to the city, and McKiernan became its first director. The center thrives, Seniuk has said, because of its supportive community: artists, art lovers and sponsors such as Kitsap “Take Me to the River” by Charles Miller is one highlight of “25! A Silver Bank, which provided the fund- Milestone,” the show opening Sunday at the Port Angeles Fine Arts ing for the “25!” show. The exhi- Center. bition also includes a display of and out in Webster’s Woods. also Gwinna’s grandmother. The other old posters and “On Center” “He is always interested in ideas,” image is of Gwinna in flight. newsletters, alongside works by local Berger said. “It isn’t just decorative art The Gwinna book will also be on artists such as Peninsula College art professor Michael Paul Miller, Sequim or art for art’s sake,” at the center; “it’s display, Berger said. She has not been art that evokes thought, and feeling to the fine arts center for some time, photographer Charlotte Watts and and depth.” and hopes to attend Sunday’s opening Port Townsend-area sculptors David For “25!” Berger has contributed a reception for “25!” Eisenhour and Tom Jay. Contributors pair of illustrations from Gwinna, her “It is always an honor,” she said, “to from farther afield include photogra1990 Washington Governor’s Awardhave something in a show there.” pher Mary Randlett of Seattle and winning book about a girl born with To learn more about the Port AngeBarbara Berger of Bainbridge Island. wings. At first she doesn’t know how les Fine Arts Center, visit www. “Jake’s vision is essential,” Berger she is different, but at age 12, she dis- PAFAC.org or phone 360-457-3532. said of Seniuk. “He has put together a While the gallery is open from 11 a.m. lot of very interesting shows,” added the covers the wings and must learn how till 5 p.m. Wednesdays through Sunauthor and artist, who first showed her to use them. One illustration, which Seniuk days, the 5-acre Webster’s Woods park work here in the 1990s. “He includes a lot of different mediums, including con- describes as a work of magical realism, around it is open daily from dawn till shows the “Mother of the Owl,” who is dusk. ceptual pieces,” both inside the gallery


8

Friday, October 14, 2011

Peninsula Daily News

In a Candlelight Concert in Port Townsend next Thursday, pianist Helen Lauritzen, lyric soprano Linda Bach, pianist Nan Toby Tyrrell and guitarist Paul Becker will offer an evening of autumninspired songs.

Peninsula Spotlight

Sounds of fall, turning time Candlelight Concert to benefit Jefferson County Food Bank soprano Linda Bach, Perry Spring of PT Songlines and PORT TOWNSEND — Wild Rose Chorale member “Seasons Turning: Time Marj Iuro. and Memories” is the Paul Becker, another theme of the next Candlelocal musician, will play light Concert at the Trinity clarinet and guitar while United Methodist Church, 609 Taylor St., on Thursday Helen Lauritzen will add piano accompaniment. night. Nan Toby Tyrrell, a piaDoors will open at nist well-known around 6:30 p.m. Thursday for the Port Townsend, will offer 7 p.m. performance, and “September Song,” everyone is invited to stay “Autumn Leaves, “Starand enjoy refreshments dust,” “Memory” and other afterward. reflections, on the Petrof Admission is a suggrand piano; the soloists to gested $10 donation, while sing with her include lyric children get in free. This month, all proceeds will benefit the Jefferson County Food Bank. For more details about the Candlelight Concert series, phone 360-774-1644. Peninsula Spotlight

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Peninsula Daily News

9

Friday, October 14, 2011

Bosnian film tonight’s offering Seattle graphic novelist to give in college’s Global Lens series workshops at Clallam libraries Peninsula Spotlight

PORT ANGELES — “Belvedere,� a feature film about the legacy of the Balkans civil war, is this week’s installment of the Global Lens series, screening tonight at Peninsula College, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd. The movie will start at 7 p.m. in the new Maier Performance Hall in the southeastern corner of the campus, and admission is $5, or free for Peninsula College students. “Belvedere� is the name of a refugee camp where widows, mothers and children stayed after their loved ones were killed in

the 1995 Srebrenica massacre. The film is considered the first to deal directly with the massacre, one of Europe’s worst atrocities since World War II. In it, actors and real-life survivors tell the story, as the mostly female relatives of the dead wander among mass graves, searching for the remains of 8,000 Muslim men and boys. The movie also follows one Srebrenica youth who tries to escape life in the camp by entering the world of “reality� television — and then realizes there can be no escape from the past until justice is served.

The black-and-white footage used to portray the life of the main character, whose inner voice articulates lines of a famous Bosnian poet, is in stark contrast with the bright colors and small talk on reality TV. “Belvedere� is in Bosnian with English subtitles and has a running time of 90 minutes. To find out more about the Global Lens series, which brings foreign films to the college and to the Rose Theatre, 235 Taylor St. in Port Townsend, visit www.PenCol.edu or www. PTFilmFest.com.

By Diane Urbani de la Paz

Peninsula Spotlight

Teenagers are invited to join Seattle graphic novelist David Lasky in any one of three 90-minute drawing workshops at local libraries next week. In each free session, Lasky will give a brief talk on how he got into comics, and then show youngsters ages 12 to 18 how they can get started — right then and there. The artist will walk everyone through the process of designing a simple character and planning a short story,

and invite them to create a short comic book before the end of their workshop. Lasky’s first class will start at 3:30 p.m. Monday at the Forks Library, 171 S. Forks Ave. Then he’ll go to the Port Angeles Library, 2210 S. Peabody St., for a 6:30 p.m. workshop there. His third and final class will take place at the Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave., at 4 p.m. Tuesday. These no-cost events are part of Teen Read Week, which has a theme this year of “Picture It @Your Library.� The week is designed to highlight the variety of books and other resources at public and

school libraries. Teens don’t need to sign up ahead of time, but they may want to arrive early since space is limited in the workshops. For more details, phone the Forks Library at 360374-6402, the Port Angeles Library at 360-417-8500 or the Sequim Library at 360683-1161. Information about the free materials and activities across the North Olympic Library System also awaits at www.NOLS.org.

Eat Local @ Cheese

Featuring Fresh, Local Fare from the Peninsula and Beyond: Bread from Sequim’s Bell Street Bakery, Fresh Local Butter from Golden Glen Creamery, Frommage Blanc from Mt Townsend Creamery, and MORE!

Musical Score by Sergei Prokofiev

Saturday, October 29, 2011 ~ 7:30pm at the Port Angeles High School Auditorium Tickets: $25-15/Adults; $22-13 Youth 12 & under

Tickets on sale through www.brownpapertickets.com, Port Book and News in Port Angeles & Pacific Mist Books in Sequim Sponsored by

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Friday, October 14, 2011

Peninsula Daily News

PS    Nightlife

Clallam County Port Angeles Bar N9NE (229 W. First St.) — Yes We Can Can at Art Rock, tonight, at 8 p.m. bring canned foods plus $3 cover, with music by Gems and Daniel Rapport; karaoke, Wednesday, 9 p.m. to 2 a.m.; open mic, Thursday, 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. Castaways Night Club (1213 Marine Drive) — Jimmy Hoffman Band, today, 9 a.m.

to 1 p.m.; Denny Secord, Jr, and Haywire, Saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Jerry’s Country Jam, Thursday, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Dupuis Restaurant (256861 Highway 101) — Bob and Dave (blues), Wednesday, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Fairmount Restaurant (1127 W. Highway 101) — Les Wamboldt and Olde Tyme Country, tonight, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.; Dave and Rosalie Secord’s Luck of the Draw Band,

The Port Townsend chamber Music Festival

The Junction Roadhouse (US Highway 101 and state Highway 112, junction) — Jam session hosted by Johnnie Mustang, Sunday, 7 p.m. to 11 p.m.; Jason Mogi, Paul StehrGreen and Kim Trenerry, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Port Angeles Senior Center (Seventh and Peabody streets) — Wally and the Boys (ballroom dance favorites), Tuesday 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., $5, first timers free. R Bar (132 E. Front St) — Voo-Doo BBQ Blues Band, Sunday, 10 p.m. Wine on the Waterfront (115 E. Railroad Ave.) — Julia Maguire (Modern and classical folk, rock and pop), Saturday, 8 p.m. $3.

Lucinda Carver, Artistic Director

Joseph F. Wheeler Celebration Series

Sequim and Blyn

sunday, October 23 2 PM

The Buzz (128 N. Sequim Ave. ) — Open mic hosted by

Kelly Thomas and Victor Reventlow, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. The Cedars at Dungeness (1965 Woodcock Road) — Al Harris Trio, tonight 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Oasis Sports Bar and Grill (301 E. Washington St.) — Fret Noir, tonight, 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.; Irish Session, Tuesday, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.; Denny Secord Trio, Wednesday, 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. 7 Cedars Casino (270756 Highway 101) — 2 Dog Night, tonight, 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. and Kapwnya (disc jockey), tonight, 10 p.m. to 1 a.m.; Mr. Pink and Pink Party 4, Saturday, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.; It’s All About Me, Sunday, 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.; jam session with Barry Burnett and friends, Monday,7 p.m. to 10 p.m.; Comedy Night with Linda Diaz and Auggie Smith, Wednesday, 8:30 p.m.

Scare for the Cure Percentage of proceeds going to Relay For Life

with Lucinda Carver, piano Henry Gronnier, violin Eric Gaenslen, violoncello Thomas Diener, viola

3 Nights Only 50600 Hwy 112 in Joyce October 28-30 • 6pm - 11pm Check out our amazing tricks, then stay for our treats!

PROgRaM: Haydn: Piano Trio in G major (“Gypsy”) Fauré: Sonata in A major for Violin and Piano Brahms: Piano Quartet in G minor This performance is dedicated to the memory of longtime Centrum supporter Frank Dameron.

Hadlock House (141 Chimacum Road) — Karaoke, tonight and Saturday, 9 p.m. to 1:30 a.m.; all ages open mic, Wednesday, 7 p.m. Inn at Port Hadlock (310 Hadlock Bay Road) — Open mic hosted by Dave Sheehan, Thursday, 7 p.m.

Undertown (211 Taylor St.) — 907 and Britt, tonight, 8 p.m. Upstage (923 Washington St.) — Steve Grandinetti Band (blues, rock, jazz and reggae originals with New Orleans funk, blues and R&B covers), tonight, 8 p.m. to 11 p.m.; Michael Tomlinson (folk/rock, jazzy-pop, ballads and Americana), Saturday, 7 p.m., $20, followed by Steve Grandinetti (solo piano), 9:30 p.m. to 11 p.m.; live open mic, Monday, 6 p.m.; George Kahumoku (Hawaiian music), Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., $20; Nathan James Blues Band, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., $10; The Gonzalo Bergara Band (Gypsy jazz), Thursday, 8 p.m., $12.

Kevin Tracy

1051⁄2 East First Street, Suite A Port Angeles, WA 98362 (360) 452-9080

www.tracywealthmanagement.com Securities and investment advisory services offered through FSC Securities Corporation, member FINRA/SIPC and a registered investment advisor. Tracy Wealth Management is not affiliated with FSC Securities Corporation or registered as a broker-dealer or investment advisor.

0A5100748

1A5136808

Not Recommended for Children Under 12

Ajax Cafe (271 Water St.) — Jim Nyby (piano harmonica and vocals with blues, ballads, jazz and soul), Sunday, 5:30 p.m.; Jess (piano stylings), Tuesday, 6 p.m.; Buzz Rogowski (jazz and originals on the piano), Thursday, 6 p.m.

Sirens (823 Water St.) — Hillfolk Noir (acoustic old-time sound), tonight, 9 p.m., $5; Stargrass (atmospheric and thoughtful music), Saturday, 9 p.m., $5; open mic, Wednesday, 9 p.m.; karaoke, Thursday, 9 p.m.

Financial Planner - FSC Securities Corporation

Happy Halloween! 1A5136667

Or at the venue box office, one hour prior to performance

Port Hadlock

rock), Thursday, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.

The Boiler Room (711 Uptown Pub (1016 LawWater St.) — Open mic Thursday, sign up 7 p.m., starts at 8, rence St.) — Open mic hosted by Greg Vinson, Tuesan all ages venue. day, 8 p.m. Castle Key Restaurant This listing, which runs and Lounge (Seventh and every Friday, iannounces live Sheridan streets) — Ranger and the Re-arrangers (Django entertainment at Clallam and Jefferson counties night spots. style Gypsy jazz), Saturday, Call in your information by 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m., $8. Tuesday to 360-417-3527, fax it to 360-417-3521, or e-mail The Owl Sprit (218 Polk St.) — Steve Grandinetti (solo news@peninsuladaily guitar and vocals, funky blues news.com.

$600 per Person

Lucinda Carver

Jefferson County

Alchemy (842 Washington St.) — Trevor Hanson (classical guitar), Monday, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Haunted House

Members of the Rossetti string Quartet

Three Crabs Restaurant (11 3 Crabs Road) — The Old Sidekicks, Saturday, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Port Townsend

Biohazard Freak Show

Wheeler Theater Fort Worden State Park

TickeTs: $25/$30 www.centrum.org 800.746.1982 (a processing fee applies)

Tuesday, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Peninsula Spotlight


Peninsula Spotlight

Peninsula Daily News

Friday, October 14, 2011

PS At the Movies: Week of Oct. 14-20 Port Angeles

“Drive” (R) — Ryan Gosling plays a Hollywood stunt driver who moonlights as a getaway driver and gets entangled in a crime plot that goes awry. At Lincoln Theater. Showtimes 4:55 p.m. and 7:05 p.m. daily, plus 9:15 p.m. today and Saturday. “50/50” (R) — Comedic account of a 27-year-old guy (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) who has a cancer diagnosis, and his subsequent struggle to beat the disease. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes 5 p.m. and 7:05 p.m. daily, plus 9:05 p.m. today and Saturday, plus 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. “Footloose (2011)” (PG-13) — In this remake of the 1984 blockbuster, city kid Ren McCormack moves to a small town where rock ’n’ roll and dancing have been banned. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes 4:55 p.m. and 7:10 p.m. daily, plus 9:25 p.m. today and Saturday, plus 12:35 p.m. and 2:45 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. “Killer Elite” (R) — When his mentor is taken captive, a

Angeles listings. At Rose Theatre. Showtime 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. daily.

Where to find the cinemas

“Dolphin Tale” (PG) — A boy (Nathan Gamble) and a dolphin whose tail was lost in a crab trap. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes 5:10 p.m. and 7:20 p.m. daily, plus 9:30 p.m. today and Saturday, plus 12:50 p.m. and 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.

■  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, Discovery Bay; 360-385-0859.

retired member of Britain’s Elite Special Air Service is forced into action. His mission: Kill three assassins dispatched by their cunning leader. At Lincoln Theater. Showtime 7:15 p.m. daily. “Moneyball” (PG-13) — Brad Pitt stars in the story of Oakland A’s general manager Billy Beane’s successful attempt to put together a baseball club on a budget by employing computer-generated analysis to draft his players. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes 4:45 p.m. and 7:15 p.m. daily, plus 9:45 p.m. today and Saturday, plus 2:15 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.

“The Guard” (R) — An unorthodox Irish policeman with a confrontational personality (Brendan Gleeson) is teamed up with an uptight FBI agent (Don Cheadle) to investigate an international drugsmuggling ring. At Rose Theatre. Showtimes 4:30 p.m. and 7:20 p.m. daily.

Saturday, plus 12:35 p.m. and 2:50 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. “The Thing” (R) — At an Antarctic research site, the discovery of an alien craft leads to a confrontation between graduate student Kate Lloyd and scientist Dr. Sander Halvorson. At Lincoln Theater. Showtimes 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. daily, plus 9 p.m. today and Saturday. “What’s Your Number” (R) — A woman (Anna Faris) looks back at the past 20 men she’s had relationships with in her life and wonders if one of them might be her one true love. At Lincoln Theater. Showtimes 5:10 p.m. daily, plus 9:30 p.m. today and Saturday.

“Real Steel” (PG-13) — Set in the near future, where robot boxing is a top sport, a struggling promoter (Hugh Jackman) feels he’s found a champion in a discarded robot. Port Townsend At Deer Park Cinema. Show“Moneyball” (PG-13) — times 5:05 p.m. and 7:25 p.m. daily, plus 9:40 p.m. today and See synopsis under Port

“Dolphin Tale” (PG) — See synopsis under Port Angeles listings. At the Uptown Theatre. Showtime 5 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. today, 430 p.m. and 7:20 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, 7:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday.

The Associated Press

Evangeline Lilly, left, and Hugh Jackman star in “Real Steel.”

4th Annual Saturday, October 22, 4-7 pm At Vern Burton Center 308 E. 4th Street in Port Angeles Hosted by Park View Villas & Crestwood Convalescent Center Entertainment by “Luck of the Draw” Silent auction, raffle prizes & “Kiss the Pig” contest!

on the water • 115 E. Railroad Ave. • 452-2700

12th Annual Train Show & Swap Meet Sat., Oct. 15th 10-4pm & Sun., Oct. 16th 10-3pm, 2011

SEQUIM PRAIRIE GRANGE

290 Macleay Rd. Sequim, WA.

ROAST TURKEY OR SMOKED VIRGINIA HAM

Homemade stuffing, mashed potatoes, Gravy, Veggies, Cranberry Sauce, Salad, Bread, Beverage & Dessert

14

$

95

MONDAY NIGHTS

Buy 1 & Get 2nd At Half Price 95 All you can eat $

10

SENIOR DINNERS STARTING AT $898 4PM - CLOSING

WEDNESDAY NIGHTS

5- 7- 9 Appetizers

$

$

$

Tickets $15, on sale at Park View Villas, Crestwood Convalescent Center & Port Angeles Senior Center Benefits support Port Angeles Senior Center

PASTA BOWL 95

10

Prime Rib

Eggplant Parmesan

Family Style Green Salad

Butternut Squash Soup

Garlic Roasted Red Potatoes

Green Bean Almondine

Pumpkin Cheesecake

Bourbon Apple Pie

Beer, Wine & Sparkling Apple Cider

Tickets also available at the door

THURSDAY NIGHTS Never Ending Served with $ Salad & Bread

Menu:

1430 Park View Lane | Port Angeles, WA (360) 452-7222 | www.villageconcepts.com

1A5136900

95 Burger & Brew 9 – or – Salad, Chowder & Bread

$

TUESDAY NIGHTS

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FREE Admission DOOR Prizes HO Model Train Layout on Display & Operating!

EVERY SUNDAY The ALL DAY Sunday Dinner Special

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Friday, October 14, 2011

Peninsula Daily News

Peninsula Spotlight

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Quick Draw Cash Dash

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