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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS May 12, 2013 | $1.50

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Victim hurt in Hadlock SUV plunge Man held in car theft allegedly leaped clear BY JOE SMILLIE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Clallam County firefighters examine a house at 2325 Ryan Drive that was damaged during Friday’s bulldozer rampage in the Gales Addition east of Port Angeles. More photos below and on Page A7.

Bulldozer attack destroys 4 homes BY JEREMY SCHWARTZ PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Neighbors, family members and friends Saturday were picking up the pieces of homes and other property strewn across a Gales Addition neighborhood after a nearly lifelong resident of the area allegedly cut a swath of destruction through the area with a logging bulldozer Friday. The estimated 10-minute rampage, allegedly induced by a long-simmering property-line dispute, damaged four homes, a pickup truck, a boat and multiple sheds and other outbuildings, in addition to toppling a Clallam County Public

Found hiding under a bed

He was booked Friday for investigation of two counts of first-degree assault and six counts of first-degree malicious mischief, a class B felony.

Rampage in Gales Addition Utility District power pole, knocking out power to an estimated thousands at about noon Friday. “It’s just unbelievable,� said 74-year-old Dan Davis, whose two houses were torn up. Authorities said Davis’ neighbor, Barry Alan Swegle — who lived on North Davis Street — did the damage because he was angry with his neighbors, especially Davis. Swegle, 51, remained in the Clallam County jail with no bond set Saturday.

Probably in court Monday Ron Cameron, chief criminal deputy with the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office, said Swegle likely will make his first appearance in Superior Court on Monday. Sheriff’s deputies are continuing to sift through pages of witnesses statements and interviews to iron out exactly what happened in the neighborhood just east of Port Angeles. TURN

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PORT HADLOCK –– A screaming woman who plummeted down a 150-foot hill in a stolen SUV after the man in the driver’s seat jumped from the moving vehicle to end an 80 mph run from the law suffered only bruised ALSO . . . ribs, authorities said. She was contacted at ■Suspect’s home Thursday, treated sister held by medics and was in separate recovering Saturday, car chase, said Sgt. Andrew Perburglary/A4 nsteiner of the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office. Because she is considered a victim, Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office personnel would not disclose her name. Authorities said Cordis Earl McBride, 28, of Port Hadlock was the man who jumped from the sport utility vehicle early Thursday morning.

He was arrested after Jefferson County deputies, who were investigating the theft of another vehicle, found him hiding beneath a bed in a house on Stevens Street on Thursday afternoon. McBride, who had been free on a $25,000 bond from previous charges of burglary, theft and financial fraud, was in the Jefferson County jail Saturday for investigation of two counts of theft of a motor vehicle and one count each of attempting to elude a police vehicle, vehicular assault, malicious mischief, reckless endangerment, hit-and-run and driving with a suspended license. Capt. Ben Stamper with the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office gave an account.

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Gales suspect had drug, threat arrests BY ROB OLLIKAINEN

Rampage in Gales Addition

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

The logging bulldozer involved in Friday’s rampage east of Port Angeles is seen near a shed and out building behind 2325 Ryan Drive.

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PORT ANGELES — The man who allegedly bulldozed four homes, a boat, a truck and a power pole in his Gales Addition neighborhood pleaded guilty in 2011 to harassment and possession of methamphetamine, court papers show. Barry A. Swegle, 51, allegedly made verbal threats to kill a man during a roadside dispute near the Port Angeles Boat Haven on Oct. 29, 2010. Two months earlier, Clallam County sheriff’s deputies discovered a bag of meth in Swegle’s right front pocket as he was being arrested for investigation of stalking. He was never charged with stalking. The verbal threat and drug charges were merged into one case, to which Swegle pleaded guilty in March 2011. He was ordered to serve 192 hours of community service in lieu of 24 days in jail.

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Port Angeles police said Swegle was following William Hollingsworth as they drove westbound on Marine Drive when Hollingsworth pulled over and got out of his truck. Swegle parked his vehicle, approached the man with his fists clenched and told Hollingsworth that he “knew what he did and he was going to kill him,� according to the certification for probable cause filed in court. TURN TO SWEGLE/A6

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Bench warrants were issued in 2010 and 2011 when Swegle failed to appear in court for hearings in the drug and threat cases.

BUSINESS/POLITICS D1 E1 CLASSIFIED COMMENTARY/LETTERS A10 C4 DEAR ABBY C11 DEATHS C12 MOVIES A3 NATION A2 PENINSULA POLL PENINSULA PROFILE C5 TV WEEK

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UpFront

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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Tundra

The Samurai of Puzzles

By Chad Carpenter

Copyright © 2013, Michael Mepham Editorial Services

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

PORT ANGELES main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 General information: 360-452-2345 Toll-free from Jefferson County and West End: 800-826-7714 Fax: 360-417-3521 Lobby hours: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday ■ See Commentary page for names, telephone numbers and email addresses of key executives and contact people. SEQUIM news office: 360-681-2390 147-B W. Washington St. Sequim, WA 98382 JEFFERSON COUNTY news office: 360-385-2335 1939 E. Sims Way Port Townsend, WA 98368

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Newsroom, sports CONTACTS! To report news: 360-417-3531, or call one of our local offices: Sequim, 360-681-2390; Jefferson County/Port Townsend, 360-385-2335; West End/Forks, 800-826-7714 Sports desk/reporting a sports score: 360-417-3525 Letters to Editor: 360-417-3527 Club news, “Seen Around” items, subjects not listed above: 360-417-3527 To purchase PDN photos: www.peninsuladailynews.com, click on “Photo Gallery.” Permission to reprint or reuse articles: 360-417-3530 To locate a recent article: 360-417-3527

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS (ISSN 1050-7000, USPS No. 438.580), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Black Press Group Ltd./Sound Publishing Inc., published each morning Sunday through Friday at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. POSTMASTER: Periodicals postage paid at Port Angeles, WA. Send address changes to Circulation Department, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Contents copyright © 2013, Peninsula Daily News MEMBER

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The Associated Press

Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

O.J. to get Vegas hearing on retrial bid O.J. SIMPSON WILL return next week to the Las Vegas courthouse where he was convicted of leading an armed sports memorabilia heist to ask a judge for a new trial on the grounds that his lawyer botched his case. Simpson will take the witness stand to testify that the Florida lawyer who collected nearly $700,000 is to blame for Simpson his conviction for armed robbery and kidnapping in 2008 and his failed appeal to the Nevada Supreme Court in 2010. Simpson, 65, is scheduled to be in Clark County District Court beginning Monday for the entire fiveday hearing. He could testify Wednesday before a judge who has agreed to hear 19 separate points, mostly claiming that lawyer Yale Galanter provided such poor representation that Simpson deserves a new trial. Simpson is serving a nine- to 33-year sentence that makes him first eligible for parole at age 70.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

‘ULTIMATE SURVIVAL ALASKA’ Dallas Seavey, center, high-fives Willi Prittie in the Tordrillo Mountains in Alaska in 2012. Seavey, who became the youngest Iditarod champion when he won the race last year, is among eight outdoor adventurers featured in the reality show “Ultimate Survival Alaska,” which premieres today on NatGeoTV.

Little Richard home Officials in Georgia have decided to move the boyhood home of Little Richard to spare it from a highway construction project. Macon Mayor Robert Reichert made the announcement Friday. WMAZ-TV reported that the 80-year-old singer received an honorary degree Saturday from Mercer University in Macon. Born Richard Wayne Penniman, Little Richard

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL

grew up in Macon’s Pleasant Hill community. It’s a neighborhood that was later divided by the construction of Interstate 75. The “Tutti Frutti” singer’s boyhood home faced possible demolition to make room for a planned expansion of the interchange where I-75 meets Interstate 16 to Savannah. At its new location near the Pleasant Hill community garden, the house will be used as a neighborhood resource center.

THURSDAY’S QUESTION: Which one of the following gives you the heebiejeebies the most?

GEORGE SAUER, 69, who as a wide receiver for the Jets played a pivotal role in the team’s stunning victory in Super Bowl III and who later quit professional football because he considered it dehumanizing, died Tuesday in

Fleas

4.5% 12.2%

Spiders

19.5%

Rats

21.1%

Maggots

24.9%

Ants 0.8% Other

By The Associated Press

_________

3.2%

Cockroaches

Passings ALAN ABELSON, 87, who spent 57 years as a writer, editor and chief columnist for financial news publication Barron’s, has died. The author of the longrunning Up and Down Wall Street column died Thursday of a heart Mr. Abelson attack, said Sara Blask, a spokeswoman for Dow Jones, which publishes Barron’s. Mr. Abelson had been on a medical leave of absence from Barron’s for the past three months, The Wall Street Journal reported. Mr. Abelson joined Barron’s in 1956 and became managing editor nine years later. Mr. Abelson began writing Up and Down Wall Street in 1966, and the column became a weekly mainstay of the publication for nearly half a century.

Mice

13.8%

Total votes cast: 907 Westerville, Ohio. His sister, Dana Keifer, confirmed the death, saying the cause was congestive heart failure. She said he had been struggling with Alzheimer’s disease for some time. The Baltimore Colts were three-touchdown favorites when they faced the Jets in the 1969 Super Bowl in Miami, but they lost 16-7 in one of the great upsets in pro football history. A big factor was the stellar play of Jets quarterback Joe Namath, who had brashly guaranteed a victory. Mr. Sauer was another. Mr. Sauer was a fourtime All-Star in the American Football League. He played for the Jets in the AFL and then the NFL

from 1965 through 1970, appearing in 84 games and catching 309 passes for 4,965 yards and 28 touchdowns. He retired from the NFL at the end of the 1970 season at 27, at the peak of his career (though he would return briefly to the game with short-lived rival leagues).

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

Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications 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

1938 (75 years ago) Opening on property that was one of the first lots of the Port Angeles townsite sold by the U.S. government in 1864 is Todd’s Cycle Shop, 125 W. First St. Smith was a lighthouse keeper and the father of Victor Smith, considered the “father of Port Angeles.”

bids and called for new ones

Laugh Lines

THINGS MOM WOULD NEVER SAY: “How on earth can you see the TV sitting so far back?” “Just leave all the lights on. It makes the house look Seen Around more cheery.” Peninsula snapshots “Let me smell that shirt. Yup, it’s good for another PORT ANGELES 1963 (50 years ago) week.” OFFICE worker missing The Port Angeles City “Go ahead and keep office chair when sitting Council voted to extend Lau- that stray dog, honey. I’ll be down, landing on the floor ridsen Boulevard east from glad to feed and walk him while the wheeled chair is Lincoln Street to Peabody every day.” sent across the aisle. Creek. “Well, if Rachel’s mamma Fortunately, no injuries says it’s OK, that’s good Paving of two lanes will either to the embarrassed enough for me.” be accomplished next year. worker or the chair . . . “Don’t bother wearing a The council also learned WANTED! “Seen Around” jacket — the wind-chill is that bids to repave the items. Send them to PDN News bound to improve.” Eighth Street bridge over Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles “I don’t have a tissue with Tumwater Creek ran at WA 98362; fax 360-417-3521; or me. Just use your sleeve.” least $5,000 over budget. email news@peninsuladailynews. Your Monologue The council rejected the com.

based on specification changes by City Engineer John Warder.

1988 (25 years ago) Nearly 200 Port Townsend residents gathered at Fort Worden State Park to discuss concerns for the city, including issues related to strip commercial development along Upper Sims Way. Residents voiced the hope that a core group holding a two-day planning session will consider issues such as traffic, pedestrian and bicycle safety and needs, greenbelt or park areas, preservation of native trees and sign controls. One alternative suggestion was to channel traffic into town on Sims Way and out of town on Old Discovery Road, a proposal that drew mixed reactions.

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS SUNDAY, May 12, the 132nd day of 2013. There are 233 days left in the year. This is Mother’s Day. Today’s Highlights in History: ■ On May 12, 1943, during World War II, Axis forces in North Africa surrendered. The two-week Trident Conference, headed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, opened in Washington. On this date: ■ In 1922, a 20-ton meteor crashed near Blackstone, Va. ■ In 1932, the body of Charles Lindbergh Jr., the kidnapped son of Charles and Anne Lindbergh,

was found in a wooded area near Hopewell, N.J. ■ In 1937, Britain’s King George VI was crowned at Westminster Abbey; his wife, Elizabeth, was crowned as queen consort. ■ In 1958, the United States and Canada signed an agreement to create the North American Air Defense Command (later the North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD). ■ In 1963, Betty Miller became the first woman to fly solo across the Pacific Ocean as she landed her Piper Apache in Brisbane, Australia, having left Oakland, Calif., on April 30, making three stopovers along the way. ■ In 1982, in Fatima, Portugal,

security guards overpowered a Spanish priest armed with a bayonet who attacked Pope John Paul II. In 2008, the pope’s longtime private secretary revealed that the pontiff was slightly wounded in the assault. ■ In 2002, Jimmy Carter arrived in Cuba, becoming the first U.S. president in or out of office to visit since the 1959 revolution that put Fidel Castro in power. ■ Ten years ago: The Texas House ground to a standstill after 51 Democratic lawmakers left the state in a dispute over a Republican congressional redistricting plan. The Democrats returned four days later from Oklahoma, having succeeded in killing the bill.

■ Five years ago: Cleveland Indians second baseman Asdrubal Cabrera turned the 14th unassisted triple play in major league history during the second game of a doubleheader against Toronto. ■ One year ago: At least 100,000 Spaniards angered by grim economic prospects and the handling of the international financial crisis turned out for street demonstrations, marking the one-year anniversary of a spontaneous movement that inspired similar protests elsewhere. Miami’s LeBron James became the eighth player in NBA history to win the MVP award three times.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Sunday, May 12, 2013 PAGE

A3 Briefly: Nation and six educators were shot dead in December and rebuilding on the site. The group of 28 Newtown elected officials voted unanimously in favor of a plan that would construct a new building CLEVELAND — As relatives on the property where the existof the Cleveland kidnapping ing Sandy Hook Elementary and rape suspect recounted School is located. The proposal claims of his paranoia and vionow goes to the local school lent outbursts, DNA testing con- board and ultimately voters. firmed the man accused of holdParent Daniel Krauss, whose ing three women captive for daughter is a second-grader, nearly a decade is the father of said he was pleased. “It’s been a a 6-year-old girl who also place for learning . . . and it’s escaped from the house. going to go back to that.” Ariel Castro, 52, News show guests charged with WASHINGTON — Guest lineups for rape and kidtoday’s TV news shows: napping, ■ ABC’s “This Week” — Sen. John remained McCain. R-Ariz.; Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I.; journalist George Will; retired Gen. jailed Friday James Cartwright; journalist Jonathan under a suiKarl; columnist Ruth Marcus; Democratic cide watch on strategist Donna Brazile; political analyst $8 million Matthew Dowd; author Olympia Snowe. Castro bond while ■ NBC’s “Meet the Press” — Rep. prosecutors Darrell Issa, R-Calif.; Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.; former Ambassador weighed more charges. Thomas Pickering; Rep. Adam Kinzinger, Castro was said to be prone R-Ill.; journalist David Brooks; journalist to violent outbursts against the Katty Kay; and author Wes Moore. now-dead mother of his adult ■ CBS’s “Face the Nation” — Pickchildren. Two of the women ering; former Defense Secretary Robert Gates; Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill.; Sen. freed from Castro’s home, Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H.; Dr. Maya Angelou; including the one who gave journalists David Rohde, David birth to the girl, returned to rel- and Sanger and Sharyl Attkisson. atives’ houses last week. ■ CNN’s “State of the Union” — The third woman, Michelle Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine; Reps. Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii, and Tammy DuckKnight, was released from a worth, D-Ill.; Republican consultant Alex hospital Friday.

DNA tests show kidnap suspect fathered child

Panel: Rebuild school NEWTOWN, Conn. — A task force of elected officials on Friday recommended tearing down the Connecticut elementary school where 20 first-graders

Castellanos; Democratic strategist Mo Elleithee; and journalist Karen Tumulty. ■ “Fox News Sunday” — Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich.; Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash.; Rep.-elect Mark Sanford, R-S.C.; journalist Bill Kristol and Kimberley Strassel; former Rep. Dennis Kucinich; political analyst Juan Williams.

The Associated Press

More nation and world news/Section D

Officials tried to alter Benghazi talking points Disclosure may hurt Democrats THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Steady drips of information about a horrific night in Libya are fueling Republican arguments and ads designed to undercut the Democrats’ early favorite for president in 2016. After eight months of trying, Democrats still are struggling to move past the terrorist attack on the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi last Sept. 11 that killed Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans. Newly revealed communications show that senior State Department officials pressed for changes in the talking points that U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice used a few days after the Benghazi attacks. The officials expressed concerns that Congress might criticize the Obama administration for ignoring warnings of a growing threat in Libya. The White House has contended it only made stylistic changes to the intelligence agency talking points, in which Rice suggested that spontaneous protests over an anti-Islamic video set off the deadly attack.

Briefly: World Pakistanis go to polls despite violence fears ISLAMABAD — Pakistanis streamed to the polls Saturday, despite a string of attacks that killed 24 people, for a historic vote pitting former cricket star Imran Khan against a two-time prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, and an unpopular incumbent, President Asif Ali Zardari. The violence, which included blasts outside a political office in Karachi that left 10 dead, capped a bloody election season, in which more than 130 people have been killed. With the Pakistani Taliban threatening to target political parties Saturday, an estimated 600,000 security personnel fanned out across the country to protect polling sites and voters. Many Pakistanis seemed determined to cast their ballots despite the violence. “Yes, there are fears. But what should we do?” said Ali Khan, who was waiting to vote in Peshawar, where one of the blasts took place Saturday.

Turkey bombs kill 42 REYHANLI, Turkey — In one of the deadliest attacks in Turkey in recent years, two car bombs exploded near the border with Syria on Saturday, killing 42 and wounding 140 others. A Turkish official blamed Syria, calling the neighboring country’s intelligence service and

military “the usual suspects.” The blasts, which were 15 minutes apart and hit the town of Reyhanli’s busiest street, raised fears that Turkey could increasingly be drawn into Syria’s brutal civil war. Turkey already hosts Syria’s political opposition and rebel commanders, has given shelter to hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees and in the past retaliated against Syrian shells that landed in Turkey. “We know that the Syrian refugees have become a target of the Syrian regime,” Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc said. “Reyhanli was not chosen by coincidence.”

Milan pickax massacre ROME — An immigrant illegally living in Italy went on a rampage with a pickax in Milan at dawn Saturday, killing a passer-by and wounding four others in an apparently random attack, police said. The attack, which police said was carried out by a Ghanaian immigrant with a criminal record, revived a political debate over whether Italy should crack down harder on immigrants. Mada Kabiobo, 21, was taken into custody after the attacks on the northern outskirts of Milan, police said. Witnesses working at cafes near the attack said the man wildly swung a pickax, running down streets and striking passers-by, mainly on their heads. Pools of blood stained the streets. The Associated Press

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

State Department officials pressed for changes in the talking points that U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice, above, used after the deadly attack on the U.S. mission in Libya. The new details suggest greater political sensitivity and involvement by the White House and State Department. Rice and others eventually acknowledged that the Benghazi assault was a premeditated terrorist attack. Republicans said her Sept. 16 remarks were just the start of administration efforts to mislead Americans about what happened. The incident was heavily polit-

icized from the start, occurring less than two months before President Barack Obama’s re-election and while Hillary Rodham Clinton was secretary of state.

Speculations about Clinton The former New York senator and first lady, who infuriates many conservatives, ranks high in speculation about Democrats in the hunt for the 2016 presidential nomination.

IRS apologizes to tea party groups THE INTERNAL REVENUE Service apologized Friday for what it acknowledged was “inappropriate” targeting of conservative political groups during the 2012 election to see if they were violating their tax-exempt status. Agents singled out dozens of organizations for added reviews because they included the words “tea party” or “patriot” in their exemption applications, said Lois Lerner, who heads the IRS division that oversees tax-exempt groups. In some cases, groups were asked for lists of

donors, which violates IRS policy in most cases. The agency — led at the time by a Bush administration appointee — blamed low-level employees. But that wasn’t good enough for Republicans in Congress. “I call on the White House to conduct a transparent, government-wide review aimed at assuring the American people that these thuggish practices are not under way at the IRS,” said Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. The Associated Press

Paramedic vocal following Texas blast that killed 14 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WEST, Texas — Three days after a massive explosion at a Texas fertilizer plant, Bryce Reed climbed onto a coffee table at a local hotel where displaced families picked over donated sweatshirts and pizza. In a navy blue shirt emblazoned with “West EMS,” he gathered the crowd close. “You’re safe where you’re at,” Reed said, describing an anhydrous ammonia leak inside the rubble at the West Fertilizer Co. plant. “If you’re not, I’d be dragging you out of here myself.” On Friday, Reed was charged with having bomb-making material nine days after the April 17 plant explosion, which killed 14 people, including 10 first responders. Federal authorities stressed that Reed has not yet been linked

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to the plant explosion. In a statement released S a t u r d a y, Reed’s attorney, Jonathan Sibley, described his client as “heartbroken” Reed Sibley said Reed will plead not guilty to the explosives charge Wednesday. Reed allegedly gave the materials, including chemical powders, to a man April 26, and that man called authorities, according to court documents. Officials largely treated the West explosion as an industrial accident, though investigators are still searching for the cause of a fire that preceded the blast. A criminal investigation was

launched Friday. That day in the West hotel lobby, applause erupted when Reed stepped down. Yet no one had asked Reed to come, and in a town swarming with investigators who had handled all the official briefings, a local volunteer relaying such information was a stark contrast.

‘Let go’ by West EMS In fact, Reed had been “let go” by West EMS as of April 19, the day before the speech, according to an email obtained by The Associated Press sent by a regional EMS organization, the Heart of Texas Regional Advisory Council. Reed was among the most vocal residents after the fatal explosion, freely talking to reporters while other first responders declined interviews.

. . . more news to start your day

West: Prince Harry visits Colorado’s Warrior Games

Nation: Gunman reportedly holding multiple hostages

Nation: Hundreds sickened after dining at Vegas eatery

World: Suspected al-Qaida militants arrested in Egypt

BRITAIN’S PRINCE HARRY chatted and joked with wounded service members from the United Kingdom Saturday at the Warrior Games, the U.S. military’s Paralympic-style competition in Colorado. The prince, a veteran combat helicopter pilot, mingled with the 35-member British team and then sat on a gymnasium floor in a circle of 12 sitting volleyball team members, batting the ball around amid whoops and laughter. The veterans said Harry’s combat experience made him easy to talk to. “He knows what it’s like out there,” said British Army Capt. Dave Henson, 28, who lost both legs in Afghanistan.

A STANDOFF WITH an armed man who police said took multiple hostages entered its second day Saturday as authorities worked to negotiate his surrender and his captives’ safe release. The man, whose identity was not released, was holed up in a two-story red brick house in South Trenton more than 22 hours after the standoff began Friday afternoon, authorities said. Trenton police Lt. Stephen Varn declined to give any details on the number of people being held, their ages or relationship to the armed man. State police Lt. Stephen Jones called the standoff an “ongoing, tense situation.”

A NEW REPORT shows that 200 people who dined at one of Las Vegas’ most popular restaurants about a block off the Strip have reported food-poisoning symptoms, making it the largest outbreak Southern Nevada health officials have seen in at least a decade. Sick patrons who dined at Firefly, a tapas restaurant, in April hailed from 20 different states and two foreign countries, said a report released Friday by the Southern Nevada Health District. More likely became ill. Inspectors looking for the cause o the illnesses are checking employeehygiene practices and tracing the sources of some foods served raw.

EGYPT’S INTERIOR MINISTER said Saturday that security authorities had arrested three suspected al-Qaidalinked militants who were planning to carry out suicide attacks on vital installations and an unidentified embassy. Mohammed Ibrahim told a news conference that the men had been in contact with Dawood al-Assady, a leader of al-Qaida in southeast Asian countries such as Pakistan, and that the group was planning to attack government buildings and a foreign embassy. He did not disclose details. Security officials with knowledge of the case said only that a Western embassy was the target.


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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Woman in jail after break-in, wild chase BY JOE SMILLIE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — A Port Townsend woman was in custody in King County on Saturday after she allegedly tried to burglarize a home, led Jefferson County deputies on a chase, crashed her car, backed into one deputy’s car and forced another to leap out of her path Friday. Dakota McBride, 32, was arrested Friday by Jefferson County deputies after a homeowner reportedly interrupted an attempted burglary on Tanglewood Lane near Cape George, a private residential community about 4 miles west and slightly south of Port Townsend, shortly before 9 a.m. Friday. The homeowner, who was not named by authorities, told deputies that a woman in a blue Chevrolet Suburban had fled her home. McBride was arrested after a chase, deputies said. Dakota McBride is the sister of Curtis McBride, who was arrested Thursday for investigation of thefts of two

vehicles and other charges, authorities said. Dakota McBride was flown to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle after the crash left her with an injured ankle and possible internal injuries, deputies said. She was being held Saturday in King County jail without bail for investigation of second-degree burglary. Jefferson County Sheriff Anthony Hernandez said she likely also will face charges for eluding police. Sgt. Andrew Pernsteiner of the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office said she reportedly hit a Harborview nurse in the face, and he added that she may face a King County charge. Sgt. Ben Stamper of the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office gave this account: After the homeowner’s report, deputies who were called to investigate spotted the Suburban traveling east on South Discovery Road and gave chase. McBride turned into the Four Corners Mini Storage, sped around the complex,

lost control in the gravel lot and crashed into a cinderblock building hard enough to cause structural damage. Deputies Brian Anderson and Scott Boyd thought her car was disabled. They got out of their cars to make the arrest. McBride freed her car and backed into Anderson’s 20 13 Ford Police Interceptor, crumpling the front end. Then, she drove forward, forcing Boyd to leap into his car to avoid being hit. She took off westward down Discovery Road in the damaged Suburban. Deputies pursued her. After a short chase, she lost control of the car again and crashed into a large tree at the intersection with Milo Curry Road. McBride was taken by ambulance to Jefferson Healthcare in Port Townsend and later was flown to Harborview in Seattle. She was booked into King County’s Seattle Correctional Facility at 4:20 p.m. Friday.

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

UNDER

PRESSURE

Darryl Anderson of the Port Angeles Parks Department uses a pressure washer to clean the pickleball courts at Elks Playfield in Port Angeles on Thursday. With the advent of warmer weather, the courts are expected to become busier, prompting the periodic cleaning. For a five-day forecast, see Page C12.

Man hit by vehicle on Interstate 405 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BELLEVUE — A man in his 20s was struck by a vehicle and critically injured when he ran into traffic in Bellevue on Interstate 405. The Seattle Times

reported that the man had been riding in a car with a woman on I-405 just before 11 p.m. Friday. Washington State Trooper Julie Judson said the woman, who had been driving, pulled

over, and they were arguing. She said the man left the vehicle and ran into traffic, where he was struck by a Jeep Cherokee. He was taken to Harborview Medical Center.

SUV: 80 mph CONTINUED FROM A1 momentum from his ejection forced McBride over McBride ran from a dep- the blackberry-covered hill uty who tried to pull over a along with the vehicle. Then, McBride and the 1993 Ford Explorer because he suspected faulty lighting unidentified woman fled at 2:05 a.m. Thursday on north up the shoreline toward Irondale while depChimacum Road. The sport utility vehicle uties drove to the crash had been reported stolen scene, Hernandez said. A receipt left in the car May 6 from a Hadlock Aveshowed the two had purnue residence. McBride led the deputy chased ice cream at the on a two-minute chase, Poulsbo Walmart an hour turning onto side streets before the chase, the sheriff and cutting through park- added. Deputies located the ing lots, reaching speeds in excess of 80 mph in 25 mph woman at her home later speed zones, Stamper said. that day, and she was He drove into the yard of treated by emergency media Brighton Avenue home cal technicians for her injuand then jumped from the ries. At about 1 p.m. that day, moving car moments before it careened over a 150-foot a 1991 Chevrolet S-10 embankment, Stamper pickup truck was reported A wreck involving two cars and a semitrailer blocked U.S. Highway 101 for stolen from Blanche Avesaid. the Barr Road intersection west of Sequim on Friday. “The deputy could hear a nue, Stamper said. Deputies found the car female screaming from within the vehicle as it on Stevens Street and went over the bank,� received consent from the Stamper said in his state- home’s resident to conduct a search. ment. McBride was found “cowThe SUV came to rest near a garage on North ering under a bed� and was Water Street, Stamper said. arrested, Stamper said. The woman living at the Deputies could not find house told investigators either the driver or the that McBride had showed woman. up with the truck at about The highway was clear slowed because of traffic BY JOE SMILLIE 5:30 a.m. Vehicle destroyed PENINSULA DAILY NEWS by 4 p.m., the state Depart- and was hit from behind by ________ ment of Transportation the second car, a 2006 ToyThe vehicle was SEQUIM –– Medics said. Sequim-Dungeness Valley Ediota Corolla driven by Trisdestroyed, Stamper said. tor Joe Smillie can be reached at treated three people for Emergency medical ton Cortani, 21, also of Jefferson County Sheriff 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or at minor injuries after a wreck Anthony Hernandez said jsmillie@peninsuladailynews.com. involving two cars and a technicians with Clallam Sequim, Ward said. County Fire District No. 3 The collision spun semitrailer prompted the treated minor scrapes, and O’Connell’s car into the closure of U.S. Highway 101 no one was taken to a hospi- oncoming lane, where it colfor about an hour and a half tal, said State Patrol lided with a 2006 Peterbilt late last week. The wreck happened Trooper Rick Ward, an tractor-trailer driven by Call 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 Erik Mickelson, 46, of Des shortly after 2:30 p.m. Fri- investigator at the scene. www.peninsuladailynews.com Ward said the two cars Moines, Wash. day and left one car in a An infant riding in the ditch and another blocking were traveling westbound ENINSULA AILY EWS the highway at Barr Road. through the construction Kia was unharmed, Ward zone near the Barr Road said. intersection. Ward said Cortani told him that he had looked Description of wreck away from the road and did The lead car — a 2003 not notice that O’Connell Kia sedan driven by Stacy had slowed. The back of the Kia was O’Connell, 31, of Sequim —

JOE SMILLIE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

more than an hour at

3 injured in wreck of 2 cars, semitrailer on 101

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crushed from the initial contact, and the front passenger segment was severely damaged from the collision with the semitrailer, Ward said. Cortani’s Toyota ended up in the north ditch with a crumpled front end. All involved were wearing seat belts, Ward said. No citations were issued. The State Patrol is investigating whether the second driver should be cited for inattentive driving.

________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Joe Smillie can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or at jsmillie@peninsuladailynews.com.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

A5

Votes in for prizewinning mothers THE VOTES FOR the Peninsula Daily News’ online Mother’s Day Photo and Essay Contest are in! It was a tough decision, but more than 1,900 votes were tallied to select three winners from 32 entries. The first-place winner is Marleen Amundson of Forks. She was nominated by her children — Alanna Gores, Adam Amundson and Lisa Hainstock — in their essay “My Mom . . . My Best Buddy.� Marleen will be treated to gift certificates provided by contest sponsors Atma Massage and LD’s Woodfire Grill. The second-place winner is Norma Davis. She was nominated by Chandra McGoff, Jessica Pepper, Travis Parker and John Parker. Their essay: “My Mom is an Inspiration.� Norma will receive gift certificates provided by contest sponsors Peaceful Kneads Massage and Port Angeles Anytime Fitness.

The third-place winner is Patty Starks of Port Angeles. She was nominated by her daughter, Braedi Starks. The essay: “The World’s Best Mom (No, For Real, She Is).� Patty will receive gift certificates provided by contest sponsors Elwha River Casino and Extendicare. Our thanks to all who entered the contest. We wish everyone a wonderful Mother’s Day! Peninsula Daily News

Judge admonished by state commission BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS has hit a new milestone. The newspaper’s website, www. peninsuladailynews.com, logged 1,581,140 page views in April, with an average audience of 159,779 unique visitors. This is up from 1,578,650 page views and 158,193 unique visitors in March. The previous highest number of page views — 1,486,646 — was in November 2012, with an average audience that month of 183,556 unique visitors.

Top website The PDN’s website is far and away the dominant news, information and advertising website for the North Olympic Peninsula, according to statistics from Omniture, Quantcast and Google Analytics, all of which measure Web traffic. Unique visitors, in Web jargon, are regular readers, coming back again and again for fresh information. Their Internet address is counted only once, no matter how many times

he newspaper’s website, www.peninsuladailynews. com, logged a total of 13.1 million page views in 2012, and 9.5 million pageviews in 2011, the online traffic so far this year is already far outpacing the monthly numbers in those years.

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they visit the site in a month. The number of page views also demonstrates the volume of traffic a website receives. The print PDN is also strong, with an audited Sunday-through-Friday average circulation of 16,255, which translates to a readership of 44,244.

Two editions The newspaper puts out two editions daily — one tailored to Clallam County readers, the other for readers in Jefferson County. In addition to using independent agencies to measure its Web traffic, the PDN’s print circulation is verified by an independent auditor, the national Audit Bureau of Circulations. Peninsula Daily News

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PORT ANGELES — Clallam County District Court Judge Rick L. Porter has received an admonishment from the state Commission on Judicial Conduct in Olympia. Porter received the admonishment — the lowest level of disciplinary action the commission can Porter impose — for signing bench warrants for cases in which he was disqualified and for failing to inform a defense lawyer of information received regarding a defendant, according to the commission. “I take full responsibility for everything that occurs in my court,� Porter said Friday, adding that he had taken part in the process to create the admonishment. According to the commission’s report, Porter acknowledged that he inadvertently signed bench warrants in some cases he had been disqualified from handling by “affidavits of prejudice.� Defendants are allowed to exclude one judge from seeing their case, for any or no reason, known as an affidavit of prejudice, according to state law. When Porter set up a “pay or appear� program in Clallam County, it did not have safeguards to separate those cases from the judges who are named in the affidavit, according to the report. “While there is no indication Judge Porter was specifically aware that he signed warrants in cases in which he was disqualified,

the warrants were issued ccording to the through a Pay or Appear program set in place by commission’s Judge Porter,� the report report, Clallam said. “The program was with- County District Court out safeguards to keep the Judge Rick L. Porter judge from issuing warrants in cases in which he acknowledged that he had been disqualified.� inadvertently signed Said J. Reiko Callner, bench warrants in executive director of the commission: “It is an advi- some cases he had sory not only to this judge, been disqualified from but to others.� handling by “affidavits Porter also “failed to timely disclose this infor- of prejudice.� mation and apparently relied on it in ruling in the defendant’s case,� the com- tion of partiality,� the report said. mission report stated. The stipulation, agreement and order of admonEx parte ishment can be found at Porter agreed that not www.cjc.state.wa.us. disclosing ex parte commuThe state Commission nications immediately to on Judicial Conduct is an the defendant or her attor- independent agency of the ney in the circumstances judicial branch of governdescribed violated the Code ment created under the of Judicial Conduct. state constitution. It was an unusual case, ________ Porter said, and the first he Reporter Arwyn Rice can be had seen of its type, in which the defendant sub- reached at 360-452-2345, ext. or at arwyn.rice@peninsula mitted fraudulent commu- 5070, dailynews.com. nity service hours, he said Friday. The commission found Port Angeles Garden Club that the warrant violations appear to have resulted from oversight and were th unintentional, and it did not find any pattern of not disclosing ex parte communications. “[Porter] should have P.A. Senior Center disclosed the ex parte communications to the counsel assigned on an unrelated Gertie’s Vegetable Plants case, prior to sentencing, to 582-0803 avoid any possible percep-

Clockwise from top left are firstplace winner Marleen Amundson; secondplace winner Norma Davis with children Abigail, 8, Markette, 6 and Alexis, 5; and thirdplace awardee Patty Starks.


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PeninsulaNorthwest

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Rampage in Esprit transgender panel Gales Addition starts today at PA hotel Suspect’s neighbor BY JOE SMILLIE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES –– Participants will begin arriving today for Esprit, an annual gathering of members of transgender organizations from Seattle, Portland, Ore., and Vancouver, B.C. “I can’t tell you how wonderful of a city Port Angeles is to do this,” said Suzanne Adams, president of the Esprit conference’s organizing board and the Emerald City Social Club, a transgender organization in Seattle. “It means a lot to all of us.” Like they have every year since 1989, more than 100 transgender people will fill the Red Lion Hotel, 221 N. Lincoln St., to be themselves for a week. Some are men who simply enjoy dressing in women’s clothes. Others, like Adams, have begun new

lives as women. “For a lot of people, this is the perfect place for them to get more comfortable with who they are,” said Adams, a former law enforcement officer who now serves as a consultant on transgender issues. “It’s a real special thing to have.”

A busy week Those who have signed up for the conference get access to a week’s worth of classes on topics ranging from self-defense and legal defense to relationship seminars and fashion training. They also can head out together on a number of field trips all over the area. For instance, on Tuesday, the Esprit corps travels to Victoria for high tea and a chance to put on their finest Kentucky Derby clothes and elaborate hats at a day at the races. “I’m so excited for that.

We’re going to see some tremendous outfits up there,” Adams said. “So elegant.” The conference runs through next Sunday, May 19, when participants can attend a farewell brunch before returning home.

Events scheduled

ing to the theme of the Oscars, complete with a red carpet. A $5 cover charge will be donated to Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County. The Saturday night gala, also open to the public after 8 p.m. with a $5 cover charge — also donated to hospice — will have the theme of “Everybody is a Star!” in the Juan de Fuca ballroom at the hotel. The Nasty Habits, a fivepiece transgender band, will perform at 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday nights at Bar N9ne, 229 W. First St. The performances, which are listed on the Esprit calendar as non-Esprit events, will go on until 1 a.m. and are open to the public. The cover will be $5. For more information, visit www.espritconf.com.

Activities will be based at the Red Lion Hotel. The first event is a icebreaker at 7 p.m. today. Classes, tours and other activities will continue through the week. Conferees can participant in Girls’ Night Out in downtown Port Angeles, which is planned with an “island” theme from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday. The Esprit Talent Show is open to the public after 8 p.m. Friday at the Elks ________ Naval Lodge at 131 E. First Sequim-Dungeness Valley EdiSt. tor Joe Smillie can be reached at Between eight and 10 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or at acts will perform, all accord- jsmillie@peninsuladailynews.com.

PA homeowner says burglar may have robbed home before BY JEREMY SCHWARTZ

L a s t week, Feeley said he was coming home to review some paperwork and went into his Feeley h o u s e through a back door when he heard noises from the back bedroom. “I went back there and bumped right into this guy,” Feeley said. “It scared the bejesus out of me.” The scare wasn’t enough, however, to stop Feeley from grabbing the man and sharing words “not suitable for print.” “And that’s when the conversation got colorful,” Feeley said.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Bill Feeley let himself into his Deer Park Road home, turned a corner and bumped into an intruder. And he thinks the man who broke into his home last Tuesday may have been a repeat visitor. “He seemed like he knew what he was doing,” said Feeley, 66, who came home Tuesday morning at about 11 to find a stranger rummaging through his belongings. Feeley said Friday that his home along Deer Park Road had been broken into a couple of years ago and about $2,500 worth of $2 bills — meant as a graduation present for his granddaughter — and silver coins had been stolen. Feeley said the burglar Man broke free was never caught. Feeley tried to keep hold of the man as he struggled, but the man broke free and ran toward the front door, which Feeley thinks the man had opened ahead of time as an escape route. SUPPORT EDUCATION: “I wish I would have hit When you go on vacation, donate the credit for your him,” Feeley said. suspended copies to proThe man also seemed to vide the PDN to schools. know his way around the Phone 360-452-4507 area surrounding the propPENINSULA DAILY NEWS erty, Feeley said. “The way the guy ran off into the woods, he knew exactly where he was going,” he added. Feeley’s call to 9-1-1 emergency dispatchers A sprightly little market after the man fled into the unlike any you’ve seen Deer Park-area woods led

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1. Paying bill collectors only encourages them. 2. My dog ate my checkbook. 3. I gave at the office. 4. I do so have an office. 5. Frank pays bills only in months ending in “w”. 6. I’m concentrating my efforts on Russian beers, not rushing bills.

“I went back there [to the back bedroom] and bumped right into this guy. It scared the bejesus out of me.” BILL FEELEY Deer Park Road homeowner to an unsuccessful 2½-hour search that involved Clallam County sheriff’s deputies, U.S. Border Patrol agents and a Port Angeles police officer and police dog. The search did not turn up the burglar, however, and sheriff’s deputies were still investigating the case as of Saturday morning. “There’s nothing leading us to identifying the suspect as of yet,” said Sgt. Randy Pieper with the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office. Feeley described the man to law enforcement as white, between 25 and 27 years old, standing between 5-foot-8 and 5-foot-10 and weighing a stocky 160 pounds. The man also had a streak-like tattoo on his neck, dark brown or black hair and was wearing a blue windbreaker and blue jeans, Feeley said.

Not hurt Feeley said he was not hurt in the scuffle, except for a dime-sized bruise on his inner arm. “Mostly what’s hurt is my pride,” he said, adding that the man likely got away with $10 from Fee-

ley’s bedroom. The man appeared to use a step ladder to get into the bedroom and enter through a widow, which Feeley said likely was unlocked. “It’s my mistake,” he added. It’s a mistake, however, that Feeley said he does not plan to repeat as he will now be regularly locking his doors and windows, and likely having a security system installed. “And yes, I’m packing my gun now,” said Feeley, who described his pistol as a “little” Ruger .380. Feeley shares the home with his wife, Fran, who was not home during the burglary, and his two dogs: a German shepherd/collie mix named Chado and a Labrador/hound mix named Coco. Both dogs were in an fenced outdoor kennel when the burglary happened, Feeley said. “The Sheriff’s Office said if [one of the dogs had been] out, the [burglar] probably wouldn’t have come in,” Feeley added. Authorities have said anyone who sees a man matching the burglar’s description should phone the Sheriff’s Office’s business line at 360-417-2459 or dial 9-1-1 if the situation is an emergency.

BY JEREMY SCHWARTZ PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — A neighbor of Barry Swegle’s said the two had argued in the past about the line between their properties before today’s rampage that destroyed two of the neighbor’s houses. Dan Davis, 74, and oth-

ers told of a man on heavy machinery tearing into homes, rolling over a pickup truck and smashing through a portion of Gales Addition east of town. Barry Alan Swegle, 51, was being held Saturday in the Clallam County jail for investigation of malicious mischief in the first degree. TURN

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Rampage: Pole CONTINUED FROM A1 Gales Addition is located between U.S. Highway 101 and Pioneer Road to the north, said Cameron, adding that total damage estimates have not been determined. The power pole alone, which was replaced Friday night, cost $30,000, he said. “I don’t think I’m exaggerating when I say several hundred thousands of dollars [of total damage was done],” Cameron said. Power had been restored to all electrical customers by 1 a.m. Saturday, PUD spokesman Michael Howe said. Electricity had been cut to thousands of people between Port Angeles and Sequim. All except 200 people in the Gales Addition were back on the grid by Friday afternoon. “Everything went smoowwthly. It was just a lot of dang work,” Howe said Saturday. “We hope this never happens again.”

Recovery beginning

With the power pole righted, however, the work for people in the neighborhood was just beginning. Davis, wife Mary and other family members walked a piece of Davis’ property early Saturday afternoon, recovering Davis’ tools so they didn’t “get legs and walk off,” as he put it. The lot once held the manufactured home Davis was completing with the intention of renting it. Davis said that on Friday afternoon, he was working on a wooden deck leading up to the front door of the home when Swegle allegedly used his skidder, a type of logging bulldozer, to plow the manufactured home off its foundation and into the home that Davis’ neighbor Barbara Porter, 72, owns with her husband, James. “I heard Barry take off with [the skidder],” said Porter, a 45-year resident of the neighborhood who said Swe________ gle was a longtime resident of the neighborhood. Reporter Jeremy Schwartz can “I knew he was out to do be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5074, or at jschwartz@peninsula some damage.” A Barry Swegle logging dailynews.com. company is listed as having been founded in 1997. The phone number has been disconnected. Swegle, who lived just north of Davis and Porter, also allegedly rolled his skidder over Davis’ Ford F-250 pickup truck three times before taking out the power pole and heading east. Neither Porter nor Davis could estimate Saturday the damage done to their homes, though Porter said her house sustained no interior damage. “I thought [Swegle] was going to push mine over, too,” said Porter, who said she has

an Davis said that on Friday afternoon, he was working on a wooden deck leading up to the front door of the home when Swegle allegedly used his skidder, a type of logging bulldozer, to plow the manufactured home off its foundation and into a neighbor’s home.

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known Swegle since he was 12. Davis’ manufactured home was effectively destroyed. Davis said he will have to wait until Monday to see what can be done with the home he and his wife shared — whether it can be fixed or whether it needs to be demolished. The home was assessed at $138,838, according to the Clallam County Assessor’s Office. Davis has insurance on both structures, he said. Keith Haynes, who lives near the damaged homes, said Friday that Swegle “just went nuts.” According to multiple witness accounts, after pushing the manufactured home off its foundation, Swegle allegedly headed east along Pioneer Road, traveling through fence lines and backyards to carve a hole in 45-year-old Alaric Bergeson’s home before turning north and going through more fences toward the home Davis shared with his wife. “He just took out [the house] and destroyed some of my favorite toys,” Bergeson said, gesturing to a trail of damaged tools and a destroyed off-road vehicle left in the bulldozer’s wake. The bulldozer rumbled north toward his home, said Davis, who called his wife, also 74, on his cellphone and told her to get out of the place after she called back. Davis said Swegle plowed through the eastern section of his home. Swegle continued north, witnesses said, allegedly also demolishing Davis’ home office, boat garage and boat, a shed and a tractor before continuing north and being apprehended without incident by sheriff’s deputies and other law enforcement officers on an undeveloped piece of property.

________ Reporter Jeremy Schwartz can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5074, or at jschwartz@peninsula dailynews.com. Reporter Rob Ollikainen also contributed to this report.

Swegle: Trailer

7. I drink instant coffee. 8. I broke a shoelace this morning.

CONTINUED FROM A1

9. Whatever! 10. Earthquakes give me the vapors. 35788334

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recalls arguments

Hollingsworth told police he had moved his trailer off Hollingsworth told city Swegle’s property five police that Swegle made the months prior because Swestatement three times gle “was acting very strangely.” before backing down. Police said Holling________ sworth remained at his Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be truck and “did not have any reached at 360-452-2345, ext. idea what Swegle was upset 5072, or at rollikainen@peninsula about.” dailynews.com.


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

A7

Rampage in Gales Addition Dan Davis’s 2003 Ford F-250 pickup truck sits mangled on Davis’ property in Gales Addition east of Port Angeles after it was run over with a type of logging bulldozer called a skidder Friday afternoon. “That was a sight to behold,� said neighbor and witness Phil Riley, describing the bulldozer backing up three times over Davis’ truck. Several homes owned by Davis, 74, also were destroyed.

JEREMY SCHWARTZ/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

KEITH THORPE (2)/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Wreckage is strewn along the path of the logging bulldozer, left. Above, Clallam County firefighters look over what’s left of a house at 309 N. Baker St. that was pushed off its foundation and into an adjoining yard Friday in Gales Addition.

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

A downed power pole, crushed truck and destroyed house, above, are part of the surreal landscape Friday in Gales Addition. At right, an aerial view of some of the wreckage.

KOMO 4 TV

Neighbor: Says he is ‘happy no one got killed’ CONTINUED FROM A6 and drove through a portion of Davis’ chain-link fence, Davis said Swegle had taking out a buried phone driven past Davis’ property line and destroying the Friday morning and made house’s connection to obscene gestures at him. nearby power lines. Then between 11:30 a.m. Davis said Swegle then and noon, according to wit- headed east, plowing into nesses, Swegle allegedly got the manufactured home on into a logging bulldozer — Davis’ property and pushparked on Swegle’s prop- ing it off its foundation and erty east of Davis’ lot — and into a neighboring house. drove west on a dirt alleyChris Main, who lives way toward a manufactured across East Pioneer Road home on Davis’ property. south of Davis’ property, Davis said he had been said Swegle backed up and working on the house in demolished Davis’ Ford preparation for putting it truck, knocking over a up for rent. power pole. KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Davis said that as Swe“That was a sight to Dan Davis of Gales Addition gestures Friday as gle traveled west, he low- behold,� said neighbor and he describes seeing two of his homes destroyed. ered the bulldozer’s blade witness Phil Riley. “It looks

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Main said he called 9-1-1 for help, telling the dispatcher, “He’s got no concern for human life.� Swegle reportedly continued northeast toward Davis’ home, where Davis’ wife, Mary, 74, was inside. Davis said he had tried to call her on his cellphone as Swegle approached but could not get through. “I told her to get the heck out of there,� Davis said

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when his wife called back. Davis said Swegle took out the entire east side of his home before destroying the Davises’ home office. Davis said Swegle also plowed through Davis’ boat shed and damaged his garage before heading north into a wooded area. “That’s when police showed up, and two deputies came up with assault rifles,� Main said. Swegle was taken into custody without incident, Clallam County Undersheriff Ron Peregrin said. Davis said many valuables inside his home were destroyed, adding, “I’m happy no one got killed.�

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like a bomb went off.� Main said Swegle knocked down another line of fences, clipping the corner of another home as he headed northeast.

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PeninsulaNorthwest

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Widow remembers late writer’s legacy BY DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

KEITH THORPE (2)/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

CELEBRATING SEQUIM’S HERITAGE Irrigation Festival royalty, above from left, Princess Danyelle Wilson, Queen Angela Bentley, Princess Christie Honoré and Princess Lavee Hess preside over the festival’s grand parade from their float Saturday in Sequim. More than 100 parade entries made their way down Washington Street during the 118th annual festival. At right, Chris Goff takes on the persona of a cow wrangler while performing with the Happy Tymer Clowns in the parade.

Missing man’s girlfriend charged with felonies THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

YAKIMA — The girlfriend of a man missing from Yakima for nearly 3½ years has been charged with welfare fraud. Ladena Mann, 51, appeared by summons Friday in Yakima Superior Court on felony welfare charges linked to Larry Riegel’s disappearance, The Yakima Herald-Republic reported in Saturday’s newspaper. The disabled 57-year-old contract pilot has not been in contact with his family since Christmas Day 2009.

Yakima police consider him a possible, if not probable, victim of foul play. According to state welfare-fraud investigators, Mann used Riegel’s electronic benefits transfer card several times in the weeks after his disappearance for $1,503 in financial assistance, including groceries. She also filled out an EBT-card eligibility form claiming Riegel still lived with her, even though by then he had been missing for more than two months, investigators said.

As a result, prosecutors filed three charges against Mann: first-degree theft (welfare fraud), seconddegree perjury and false verification for public assistance. All three charges are felonies. Mann, who is free on her own recognizance, spoke with the Yakima HeraldRepublic after the arraignment. “Right off the get-go, they started saying horrible things about me,” she said. “They didn’t have no reason to say those things . . . It’s just snowballed.”

PORT ANGELES — Ray was a big, tall man who loved to fish, to eat, to laugh. “It was like having a giant bear in the house,” remembers Tess Gallagher, his widow and the woman who brought Raymond Carver to Port Angeles. Carver spent the last 10 years of his life here, living, loving and writing beside Gallagher. Gallagher Then he was gone in August 1988, felled by lung cancer. Carver was 50, Gallagher 45. “I spent a lot of time very bereft,” Gallagher recalled. In an interview this past week, she remembered how she spent her days walking the blufftop at Ocean View Cemetery, where Carver is buried. “We were so close,” Gallagher said, “and Ray was so full of laughter and joy.” A Port Angeles native, Gallagher is the caretaker of Carver’s legacy; posthumously published collections of Carver’s work include A New Path to the Waterfall, Beginners and Call If You Need Me. She is also an author and teacher with many books of her own, including the acclaimed poetry collections Moon Crossing Bridge, Dear Ghosts and Midnight Lantern. She spends part of the year in Port Angeles and the rest in Sligo, Ireland, where she keeps a cottage next door to her companion, the Irish artist Josie Gray. Carver, meantime, has become known as one of the great writers of our time, revered by a range of artists, from Cheryl Strayed, author of the runaway bestseller Wild, to the late filmmaker Robert Altman. May 25 would have been Carver’s 75th birthday. And Gallagher, along with Peninsula College, has spent the past year planning to celebrate with a festival of readings, performances, movie screenings, an art exhibition and finally a kind of walkabout. The two-week festival will conclude with “A Rouse for Ray,” a traveling reading across Port Angeles, to sites

TM

will be providing

MENTAL

HEALTH FIRST AID

Training on June 6th and 7th

For more information, call Julie Calabria at: (360) 457-0431, ex. 158, or to register go to www.peninsulabehavioral.org Helping People Grow and Change.

Partner Agency

PORT ANGELES — The inaugural Raymond Carver Festival, a celebration of the writer who spent his last 10 years in Port Angeles, moves into its first full week with the opening of an art display Monday, a movie screening Tuesday and a free writing workshop Wednesday. Nearly all of the Carver festival events are free and held at Peninsula College, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd. For details about the festival, which runs through May 25 — the 75th anniversary of Carver’s birth — visit www.PenCol.edu. Here’s what’s happening in the early part of the week: ■ Monday, Peninsula College PUB Art Gallery — The Raymond Carver Festival art show opens, featuring paintings by Alfredo Arreguin and Susan Lytle, longtime friends of Carver; mounted excerpts of poems and stories; and photographs from his widow Tess Gallagher’s private collection. Admission is free to the gallery inside the college’s J Building. Hours are from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday. ■ Tuesday, 12:30 p.m., Peninsula College Little Theater — Tess Gallagher and Peninsula College Writer-in-Residence Jane Mead give a reading. ■ Tuesday, 7 p.m., Maier Hall at Peninsula College — A screening of a documentary film about Carver, “To Write and Keep Kind,” with director Jean Walkinshaw on hand for a discussion; admission is $5 for the public and free for students. ■ Wednesday, 12:30 p.m., Maier Hall — Foothills Writers Series Writer-in-Residence Lucia Perillo gives a free reading. ■ Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m., Peninsula College Longhouse — Free creative writing workshop for all levels with Alice Derry and Kate Reavey. ■ Wednesday, 7 p.m., Little Theater and PUB Art Gallery — Free reading and reception with Gallagher, Mead and Perillo. significant in his writings. The sojourn will end at Ocean View Cemetery for his “Late Fragment.” It begins: Did you get what you wanted from this life? I did. And what did you want? To call myself beloved, to feel myself beloved on the earth. “This festival is going to be wonderful,” said Gallagher, “because we’re bringing the poetry forward — a lot.” A cross-section of Carver’s short stories will be celebrated in two readers’ theater performances next Saturday and Sunday, May 19.

Poetry reading

with her — a smile lights her face. She can hardly wait for people to gather and hear his voice, in its humor and its “deadly truth,” as she puts it. What’s clear most of all: She wants listeners to hear the love Carver felt: for his wife, his friends, the world.

Poem to water In his poem “Where Water Comes Together with Other Water,” Carver wrote about streams, like the Elwha River, running to the sea: Those places stand out in my mind like holy places. But these coastal rivers! I love them the way some men love horses or glamorous women. I have a thing for this cold swift water. Just looking at it makes my blood run and my skin tingle. After the festival, Gallagher and the rest of the world will have yet another chance to see Carver’s work come alive in a different form. Alejandro González Iñárritu, director of movies including “21 Grams,” “Biutiful” and “Babel,” is directing “Birdman,” a picture based on a Carver short story. The picture is slated for a 2014 release, and Gallagher has traveled to New York City to meet Iñárritu and visit the set. “The thing about Ray,” she said, “is that I never know where’s he’s going to bring me.”

Aberdeen student falls through ceiling THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 35788354

Mental Health First Aid is a twelve hour training certification course which teaches participants a five step action plan to assess a situation, select and implement interventions, provide referrals, and secure appropriate care for the individual. The certification program introduces participants to risk factors and warnings signs of mental health problems, builds understanding of their impact and overviews common treatments. Evaluations in randomized trials and a quantitative study have proved this CPR like program effective in improving trainee’s knowledge of mental disorders, reducing stigma, and increasing the amount of help provided to others.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

But his poetry will be read, too, during an evening in the Raymond Carver Room at the Port Angeles Library. “To know the man,” Gallagher said, “you have to read All of Us [Carver’s poetry collection] and hear our local Northwest poets read out loud.” Gallagher has chosen the readers to gather at 7 p.m. Monday, May 20. Those reading beside her will include Jim Fisher, Alice Derry, Holly Hughes, Tim Roos, Kate Reavey and Charlotte Warren. The library’s Carver Room exists largely thanks to “Short Cuts,” Altman’s 1993 movie based on nine Carver short stories. Gallagher used her portion of film royalties to create the space, which has become a venue for author ________ readings, activist group meetings and poetry conFeatures Editor Diane Urbani tests. de la Paz can be reached at 360When Gallagher speaks 452-2345, ext. 5062, or at diane. of Carver — always “Ray,” urbani@peninsuladailynews.com.

Peninsula Behavioral

HEALTH

Carver festival events continue throughout week

ABERDEEN, Wash. — A student fell through a ceiling Friday at Aberdeen High School. Superintendent Thomas Opstad told KXRO that the student was working on a video project when he

stepped off an auditorium catwalk to retrieve an item he dropped. He fell through the ceiling into a hallway. He was able to walk to the nurse’s office and was taken to Grays Harbor Community Hospital as a precaution.


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

(J) — SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

A9

Open house on mill Ludlow development, permit set Tuesday field projects on tap PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — An open house to provide information about the renewal of a wastewater permit for the Port Townsend Paper Corp. mill comes in the middle of the public comment period and precedes a public hearing. The open house will be from 4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the card room at the Port Townsend Community Center, 620 Tyler St. “This is where people can come to get information about the permit and the permit process, but [it] is not a public hearing,� said Linda Kent, state Department of Ecology spokeswoman. “There will be DOE officials there to answer any questions that people might have, but there will be no opportunity to testify.� The comment period, which began April 24, will end at 5 p.m. June 21. A public meeting in which testimony will be taken is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. June 4 at the Port Townsend Elks Lodge, 555 Otto St. The permit is a renewal of an existing permit for current operations. National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System, or NPDES, permits are required for industrial facilities that discharge wastewater to a bay or a river, according to an Ecology fact sheet. Kevin Scott, Port Townsend Paper Corp. environmental officer, said Friday that when the permit expired in 2009, the company applied for its renewal. It took this long for Ecology to address the application, he said. “Ecology has been really backed up,� Scott said. “We have been working to comply with all of the federal and state regulations, and so far, the permit

has not been a huge issue for us.� According to the fact sheet, the permits are designed to protect water quality by limiting how much pollution can be discharged. The amount of pollution allowed by the permit must meet state and federal water-quality standards, Ecology said. There are a number of differences from the last permit, including a small decrease in the amount of biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and total suspended solids (TSS) allowed to be discharged from the main outfall, a new pH limit for the sanitary treatment plant and a compliance schedule for removal of sludge buildup from the treatment pond. The new permit also requires development of a stormwater pollution prevention plan and a treatment efficiency study of the treatment pond, with a specific requirement to address minimization of odors from the pond.

Odor control

expansion originally was expected to be put into operation last month, but work on the facility has been delayed until 2014 or 2015, the company said after a Dec. 10 state Court of Appeals ruling that sends a suit filed by five environmental groups to the state Supreme Court. The suit — filed by PT Airwatchers, No Biomass Burn, the Olympic Environmental Council, the Olympic Forest Coalition and the World Temperate Rainforest Network — urges the requirement of an environmental impact statement prior to construction of the expanded facility that burns wood waste to create electricity. NPDES permits are updated periodically to consider changes in environmental conditions and incorporate any changes in laws, rules or policies, according to Ecology.

Inert-landfill permit The NPDES is not related to the inert-landfill permit that is under dispute between the mill and the Jefferson County Health Department. The county denied the renewal of the inert-landfill permit in September; the mill appealed in December but was again denied. The mill then appealed to the Pollution Controls Hearing Board, which is scheduled to address the matter Aug. 20-21 in the agency’s Tumwater office. Comments about the NPDES permit can be submitted by email to PTPC. comments@ecy.wa.gov or by mail to Stephanie Ogle, P.E., Washington Department of Ecology, P.O. Box 47600, Olympia, WA 985047600.

Scott said the company has been working on odor control for more than two years, with a plan that includes removal of the biomass sludge from the treatment pond and extra treatment of the wastewater. The mill also plans to conduct an odor study, he said. The permit covers all the wastewater discharges from the mill, and its proposed cogeneration project would have minimal impacts to the wastewater treatment system, according to Ecology, though it would require a dry scrubber system that would reduce the solids entering the treatment ________ pond. Jefferson County Editor Charlie The Port Townsend Bermant can be reached at 360mill’s $55 million, 24-mega- 385-2335 or at cbermant@ watt biomass cogeneration peninsuladailynews.com.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Port Townsend city The Historic Preservation Committee will review an application for the demolition of 847 Taylor St. when it meets Tuesday. The committee will meet at 3 p.m. in the thirdfloor conference room at City Hall, 250 Madison St. The Port Townsend City Council does not meet this week. City Council office hours, when anyone can speak with a council member on any issue without an appointment, are set from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesday, from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday and from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday in the mayor’s office. Also meeting this week will be the PEG access coordinating committee. It will meet at 3:30 Tuesday in the Gael Stuart Building, 1610 Blaine St.

the charter school authorizer application when it meets Monday. The board will meet at 6 p.m. at the Gael Stuart Building, 1610 Blaine St. The Port Townsend School District is one of two public school districts on the North Olympic Peninsula that submitted letters of intent in early April to become charter school authorizers. The Sequim School Board decided last week, without a vote, that it would drop out of the state application process. The board also will consider a revised memorandum of understanding with the Townsend Redskin Boosters/Team Port Townsend for sports at Blue Heron Middle School. The revision reflects a lowered expectation of needed funding for the 2012-2013 program, from $85,000 to $60,000, which means the district will provide no more than $40,000 this year. The board also will consider Olympic League Sports admission fees, student fees and a school calender for 2013-2014.

Jefferson Healthcare

Jefferson Healthcare commissioners are expected to meet Wednesday. The meeting will be at 3:30 p.m. in the hospital Port Townsend auditorium at 834 Sherischools dan St. The Port Townsend No agenda was availSchool Board will discuss able as of Saturday.

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Roark Miller was said to have required one of her employees to backdate a building-permit document for a Sequim-area business so that permit applicant would not be subject to new water-use rules for the Dungeness River watershed from Bagley Creek to Sequim Bay, Jones said.

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PORT ANGELES — An investigation into an overtime complaint has grown into a review of allegations that Clallam County landuse director Sheila Roark Miller used her office for personal gain and ordered the backdating of a building-permit document so it complied with the county’s new Dungeness water rule. Clallam C o u n t y Administrator Jim Jones confirmed last week that c o u n t y Department Roark Miller of Human Resources attorney Akin Blitz has expanded his investigation into the Feb. 21 whistleblower complaint concerning overtime and is reviewing the entire building-permit file that contains the document in question. Blitz, a Portland, Ore., attorney who has hired former FBI investigator and federal prosecutor Kenneth Bauman to assist him, is reviewing “allegations of, essentially, corruption or self-dealing,� Jones said. Jones defined self-dealing as “where there is misuse of the position for your own benefit.� Blitz said Friday his investigation is being coordinated with the state Auditor’s Office and the state Attorney General’s Office. He expects the investigation will be completed by May 31 and that the investigative report eventually will be made public. In an interview Thurs-

day, Roark Miller, the only elected director of a department of community development in the nation, defended herself and her department. The backdating allegation is separate from the overtime complaint and grew out of Blitz’s initial efforts to delve into the Feb. 21 complaint.

for monthly testing for anatoxin-a, a potent and fast-acting nerve toxin, and microcystin, a sloweracting poison that can cause skin irritation if touched and liver damage if ingested over a long period of time.

I S L A N D

Land-use director under review for misconduct BY PAUL GOTTLIEB

The three Jefferson County commissioners will discuss amending the Port Ludlow development agreement and awarding a contract for drainage improvements at Memorial Field when they meet Monday. The meeting will begin at 9 a.m. in chambers, 1820 Jefferson St. Under the original agreement, Port Ludlow Associates had until 2020 to complete a development project. The economic downturn of 2008 caused the company to request that the county allow a five-year extension for the project’s completion. The proposed Memorial Field contract is for $8,645 to Seton Construction to complete the project between June 1-15. The drainage problem is in front of the grandstand near the Quincy Street entry and around the concession stand. “The problem threatened the integrity and usability of the athletic field during the fall of 2012 football season,� the staff memo said. Commissioners also will consider allocating a $5,000 match to augment a $15,000 grant for testing for toxins created by bluegreen algae in the East Jefferson County lakes of Anderson, Leland and Gibbs through June 2015. The match will mean that $20,000 is available

Eye on Jefferson


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Sunday, May 12, 2013 PAGE

A10

Sage rule: Drink wine, live longer called resveratrol, or so say those drunken fools at the Harvard Medical School. Large quantities of resveratrol enabled mice to live longer, ward off disease and sing bar songs. They also ran faster, though most of the time they were running to the bathroom. According to a website on alcohol consumption, if a 160pound man drank 750 bottles of wine, his blood alcohol content would be approximately 86.5 percent. This is higher than the legal limit for operating a motor vehicle, even in Texas. Most states have a statutory cap of .08 percent, so you’d be more than 1,000 times over the limit — too drunk to drive, in other words, though if you were in Europe, you could still go to a soccer match. At that level of intoxication, you’d have to drive an SUV just to have room for your liver, and if you blew into a Breathalyzer, it would burst into flames. Officer: Sir, have you been drinking?

FINALLY, A PRACTICAL method for extending one’s life: Researchers at the Harvard Medical School W. Bruce have concluded Cameron that a person can slow the aging process and prevent disease by drinking around 750 bottles of red wine a day. Maybe “practical” isn’t the right word — how about “insane”? Because for me, anyway, drinking 750 bottles of red wine a day would be a little excessive. I simply don’t have that kind of money. And, as much as I’d like to extend my lifespan, I don’t want to do it in a coma. That much wine isn’t just too much for a single person; it’s too much for a wedding. The key to red wine’s antiaging capability is a chemical

Speaking Out

You: Drinking? I can’t even breathe. Of course, not everyone weighs 160 pounds. In fact, by my calculations, drinking 750 bottles of wine would not be excessive for a man weighing 9,500 pounds — he’d still be legally able to operate a motor vehicle, though by and large, it is not advisable to drive a car if you can’t fit inside it. I spoke to a police officer, who told me that people should not drive if they feel that their ability to do so is inhibited by paralysis and death. He seemed skeptical of the idea that 750 bottles of wine a day would cause someone to live longer, but he didn’t go to Harvard, so maybe he doesn’t know what he’s talking about. He also said that if he pulled someone over on suspicion of driving under the influence and the driver weighed 9,500 pounds, he would call for backup. Researchers have discovered similar longevity-enhancing effects from low-calorie diets,

though the mice in those studies seemed a lot more grumpy. They lived longer, were more active and spent most of their time trying to figure out how to tunnel into the cages with the mice who drank wine. People who don’t want to go the 750-bottle route might consider reducing their calorie consumption by 30 percent to 40 percent, as long as they don’t mind screaming at people for no reason and bursting into tears at Burger King commercials. People who both reduce their caloric intake by 30 percent to 40 percent and increase their alcohol consumption to 750 bottles per day not only will live longer but can probably manage to do other impossible stuff, like become invisible, have heat vision and understand how to do their income taxes. Oddly, white wine, distilled spirits and beer do not appear to have the same life-enhancing benefits, though they do seem to lead to a greater incidence of karaoke.

Also odd is that one’s life expectancy does not increase from eating doughnuts and cinnamon rolls. (Well, OK, it may not be odd, exactly, but it’s certainly inconvenient.) I asked the same police officer whether he thought people could reduce their caloric intake by 40 percent while eating doughnuts — and he said yes. He was very calm when he said this, so I’m going to assume he’s currently eating at 100 percent. As for me, I’ve decided that any resveratrol that finds its way into my bloodstream is going to be pretty lonely. I want to live longer, sure, but not if, in doing so, I have to drink myself to death.

________ W. Bruce Cameron, (8 Simple Rules for Marrying My Daughter; A Dog’s Life) can be reached at www.tinyurl.com/pdnbcameron. His humor column appears every Sunday.

What’s the best thing to do for a mom on Mother’s Day?

Sarah Doyle

Pam Lindquist

Brendan Kaake

Joey Pippa

Nadine Wheeler

Stirling Hall

Allyson Braunberger

Larry Vellucci

Biologist Port Townsend

Attorney Port Angeles

Fourth-grader Port Angeles

Entertainer Port Townsend

Homemaker LaPush

Musician Port Angeles

Equine instructor Blue Mountain

“Mothers always like getting a personal letter from you thanking them for all the things they’ve done for you, even though you didn’t appreciate how important they were at the time.”

“Do her laundry for her. I sure didn’t like going to the Laundromat like we used to do. I’d also cook eggs for her. They’re delicious and good for a breakfast to start her special day.”

“Make her breakfast. That would be a nice thing to do for her. Pancakes are good, but I don’t know how to make them yet. Also, toast and ice cream. It would all be special, I feel.”

“I get my mother roses. No matter what else I do or get her, she likes it when I get her flowers the most.”

“Get away and let her have a day alone, a minivacation. I had a big family with lots of kids, so that would work out great. I cherish peace and quiet, so a short vacation would be in order.”

“That’s easy: Let her know she is appreciated. I have the best mom in the world. I’d take her out to lunch. She has a favorite place in Port Townsend. Also, a card and flowers would help.”

“Tell her how much you appreciate her. My husband and I had no children, so we’d give each other special cards signed with a paw print from our animals — our kids.”

Government educator Port Angeles

INTERVIEWS

Peninsula Voices Elwha River silt For years, REAL [Rescue Elwha Area Lakes] ranted by spoken words and 600 videos against the destruction of the Elwha dams. Most locals agreed with us. The deal was done in Washington, D.C. Local opinion was not considered even by our congressman. The only time [former U.S. Rep. Norm] Dicks lost in Clallam County was when a political unknown debating him said, “Keep the dams.” The county commissioners’ public forum was monitored by a White House representative. The federal steamroller driven by so-called environmentalist [groups including] the Sierra Club, the Audubon Society and others rolled right on. “For the salmon” they said. Some of the loss: a billion dollars-plus of cheap, clean electric power over 50 years, habitat of about 20

species of mammal and waterfowl along with an endangered species, the Dolly Varden and bull trout. Also, a huge financial cost under many different titles over 30 years plus 5 miles of fine salmonspawning habitat. And, recently, 200,000 young salmon suffocated by silt. Future releases must use a different stream. REAL’s warnings about silt damage proved conservative. Port Angeles officials should have paid attention. Motive? Clearly, neither the environment nor salmon. Apparently a plan authored by Dave Foreman (Earth First! founder) and Reed Noss (Wildlands Project) to get the people off the land and turn it all over to wildlife: wolves and grizzlies. When Foreman moved to the Sierra Club, club members took this up with help from a pack of “major

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READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND EMAIL

3-D gun blueprints U.S. OFFICIALS HAVE told the Texas creator of a plastic gun that was made from a 3-D printer and successfully test-fired last weekend to take down online blueprints for the weapon. The move by the State Department, under its authority to review arms exports, followed the posting of an online video by Defense Distributed showing a demonstration of its handgun, the Liberator. The gun, which looks like a water pistol but fires a .380-caliber bullet, was almost entirely made on a printer that can fabricate solid objects from blueprints. A regular nail was used as a firing pin. Cody Wilson, a founder of Defense Distributed, an Austin nonprofit corporation, said he had complied with the government request — but that he and his attorneys were reviewing their options and talking to a number of organizations that support open access to information about challenging any ongoing ban. The Associated Press

enviro” organizations. Truth is no longer hidden. REAL found 60-plus feet of something on the lake bottom approximately 100 feet behind Glines

BY

“Show her how much you care and love her by giving her a day off. No cooking, no cleaning and not taking care of the bratty kids — a day off for Mom in appreciation.”

treasurer and spokesman for Rescue Elwha Area Lakes.

Armed citizenry

On Sunday, May 5, the writer of the letter “Gun legislation” made a good point about the efficacy of my “pea-shooter” against the full might of the U.S. military. Unfortunately, he seems to think everyone would be better off being good, docile little Americans. Contrary to being a “psychological extension” of one’s manhood, the letter writer also fails to appreciate the psychological deterrent a well-armed citizenry would present to unbridled state power. The Syrian people’s struggle for freedom proves this to be no mere anachronism. Canyon Dam. I recall the Second, the writer and National Park Service many like him seem more “estimated” it was 6 feet. concerned about the limMarv Chastain, ited and divided power of Port Angeles corporations than the far greater power of the state. Chastain was secretaryWhich has a monopoly

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

on the world’s most destructive weapons? The last time I checked, no cabal of corporate executives had control of even the smallest fraction of our government’s military power. Businesses operate under the law. They pay taxes and can be sued. But the government can become a law unto itself. Finally, our country is filled with more “soft targets” than our police can reasonably protect, and those who would leave their security to others do so at their own risk. Sometimes, the only thing standing between civil society and the extremes of tyranny or anarchy are those who are able to defend their families, their friends and their communities. It’s not just a right, but a solemn duty for all citizens to be that final, most basic check on tyranny. Nick Kavadas, Port Angeles TURN

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HAVE YOUR SAY ■ REX WILSON, executive editor, 360-417-3530 We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” and “Teen Point of View” guest TURN TO VOICES/AXX 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


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

CommentaryViewpoints

Peninsula Voices CONTINUED FROM A10 plays no role in winning. Facing crushing war debts, severe interstate disMajority rule Recently, a letter writer putes threatening civil war and British violation of stated: “Sports teams win unenforceable Paris Treaty by gaining one more point than their opponent,” thus agreements, in order to gain Southerners’ critical majority rules. (“Majority rules,” Penin- constitutional ratification, our Founding Fathers, with sula Voices, March 29-30.) foreboding, did not abolish Lauding majority rule and referring to legislators slavery. Before our Civil War, elected by electorate majorSouthern legislative majority vote, the writer asked, ities supported Southern“Why should their governing be any different?” ers’ control over their felIn response, unless a low man’s labor. sports team cheats, ethics Slave owners negated

our Declaration’s precepts of inalienable individual rights. Accordingly, Southerners fought to keep their slaves. Acknowledgment of God-given inalienable rights became our founders’ prerequisite for securing individuals’ life, liberty and pursuit of happiness, and self-protection (intrinsic to survival). Otherwise, dictators and/or tyrannical majorities would forever assert entitlement to the life, liberty and property of others.

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SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

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READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND EMAIL

Taxation beyond that necessary for protection of inalienable rights, whether by electorate majority rule or legislative majority rule, always involves ethics. Time limits earthly life. Through labor, individuals expend irreplaceable, precious time. Taking the product of an individual’s labor, essentially, takes part of his life. With increased appropriation of his product (his labor), more of his life is taken from him. Gradually, the individ-

ual becomes possessed by the takers. Progressives, self-deluded by their intent for wealth redistribution, disavow this simple truth and choose immorality. Majority rule cannot transform legalized plunder into virtue. Susan Shotthafer Port Angeles

Olympia gridlock Public trust: an idea that should infuse every politician’s conscience when it comes time to vote. Lapses of the public

trust are a betrayal to every constituent who sent these men and women to do the public good. Shame on those politicians who fall prey to the bickering and stubbornness that keep our state from moving forward. The sad truth is that gridlock appears to be the way that Olympia addresses economic issues. The time for collecting paychecks for a job not done should be over! Robert E. Caruthers II, Port Angeles

Dogs’ lesson on Duckabush elk Take a recent morning. I hooked up the MY 5-YEAR-OLD dynamic duo to their WESTIE, MIM, teaches leashes, opened my front my 6-month-old mutt, Milo, door, and knew the minute how to Mim set paw to forest duff read — that the Duckabush elk read the herd was near. forest, She has special “dances that is. with elk” moves, which I I, the call the Ungulate Ecstasy bipedal Four-Step. alpha Her savvy nose immedileader of ately snaps to attention, the Ducktesting the air currents for abush a direction. Dog Pack, Luckett Her furry head points am heavenward. enrolled in Mim’s outdoor Her tail stiffens. Stumpy school as well. paws do a circle jig. The nature-deficient, A chesty growl issues industrialized side of my brain learns so much more from deep within a 50,000-year-old memory of through Mim’s voracious nose, interpretive body and wolf ancestry. Within seconds, her talexpressive voice than if I ented whiffer knows where were relying solely on my own five senses. the herd lolls (and quite

BY MITCH LUCKETT

an octave higher, leashes strained so tight you could pluck a tune off them if possibly just how far away you’d a mind to say, “Fox on and how many elk, the run.” although I can’t be sure of One wary cow keeps an this). Student Milo pauses eye on us, but the herd, in to watch Mim and, lately, general, appears unconmimics her every action. cerned. It has long ago Both leashes stretch rigid as I’m pulled through taken measure of Mim and the woods, Mim leading the me, deeming us harmless. I suspect the cows view way with her rich bugle the tagalong, skinny pup in baying, Milo fast thereafter, his atonal teen yowl flush- the same category. The dogs bark a few ing ground-feeding birds minutes, then Mim — from the underbrush. We top a knoll, and sure leashed and aware that enough, the Duckabush elk this hoofed prey is off-limits — finds another animal herd stands casually feedtrail to explore. ing in a meadow below Mim has researched blanketed with salal, sword many beasties and counfern and red huckleberry. Morning steam rises off sels Milo to ignore skunks, muscular shoulders, brown orange-bellied newts and backs and golden rumps. bumblebees. Both dogs, already in a Certain plants can be full-throated frenzy, take it eaten: miners’ lettuce,

POINT OF VIEW

waterleaf, trailing blackberry leaves. Avoid stinging nettles and deadly nightshade. Mim inhales a lowhanging hemlock branch from cone to crotch; Milo follows right behind to calibrate his immature sniffer. This droopy tree limb yesterday offered no sniff significance. Today, it sets Mim’s cuspids a-clatter and her throat a-rumble. This spells raccoon. Milo’s eager nose traverses the branch. He flashes his newly minted adult teeth, then does his best basso-profundo growl, missing Mim’s auditory mark, but practice will make perfect. What the heck! I kneel down and give the branch a sniff, too, bare my polished “grill” menac-

ingly at the timbered landscape and join in with my best human don’t-messwith-me howl. I feel in the doing a reconnection with some primal nature I had long ago forsaken but recognize as back within reach. We hunters three with our predatory braggadocio light up the morning in the woodlands wild. Forest dogma lessons learned, we then head inside my cabin to stalk, corner and pounce on some lamb-’n’-rice kibbles and corn flakes.

________ Luckett is a Brinnon musician, storyteller and Point of View contributor. See “Have Your Say” on the opposite page about writing a Point of View lifestyle column for the PDN.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Rants & Raves Rave of the Week THANK YOU TO the two good Samaritans who assisted when I was hit by a car while riding my bike on Front Street [Port Angeles] recently. Your concern and quick response were totally appreciated.

. . . and other Raves A GIANT RAVE to the Clallam County Fair royalty for their hugely successful drive at the Sequim Petco to benefit Peninsula Friends of Animals. Lots of happy kitties will make good use of all the fun toys, beds, food and litter that were donated. You are the cat’s meow! A HUGE RAVE to the lady picking up a bag of dumped plaster or garbage near the Sunshine Acres [Diamond Point] entrance

Rant of the Week The Rants & Raves hotline 24/7: 360-417-3506 PLEASE SEND COMMENTS on topics in the news — including comments about the Sequim City Council — as signed letters to Peninsula Voices (see “Have Your Say” on the opposite page). And customer complaints aimed at specific businesses need to be taken up directly with the businesses themselves.

on Monday. We shouted “thank you” as we passed. We want her to know that it was appreciated! A HUGE RAVE to everyone involved in “The Foreigner,” now at the Port Angeles Playhouse. The set, the actors, the director are all terrific. Go see it if you want to laugh. Well done! EDITOR’S NOTE: For more details, phone the Port Angeles Community Players at 360-4526651. A HUGE RAVE to the staff at the Sequim Aquatic

Recreation Center. They are all so friendly and helpful, and called Paratransit when I left my purse on the bus. A big, sincere thanks to all of them. MY SINCERE THANKS to the kind volunteer at Olympic Medical Center who courteously escorted me to two patients’ rooms recently. A RAVE FOR Jason, a nightshift porter at 7 Cedars Casino [Blyn]. He found and returned my wallet, which had a substantial amount of money and my credit cards.

A HUGE RANT to the woman who was complaining that her brother’s pit bull has to be put down for biting a little boy in the face. I am an animal lover, but never is an animal’s life more important than a human being’s. Although it’s sad, he needs to take responsibility for that dog before he has a lawsuit.

hour or so, it’s very discourteous to potential customers.

________ (CLIP AND SAVE)

To participate, call our Rants & Raves hotline at 360-417-3506 (works 24 hours a day), email us at letters@peninsuladailynews. com or drop us a postcard at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. Keep comments brief — 50 words or less. And, please, no libel, no responses to letters to the editor (Peninsula Voices) or news stories; no personal attacks on . . . and other Rants individuals or on businesses identified by name; no routine A RANT TO the “newbiethank-you notes to your favorite greater” person on . . . Drive. restaurant, dry-cleaner, What a horrible mess you left. grandchild (we simply don’t have We feel sorry for the two gentlemen who had to fix your mess. enough room for those); no inaccurate information or Please stay off our road. unverified rumors; no calls for boycotts; no political A RANT FOR businesses that don’t close their “open” signs endorsements; no charity fund appeals; no commercial pitches. at night. Don’t forget to tell us where So if you look in the morning and they still say the sign is open things happened — Port Angeles, Chimacum, Sequim, etc. but they aren’t open for another



PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Sunday, May 12, 2013 SECTION

SCOREBOARD In this section

B Marathon

Runners again to flock to area IT COMES AS no surprise that the 11th annual North Olympic Discovery Marathon is filling up fast with less than a month to go. One of the more popular Brad smaller marathons in the LaBrie country, event registration still is available in all races except for the corporate and high school marathon relay events. “We have a record number of corporate relay teams this year,” Larry Little, who has been the director of the event all 11 years, said. The 3013 marathon is set for Sunday, June 2. The marathon starts in Sequim and finishes at the Port Angeles City Pier next to Hollywood Beach and the Red Lion Hotel. There still is a lot of excitement and enthusiasm for the race despite the violence and tragedy of the Boston Marathon on April 15. More on that below. The event is much more than the marathon, which has been attracting less than 400 marathoners of the nearly 2,000 total runners in recent years. In addition to the 26.2-mile marathon, there also is the 13.1-mile half marathon — which attracts the bulk of the runners — the Olympic Medical Center 10-kilometer and 5K races and the kids marathon. No, they don’t make the children run 26 miles on race day. They will run the final 1.2 miles of their race on Saturday, June 1, after tracking 25 miles for six to 10 weeks leading up to marathon weekend. These kids aren’t just the ones you see playing in your North Olympic Peninsula neighborhoods. Some of them travel here with their families from all over the country and the world. Anne Newlin of Sparks, Nev., wrote on the NODM website: “After three days, I finally had to peel off my daughter’s kids marathon T-shirt to wash it. She was so proud of her accomplishment that she wore her shirt and medal for two weeks straight. “Our family traveled from Nevada to cheer for my mom and husband running the half-marathon, but watching my girls participate in the kids marathon was the definite highlight for all of us.”

Loggers dominate again Crescent boys win, girls 2nd at Bi-District meet PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

STANWOOD — The Crescent boys dominated the nineteam 1B Bi-District track and field meet at Stanwood High School with 132.5 points. The North Olympic League had a one-two showing as Clallam Bay finished in second place with 67 points. On the girls side, Crescent posted a second-place showing while Neah Bay was fourth with 39 and Clallam Bay took sixth with 33 points. As has been the case most of the year, the Crescent boys team’s win came mainly on the strength of its throwers and jumpers, although this time around the sprinters also shined. Donvovan Christie (a new addition to the relay team), Eric Larson, Beau Bamer and Derrick Findley flew to 46.95 time (third-best in the 1B state classification so far this season) in the 4x100-meter relay to finish only four-tenths of a second behind the meet’s winner, Mount Vernon Christian. “Nice to see our boys short relay put it into the 46s, and back to the top three in the state,” Crescent coach Darrell Yount said. “On paper, I knew that inserting Donovan Christie into the lineup would be a difference maker. “He ran a great opening leg to really get us flying. And with a great hook with our fastest guy, Larson, we were kind of off to the races.” That effort set the tone for the throwers to take over and produce an outpouring of points, including the always tough Crescent javelin crew going 1-2-3 yet again (Quenton Wolfer, Findley and Travis Walker). Clallam Bay’s Evan Messinger finished fourth to give the North Olympic Peninsula a javelin sweep of the four spots moving on to next week’s Quad-

Preps District meet at Port Angeles High School. The Loggers also qualified two in the shot put, Josh Sowders was second and Gene Peppard took third, and in the discus with Sowders and Wolfer placing second and fourth, respectively. The long jump also resulted in a Peninsula sweep, with Findley winning the event for the Loggers, Clallam Bay’s Casey Randall taking second, Christie placing third and Neah Bay’s Elijah Winck grabbing the fourth Quad-District spot. Winck won the triple jump, with Findley finishing third. Findley had a winning mark of 42 feet, but officials incorrectly measured from the wrong board. He was eventually awarded a replacement jump, but he was unable to match his previous jump. More points piled up for Crescent when Donovan Christie won the high jump, despite battling a slick, worn-out runway. Wolfer took third place. “The field event venues were such that they didn’t yield the big marks we had hoped for; perhaps we weren’t as sharp as we needed to be,” Yount said. “And yet, we advanced exactly who we needed to to keep this run [of success] alive.” Other Quad-District qualifiers for the Loggers were Martin Waldrip in the 3,200-meter run and Quinn’Tin March in the 300-meter hurdles. Clallam Bay super sprinter Justin Welever won the 100 and the 200. His 100 time of 11.65 seconds is the sixth best in the state this year and moved him to second place on the Peninsula. Jesse Wonderly won the 400 for the Bruins. Welever and Wonderly also qualified in the 4x400 relay,

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along with Sam Signor and Philip Tejano. Winck is the only qualifier for the Neah Bay boys. He placed third in the 110 hurdles, to go along with his qualifying marks in the triple and long jumps.

For the girls, Crescent got off to a solid start and kept the pedal to the floor to earn second place to the always powerful Mount Vernon Christian. TURN

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Cowboys 2nd at PA invite Chimacum loses playoff; Riders capture third place PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Time’s running out Any runners sitting on the fence about whether to run or not this year need to make up their minds quickly because these races always fill up before the day of the event and registration is cut off. Organizers are trying to keep the total number of participants in all the events to no more than 2,000 for quality purposes. “We’re expecting our numbers should be really similar to what they have been the last three years,” Little said. That’s right around a total of 2,000. “We have that cap for now to maintain that quality we have,” he added. And what a high quality that is. Because of the area scenery, the time of year of the race, the weather and the friendliness of area residents, it has become a yearly designation for some families and a few hard-core runners from around the country and different parts of the world. The event started in 2003 with 248 marathon finishers, which ballooned to 365 the next year and then to 432 in 2005. That was the peak, though, for the 26.2-mile race. Marathon runners finishing the race fell to 391 in 2006, broke the 400-barrier again with 405 in 2007 but then fell back to 367 in 2008.

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Neah Bay’s Inanna McCarty, who won the 3,200 race at the league meet here last week in Joyce, qualified for districts in three distance events, including the 3,200, at the sub-district meet at Stanwood High School.

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Nathan Browning of Chimacum tees off at the first hole of the 19th annual Duke Streeter Memorial Golf Invitational on Friday at Peninsula Golf Club in Port Angeles. Browning and the Cowboys tied for first with Shelton before losing a one-hole playoff by one stroke.

PORT ANGELES — The 19th annual Duke Streeter Memorial Invitational was a wild one as three-time defending champion Shelton nosed out Chimcum in a playoff at Peninsula Golf Club. Shelton, a senior-dominated team, tied 1A powerhouse Chimacum as both squads finished with 13-under 203 scores. The seven teams each played three squads of two players. To decide the team title, Shelton’s and Chimacum’s top twosomes played a sudden death playoff on the 10th hole. Shelton won when Alec Martinson and Zack Lund birdied the playoff hole while Chimacum’s Riley Downs and Jack Hilt pared the 5-par hole. Downs and Hilt finished second in the 18-hole tourney with a 7-under 65 while Martinson and Lund claimed third place with a 6-under 66. Host Port Angeles, meanwhile, captured third place with a team score of 206, just three strokes behind the top two teams. “I thought we had a strong showing,” Port Angeles coach Mark Mitrovich said. “We probably didn’t have enough birdies overall [to win].” The Cowboys had returned the favor after the Roughriders had won Chimacum’s own Port Ludlow Invitational about a week ago. The Roughrider twosome of Joe Barnes and Alex Atwell teamed up, though, to win the individual title with a 10-under

Golf score of 62, winning by three strokes over Downs and Hilt. “I thought Joey and Alex were brilliant,” Mitrovich said. “They played solid ball and had an overall outstanding performance.”

Wolves take third Sequim was fourth with 221, followed by Bremerton with 240, North Mason with 250 and Port Townsend with 251. Grant Cation and Mitchell DeAndre of Shelton shot 68 while teammates John Pentony and Marcus Browning shot a 69. Chimacum’s other teams included Kevin Miller and Nathan Browning, who combined for a 5-under 67, and Cole Lovehamp and Jay Porter, who shot 71. For Port Angeles, Garrett Payton and Alex Brown combined for a 2-under 70 while Austin Underwood and Micah Needham shot a 2-over 74. Anthony Pinza and Jesse Francis had the top score for Sequim with a 4-under 68 while teammates Travis Priest and Jack Shea followed with a 75 and Alex McCracken and henry Markham shot 78. Zack Glover and Keegan Khile shot a low 80 for Port Townsend while teammates Jack Bishop and Austin Khile shot 84 and Grayson Pennell and Harry Doyle followed with an 87. TURN

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SportsRecreation

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

Today’s

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

Scoreboard Area Sports Bowling LAUREL LANES Thursday Spring Classic No. 2 Men’s high game: Cliff Silliman, 222; men’s high series: DeAndre Harris, 577. Women’s high game: Debbie Nickles, 186; Joan Wright, 186; women’s high series: Joan Wright, 497. Monday Spring Classic Men’s high game: Aaron Chavis, 236; men’s high series: Aaron Chavis, 618. Women’s high game: Sage Brown, 207; women’s high series: Sage Brown, 511. SEQUIM OLYMPIC LANES Thursday, April 25 Thursday 9-Pin No-Tap Men’s high game: Gordy Omdal, 276; men’s high series: Gunter Kessler, 543. Women’s high game: Joan Wright, 214; women’s high series: Dona Eby, 459. Wednesday, April 24 Les Schwab Mixed Winning team: King Pins. Tuesday, April 23 Wall Street Journal Men’s high game: Gordy Omdal, 223; men’s high series: Gordy Omdal, 539. Women’s high game: Holly Robirts, 154; women’s high series: Holly Robirts, 452. Leading team: First Edition.

Golf PENINSULA GOLF CLUB Men’s Club Medal Play Thursday Gross: Mike DuPuis, 69; Gerald Petersen, 70; Gary Thorne, 72. Net: Jim Spurr, 65; Chuck Burkhardt, 65; Doug Tissot, 66; Gary McLaughlin, 66; Dennis Ingram, 66; Bill Rinehart, 66; Gene Hitt, 66; Leo Greenawalt, 66. Team gross: Gerald Petersen and John Tweter, 65; Mike DuPuis and Gary thorne, 66; Mike DuPuis and Jim Spurr, 66. Team net: Gerald Petersen and Steve Jones, 56; Dennis Ingram and Bill Rinehart, 57; John Tweter and Steve Jones, 57; Leo Greenawalt and Gary McLaughlin, 58; Dennis Ingram and Joe Tweter, 58; Larry Bourm and Bill Rinehart, 59; Tom Hainstock and Jerry Hendricks, 59; Dale Doran and Doug Tissot, 60; Mike Ferong and Gene Hitt, 60; John Pruss and Quint Boe, 60; Ray Dooley and Daryl Jensen, 60. Wednesday Merchant League — Week Three Team Points 1. Amsan 46.5 2. Fryer Insurance 46 3. Callis Insurance 41.5 4. Triggs Dental Lab No. 2 38.5 5. Joshua’s 37.5 6. Dream Team 36.5 7. Glass Services 32 8. APS Electrical 31 9. D&K Painting 30.5 10. John L. Scott 29.5 11. Les Schwab 29.5 12. Elwood Allstate 25.5 13. Laurel Lanes No. 2 23.5 14. Lakeside Industries 23.5 15. Peninsula College 23 16. Laurel Lanes No. 1 22 17. DeFrang Services 20.5 18/ Triggs Dental Lab No. 1 18 19. Buck’s Hooligans 15 Division One (0 to 10 handicap) Gross: Rick Hoover, 35; Jim Jones Jr., 37. Net: George Peabody, 30; Matt Murray, 31; Jack Heckman, 32; Tim Lusk, 33; Jay Kalla, 33; Mike Robinson, 33; Randy Barber, 35; Josh Fox, 35; Greg Senf, 35; Gene Ketchu, 35. Division Two (11 to 14 handicap) Gross: Randy Hoch, 44; Dan Mock, 44. Net: Marc Kalla, 30; Aaron Clawson, 32; Tory Clayton, 33; Fred Pratt, 33; Mike Oakes, 34; Ward Dunscomb, 34; Bobby Allis, 35; Josh Gardner, 35; Vic Ward, 35. Division Three (15 and up handicap) Gross: Rich Rodibaugh, 47; Dan Huff, 48. Net: Cory Johnson, 27; Nancy VanWinkle, 29; Vern Elkhart, 29; Christy Brown, 31; Barb Thompson, 31; Milt Johnson, 32; Lori Oakes, 33; Jay Norberg, 33; Sue Barber, 33; Joan Hanson, 33. Ladies Club Sub Par Any Three Holes Gross: Linda Bruch, 59; Linda Beatty, 62; Sue Barber, 63; Sherry Henderson, 66; Cindy Schlaffman, 66. Net: Donna Willenberg, 35; Dona Scarcia, 37.5. Tuesday Men’s Club Better Nine Gross: Mike DuPuis, 33; Gary Thorne, 36; Bob Brodhun, 36; Mike Clayton, 36. Net: Ming Chang, 31; Jack Munro, 32; Gary McLaughlin, 32; Todd Negus, 32; Dennis Ingram, 32.5; Jerry Sparks, 32.5. Team gross: Mike DuPuis and Gary Thorne, 65; Mike DuPuis and Gerald Petersen, 66. Net: Mike DuPuis and Jim Spurr, 57; Tom Lowe and Dennis Ingram, 58; Gerald Petersen and Jim Spurr, 59; Dale Doran and Jack Munro, 60; Tom Lowe and Craig Jacobs, 60; Bill Pampell and Dale Doran, 61; Bill Pampell and Andy Vanderweyden, 61; Bill Pampell and Doug Tissot, 61; Bill Pampell and Jack Munro, 61; Leo Greenawalt and Gary McLaughlin, 61; Leo Greenawalt and Bernie Anselmo, 61; Tom Lowe and Joe Tweter, 61; Todd Negus and Scott Spencer, 61. Saturday, May 4 Men’s Club Sub Par One Hole Each Nine Gross: Bob Brodhun, 76; Mark Leffers, 76; Ryan Seiler, 76; Jack Heckman, 76. Net: Leo Greenawalt, 61; David Henderson, 66; Ray Santiago, 66; Joe Tweter, 66; Jade Tisdale, 66; Gene Middleton, 66; Herb Renner, 66; Kevin Borde, 66. Team gross: Mike Clayton and Brian Duncan, 75; Bob Brodhun and Kerry Perkins, 75; Rayn Seiler and Jade Tisdale, 75. Team net: David Henderson and Ray Dooley, 58; David Henderson and Leo Greenawalt, 59; David Henderson and Ray Santiago, 60; David Henderson and Bernie Anselmo, 60; Ray Dooley and Ray Santiago, 61. SUNLAND GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB Tuesday BB of Men and Women Combined 1. Owen Prout, Jan Prout, Bob Holsmann and Nadia Saulsbury, 125; 2. Judy Kelley, Karl Kelley, Nancy Harlan and Jam Harlan, 126; 3. Russ McClelland, Larry Burback, Dana Burback and Cecil Black, 128.

Closest to pin No. 17: Dave Anderson, 22 ft. 3 in. CEDARS AT DUNGENESS Thursday Merchant League Team Standings Team Points 1. Windermere Sequim East 10 2. Dungeness Plumbing 9 3. Eric’s RV Repair 8 4. SkyRidge Golf Shop 7.5 5. Eagle Home Mortgage 7.5 6. Dungeness Tile and Stone 6.5 7. America’s Finest 5.5 8. Jamestown Aces 4.5 9. Mischmidt 3.5 10. Dungeness Golf Shop 2.5 11. Wash N Go Car Wash 2.5 12. Sequim Plumbing 2.0 13. Double Eagle 1.0 14. Stymie’s Bar and Grill 0 Weekly Results SkyRidge Golf Shop 7.5, Dungeness Golf Shop 2.5 Windermere Sequim East 10, Stymie’s Bar And Grill 0 Dungeness Plumbing 9, Double Eagle 1 Eric’s RV Repair 8, Sequim Plumbing 2 Dungeness Tile and Stone 6.5, Mischmidt 3.5 America’s Finest 5.5, Jamestown Aces 4.5 Eagle Home Mortgage 7.5, Wash N Go Car Wash 2.5 Low Handicap Division Gross: Sid Krumpe, 35; Matt Eveland, 36; Evin Still, 40; Frank Arnold, 41; Glenn Smithson, 41; Robert Bourns, 41. Net: Jason Hoffman, 32; Kurt Anderson, 33; Kris Lether, 34; Kevin McCormack, 34; Jerry Pedersen, 34. High Handicap Division Gross: George Penic, 45; Bill Bailey, 46; Jeff Kussin, 47; Jeremy Oliver, 47. Net: Matt Bailey, 39; Walter Ritchie, 30; Greg Ulin, 31; Eric Davis, 31. Closest to pin Low handicap division No. 4: Jeremy Oliver, 2 ft. 8 in. No. 8: Ron Sather, 9 ft. High handicap division No. 4: Eric Davis, 8 ft. 5 in. No. 8: Greg Ulin, 31 ft. 6 in. Wednesday Two Man Best Ball Flight One Gross: Gil Goodman and Jeff Upchurch, 68. Net: Everett Thometz and John Raske, 62; Fred Harrison and Cary Richardson, 62. Flight Two Gross: Ken Lane and Ron Sather, 72. Net: Arni Fredrickson and Bill Rucker, 60. Gayle Doyle and Brian Anderson, 60. Flight Three Gross: Walt Stetter and James Engel, 77. Net: Darrell Waller and George Switzer, 62. Flight Four Gross: Dave Johnson and Jerry McLinn, 79. Net: Jeff Hooper and Richard Hansen, 59; Ray Ballantyne and Robert Hammond, 60; Brian McArdle and Bates Bankert, 60. Closest to pin Low division No. 4: Bruce Durning, 10 ft. 4 in. No. 11: Dean Druse, 4 in. High division No. 4: Bob Purser, 16 ft. 3 in. No. 11: JC Schumacher, 5 ft. 4 in. Open No. 17: Nicolaas Holt, 9 in. Tuesday Women’s 18 Hole Monthly Medal Division One Gross: Lori Oakes, 72; Gail Savage, 76; Barb Burrows, 78. Division Two Gross: Betty Kettel and Joanie Oakes tied at 74; Bonney Benson, 75. Closest to pin Division one No. 11: Lori Oakes, 25 ft. 6 in. Division two No. 4: Donna Maclean, 8 ft. 8 in. No. 11: Shelley Huntington, 14 ft. 2 in. Putts Division one: Carole Patterson, 32 Division two: Betty Kettel, 33. Chip In’s No. 4: Betty Kettel and Lori Oakes. Birdies No. 4: Lori Oakes. Tuesday, April 30 Women’s 18 Hole Sweet 16 Division One Gross: Pat Conway, 59; Carole Patterson and Judy Reno tied at 63. Division Two Gross: Lori Oakes, 57; Donna Maclean, 59; Joanie Oakes, 60. Closest to pin Division one No. 8: Carole Patterson, 23 ft. 9 in. No. 17: Pat Conway, 2 ft. 8 in. Division two No. 8: Jackie Davis, 35 ft. No. 17: Lilli Gomes, 35 ft. 8 in. Putts Division one: Judy Reno, 31; Pat Schumacher, Marlene Erickson, Gail Savage, Carole Patterson and Marine Hirschfeld tied at 33. Division two: Lori Oakes, 31; Joanie Oakes, 34. Chip In’s No. 6 and No. 9: Gail Savage. No. 10: Pat Schumacher. Birdies No. 13: Barb Burrows. No. 17: Pat Conway. SKYRIDGE GOLF COURSE Thursday Merchants League Team Standings Team Points 1. Windermere Sequim East 10 2. Dungeness Plumbing 9 3. Eric’s RV Repair 8 4. SkyRidge Golf Shop 7.5 5. Eagle Home Mortgage 7.5 6. Dungeness Tile and Stone 6.5 7. America’s Finest 5.5 8. Jamestown Aces 4.5 9. Mischmidt 3.5 10. Dungeness Golf Shop 2.5 11. Wash N Go Car Wash 2.5 12. Sequim Plumbing 2.0 13. Double Eagle 1.0 14. Stymies Bar And Grill 0 Weekly Results SkyRidge Golf Shop 7.5, Dungeness Golf Shop 2.5 Windermere Sequim East 10, Stymies Bar and Grill 0

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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

Dungeness Plumbing 9, Double Eagle 1 Eric’s RV Repair 8, Sequim Plumbing 2 Dungenss Tile and Stone 6.5, Mischmidt 3.5 America’s Finest 5.5, Jamestown Aces 4.5 Eagle Home Mortgage 7.5, Wash N Go Car Wash 2.5 Low division Gross: Sid Krumpe, 35; Matt Eveland, 36; Evin Still, 40; Frank Arnold, 41; Gelnn Smithson, 41; Robert Burns, 41. High division Gross: George Penic, 45; Bill Bailey, 46; Jeff Kussin, 47; Jeremy Oliver,47. Low division Net: Jason Hoffman, 32; Kurt Anderson, 33; Kris Lether, 34; Kevin McCormack, 34; Jerry Pedersen, 34. High division Net: Matt Bailey, 29; Walter Richie, 30; Greg Ulin, 31; Eric Davis, 31. Closest to pin Low division No. 4: Jeremy Oliver, 2 ft. 8 in. No. 8: Ron Sather 9 ft. High division No. 4: Eric Davis, 8 ft. 5 in. No. 8: Greg Ulin, 31 ft. 6 in. DISCOVERY BAY GOLF COURSE Thursday, May 2 Ladies Club Better Nine Net: Edna Chicarell, 34; Lynn Pierle, 37; Sheila Kilmer, 40.5; Norma Lupkes, 41; Pat Burns, 41.5. Thursday, April 25 Ladies Club Low Puffs Net: Barb Aldrich 31; Lynn Pierle, 31; Sheila Kilmer, 32; Marianne Ott, 34; Pat Burns, 38.

Baseball And Softball NORTH OLYMPIC LEAGUE Standings through Friday Cal Ripken Majors American League Team W L Eagles 8 2 Elks 7 3 Swain’s 6 4 Local 155 2 8 National League Team W L Lions 9 1 Rotary 4 6 Laurel Lanes 2 8 Hi-Tech Electronics 1 9 Babe Ruth Major 12Un Softball Team W L Tranco Transmissions 4 2 Paint and Carpet Barn 3 3 Jim’s Pharmacy 3 3 Olympic Labor Council 2 2 Boulevard Wellness 3 4 PA Power Equipment 2 3 Babe Ruth 16U Softball Team W L Kiwanis 5 0 KONP 3 1 ILWU 2 3 Diamond Roofing 2 3 Albertson’s 1 4 West End 0 2 Cal Ripken AAA Minor Baseball Team W L Frame & Eye 6 0 Nippon 3 3 Laurel Dental Clinic 3 3 Shaltry Orthodontics 0 6

Slowpitch PA PARKS & RECREATION LEAGUE Standings through Saturday, May 4 Women’s Division Team W L Smuggler’s Landing 2 0 Shirley’s Cafe 2 0 California Horizon 1 1 Elwha Bravettes 1 1 Alan Millet Law Office 1 1 Shaltry & Rudd 1 1 Extreme Sports Park 0 2 Airport Garden Center 0 2 Men’s Purple Division Team W L Next Door Gastropub 2 0 Cafe Redbirds 2 0 Elwha Young Gunz 1 1 Earth Tech Construct 1 1 All Weather Heating 0 2 Moose Lodge Bulls 0 2 Men’s Gold Division Team W L Elwha Braves 2 0 Evergreen Collision 2 0 Ace Michael’s Inc. 1 1 Lincoln Street Coffee 1 1 U.S. Coasties 1 1 Coo Coo Nest 0 2 Moon Palace Bombers 0 2 Thursday’s Results Women’s division Shirley’s Cafe, 21, Airport Garden Center, 1. Shirley’s Cafe, 10, Shaltry and Rudd Orthodontic, 5. Shaltry and Rudd Orthodontics, 5, Extreme Sports Park, 0. Law Office of Alan Millet, 17, Extreme Sports Park, 0. Smuggler’s Landing, 11, Airport Garden Center, 1.

Baseball Mariners 6, Athletics 3 Friday’s Game Seattle ab r hbi ab r hbi Jaso dh 4 1 2 0 MSndrs cf 4000 S.Smith lf 4 0 0 0 Seager 3b 2320 Lowrie ss 4 0 1 2 KMorls dh 3121 Cespds cf 4 0 0 0 Morse rf 4011 Moss rf 4 0 0 0 Smoak 1b 3111 Dnldsn 3b 3 0 0 0 Ibanez lf 3113 Barton 1b 3 0 0 0 EnChvz lf 1000 DNorrs c 3 1 1 1 JMontr c 3000 Sogard 2b 2 1 1 0 Ackley 2b 4000 Rosales ph-2b10 0 0 Ryan ss 3000 Totals 32 3 5 3 Totals 30 6 7 6 Oakland 000 002 010—3 Seattle 203 010 00x—6 D—Oakland 1. LOB—Oakland 2, Seattle 5. 2B—Lowrie (12), K.Morales (8), Smoak (6). HR—D.Norris (1), Ibanez (3). SB—Seager (1). IP H R ER BB SO Oakland Straily L,1-1 5 6 6 6 4 4 Resop 2 1 0 0 0 1 J.Chavez 1 0 0 0 0 0 Seattle Iwakuma W,4-1 7 4 2 2 0 9 Oakland

O.Perez 1 1 1 1 0 3 Wilhelmsen S,10-10 1 0 0 0 0 0 Straily pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. HBP—by Resop (K.Morales). WP—Iwakuma. Umpires—Home, Ted Barrett; First, Alfonso Marquez; Second, Dan Bellino; Third, Mike DiMuro. T—2:41. A—25,509 (47,476).

American League West Division W L Pct GB Texas 22 13 .629 — Oakland 18 19 .486 5 Seattle 17 19 .472 5½ Los Angeles 13 22 .371 9 Houston 10 26 .278 12½ East Division W L Pct GB New York 21 13 .618 — Baltimore 22 14 .611 — Boston 22 15 .595 ½ Tampa Bay 17 18 .486 4½ Toronto 14 24 .368 9 Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 20 13 .606 — Kansas City 18 14 .563 1½ Cleveland 18 15 .545 2 Minnesota 16 16 .500 3½ Chicago 14 19 .424 6 Friday’s Games Detroit 10, Cleveland 4 Tampa Bay 6, San Diego 3 Boston 5, Toronto 0 Baltimore 9, Minnesota 6, 10 innings L.A. Angels 7, Chicago White Sox 5 N.Y. Yankees 11, Kansas City 6 Texas 4, Houston 2 Seattle 6, Oakland 3 Saturday’s Games Toronto 3, Boston 2 San Diego at Tampa Bay, late Cleveland at Detroit, late Baltimore at Minnesota, late L.A. Angels at Chicago White Sox, late N.Y. Yankees at Kansas City, late Texas at Houston, late Oakland at Seattle, late Today’s Games Cleveland (McAllister 3-3) at Detroit (Porcello 1-2), 10:08 a.m. Toronto (Jenkins 0-0) at Boston (Dempster 2-3), 10:35 a.m. San Diego (Stults 3-2) at Tampa Bay (Ro. Hernandez 1-4), 10:40 a.m. Baltimore (W.Chen 2-3) at Minnesota (Diamond 3-2), 11:10 a.m. N.Y. Yankees (Kuroda 4-2) at Kansas City (E.Santana 3-1), 11:10 a.m. Texas (Tepesch 2-3) at Houston (Lyles 1-0), 11:10 a.m. Oakland (Milone 3-4) at Seattle (J.Saunders 2-4), 1:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 3-1) at Chicago White Sox (Sale 3-2), 5:05 p.m. Monday’s Games N.Y. Yankees at Cleveland, 9:05 a.m., 1st game N.Y. Yankees at Cleveland, 12:35 p.m., 2nd game Houston at Detroit, 4:08 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 5:10 p.m. Kansas City at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m. Texas at Oakland, 7:05 p.m.

National League West Division W L Pct GB Arizona 21 15 .583 — San Francisco 21 15 .583 — Colorado 19 17 .528 2 San Diego 16 19 .457 4½ Los Angeles 13 21 .382 7 East Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 21 14 .600 — Washington 20 15 .571 1 Philadelphia 16 21 .432 6 New York 14 19 .424 6 Miami 11 25 .306 10½ Central Division W L Pct GB St. Louis 23 12 .657 — Cincinnati 20 16 .556 3½ Pittsburgh 20 16 .556 3½ Milwaukee 15 18 .455 7 Chicago 13 22 .371 10 Friday’s Games Washington 7, Chicago Cubs 3 Cincinnati 4, Milwaukee 3 Pittsburgh 7, N.Y. Mets 3 Tampa Bay 6, San Diego 3 St. Louis 3, Colorado 0 Arizona 3, Philadelphia 2 Miami 5, L.A. Dodgers 4 San Francisco 8, Atlanta 2 Saturday’s Games Pittsburgh 11, N.Y. Mets 2 St. Louis 3, Colorado 0 Atlanta at San Francisco, late Chicago Cubs at Washington, late Milwaukee at Cincinnati, late San Diego at Tampa Bay, late Philadelphia at Arizona, late Miami at L.A. Dodgers, late Today’s Games Milwaukee (W.Peralta 3-2) at Cincinnati (Arroyo 2-4), 10:10 a.m. Pittsburgh (J.Gomez 2-0) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 4-0), 10:10 a.m. Chicago Cubs (Feldman 3-3) at Washington (G.Gonzalez 3-2), 10:35 a.m. San Diego (Stults 3-2) at Tampa Bay (Ro. Hernandez 1-4), 10:40 a.m. Colorado (J.De La Rosa 3-3) at St. Louis (J.Garcia 4-1), 11:15 a.m. Atlanta (Medlen 1-4) at San Francisco (Lincecum 2-2), 1:05 p.m. Miami (Koehler 0-0) at L.A. Dodgers (Capuano 0-2), 1:10 p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 4-1) at Arizona (McCarthy 0-3), 1:10 p.m. Monday’s Games Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at St. Louis, 4:05 p.m. Colorado at Chicago Cubs, 5:05 p.m. Atlanta at Arizona, 6:40 p.m. Washington at L.A. Dodgers, 7:10 p.m.

Basketball NBA Playoffs CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (Best-of-7) EASTERN CONFERENCE Miami 2, Chicago 1 Monday, May 6: Chicago 93, Miami 86 Wednesday, May 8: Miami 115, Chicago 78

SPORTS ON TV

Today 10 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Lacrosse NCAA, Cornell vs. Maryland, Division I Tournament, First Round, Site: Chevy Chase Bank Field (Live) 10:30 a.m. (28) TBS Baseball MLB, Toronto Blue Jays vs. Boston Red SoxSite: Fenway Park - Boston (Live) 10:30 a.m. WGN Baseball MLB, Chicago Cubs vs. Washington Nationals, Site: Nationals Park - Washington, D.C. (Live) 11 a.m. (5) KING (8) GBLBC Golf PGA, The Player’s Championship, Final Round, Site: TPC Sawgrass - Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. (Live) Noon Pac-12 NETWORK Baseball NCAA, Utah at Washington (Live) 12:30 p.m. (4) KOMO Basketball NBA, San Antonio Spurs vs. Golden State Warriors, Playoffs, Western Conference Semifinals, Game 4, Site: The Oracle Oakland, Calif. (Live) 1 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Oakland Athletics vs. Seattle Mariners, Site: Safeco Field - Seattle (Live) 3:55 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Soccer MFL, Cruz Azul vs. Monarcas Morelia (Live) 4 p.m. (2) CBUT Hockey NHL, Boston Bruins vs. Toronto Maple Leafs, Stanley Cup Playoffs, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, Game 6, Site: Air Canada Centre - Toronto (Live) 5 p.m. (26) ESPN Baseball MLB, Los Angeles Angels vs. Chicago White Sox, Site: U.S. Cellular Field - Chicago (Live) Friday, May 10: Miami 104, Chicago 94 Monday: Miami at Chicago, 4 p.m. Wednesday: Chicago at Miami, 4 p.m. x-Friday: Miami at Chicago, TBA x-Sunday, May 19: Chicago at Miami, TBA Indiana 1, New York 1 Sunday, May 5: Indiana 102, New York 95 Tuesday, May 7: New York 105, Indiana 79 Saturday: New York at Indiana, late. Tuesday: New York at Indiana, 4 p.m. Thursday: Indiana at New York, 5 p.m. x-Saturday, May 18: New York at Indiana, TBA x-Monday, May 20: Indiana at New York, 5 p.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE San Antonio 2, Golden State 1 Monday, May 6: San Antonio 129, Golden State 127, 2OT Wednesday, May 8: Golden St. 100, San Antonio 91 Friday: San Antonio 102, Golden State 92 Today: San Antonio at Golden State, 12:30 p.m. Tuesday: Golden State at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. x-Thursday: San Antonio at Golden State, TBA x-Sunday, May 19: Golden State at San Antonio, TBA Memphis 2, Oklahoma City 1 Sunday, May 5: Oklahoma City 93, Memphis 91 Tuesday, May 7: Memphis 99, Oklahoma City 93 Saturday: Memphis 87, Oklahoma City 81 Monday: Oklahoma City at Memphis, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday: Memphis at Oklahoma City, 6:30 p.m. x-Friday: Oklahoma City at Memphis, TBA x-Sunday, May 19: Memphis at Oklahoma City, TBA (x-if necessary)

Transactions Baseball American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Optioned RHP Alex Burnett to Norfolk (IL). Recalled RHP Steve Johnson from Norfolk. DETROIT TIGERS—Optioned RHP Luke Putkonen to Toledo (IL). Reinstated LHP Phil Coke from the 15-day DL. HOUSTON ASTROS—Sent RHP Josh Fields to Quad Cities (MWL) for a rehab assignment. OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Optioned RHP Evan Scribner to Sacramento (PCL). Recalled RHP Jesse Chavez from Sacramento. TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Placed OF Rajai Davis on the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Michael Schwimer to Buffalo (IL). Recalled RHP Chad Jenkins from New Hampshire (EL). National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Sent OF Adam Eaton to Visalia (Cal) for a rehab assignment. ATLANTA BRAVES—Optioned SS Paul Janish to Gwinnett (IL). CHICAGO CUBS—Sent RHP Matt Garza to Tennessee (SL) for a rehab assignment. Announced RHP Kameron Loe declined outright assignment and elected free agency. LOS ANGELES DODGERS—Optioned 2B Elian Herrera to Albuquerque (PCL). Selected the contract of 1B Scott Van Slyke from Albuquerque. Transferred RHP Chad Billingsley to the 60-day DL. Sent LHP Scott Elbert and RHP Zack Greinke to Rancho Cucamonga (Cal) for rehab assignments. MIAMI MARLINS—Sent C Jeff Mathis to New Orleans (PCL) for a rehab assignment. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Optioned RHP Tyler Cloyd and LHP Joe Savery to Lehigh Valley (IL). Recalled RHP Justin De Fratus from Lehigh Valley (IL). PITTSBURGH PIRATES—Optioned RHP Duke Welker to Indianapolis (IL). Reinstated LHP Francisco Liriano from the 15-day DL. SAN DIEGO PADRES—Optioned RHP Brad Boxberger to Tucson (AHL). Designated RHP Fautino De Los Santos.


SportsRecreation

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

B3

Replay looms after bad week for umpires BY TIM DAHLBERG

even when the video evidence showed clearly that it was a game tying home Take heart, baseball run by Adam Rosales of the fans. Expanded instant Oakland A’s. replay is on its way, though That got Oakland manit may not be the game ager Bob Melvin ejected for changer the sport needs. arguing, and it quite possiNot when there are bly cost his team a game. umpires who don’t know It also brought Randy the rules, and others who Marsh, MLB’s director of ignore what they see in umpires, to the game the front of them. next night to speak to Incompetence, meet umpires and make sure the sheer arrogance. The glaring mistakes of replay equipment was functioning properly. the past week didn’t go It was, which makes the unnoticed by Major League Baseball, which suspended decision not to overturn the original call even more perone umpire for two games and fined three others after plexing. Even with the use of they botched a rule on high definition technology, pitching changes in Housthe umpiring crew was ton that most fans sitting either too proud — or simat home watching on teleply too arrogant — to vision could have gotten change their minds over right. what MLB executive vice Why four umpires who are supposed to know even president Joe Torre said was a blown call. the most arcane rules Remember that when couldn’t figure it out is a mystery, though suspended Bud Selig stands before cameras sometime later plate umpire Fieldin Culbreth said he takes “all the this year and announces that instant replay — now responsibility’” for what confined mostly to trying to happened. get home runs right — will More troubling than be expanded next season to basic ignorance of a rule, include fair-or-foul calls though, was what hapdown the line, trapped pened in Cleveland a day balls and maybe even close earlier. plays on basepaths. There, three umpires Baseball purists won’t went to a video review and upheld an original call that like it, but it’s inevitable. a ball didn’t clear the fence The way technology and THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

And there was a review the same night of a double off the top of the center field wall at Dodger Stadium by Miami’s Chris Coghlan that showed the umpires got it right. The argument that replay slows up the game is nonsense to anyone who has watched Josh Beckett pitch or any number of hitters take walks around home plate between pitches. Games are bloated now mostly because umpires don’t enforce rules that are in place to keep the game moving, and an occasional few minutes spent looking at a video THE ASSOCIATED PRESS replay isn’t going to make a big difference. Umpire Angel Hernandez, right, ejects Oakland Athletics manager Bob Umpires, though, are Melvin for arguing a call in the ninth inning on Wednesday. going to be proven wrong at times, and they’d better camera angles have ball down the left field line Cleveland, where three get used to it. It happens improved, it’s hard to make landed clearly fair just a umpires couldn’t bring an argument any longer few feet away from umpire themselves to change a call every week in the NFL, and yet somehow officials that the game is better off Phil Cuzzi, who called it despite irrefutable evidence there have managed not to without the benefit of the foul. The Yankees ended up on the screen in front of let games careen out of best set of eyes around. beating Minnesota in that them that it was a home control. Other sports have long game and going on to win run. It’s been a tough year so since figured that out. The the World Series, but the Umpires around the far for umpires, who have NFL led the way and still result could have been dif- league were on their best been in the spotlight in reviews more than any ferent had the call been behavior, though, in the unflattering ways, includother sport, but instant correct. wake of the debacle. In ing Tom Hallion’s verbal replay is also used in the The problem with New York on Friday night spat with Tampa Bay NHL, NBA, college football instant replay in baseball they huddled and watched pitcher David Price last and Grand Slam tennis. is that umpires are still video of a ball hit by Pitts- month that got him fined. Imagine, if you will, had resistant to anything that burgh’s Garrett Jones that Like that incident, the it been in place in the takes away their absolute caromed back on the field missteps this past week American League playoffs authority or exposes them and then reversed their could have been avoided by in 2009, when the Joe as human. That seems to call to give him a three-run umpires with a little clear Mauer’s 11th inning fly have been the case in home run. thinking.

Wigan beats Man City to win first FA Cup Golf THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON — As blueand-white confetti exploded under the Wembley arch, Wigan players lifted a trophy for the first time in the club’s 81-year history. In one of the biggest FA Cup final upsets, a team playing non-league football 35 years ago and assembled for barely $30 million beat big-spending Manchester City 1-0 on Saturday. Winning English football’s showpiece match was not only a reward for Wigan

owner Dave Whelan’s investment in the small northern club, but completed his unfinished business from the 1960 final. After breaking a leg playing for Blackburn at the old Wembley, Whelan’s career ended at the age of 23 and he started amassing the wealth that enabled him to ultimately finance Wigan. “The dream has come true,” Whelan said. “I’m repaid for 1960 when I broke my leg and we lost the match.”

The game was drifting into extra time — and City defender Pablo Zabaleta had just been sent off — when substitute Ben Watson planted a header from Shaun Maloney’s corner into the net in the 90th minute. Watson had only just returned to action after recovering from a broken leg. “It’s been a long six months for myself and it’s been a dream — coming on in an FA Cup final and scor-

ing the winner,” Watson said. But there was no champagne for the Wigan players after the match. Now the history-makers will try to avoid the dubious distinction of being the first FA Cup winners to be relegated in the same season. Wigan is in the drop zone with just two rounds remaining, three points from safety. “We’ve got two massive games now to stay in the league and if we perform

like that we’ll be all right,” Watson said. “We crack on again tomorrow.” Wigan is the second history-maker this season at Wembley, with Swansea winning its first major trophy in the League Cup final in February. “Today it was David and Goliath,” Wigan manager Roberto Martinez said. “It was following a dream. We saw the underdogs play with incredible bravery, incredible belief and they defied the odds again. That’s the FA Cup.”

CONTINUED FROM B1 Earning closest to the pin honors on par 3s were Barnes on No. 3, Atwell on No. 4, Marcus Browning of Shelton on No. 9, Priest on No. 14, Barnes and Atwell on No. 16 and Glover and Keegan Khile on No. 17. Martinson of Shelton took long-drive honors on No. 18. Overall, Friday was a perfect day for the golf tournament, and the course was in great condition, Mitrovich said.

Preps: Neah Bay’s McCarty a triple qualifier CONTINUED FROM B1 First, the Loggers’ 4x200 relay team (Jandi Frantz, Nycole McNaughton, Ryan Lester and Kellie Belford) qualified easily, and then the 4x100 team (Frantz, Belford, Lester, Devanie Christie) got its time into the 54s yet again and barely was nipped for the title by Mount Vernon. Neah Bay’s 4x200 relay team of Faye Chartraw, Summer Hamman, Desarae Perry and Cassie Dias also qualified for the QuadDistrict meet. Devanie Christie and Lester had another great battle in the 100 hurdles, with Christie winning this time around with a mark of 17.35 seconds, just off her own school record — which she shares with Lester — from two weeks ago of 17.24, which broke a decades old mark. “Devanie Christie and Ryan Lester did it again in the hurdles,” Yount said. “Just very talented and ultra-competitive kids. They both hate to lose, so when they hook up head to head, big things tend to happen.” In the 300 hurdles, Belford ripped off a time in the 52-second range to take third and move forward in her specialty. Clallam Bay eighth grader Molly McCoy also qualified by finishing fourth.

Belford added a fourthplace showing in the 200meter dash to add to her qualify list. “Belford was great again all day long,” Yount said. “She leads our team from every perspective: Captains our team, captains the relays, takes care of her individual stuff, and really just rallies all her teammates to succeed. “What an athlete.” Devanie Christie also won another javelin title with a nice 108-feet, 2-inch throw, and notched a thirdplace finish in the triple jump. Teammate Meghan Shamp took fourth in the javelin to advance to next week’s Quad-Districts. Shamp also qualified in the discus with a secondplace showing, as did fellow Logger Shannon Williams and Neah Bay’s Selena Akin. Williams won the shot put with a heave of 31-10, while Chartraw was second with a 30-01.25. Frantz had a good day in the high jump and the long jump, taking second in both. Williams will join her at the Quad meet by taking fourth, as will Clallam Bay’s McCoy. Inanna McCarty was a triple qualifier for Neah Bay, finishing second in the 3,200 and third in both the 800 and 1,600. Clallam Bay’s Inga

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Forks pair wins at Evergreen meet

Chimacum wins two league titles

ELMA — Shane WhiteEagle and Sydney Christensen both won titles for the Spartans at the SWLEvergreen Division meet. WhiteEagle won the boys shot put with a heave of 45 feet 11.5 inches, the second-best mark on the North Olympic Peninsula this year. Christensen dominated the discus with a hurl of 107-11, almost 8 feet longer than her nearest competitor, DeShae Nedro of Rainier. Forks had a nice showing overall in the throwing events. Leo Gonzales placed third in the boys discus with a 125-11 mark, and Mercedes Flores finished third in the girls shot put. Tristina Smith took third place in the javelin and Flores finished in fourth. Hugo Lucas took second place for the Spartans in the boys 3,200-meter run. In the girls 800, Kari

EATONVILLE — Daryl Settlemire and Bailey Castillo both won Nisqually League titles for Chimacum, Settlemire in the discus and Castillo in the javelin. Both athletes will compete at the 1A Tri-District meet at King’s High School in Seattle on Thursday at Saturday. Other Cowboys who advanced are Rafael Pagasian in the triple jump and long jump, Mel Thornton in the 300-meter hurdles and long jump, and the 4x100meter relay team of Eoin Hartnett, Trevon Noel, Pagasian and Thornton.

Softball Cedar Park Christian 6, Chimacum 1 TACOMA — The Eagles claimed third place in the Nisqually League by handling the Cowboys in a tiebreaker game at Heidelberg

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Cedar Park Christian 6, Chimacum 1 Chimacum 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 —1 3 Cedar Park 2 0 4 0 0 0 x —6 6 WP- Girgus; LP- Eldridge Pitching Statistics Chimacum: Eldridge 2 1/2IP, 2K, 3BB, 4H; Nelson 3 1/2IP, 3K, 2H. Cedar Park Christian: Girgus 7IP, 5K, 4BB, 3H. Hitting Statistics Chimacum: Cossell 2-4, 2B; Hathaway 1-2, RBI. Cedar Park Christian: Fazio 2-3, RBI; Britton 1-3, RBI.

Sequim, PA meet in softball title tilt BREMERTON — Sequim and Port Angeles both won their opening games at the Olympic League tournament Saturday afternoon at the Kitsap County Fairgrounds to set up a battle between the two in the tournament final later in the day. The winner will earn the league’s top spot in the this weekend’s West Central District tournament.

Not a surprise Both teams won rather handily as expected considering neither team lost a game to the league’s other seven teams this season (the Wolves rolled through the league undefeated and dealt the Roughriders’ their only losses). Sequim (18-0) beat Olympic 13-0 in five innings. It was the Wolves’ third win over the Trojans in 15 days, and Sequim has won by a combined score of 58-3. Port Angeles (17-2) got its third win of the season over third-place Kingston by a score of 6-1.

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Sports Complex. As the league’s fourthplace team, Chimacum (8-8) opens the 1A Tri-District tournament with a loserout home game Thursday against the Northwest District’s No. 4 team. Cedar Park Christian put up two runs in the first inning and four in the third, and then held on as Chimacum struggled to generate much offense. The Cowboys were held to three hits — Mallori Cossell had two, including a double, and Krista Hathaway had the other and drove in Chimacum’s only run. Cossell also had a strong defensive showing from the catcher position, as did Kiersten Snyder in right field and at shortstop, and Megan Dukek at third place.

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Larson finished second with a time of 2:28.28. Andrew Armas placed third in the boys long jump and fifth in the triple jump. Forks will next compete at the 1A Southwest District championships at Rainier High School on Friday.

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Erickson placed third in the 400 to move on. Thursday’s Quad-District meet will be highlighted by a battle between Crescent and fellow 1B state power Wishkah Valley, who for the first time ever will have to go through each other to get to state.


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SportsRecreation

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Seahawks open rookie minicamp BY TIM BOOTH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

RENTON — Before he ever got on the field with the newest batch of rookies, Pete Carroll pulled up an interesting piece of film for his coaches to watch Friday morning. It had nothing to do with anyone who was about to be on the field on the first day of the Seattle Seahawks’ rookie minicamp. Carroll watched the video from quarterback Russell Wilson’s first practice at the same rookie minicamp a year ago. Wilson was miked up for the practice, so coaches got a chance to hear every time he chided himself for a fumbled snap or a missed throw. The message Carroll was trying to send went beyond getting another look at their franchise quarterback. Instead, Carroll wanted his coaches to remember that with the rookies, it might not look good at first, but some could end up being contributors. Major contributors. “It was kind of funny to see it to know how far he’s come in such a short time,” Carroll said. “It was for the staff to remember that we might not see everything the first day and keep the hopes that we can bring some good stuff out of these guys.” Carroll spent most of the first day Friday keeping an eye on some offensive prospects the Seahawks selected

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Seattle’s top draft pick, running back Christine Michael, right, tries to avoid the defense of John Lotulelei, left, and Jaydan Bird, second from right, during practice drills at Seattle’s rookie minicamp in Renton on Friday. in last month’s draft. It’s easier for the offensive players to grab attention in a non-padded minicamp, and running back Christine Michael, wide receiver Chris Harper and tight end Luke Willson certainly did that on Day 1. Michael was Seattle’s highest pick in the 2013 draft, taken with the final pick of the second-round

after the Seahawks dealt their first-round pick to Minnesota when they acquired wide receiver Percy Harvin. Seattle drafted Michael to fill the role previously held by Leon Washington, but with a bit more durability to run inside. He was even issued Washington’s old No. 33. Michael’s quickness was

evident on the first day. He added a little fire with a loud scream after racing into the end zone during team drills. “It was just fun bringing emotion to the game and just having fun, man, competing,” Michael said. “Just that I’m a good player, I’m a great teammate, I’m here to compete, I’m here to learn and just

put it all out there. Help contribute to my team as much as possible.” For any of this batch of rookies to make the Seahawks roster could be more difficult than in the previous three seasons under Carroll. An already young and loaded roster has made the Seahawks a popular Super Bowl pick months before

the season begins. “We’ve told them that we’re looking for the competitiveness. Show us that first. They’re not going to do their assignments all right,” Carroll said. “They’re not going to be technically sound. They’re not going to be right for us. But to show us that they have real good spirit about them, a good will about them, and could be competitive on our football team, that’s most important.” One curious party to how the rookies were adjusting turned out to be All-Pro cornerback Richard Sherman. Earlier Friday, Sherman posted on Twitter his intention of riding a jet ski on Lake Washington over to the Seahawks waterfront practice facility. About an hour into practice, Sherman came driving up and lingered just off shore for about 30 minutes, posing for pictures with other onlookers in boats near the facility. Notes: Seattle has signed seven of its 11 draft picks. Harper, Willison, DL Jordan Hill, DT Jesse Williams, G Ryan Seymour, LB Ty Powell and OL Jared Smith have all signed. Carroll gave more detail on the torn right ACL suffered by defensive lineman Greg Scruggs. The injury occurred a few weeks ago during a bag drill when Scruggs lost his balance and hyperextended his knee.

Neagle’s two goals lifts Sounders over Earthquakes THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE — Lamar Neagle scored twice and Mauro Rosales added a goal and an assist to help lead the Seattle Sounders FC to a 4-0 win over the San Jose Earthquakes on Saturday. Neagle made it 3-0 in the 54th minute with a leftfooted kick from just inside the box after he danced around a defender and gave Seattle (3-3-3) its highest scoring output of the season after scoring only three in the first eight games. San Jose (3-4-5) dropped to 0-3-2 on the road this season. The Earthquakes had snapped a six-game winless streak with a 2-1 win over Toronto FC on Wednesday.

Neagle drilled a rightfooted shot from the center of the box to the top left corner for the first goal of the game in the 28th minute. He tallied his first goal of the season off a chest pass from Rosales, who received a cross in the box from Eddie Johnson. Neagle, who returned after a one-game suspension for a red card, nearly scored in the 47th minute on a header, but Busch tipped the ball over the crossbar. Rosales curled in a rightfooted free kick from just outside the box in added time in the first half to put the Sounders up 2-0 at halftime in front of a crowd of 38,880.

Goalkeeper Jon Busch leaped high as the ball glanced off his hand to give Rosales his second goal of the year. A foul and yellow card on Rafael Baca set up the goal by Rosales. Obafemi Martins scored in added time to make the final score 4-0. Seattle is undefeated in the last five games after a 0-3-1 start and won at home for the first time in four games this season. The Earthquakes had a great opportunity to score in the 37th minute but Alan Gordon missed an open header in front of the goal. San Jose had beaten the THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sounders four consecutive games, including a 1-0 win Seattle Sounders’ Zach Scott, right, moves in to defend as San Jose Earthquakes’ Alan Gordon, left, attempts a shot. on March 23.

LaBrie: Team Run for Joe is new this year group to help raise funds for the Captain Joseph House Foundation in Port Angeles. In 2012, Captain Joseph Schultz’s family members — some living in Port Angeles — fellow soldiers, friends and others who were inspired by Joe’s life came together to run for and support the first Team Run for Joe at the Big Sur

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Marathon. Betsy Reed Schultz of Port Angeles, a mother who lost her heroic son, Joseph, to a bomb blast in Afghanistan, has built the Captain Joseph House as a respite and retreat for other families who have lost sons and daughters in wars since 9/11. Team Run for Joe provides an opportunity for

those who knew or were inspired by Joe to celebrate his life and to raise money for the foundation. Soldiers and runners are participating in Team Run for Joe in races around the country. The NODM will be the home base for Team Run for Joe starting this year, Little said. Just another good rea-

son to participate in the marathon in 2013. To register for Team Run for Joe, or just to signup for any of the races, go to nodm.com.

________ Sports Editor Brad LaBrie can be reached at 360-417-3525 or at brad.labrie@peninsuladailynews. com.

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CONTINUED FROM B1 then 38, of Squamish, British Columbia, shading Buratto’s time with 3:10:39 Thanks to the poor in 2009. economy, the event hasn’t Tanaya Gallagher, then broken the 400-barrier since but did get close with 25, rewrote the record books with a time of 396 in 2010. 3:05:17 in 2011. Port Townsend’s Ian No hometown was listed Fraser opened the new for Gallagher in that race, course and event in 2003 but Gallagher, now 27 and by winning the marathon living in Sedona, Ariz., won with a quick time of 2 the Whiskey Row Marahours, 35 minutes and 56 thon in Prescott, Ariz., in seconds. 3:19:38 five days ago, Fraser was 29 when he according to prescottnews. won the event. That course record held com. But this is a different until 2006 when Renton’s world since Gallagher set Preston Brashers broke it with a time of 2:35:47, bet- the women’s record in Port Angeles two years ago. tering Fraser by only nine Marathons are looked at seconds. a little differently since two Brashers’ record time has not been broken since. terrorist bombs exploded at The women’s marathon the finish line of the Boston Marathon almost a history has been an intermonth ago, killing three esting one. runners or spectators and Gig Harbor’s Jennifer injuring — some quite seriHansen, 25 at the time, ously — scores of others. won the first 2003 race in “We will be honoring the 3:15:49 and held the record victims of the Boston Marfor two years before athon,” Little said. 34-year-old Lori Buratto “Every running event broke it with a time of 3:12:09 in 2005 to become a this year will be doing that. [The tragedy] has really two-time defending chamaffected the running compion after winning it in munity, as well as the 2004.. whole country. Buratto, then 36, broke “We are getting a lot of it again in 2009 with 3:10:49 to become the only support because of that on Facebook and on our Webthree-time winner in the site [nodm.com].” history of the race. New for North Olympic The women’s record has Discovery Marathon this been broken twice since year is a Team Run for Joe then with Margreet Dietz,



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PeninsulaNorthwest

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Service: Awards honor

everyday local heroes CONTINUED FROM C1 “They realized the need for an organization dedicated to providing assistance to the overwhelming number of east Jefferson County families directly affected by the diagnosis of cancer,” wrote Port Townsend resident Diana Talley. “[Funds raised through the foundation] have been spent toward transportation costs, rent payments, health care and even helping put a roof on one woman’s house while she was sick.” Jake Beattie, executive director of the Northwest Maritime Center and Wooden Boat Foundation, wrote: “As individuals, they have supported the maritime nonprofit community through sponsorships, scholarships and donations that have connected untold numbers of young people in our community to the waters in their community.” The Edensaw Foundation has also been greatly involved in the Port Townsend Film Festival. “Our festival has thrived because Edensaw has continued to respect the role of art in our community as we face greater and greater economic challenges,” wrote Janette Force, executive director of the Port Townsend Film Institute. After a long battle with cancer, Moore died last March 11. His award will be accepted by his widow, Gayle.

Seth Rolland Five letters nominated Port Townsend resident Seth Rolland for his efforts to promote an atmosphere of sustainable food and community. “[Rolland] has organized a polite subculture of people who search out food that is springing from local fruit trees or gardens but that will not be harvested or eaten by the landowners,” wrote Scott Wilson, publisher of The Port Townsend and Jefferson County Leader weekly newspaper. “Seth, through his own hard work, and through his ability to inspire others to help him harvest the community’s hidden bounty, makes sure that food is collected.”

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Rolland started the Gleaners group in Jefferson County to collect unused fruit, with owners’ permission, from local fruit trees and give it to both the Port Townsend Food Bank and school lunch programs. Rolland’s efforts have harvested literal tons of fruit for the food bank and local schools. “Seth is a very thoughtful and soft-spoken representative of what is wonderful about the place where we live,” wrote Anne and Dick Schneider of Port Townsend. (Anne Schneider is a 2012 Heart of Service recipient for her volunteer work with a number of nonprofit groups.) Rolland also organized volunteers to establish a small fruit tree orchard for Blue Heron Middle School. Proposed in 2009 and completed this winter, the orchard will provide fresh fruit to the schoolchildren of Port Townsend and a teaching tool for biology and botany classes. “The school orchard at Blue Heron is already resulting in positive educational outcomes for our students,” wrote David Engle, superintendent of the Port Townsend School District.

‘The Three Amigos’: Don Bolen, Ernie Jaap and Fred Spann Staff at Dove House Advocacy Service, a confidential crisis intervention shelter and advocacy facility in Port Townsend providing services to victims of domestic violence, sexual assault and general crime, praised the volunteer efforts of the men they call “The Three Amigos” in four separate nomination letters. “Don Bolen, Ernie Jaap and Fred Spann continue to cheerfully and unselfishly volunteer their time, talent and treasure to Dove House Advocacy Services for clients and staff alike,” Dove House Executive Director Beulah Kingsolver wrote. “[The Three Amigos] “use their own vehicles and truck beds to pick up bed sets, dressers, washers and dryers across the county to first store and then relocate these items when needed,” and recently completed the installation of new security cameras at Dove House. “Most importantly, our clients find their quietly mature presence reassuring while receiving positive words of encouragement and hope when devastated by broken dreams and hurting from recent abuse.” Wrote Debbie Linner, a shelter liaison and advocate at Dove House and the source of “The Three Amigos’” moniker: “They are always willing to lend a helping hand to any one of the other staff or our clients. “I frequently have clients tell me that they feel safer and calmer when one of them is around.”

commitment to the students of Chimacum High School is way above the call of duty,” wrote Mike Blair, retired Chimacum School District superintendent and youth exchange officer for the East Jefferson Rotary Club. Blair is also a 2010 Heart of Service recipient for his volunteer work. Kostenbader, serving youth through the East Jefferson Rotary Club for almost a decade, coordinates the Chimacum High School Rotary Interact Club, Blair wrote. The club meets weekly to plan both local and international community service projects. “As anyone knows, it takes a dedicated adult to motivate and bring to life a high school youth group,” Blair wrote. “Linda is that individual, and because of her gifts and talents, many of the students at Chimacum High School are becoming splendid human beings.” Kostenbader also coordinates the Rotary student of the month program for the high school and serves as the club counselor for students hosted through the Rotary Club’s foreign exchange program, Blair wrote. “As usual, Linda takes this responsibility very seriously and does everything in her power to help the foreign exchange student thrive and enjoy their experience here. “Linda has a wonderful way of making young people around her feel special because to Linda, they are special.”

Christopher Pieper

Kostenbader (above) also nominated the teenager who received the first Heart of Service youth award from the judges. “Christopher Pieper has given so much this year to the [Rotary] Interact Club of Chimacum High School through his positive and cheerful attitude, outstanding leadership as president, continuous giving of time and organization to the many community and international projects of the Interact Club,” wrote Kostenbader. The Chimacum High School student was instrumental in leading the Santa Photo fundraiser at the Chimacum Arts and Crafts Fair, Kostenbader wrote, an effort that raised money in part for medical supplies for a rural clinic in Thailand. “The fundraiser was a great success due to [Pieper’s] organizational skills, leadership and giving of himself,” wrote Kostenbader. Pieper also has been key to a number of other Interact Club community service projects, Kostenbader wrote, including giving a concert for the Jefferson County Winter Shelter; providing Halloween safety education to primary and elementary school students; and carolLinda Kostenbader ing for and giving Christmas “Her dedication and cards to residents of both the Life Care Center and San Juan Villa Assisted Living and Alzheimer’s Care. “Christopher exemplifies the motto of Rotary: service above self,” Kostenbader wrote. “He definitely has a heart of service.”

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Megan Foley, left, of Frameworks at 118 Taylor St., Port Townsend, receives student artwork from Helen Gunn of PT Artscape. Art Wave is a monthlong exhibit showcasing K-12 student artwork in the 37 businesses downtown and uptown for the month of May. It is sponsored by PT Artscape, the Port Townsend Main Street Program and participating businesses. For more information, visit www.ptmainstreet.org.

Briefly . . . PA Humane Society meal nets $44,000 PORT ANGELES — The Olympic Peninsula Humane Society’s first-ever Meowgaritas and Mutts dinner and auction raised $44,000 to benefit the Humane Society’s building fund. The Cinco de Mayothemed event was held recently at the Port Angeles Red Lion Hotel. Almost 200 people attended the event and enjoyed a Mexican dinner, a silent auction and a live auction. The Humane Society purchased 9.5 acres last October on Old Olympic Highway between Port Angeles and Sequim. The three modular buildings on the property will be used to house cats, administration and veterinary services. However, a dog kennel facility must be built before the organization can move to the new location. “I am so pleased with the support we received from our community,” said Executive Director Mary Beth Wegener. “We are already planning for next year.” For more information or to volunteer, phone the Olympic Peninsula Humane Society at 360457-8206.

Museum now open

PORT TOWNSEND — The Commanding Officer’s Quarters Museum, managed by the Jefferson County Historical Society for Washington State Parks, is now open daily with a special exhibit on the creation of Olympic National Park. A 1904 home furnished with period antiques, the Commanding Officer’s Quarters is located on Officers’ Row in Fort Worden State Park. The exhibit features historic photographs by George Welch, antique fishing and camping gear, and information on current proposals to expand the park. It also features artifacts and photographs from the historical society collection. _________ Special events at the quarters this year will Reporter Jeremy Schwartz can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. include an 1850 Army trad5074, or at jschwartz@peninsula ing post and a summer hisdailynews.com. tory camp.

Buddy, the Ambassadog, collects donations at the Olympic Peninsula Humane Society’s Meowgaritas and Mutts dinner and auction. The 1850 Army trading post will be a free outdoor exhibit Saturday and Sunday, May 19. Within the trading post will be a display of early muzzle loading firearms. A period re-enactor will be in the trading post to answer questions about life in the 1850s. “Join the Regiment,” a summer history camp focused on military history and outdoor activities, will be held July 29-Aug. 2 for youths ages 8-12. The museum is open from noon to 5 p.m. every day through the end of September. Admission is $4 for adults, free for historical society members. A “passport” that includes discounted admission to the Rothschild House Museum and the Jefferson Museum of Art & History is also available.

Free writers’ talk PORT TOWNSEND — Holly Hughes and Brenda Miller will talk about writing in a presentation from their new book Friday. The free talk will be held at Quimper Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 2333 San Juan Ave., from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. The two writers — Hughes, an accomplished poet, and Miller, an awardwinning essayist — spent a year in dialogue, writing stories in which they use personal experience to explore how traditional contemplative practices —

meditation, yoga, mindful walking and mindful eating — can be applied in a world of Hughes packed schedules and distractions. They will explore some of these practices and share stoMiller ries from their book, The Pen and the Bell: Mindful Writing in a Busy World, published by Skinner House Press, Hughes, author of Boxing the Compass and an award-winning anthology, Beyond Forgetting: Poetry and Prose about Alzheimer’s Disease, teaches writing at Edmonds Community College, where she codirects the Sustainability Initiative and the Convergence Writers Series. Miller has authored three essay collections: Listening Against Stone, Blessing of the Animals and Season of the Body. Her work has received six Pushcart Prizes and has been published in numerous journals. She is an English professor at Western Washington University and editorin-chief of The Bellingham Review. Peninsula Daily News

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

C3

Keep birds from banging into windows “THUD!” THERE IT goes again. A bird keeps flying at one of your windows, and it isn’t by mistake. This is an all-out attack on one or more windows. Every spring, homeowners have their peace and quiet shattered by this sound. It’s amazing how one small bird can disrupt an entire household. It starts with a light feint at the window. The bird is hoping that the bird it sees in the glass will take the hint and leave.

BIRD WATCH

To understand what is Carson happening, walk outside and look at the window from the bird’s point of view. This exercise also illustrates why birds fly into windows and get a concussion or a broken neck. The reflection seen by a bird can show an unobstructed sky to Stubborn reflection fly toward or a welcoming tree to The problem gets worse land in. because the bird in the window is When a bird attacks a winstubborn. dow, the reflection he sees is It hits back, and everything another bird that looks just like goes downhill after that. him. Window attacks occur when a Even worse, this intruder hits nesting bird sees its reflection in back when he attempts to chase a window that is too near its it away. People become upset when this nesting territory. frustrated bird takes to flying at It won’t tolerate another bird of the same species in territory it the window almost nonstop. Not only does the window get is protecting.

Joan

very messy, some readers say the bird is leaving blood on it. Over the years, we’ve had numerous birds take offense at several windows in our house. Thankfully, there was no blood spilled. None of the birds defending their territory in this manner experienced damage to their bodies. Their nervous systems were more than a little stressed, but they didn’t injure themselves. Most of the time, these attacks stop once there are young in the nest. They may even cease after the female begins to brood her eggs.

Brooding behavior We went through this last year, and because the nest was in a tree right outside the living room window, we could monitor the action more thoroughly than ever before. Early in the brooding, the female would give the window a rather perfunctory whack just before she returned to the eggs. It was like she was making

sure that “other bird” had kept its distance while she was away from the nest. There are exceptions to any rule. One summer, I was convinced we were going to have a song sparrow attack our windows until the first frost. It was difficult to understand how this bird could keep up this terrorizing of a household even after it had young to feed. One thought was that something might have happened to the nest, and the bird’s distress was taken out on its reflection. Now that we know why that robin, song sparrow or chickadee is arguing with our window, what can we do about it? We must break up the reflection the bird is seeing. This can be simple to accomplish, and it can also be very challenging. Problems develop when windows are on a second floor or are very tall because they are in a room with a very high ceiling. Several years ago, a reader designed what she called an “eyelash” and hung it above the win-

dow under attack. Hanging streamers or reflective tape from the eaves or gutters is a good way to break up the offending reflection, and her eyelash expanded on this suggestion. She used a strip of strong tape, like duct tape, and cut a strip the width of the window. Streamers were attached to the tape. Their ends were placed about half way onto the tape, and then it was folded over and firmly pressed down. The eyelash was hung across the top of the window where it could flutter in the breeze and break up the window’s reflection. This idea is a good one because it means you don’t have to tape or tack down each individual streamer above the window. Hopefully, peace and quiet can now return.

________ Joan Carson’s column appears every Sunday. Contact her at P.O. Box 532, Poulsbo, WA 98370, with a selfaddressed, stamped envelope for a reply. Email: joanpcarson@comcast.net.

Briefly . . . Winner in chef contest advances PORT ANGELES — Franklin Elementary School fifth-grader Alisandra Baccus learned during a recent Franklin multi-age community meeting that she had been chosen as a western region finalist for the Sodexo Future Chef’s competition. Alisandra cooked up her “Delicious Caribbean Salad” during the Port Angeles School DistrictSodexo’s annual Kids’ Cook Off — Future Chefs: Healthy Salad Challenge — in March. She was named Port Angeles Grand Champion at the event and advanced to the regional competition. As a regional finalist, she received a plaque, a Kindle e-book package and a $100 Amazon gift card from Sodexo Food Services Director Kathy Crowley.

PORT ANGELES SCHOOL DISTRICT

Alisandra Baccus, center, is presented with her Future Chef western region finalist award by Sodexo Food Services Director Kathy Crowley, right, during a Franklin Elementary School multiage community meeting last week, as Derek Bowechop, student leader for the MAC weekly class meeting, looks on.

meant to focus the region around a shared agenda” for Puget Sound protection and recovery, according to organizers. Strait ERN members also will discuss educational and funding issues, and opportunities that would help implement a variety of priority actions within the Strait Action Area, an area Strait ERN meeting from Cape Flattery near Neah Bay east to Point WilBLYN — Members of son in Port Townsend. the Strait of Juan de Fuca For more information, Ecosystem Recovery Netemail Strait ERN coordinawork will hear from speakers on the changing oil spill tor John Cambalik at risk and possible effects on StraitSoundEnvironmental@wavecable.com. the Strait of Juan de Fuca and adjacent waters when Private graduates they meet Friday. The quarterly meeting COLUMBIA, S.C. — of the group, also known as Army National Guard Pfc. Strait ERN, will be from Sarah C. Joyner has gradu9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. in ated from basic combat the Red Cedar Meeting training at Fort Jackson in Hall at the Jamestown Columbia. S’Klallam Community CenJoyner is the daughter ter, 1033 Old Blyn Highof John Hubbard of Port way. Angeles. The meeting is open to She is a 2006 graduate the public. of Port Angeles High School The Strait ERN is one of and earned an associate the Puget Sound Partnerdegree from Peninsula Colship’s Local Integrating lege in 2009. Organizations working to During the nine weeks implement the Action of training, Joyner studied Agenda, the “leadership and the Army mission, history, coordinating document tradition and core values;

did physical fitness; and received instruction and practice in basic combat skills, military weapons, chemical warfare, bayonet training, drill and ceremony, marching, rifle marksmanship, armed and unarmed combat, map reading, field tactics, military courtesy, military justice system, basic first aid, foot marches and field training exercises.

PORT TOWNSEND — The 14-member Port Townsend High School’s Students for Sustainability group, led by junior Ewan Shortess, has completed a waste and energy audit at the school. Group members analyzed the cost savings of switching from disposable paper trays to more durable ones in the school lunchroom. The results determined that 18 percent of the school’s waste came from disposable trays. While garbage Dumpsters were emptied three times a week, they weren’t always full. By reducing cafeteria waste and consolidating the waste pickup loads, they estimated the school

“The Big Wedding” (R) “The Great Gatsby” (R) “Iron Man 3” (PG-13) “Oblivion” (PG-13)

■ Lincoln Theater, Port Angeles (360-457-7997) “The Croods” (PG) “Evil Dead” (R)

“Pain & Gain” (R)

■ The Rose Theatre, Port Townsend (360385-1089) “The Company You Keep” (R) “The Sapphires” (PG-13) “Renoir” (R) “Toys in the Attic,” part of Children’s Film Festival (PG) “Zarafa,” part of Children’s

A world of performance comes to Port Angeles At the 20th Annual Memorial Day Weekend

May 24-27 This is truly one of the great West Coast music and arts festivals. Four unforgettable days with over 100 world-class performances.

Don’t Miss These Outstanding Artists!

LoCura San Francisco band plays flamenco, cumbia, reggae and ska.

Kaumakaiwa Kanaka‘ole

Film Festival (NR)

■ Uptown Theatre, Port Townsend (360-385-3883)

Coyote C y Grace

“Iron Man 3” (PG-13)

■ Wheel-In Motor

Three triumphant tours with the Indigo Girls

Movie, Port Townsend (360-385-0859) “Oblivion” (PG-13) “Identity Thief” (R)

4 ounces, 10:31 a.m. April 30. Amanda Jean and Nickolas James Eshom, Port Angeles, a daughter, Gracie Rae, 7 pounds, 4 ounces, 1:36 p.m. April 29. Phone information about athome or out-of-town births to 360417-3527 or 800-826-7714.

Visit JFFA.org! Also, Workshops, the Art Shack, a Street Fair featuring great food, arts and outdoor entertainment, JFFA After Hours in the Downtown Clubs (included with ticket) and more. Friday or Monday

TICKET INFO Saturday or Sunday

$20 $25 — Kids 12 and under are admitted FREE! —

Four Day Passes $50 through May 23 $60 at the gate ($50 Members)

Go to jffa.org to order Four Day Passes and for more information. Tickets also available at Port Book and News in Port Angeles & Pacific Mist Books in Sequim. Phone 457-5411. Join us on Facebook!

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Sasha and Jacob Burton, Port Angeles, a son, Josiah Charles, 6 pounds, 10 ounces, 11:58 a.m. April 13. Kathleen McPherson and Joshua Spears, Port Angeles, a son, Raymond John Spears, 8 pounds,

5 ounces, 5:19 a.m. April 7. Tara Hagadorn and Sean Dulaney, Forks and Port Angeles, a son, Sebastion Lee LaRouge, 9 pounds, 14 ounces, 1:58 a.m. May 1. Heather and Seth Vanzant, Sekiu, a daughter, Evelyn Mae, 6 pounds,

Call for vendors

day, May 19. Hours for the flea market run from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. Table space is $10 per day or $20 for all three days. Vendor setup begins Thursday. The Olympic Peninsula Humane Society will have a booth at the market with pets available for adoption. Humane Society volunteers will accept donations of dry pet food and nonclumping cat litter. Musicians Dave and Rosalie Secord will entertain Friday and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and May 19 from noon to 2 p.m. For more information or to reserve a space, phone John Nelson at 360-7759128. Peninsula Daily News

Major Hawaiian talent. Five time winner of Hawaii’s Grammy

Peninsula Births Olympic Medical Center

meet for its May luncheon at the Port Angeles CrabHouse Restaurant, 221 N. Lincoln St., from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday. Jeanine Bargen will present “Joys and Jolts of Genuine Friendship.” Kevin Pedrey of NW Massage will provide a “soothing message.” The musician for the luncheon is a “springtime surprise.” For luncheon reservations, phone 360-452-4343 or 360-457-8261.

PORT ANGELES — Table space is available for Luncheon slated flea market vendors for the PORT ANGELES — The market at The Landing Port Angeles Christian mall, 115 Railroad Ave., on Women’s Connection will Friday, Saturday and Sun-

PT sustainability

Now Showing ■ Deer Park Cinema, Port Angeles (360-4527176)

could save $4,000 a year. Students for Sustainability also revived the school’s recycling program and worked with janitors, teachers and waste disposal contractor DM Disposal to encourage more recycling. Through their efforts, students are learning business principles such as cost-benefit analysis and return on investment, and how to analyze environmental trade-offs, identify recycling barriers and propose solutions to address those barriers, according to a news release.


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SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Partner could buy back jewelry gift DEAR ABBY: My partner and I have been together 23 years, and his parents have embraced me as one of their own. A few years ago, we bought his mother a beautiful diamond cocktail ring for Mother’s Day. She’s now 84, and when she passes on, I’d like that ring back to have it turned into a ring for my partner. It’s a gesture I’m sure would please him and I hope his mother as well. I believe she’s leaving her jewelry to her granddaughter, which is fine. But this particular ring will mean so much if I turn it into a ring for her son. Would it be tacky for me to request this of Mom if I tell her why? I don’t want to offend anyone, and I know the person who inherits her jewelry will probably pawn or sell it anyway.

DEAR ABBY Abigail Van Buren

(I’d also like to keep it on the down low so my partner doesn’t find out until the ring is given to him.) What do you think, Abby? Phil in Pennsylvania

Dear Phil: I think what you have in mind is beautiful, and I can’t imagine why your partner’s mother would object if you raise the subject. Estate planning is a fact of life. However, if she doesn’t wish to change her will, and you think the granddaughter is likely to pawn the ring anyway, you could offer to buy it from the grand-

daughter when the time comes.

My mother gave me some valuable advice before my wedding that I’d like to pass along. Dear Abby: Is it proper to She said, “Always respect the invite men to a bridal shower? Curious Guy in Minnesota woman who made the man you love.” I never forgot it, and my Dear Curious Guy: Accordmother-in-law has always been ing to Emily Post: “Today, showwelcome in my home for as long ers are just as likely to include the groom and his male friends.” as she wishes. If we had any differences, a There’s nothing improper about asking men to participate. respectful dialogue was opened right away — especially if it conThe purpose of a shower for a cerned our kids’ education. bridal couple (or the expected We have enjoyed shopping, arrival of a baby) is to celebrate eating, cooking, parties, caring the upcoming event and express for newborns and family good wishes. moments together for as long as I It’s also a way to give the cou- can remember. ple things they’ll need. Sadly, she is now frail and can no longer travel as much as she Dear Abby: I am no advice once could. columnist, but may I offer a few The women who made our wise words to future brides? husbands deserve all the respect I have been married for 25 we can offer them because if we years and have never had an are happy as wives, it is thanks argument with my mother-in-law. to all of them. Simone in San Francisco Never!

Dear Simone: Your mother is an intelligent lady, and so are you for having taken her advice to heart. Because few people are in total agreement about everything, there is much to be learned when adults can air their opinions respectfully. This is true of all human relationships. Because today is Mother’s Day, I would like to wish a happy Mother’s Day to mothers everywhere, be they birth mothers, adoptive and foster mothers, stepmothers or grandmothers who are raising grandchildren. I applaud you all.

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

Briefly . . . Clothing designs from the 1930s are featured at the Rothschild House Museum in Port Townsend.

Rothschild museum open for season PORT TOWNSEND — The Rothschild House Museum, managed by the Jefferson County Historical Society, is open for the season with a new exhibit featuring clothing from the 1930s. Items include elegant gowns and everyday items like a house dress and a nurse’s uniform. The clothing complements “Hope in Hard Times: Washington During the Great Depression,” a traveling exhibit on display at the Jefferson Museum of Art & History courtesy of the Washington State Historical Society and Humanities Washington. Port Townsend’s Roths-

child House Museum State Park, 418 Taylor St., is open daily from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. through September. The Rothschild House was built in 1868 by Horace Tucker, Port Townsend’s foremost builder, for D.C.H. Rothschild, a prominent local merchant. Rothschild House is furnished with artifacts original to the Rothschild family.

It is the only Victorian house museum in Port Townsend. Admission is $4, free for JCHS members. Passports that include the Jefferson Museum of Art & History and the Commanding Officer’s Quarters also are available. People wishing to serve as Rothschild House docents can phone Snyder at 360385-1003.

Eagle flights SEQUIM — Young people with an interest in aviation are invited to a Young Eagle Rally at Sequim Valley Airport, 468 Dorothy Hunt Lane, from 10 a.m. to

2 p.m. this coming Saturday. Free airplane rides will be offered to aviation enthusiasts aged 8 to 17 with their parent’s or guardian’s permission. The event is sponsored by Chapter 430 of the Experimental Aircraft Association in order to help people discover more about flying and the steps necessary to become a pilot. Before each 20-minute Eagle Flight, participants will be introduced to aeronautical charts and shown how to perform a complete walkaround inspection of the aircraft. Volunteer pilots from EAA Chapter 430 also will explain flight controls and how to check the airplane’s critical systems. After takeoff, pilots will demonstrate basic flight maneuvers — climbs, turns and descents — and allow

participants to follow along on the controls. For more information or to register, phone 360-6814441.

Watershed cleanup BRINNON — A Dosewallips River watershed cleanup event will be held Saturday. Participants will start the day with a required safety meeting at the Brinnon Community Center, 306144 U.S. Highway 101, at 9 a.m. before driving and hiking into the forest for the cleanup. It is hosted by Jefferson County 4-H Stewardship youths, Peninsula chapter Back Country Horsemen of Washington, Boy Scouts, Washington State University Beach Watchers and the U.S. Forest Service. Volunteers must preregister to Sue Hay at shay@jef-

ferson.wsu.edu or 360-3795610, ext. 208, so organizers can plan for tools and group organization. Youths 12 and younger must be accompanied by an adult.

Volunteer training PORT ANGELES — Volunteer training for the North Olympic Discovery Marathon will be held at the Vern Burton Community Center, 308 E. Fourth St., at 6 p.m. Thursday, May 23. Organizers are seeking volunteers to serve as course marshals and “end-of-race buddies” for marathon participants. All volunteers receive a free T-shirt and a ticket to the volunteer dinner. For more information, email z@nodm.com, phone 360-417-1301 or visit www. nodm.com. Peninsula Daily News

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PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

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Early May time to douse down, trim OH, THE GLORIOUS dog days of . . . May? What positively gorgeous weather we have been having, with recordbreaking temperatures across the Peninsula. We are certainly enjoying the type of warm days reserved sparingly for summer. And as I’m sure you’ve noticed, your garden, lawn and landscape plants have certainly sprouted up or leafed out, but after all, April showers do bring May flowers (which really come on with the heat).

Right as rain But I actually do want to rain on the parade (I really wish it would rain) because this time of year, a couple weeks of no rain and temperatures in the 60s or 70s can cause some problems, or at least many concerns. So let us go over the two primary plant issues I have been battling this past week with the temperature rising, the skies staying clear and no rain falling

A GROWING CONCERN as of late. First up: May spring bulb care and maintenance. As I have often said before, the Olympic Peninsula is one of the best areas to grow and display spring flowering bulbs because our weather is ideal for them yearround. I’m sure you’ve been admiring the tulips lately, but alas, the heat is quickly causing them to fade. In fact, many, if not most, of your spring bulbs have long since given up the ghost, so now is the time to tend them if you wish next year to be as good as but most likely better than this year. As the sunny skies pound

Andrew

Meanwhile, I am cultivating the soil, pulling weeds and edging in preparation for a good watering. That is my second major concern. Although it is but early May, it is already getting very dry in flowerbeds. Especially arid are those areas along the pathway, driveway and sides of rocks; at the edge of containers; where soil is of thin depth; and those all-daysunny spots. When soil gets very dry, it can require great effort to saturate the soil. Most of you, I will bet, have yet to turn on the water or to Trim back halfway water well the perennial areas or At the same time, I have been newly planted bushes and shrubs. trimming back the early crocus Do so now. leaves as well as the foliage of Your bulbs need to be kept the early daffodils and irises. moist, flowers or not, for a few By trimming the foliage back halfway, it lasts longer, thus mak- more weeks or at least until their foliage has deteriorated. ing more food and hence, bigger Anything planted since last and more prolific blooms next year! November should be soaked as down on your old bulbs, especially the daffodils, tulips and hyacinths, make sure to cut away the dead flower but leave the foliage. By cutting away the old bloom, the plant directs its energy to make more and larger flowers next year in order to reproduce. Leaving the leaves on the plant allows for food production, which goes directly into next year’s flower production since there are no seed pods to foster. This is the professional chore all botanical gardens and display gardens employ, and so should you.

Book group to meet on guru novel

Submit art entries PORT TOWNSEND — The Port Townsend Arts Commission and Northwind Arts Center are seeking submissions for “Expressions Northwest,” the 15th annual Art Port Townsend Juried Art Competition, set for Aug. 2-25 at the Northwind Arts Center. Artists must be at least 16 years old and a resident of Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Alaska or British Columbia. Works in both two- and three-dimensional forms, including photography, are eligible. A total of $2,500 in cash prizes and additional merchandise awards will be presented. The juror for this show will be David Lynx, director of Larson Gallery at Yakima Valley Community College. Further information and the prospectus can be found at www.artporttownsend.org or by contacting Joan Balzarini at 360-681-0850 or Rae Belkin at 360-437-9442 or artist@cablespeed.com. A nonrefundable entry fee of $45 is required for a maximum of three digital entries (no slides or prints) per artist. This year, entry images

COLORING

CONTEST WINNER

Bill Sommers, Hartnagel Building Supply’s retail sales manager and coloring book artist, presents Frank Johnson, 6, the winner of a coloring contest, with his prize: a toolbox filled with goodies. Sommers created a coloring book depicting kids helping with improvement projects around the house, and Hartnagel’s and Angeles Millwork & Lumber Co., both in Port Angeles, collected entries from local youths. must be submitted online to www.OnlineJuriedShows. com. The deadline is June 11.

Banquet slated SEQUIM — The North Olympic Peninsula chapter of the Coastal Conservation Association will hold its fourth annual fundraising banquet Thursday, June 13. The event will be held at John Wayne Marina, 2577 West Sequim Bay Road, from 5 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Chef Michael McQuay of Kokopelli Grill will cater the banquet. Live and silent auctions will be held, along with raffles. Tickets are $65 per person or $120 per couple and include a one-year membership in the group. The Coastal Conservation Association is the nation’s largest marine conservation organization. It is a grass-roots organization founded by sports

Andrew May is an ornamental horticulturist who dreams of having Clallam and Jefferson counties nationally recognized as “Flower Peninsula USA.” Send him questions c/o Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362, or email news@peninsuladailynews.com (subject line: Andrew May).

anglers and works to restore wild salmon and steelhead populations. Phone John Albiso at 360-928-1073, email nop@ ccapnw.org or visit ccapnw. org for more information.

‘Derby and Divas’ PORT ANGELES — “An Evening of Derby and Divas” with Esprit participants and the Port Scandalous Roller Derby is set for Wednesday. It will be held at Olympic Skate Center, 707 S. Chase St., from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Admission is $5, and the evening is open to all ages. The event will feature the second annual Roller Derby Queen Pageant, a Derby Wife auction, an intrasquad roller derby scrimmage, games, a raffle and an open skate session. Proceeds will benefit Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County and Port Scandalous Roller Derby. Peninsula Daily News

Q. From about 1985 PEOPLE’S PHARMACY till about 2005, my blood pressure ran about Joe Teresa 150/90, and I needed antihypertensive mediGraedon Graedon cations. In 2003, I planted several citrus trees, including two pink grapefruits. When they started to bear fruit, I ate lots of grapefruit and made gallons of juice (which I froze). I enjoyed the juice as the harvest faded. The past several years, my blood pressure has been about 130/75. Two doctors told me to keep up the grapefruit routine and cut back on Lo and behold, it was my husband gave up on the meds. I feel wonderbelow the normal level them. ful. at 20 ng/ml. Overnight, I felt like something was biting me After two months of A. Both animal and when I went to sleep. supplementation (5,000 human research suggest It got worse and IU/day), his levels are that grapefruit may indeed worse. Even during the now high normal (59 ng/ have an impact on bloodday, I felt like I had bugs ml), and he is no longer vessel flexibility and lower crawling all over me. depressed. blood pressure (PhytotherI finally stopped takThis is much better apy Research, July 2009; ing the capsules, and the than meds since it was Metabolism, July 2012). next night, I was 80 perinexpensive and without Other foods that can help cent better. side effects. lower blood pressure include Within a week, the beets, green, leafy vegetasensation was comA. Correcting vitamin D bles and dark chocolate. pletely gone. deficiency can help alleviate To learn more about natI eventually found depression in some patients ural ways to control hypersomeone else on the (Journal of Clinical Psychotension, readers may wish Internet who had the pharmacology, June 2013). to consult our “Guide to same reaction. Your son’s vitamin D levBlood Pressure Treatment.” So I discovered on my els should be carefully monPeople who take blood own how a seemingly itored. pressure or cholesterol med- innocuous spice could At 5,000 IUs per day, ications must be cautious cause such havoc. some people could end up about grapefruit, though. It with too much vitamin D in can interact with many A. There are numerous their bodies. drugs to make them more reports of rash occurring He may need to cut back dangerous. where cinnamon comes in now that he is in the norThere is detailed inforcontact with the skin (conmal range. mation in our “Guide to tact dermatitis). _________ Grapefruit Interactions.” Reactions like yours Anyone who would like The People’s Pharmacy seem to be relatively both copies may send $5 in appears every Sunday. uncommon, except when Joe Graedon is a pharmacolocheck or money order with a people take high doses. gist. Teresa Graedon holds a doclong (No. 10), stamped (66 cents), self-addressed envelope to: Graedons’ People’s Pharmacy, No. BJ-79, P.O. Box 52027, Durham, NC 27717-2027. They can be downloaded for $2 each from our website, www.peoplespharmacy. com. Israeli researchers have found that red grapefruit lowers not only blood pressure but also cholesterol and triglycerides (American Journal of Hypertension, October 2005; Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, March 8, 2006).

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Briefly . . .

PORT ANGELES — Roland Merullo’s novel Breakfast with Buddha will be discussed by the PALS book discussion group at the Port Angeles Library, 2210 S. Peabody St., at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 29. In the book, Otto Ringling, a confirmed skeptic, is not amused when his sister tricks him into taking her guru on a trip to their childhood home. Six days on the road with an enigmatic holy man who answers every question with a riddle is not what he’d planned. Journey with Otto and the guru on their spiritual road trip through Midwestern America. Print copies of the book are available at the library while supplies last. Preregistration for this program is not required, and drop-ins are always welcome. For more information, visit www.nols.org and click on “Events” and “Port Angeles,” or contact Lorrie Kovell at 360-417-8500, ext. 7750, or lkovell@nols.org.

well as any soon-to-be or currently flowering bushes (think rhododendrons). I myself started irrigating the soccer pitch because already it was getting quite hard and dry. Keep those emerging dahlias moist, too, along with the peonies, gladiolas and all your perennials. If an area is dry, water it a couple of times, then probe with your hand or hand trowel and see if you got it wet 5 or 6 inches down. I doubt it. If not, water a couple more times. So enjoy summer in May, but tend to your bulbs and start the watering program before problems begin.

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SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Barking dogs benefit from training AT THIS TIME of year, our windows open up to sweet scents of spring — and the headacheinducing annoyance of the neighborhood nuisance barker. Is this dog yours? The owners of problem barkers seem to develop an ability to ignore the noise that has their neighbors thinking of legal action — or worse. But a dog who’s barking night and day isn’t having any more fun than the neighbors are, and you owe it to both your pet and those who can hear him to fix this problem. The first step is to figure out why your dog is sounding off so much. Dogs bark to express a variety of emotions: anxiety, boredom, territoriality, aggression, playfulness and hunger. Certain conditions in a dog’s environment can trigger these emotions — and the barking fits — more frequently. The typical neighborhood nuisance is an outdoor dog who isn’t getting the exercise and attention he needs. Dogs are social animals and need to be part of a family. If your dog’s outside because of

PET CONNECTION Gina

poor manners because he Spadafori or isn’t housetrained, give him another chance. Ask your veterinarian for a referral to a trainer or behaviorist and arrange for an in-home consultation to fix the underlying problems. Once you’ve brought him into your life, keep him busy with regular outings. Exercise, both of the body and of the mind, works wonders for all dogs, especially those who bark from boredom or to release excess energy. You’ll be amazed at how much calmer, happier — and quieter — your dog will be. For the barking that remains — some dogs are just naturally yappy — your task is to train your dog to be quiet on command when you’re home and to reduce the barking triggers when you’re not. Teach your dog to be quiet by

distracting him from barking, saying the word “Quiet� or “Enough,� and then praising him for minding. He’ll make the connection soon enough, with repetition and lots of praise. Rattling a can filled with pennies is a commonly recommended distraction, and it works well. Shouting at your dog does nothing except make you feel temporarily better, since your dog may see your own loud yap as “chiming in.� Work to minimize barking cues to keep your dog quiet when you’re not home. If your dog barks while looking through a window that faces the street, keep him out of that room while you’re gone. Many dogs fire up when they hear car doors slam; other dogs bark at the mail carrier’s steps on the walk. Muffle these sounds by leaving a radio playing while you’re not home, and your pet is more likely to sleep than bark. Giving your dog something special to chew on, such as a Kong toy or hollow bone stuffed with a little peanut butter, will help keep him occupied and quiet while he’s awake.

For the most persistent barkers, an electric collar that shoots citrus or citronella mist when he barks may help, in concert with other strategies. The mist is harmless to the dog — the citrus tang smells good to humans, but dogs hate it. The hiss of the mist releasing from the canister and the smell itself are annoying enough to distract the dog and correct him for barking. Citrus mist collars can be an effective alternative when someone is so desperate they’re considering bark collars that shock the dog, surgical debarking or even euthanasia. Chances are that if you bring your dog into your home and train him — get help if you’re not getting anywhere — you’ll never get that desperate. No matter what, working on this problem is well worth the effort. You, your dog and your neighbors will all be happier.

The Buzz — with Dr. Marty Becker and Gina Spadafori ■A dog found with his paws and tail frozen to a puddle of water in an abandoned home is now

walking on four prosthetic paws, thanks to a veterinary assistant who was unwilling to give up on him and a company that helped get its products fitted to the animal. Naki’o now runs and jumps on prosthetic paws made by Denverbased OrthoPets. None of it would have happened had veterinary assistant Christie Pace of Colorado Springs, Colo., not adopted the dog after his rescue. “I have a soft spot for rescue animals in general. I was looking for something different, unique,� Pace said. Naki’o is believed to be the first dog to have prosthetics on all four limbs. He has a Facebook page at http://tinyurl.com/cv4kldq.

_________ Pet Connection appears every Sunday and is produced by a team of petcare experts headed by veterinarian Dr. Marty Becker and journalist Gina Spadafori. The two are the authors of several best-selling pet-care books. Email them at petconnection@gmail. com or visit www.pet connection.com. Or write to them c/o Universal/UClick, 1130 Walnut St., Kansas City, MO 64106.

Briefly . . . PA college faculty lauded at conference PORT ANGELES — Seven Peninsula College faculty members recently earned national recognition for their contributions to learning and leadership at the community college level. They were honored at the annual conference of the League for Innovation in the Community College held in Dallas. Faculty receiving the John and Suanne Roueche Excellence Awards: Kathy Craven, human services; Jann Gardner, English; Brian Hauge, science; Bev Hott, basic skills; Jill Snyder, business and technology; Lara Starcevich, humanities; and Dan Underwood, social sciences. The educators were nominated for the award by other PC faculty from their own divisions. The Excellence Awards recognize those who have created and implemented innovative programs, practices, partnerships, policies and activities that improve the institution’s ability to serve students and the community. Each of the faculty members received special certificates and a pewter medallion.

From left are Peninsula College Vice President of Instruction Mary O’Neil-Garrett; college faculty Bev Hott, Jann Gardner, Brian Hauge and Jill Snyder; Peninsula College President Luke Robins; and faculty members Dan Underwood, Kathy Craven and Lara Starcevich. price of $4 per line. For safety reasons, PORT ANGELES — 12-gauge trap shells must The Port Angeles Gun Club be purchased at the club is inviting nonmembers to for $6 per box of 25. shoot at its range through Shooters must have a June 30. 12-gauge shotgun in safe, The gun club offers sevusable condition; knowleral types of clay-bird shooting, including singles, edge of safe gun handling; and wear adequate hearing handicap, doubles, contiand eye protection. nental and five-stand. Club rules and etiquette Shooting is available brochures are available at from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wednesdays and Sundays. the club, located at 253093 U.S. Highway 101, across Cost is $3.50 for a line from Wilder Auto Center. of 25 shots, which is reduced from the standard For more information,

Gun club visits

Student of Month SEQUIM — Jeshua Anderson was recognized by Sequim Sunrise Rotary as its Vocational Student of the Month for April. He was accompanied to the award ceremony by his mother, Brooke. Jeshua, a senior, has lived in Sequim since his freshman year. He was nominated by his advanced photography teacher, Jim Heintz. Jeshua’s interests include anything art- and music-related. He plans to attend Peninsula College with an emphasis on science, then transfer to Evergreen State College to study microbiology and bacteria.

Jeshua Anderson, left, receives his Sequim Sunrise Rotary Vocational Student of the Month award from Sequim High School teacher Jim Heintz.

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preschool classes starting this fall. Braun and Beery both have bachelor’s degrees in Heart wellness PORT LUDLOW — The elementary education and Port Ludlow Village Council years of preschool experience. Wellness Committee will The church noted the present an information sespair “have great enthusiasm sion on heart attack prevention, treatment and rehabil- for encouraging the social itation at the Bay Club, 120 and intellectual growth of Spinnaker Place, from 1:30 children.� The current teacher, p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Tuesday. Zorba Alexis-Stricker, is The forum is free and retiring after 10 years with open to the public. the church. It will feature presentaEnrollment for Septemtions by three local health ber classes is under way. professionals and updates The preschool offers to recommended heart small class sizes, a Chrisattack protocols developed jointly by Jefferson County tian curriculum and instruction in music, creative arts, health organizations in social skills, math, science, 2009. kindergarten readiness and Dr. David Tinker of Kitsap Cardiology Consultants early literacy. Children who are age 3 and Harrison Medical Cenby Aug. 31 can enroll in the ter will speak about heart two-day class, which meets attack care, management Tuesdays and Thursdays at and treatment, and how they have changed dramati- a cost of $70 per month. Children who are age 4 cally over his 30 years in by Aug. 31 can enroll in the cardiac medicine. three-day class, which meets He will discuss the Mondays, Wednesdays and importance of the phrase Fridays at a cost of $90 per “Time is Muscle, Muscle is month. Life� and how critical each A $35 registration fee minute is when dealing and record of immunizawith a heart attack. Paramedic Tim Manly of tions are due with the application. the Port Ludlow Fire and Classes meet from Rescue Department will demonstrate the latest car- 8:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. For more information, diac monitoring equipment phone the church office at and how cardiac informa360-452-2323. tion is transmitted to the control center. Registered nurse Judy Science Cafe set King, cardiac coordinator SEQUIM — Carol Bernfor Jefferson Healthcare thal will present “Marine hospital, will discuss serProtection Areas in Indonevices designed to help carsia� at the Sequim Science diac patients prevent future Cafe at the Paradise Resoccurrences and return to taurant, 703 N. Sequim lead healthy, productive Ave., at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. lives. Bernthal is superintenSign up at either the Port dent of the National OceLudlow Bay or Beach Club anic and Atmospheric or RSVP to Peggy Schafran Administration’s Olympic at 360-437-9935, Coast National Marine “Bring your questions and Sanctuary and a member of learn how you can save a life the National Marine Sanc— could be yours!� said tuary Program Leadership Schafran. Team. During her career as a Two new teachers biologist, she has represented a number of agenPORT ANGELES — cies, working extensively Kathy Braun and Katie with both civil and tribal Beery will co-teach Holy Trinity Lutheran Church’s governments on a variety of

conservation issues and natural resource management projects, organizers said. “In addition to Bernthal’s presentation, we’re going to have a big surprise for the high school robotics team as a result of their appearance at the cafe last month,� said Science Cafe Director Jodi Olson. The Science Cafe is a community service project of the Sequim Education Foundation. Programs present expert speakers for adult and young adult audiences interested in current developments in science and technology. Admission is free, but attendees are asked to patronize the restaurant. The event is open to the public. For more information, visit www.sequimed.org.

Free knitting class PORT ANGELES — The Knitters Anonymous group will host a free entrelac knitting class in the Carnegie Museum meeting room, 207 S. Lincoln St., from 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. this Wednesday and on Wednesday, May 22. Entrelac is a knitting technique in which knitted triangles and rectangles are put together to form a basketweave pattern. The class will consist of a knit-along to make a garterlac dishcloth. Students should bring a ball of cotton worsted weight yarn and size 6, 7 or 8 needles. The instructions and pattern for the dishcloth are available at http://tinyurl. com/cu95z3z. The class is free, but donations are accepted to cover room rental. For more information, phone 360-457-1080.

Spotted owl talk SEQUIM — Scott Gremel will present “Twenty Years of Monitoring the Northern Spotted Owl in Olympic National Park: Lessons For Managing a Threatened Species in Protected Habitat� at a meeting of the Olympic Peninsula Audubon Society. The talk will be held at the Dungeness River Audubon Center at Railroad Bridge Park, 2151 W. Hendrickson Road, at 7 p.m. Wednesday. Gremel has worked on the spotted owl monitoring project in Olympic National Park since 1994. He will discuss gathering data, analyzing it to develop a plan to help maintain a spotted owl population within the national park and still keep the park “natural.� The program is free and open to the public. Peninsula Daily News


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

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Briefly . . . Members of the board of directors of the Clallam County chapter of NAMI, from left, Ann Foulk, Angel Lucas and Margi Ahlgren, do a taste-test ahead of the group’s pie and icecream social, set for this Saturday.

PA ice-cream social slated this Saturday PORT ANGELES — The Clallam County chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness will hold a free pie and ice-cream social at First Presbyterian Church, 139 W. Eighth St., from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. this coming Saturday. All who have an interest in NAMI and want to learn more are welcome.

Fire graduate SEQUIM — Christopher Dahll recently graduated from the Washington State Fire Training Academy. Dahll is a volunteer firefighter/EMT with Clallam County Fire District No. 3. He completed two firefighting courses along with hazardous-materials training during the 12-week period. Dahll was awarded the Bulldog award and the

Engine Company Leader award twice. District No. 3 Fire Chief Stephen Vogel attended to pin Dahll with his badge. Dahll, a 2011 graduate of Sequim High School, is the son of Marty and Denise Dahll.

Students honored PORT ANGELES — Viola Ware and Jody Jacob-

sen of Port Angeles recently were initiated into the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, the nation’s oldest collegiate honor society for all academic disciplines. Ware was initiated at Arizona State University and Jacobsen at the University of Nevada. Students must have completed 72 credit hours and be in the top 7.5 per-

Death and Memorial Notice DORA LOUISE WAKEFIELD April 12, 1923 April 4, 2013 Mrs. Dora Louise Wakefield of Port Townsend died of natural causes on April 4, 2013, at the age of 89. Dora’s place in the world and in the hearts of her family was always secure. The youngest of 11 children, she had a happy childhood and felt loved. She had a happy marriage that lasted for 66 years and four children who remained close to her throughout her entire life. Sharing the best parts of her childhood with her family became her raison d’etre, and she succeeded in her goal of creating a loving, wonderful home. She gathered people to her heart and lived a rich life of loving and car-

ing for others. She opened her home to friends and family, sometimes for years at a time. Dora nursed many people back to health after surgeries and illnesses. Hers was a life of demonstrating what she believed and putting those beliefs into action: giving, supporting, nurturing and loving. She was born in the small town of Midwest, Wyoming, to Joseph Edward and Alice Maude (Taylor) Watson on April 12, 1923. Her family then moved to Seattle. Shortly before the attack on Pearl Harbor changed America, Dora married Earle Charles Wakefield on June 21, 1941, in Seattle. During World War II, Dora took up employment with Boeing. Dora settled into her happy life as a homemaker both in Seattle and then on the Olympic Pen-

insula. She was an excellent cook and baker, loved the arts, travel, boating, camping. Dora leaves behind her daughters, Marilyn (Gus) Gustafson of Chimacum, Susan (Casey) McKinney of Port Townsend and April (Ken) Speer of Port Townsend; son Daryl (Kim) Wakefield of Port Angeles; sister Ivy Nelson of Lewiston, Idaho; grandchildren Chad Gustafson, Kelsee Norton, Matthew McKinney, Bonnie McKinney, Daira Speer, Kenzie Speer, Katie Deane, Paul Wakefield and Patrick Wakefield; and greatgrandchildren Samantha Gustafson, Megan Gustafson, Anthony Norton and Davyn Williams. She is preceded in death by her husband, Earle Charles Wakefield, who died on August 12, 2007; five brothers; and four sisters. A private celebration of Dora’s life already has taken place.

Death and Memorial Notice CHARLOTTE ‘CHARLIE’ WILSON Charlotte “Charlie” Wilson joined our Lord peacefully in her sleep from pneumonia on April 16, 2013, in Ellensburg, Washington. Born A. Charlotte Giacometti in Chignik, Alaska, in 1942, she was an Alaskan Native who loved her homeland. Charlie managed

hotels in Yakima and Port Angeles with her husband, David Wilson, until he passed in 1998. She then moved to Ellensburg to be with family. She was preceded in death by siblings George, Betty, Louie, Sophie and Harriet Harris, and Alex Giacometti; and parents Vera Osbekoff and Charles Giacometti. She is survived by brother John Giacometti and his wife, Inez, of Bremerton, Washington;

sister Eva Giacometti Suss and her husband, Bill, of Juneau, Alaska; and niece Deanie Pidgeon and her husband, John, of Superior, Montana. Charlotte was wellknown in Port Angeles with many friends at the Pershing Hotel. Her words give us comfort: “Grieve not, for I will welcome you when you arrive at our Lord’s side, with a smile and a ‘welcome home.’”

Death Notices Sharon Rae (Headrick) Kish-Ferron Dec. 6, 1936 — May 7, 2013

Port Angeles resident Sharon Rae (Headrick) Kish-Ferron died of a hemorrhagic stroke at Olympic Medical Center in Port Angeles. She was 76. Her obituary will be published later. Services: Memorial service at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Sequim Bible Church, 847 N. Sequim Ave. Sequim Valley Funeral

Chapel is in charge of arrangements.

Daniel Wayne Hunter

Timothy John Swegle

Daniel Wayne Hunter died at his Port Angeles home of a heart attack. He was 47. Services: A celebration of life will be held Saturday, May 18. The time and location is to be determined. Phone 360-457-7636 for information. Drennan-Ford Funeral Home, Port Angeles, is in charge of arrangements. www.drennanford.com

Nov. 17, 1941 — May 7, 2013

Port Angeles resident Timothy John Swegle died at Olympic Medical Center of cardiovascular disease. He was 71. His obituary will be published later. Services: To be announced. Harper-Ridgeview Funeral Chapel, Port Angeles, is in charge of arrangements.

May 18, 1965 — May 6, 2013

cent of their class. Founded in 1897, Phi Kappa Phi is the nation’s oldest and most selective collegiate honor society for all academic disciplines, according to a news release.

Activist lecture PORT ANGELES — Professor and activist Shaawano Chad Uran will

present a talk on the Idle No More movement at the Elwha Klallam Heritage Training Center, 401 E. First St., at 5:30 p.m. Thursday. Idle No More is a protest movement originating among the indigenous First Nations, Métis and Inuit people of Canada in reaction to alleged violations of treaty rights by the Canadian federal government. Uran teaches at the University of Washington and at The Evergreen State College’s reservationbased community-determined bachelor’s degree program in Port Angeles. He is an enrolled member of the White Earth Nation of Ojibwe. He has 25 years of experience related to environmental, economic and social justice in urban areas and on tribal lands. A coastal jam session will follow the lecture. Attendees are encouraged to bring drums. Phone 360-417-8545 for more information.

Relay benefit sale PORT ANGELES — A garage sale benefit for Port Angeles Relay For Life Team Hunter’s For A Cure will be held Saturday. The sale will be held at 2503 Rolling Hills Court from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Proceeds from the sale will be donated to the American Cancer Society’s Relay For Life. For more information, email canuhunt@yahoo.com or phone 360-775-1369.

Prostate group set PORT HADLOCK — The Quimper Prostate Cancer Veterans group will meet at noon Saturday in the backroom of the Fiesta Jalisco Mexican Restaurant, 10893 Rhody Drive. This prostate health men’s support group gathers every third Saturday for a no-host lunchtime meeting. For more information, phone 360-385-6807. Peninsula Daily News

Death and Memorial Notice DANIEL SPENCER CHARLES SR. March 16, 1949 May 8, 2013 Daniel Spencer Charles Sr., 64 years of age and a longtime Queets, Washington-area resident, died on Wednesday, May 8, 2013, at Grays Harbor Community Hospital in Aberdeen, Washington. He was born on March 16, 1949, in Aberdeen to Harold Leslie and Leta Rose (Williams) Charles. He was an enrolled member of the Quinault Indian Nation. He attended the Queets-Clearwater School District and then graduated from Lake Quinault High School. He served with the U.S. Army in Japan and Vietnam. He was married to Janice Jackson in LaPush. They were later divorced. Daniel worked as a fisherman and attended Bates Technical College in Tacoma for a year. He was active in the Shaker Church. His travels took him throughout

Mr. Charles the state of Washington and Arizona. He liked visiting the area casinos and playing bingo. Daniel S. Charles Sr. is survived by his mother, Leta R. Shale of Queets; his son, Daniel S. Charles Jr. of Aberdeen; his daughter, Simone Samson of Aberdeen; his brothers, Paul Charles of Queets, Terry Shale of Queets and Steve Shale of Aberdeen; his halfbrothers, Jerry Charles of Aberdeen and Harold Charles Jr. of La Push; his sisters, Florene Bergstrom of Aberdeen, Helen Shale

of Queets, Leta Shale Jr. of Queets and Carolann Pickett of Moclips; and numerous grandchildren, great-grandchildren and other relatives. A candlelight service will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday, May 14, 2013, at the Coleman Mortuary Chapel in Hoquiam. An Indian Shaker funeral service will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday, May 15, 2013, at the Coleman Mortuary in Hoquiam. Pearl Buck will officiate at the services. The active pallbearers will be Ron Obi Sr., Pete Kalama Sr., Jeff Kalama Sr., Frank Sansom, Steve Sansom and Michael Kawoosh. Concluding services with vault interment will follow in Sunset Memorial Park, 801 Sunset Drive in Hoquiam, with a dinner to follow in Queets. Direction is by the Coleman Mortuary, 422 Fifth Street in Hoquiam. Please take a few moments to record your thoughts for the family by signing the online register at www.colemanmortuary. net.

Death and Memorial Notice HELEN MARIE GALLAWAY January 23, 1922 April 21, 2013 Lifetime resident of Port Angeles Mrs. Helen Marie Gallaway passed away peacefully in her sleep on April 21, 2013, at the age of 91. She was born in Port Angeles on January 23, 1922, to Barney and Josephine Hren. She was a graduate of Port Angeles High School. She married Mr. Normal Gallaway on March 17, 1945. Together, they had two children, Kathy and Dennis. Helen worked as a shoe salesperson at Family Shoe Store and

Mrs. Gallaway McClain’s Shoe Store. In her free time, Helen loved to travel, play bingo and spend time with her grandchildren and greatgrandchildren.

She also enjoyed gambling in Elko and Reno, Nevada. In recent years, she took to the local casinos. Helen leaves behind her daughter, Kathy (Roger) Thomas; grandchildren Kimberly (Ricky) Holcomb, Jennifer (Anthony) Charles and Jeffrey (Lindy) Thomas; and great-grandchildren Peyton and Keyton Holcomb, Brody and Paisley Charles, and Jeytlin and Teyen Thomas. Helen was the last of the six siblings, all of whom were born in Port Angeles. She was also preceded in death by her son, Dennis Gallaway; and husband Norman. A private family service was held by the family.

HELP OUR TROOPS CALL HOME DONATE YOUR OLD CELL PHONES More than 150,000 troops are serving overseas. Cell Phones for Soldiers is calling on all Americans to support the troops by donating old cell phones. LOCAL DROP OFF CENTER:

Remembering a Lifetime com under “Obituary Forms.” ■ Death Notices, in which summary information about the deceased, including service information and mortuary, appears once at no charge. No biographical or family information or photo is included. For further details, call 360-417-3527.

PROUDLY SERVING THOSE WHO HAVE PROUDLY SERVEDSM

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■ Death and Memorial Notice obituaries chronicle a deceased’s life. These notices appear at a nominal cost according to the length of the obituary. Photos and ornamental insignia are welcome. Call 360-452-8435 Monday through Friday. A form is at www.peninsuladailynews.

Drennan & Ford

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Sunday, May 12, 2013 SECTION

D This week’s business meetings ■ Port Angeles Regional Chamber of Commerce — Weekly luncheon meetings are held Mondays at noon in the second-floor meeting room of the Red Lion Hotel, 221 N. Lincoln St. This Monday’s speaker is Michael Hagen, executive director of the Hoh River Trust, on “Preserving a Last Great American River.” Lunch is $15. If not eating, there is $3 participation fee which includes a beverage. ■ Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce — Weekly luncheon meetings are held Mondays at noon at the Port Townsend Elks Lodge, 555 Otto St. This Monday’s speakers will be the Sequim Robotics Team discussing the FIRST Robotics Competition and the relevance of its program to the economy. Lunch will be catered by Jordini’s.

Nell Clausen and Rick Gross of Estes Builders display the Avid Diamond Award and other honors won by the custom-home builder.

Estes wins top builder rating Diamond Award ranks it for customer satisfaction PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SEQUIM — Estes Builders LLC has received the 2013 Avid Custom Builder Diamond Award, the highest customer satisfaction award presented to custom builders in the United States. “Based on these results, Estes Builders is one of America’s finest builders, with customer satisfaction scores that consistently rank in the top tier of our nationwide survey of home buyer satisfaction,” said Paul A. Cardis CEO and founder of Avid Ratings. Avid Ratings is the largest independent new home survey company in the U.S. Based in Sequim, Estes Builders designs and constructs custom homes throughout Clallam, Jefferson and Kitsap counties. Said owner Kevin Estes: “Being No. 1 in the

country is difficult. “It is special. “How many times in a lifetime do you get to say we are the highest-rated company? “It takes a real commitment by everyone at the company to have the best customer service experience in the United States.” “I am tremendously proud of the service attitude and professionalism of our entire team.” Estes added: “We don’t rest on our laurels. “We were ranked second in the nation in 2004, and we constantly have ranked among the top 5 percent in the nation. “We continue to learn and improve every day.” Rick Gross of Estes Builders explained more: “This is more comprehensive than most people realize.

“This survey is not a few simple questions. “It evaluates builders in 56 key areas that influence a customer’s experience. “Not just construction quality, but also important areas, such as price, satisfaction with design, finishing on time, thorough explanation of the building process, prompt and accurate answers to questions, and many more.”

How they do it Estes Builders trace their success in customer satisfaction to how they design and plan with clients in the early stages of home building. Gross noted that to manage cost overruns — the primary cause of customer dissatisfaction — the company created a method to remove the financial risk to clients by having a clear, accurate and guaranteed price. Estes Builders also has received other national accolades. TURN

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Party time! Girls’ Night PT’s ‘Foolin’ Out in PA Around’ set PORT ANGELES — Downtown will turn tropical during “Girls’ Night Out Island Style,” a night of specials, refreshments and activities from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday. This annual event is sponsored by the Port Angeles Downtown Association and 30 participating businesses. Highlights include a White Crane Martial Arts-sponsored limbo contest at the Conrad Dyar Memorial Fountain, First and Laurel streets, at 6:30 p.m.; a fashion show at 7 p.m. at Sassy Kat Salon, 105 E. First St.; and numerous discounts. An island-style party at R Bar, 132 E. Front St., will run from 6 p.m. to close with no cover, specials for Hawaiian fashions and party favors. Throughout the night, Hawaiian music will be provided by Hawaii Amor, Eden Valley Strummers and DJ Dave Golding. Many businesses will give away beads for necklaces that will be in goodie bags for sale for $10 each at Sassy Kat Salon & Boutique; Cottage Queen, 119 W. First St.; Steppin’ Out Salon, 125 W. First St.; Anime Kat, 110 W. First St.; Olympic Stationers, 122 E. Front St.; Odyssey Bookshop, 114 W. Front St.; Necessities & Temptations, 217 N. Laurel St.; Cabled Fiber Studio, 106 N. Laurel St.; and Smugglers Landing, 115 E. Railroad Ave..

PORT TOWNSEND — “Foolin’ Around Uptown: A Party” will be held in the Uptown business district from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday. Billed as “an Uptown event for the entire community,” participating businesses will provide food and refreshments throughout the evening, along with a raffle drawing and a chance to mix and mingle. Some of the highlights of the evening will include oysters and beer at Printery Communications; fish tacos at Sweet Laurette’s; chocolate fondue fun at the Uptown Pub, with help from the Blue Moose Grill; and foot and hand massages, mini makeovers, and five-minute facials available at Uptown Nutrition.

GIRLS/D2

________ All the above meetings are open to the public. Peninsula Daily News

$ Briefly . . . Dungeness clinic hires executive SEQUIM — Jean M. Stratton has been named executive director of the Dungeness Health & Wellness Clinic. Stratton succeeds Jim Pickett, who was elected to the clinic’s board of directors last Stratton November. The clinic serves uninsured and underinsured community members. “Jean was chosen from a number of qualified applicants,” said Dr. Audrey Gift, president of the board. “She brings extensive business management experience and will help us grow our resources to keep pace with our increasing patient load.” Stratton will work with clinic director Rose Gibbs and medical director Dr. Kip Tulin.

Real-time stock quotations at peninsuladailynews.com

She has served as executive director of two other nonprofit organizations and brings experience in donor development and grant writing. Stratton is a member of the Sequim Soroptimist Club and is active in community volunteer work. For more information, visit www.sequimfreeclinc. org.

New 4-H leader

She holds a Bachelor of Arts in journalism with a minor in sociology. Her specialized training includes grantsmanship and mediation.

PORT ANGELES — Jenny Schmidt has been hired as the 4-H coordinator for the Washington State University Clallam County Extension. An open house to welcome Schmidt and learn more about Clallam County 4-H programSchmidt ming will be held in the county commissioners’ meeting room at the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 E. Fourth St., from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday. TURN

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Welcomes

Lynn Bedford We are happy to have Lynn join the team!

Raffle tickets Free raffle tickets can be picked up at any of the participating Uptown businesses, along with a map and guide for the evening events. The raffle baskets will include more than $1,000 in services and products from Uptown businesses. Winning numbers will be called at 6:45 p.m., and participants must be present at one of the participating Uptown businesses to win. TURN

■ Port Angeles Business Association — Breakfast meetings are Tuesdays at 7:30 a.m. at Joshua’s Restaurant, 113 DelGuzzi Drive, Port Angeles. This Tuesday’s meeting will feature state Rep. Kevin Van De Wege, D-Sequim, who represents the 24th District, which includes Clallam and Jefferson counties and a third of Grays Harbor County. Normal business will be postponed until next week. Van De Wege There is a $2.16 minimum charge by Joshua’s for those who do not order breakfast.

TO

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UPTOWN REALTY

1115 East Front Street Port Angeles, WA 98362 Toll Free: 800-292-2978 www.UptownRealty.com

I have a true passion for volunteering, and while raising my two daughters, I volunteered for various organizations including the Port Angeles Education Foundation and served as interim School Board Director. My previous education is in structural and bridge engineering, so I am excited to begin this new adventure in the Real Estate profession.

Lynn Bedford Office: 360-417-2806 Email: LynnBedford@olypen.com

35784904

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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■ Forks Chamber of Commerce — Luncheon meetings are Wednesdays at

■ North Hood Canal Chamber of Commerce — Representing the “Emerald Towns” of the Hood Canal, Quilcene and Brinnon, the chamber meets at 5:30 p.m. the third Monday of every month, alternating between the Quilcene and Brinnon community centers. This Monday’s meeting is a general forum at the Brinnon Community Center, 306144 U.S. Highway 101.

Coldwell Banker Uptown Realty

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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■ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Chamber of Commerce — Luncheon meetings are held the second and fourth Tuesdays of the month at noon at SunLand Golf & Country Club, 109 Hilltop Drive, Sequim. This week’s speaker will be Mike Gallagher, section manager of water resources of the state Department of Ecology’s Southwest Regional Office. Luncheon reservations closed Friday, but seats are available for those who are not having lunch. Coffee or tea is $3. Phone 360-683-6197 or email info@ sequimchamber.com for information. The meeting sponsor is Domino’s.

noon at JT’s Sweet Stuffs, 80 N. Forks Ave. This Wednesday’s speaker will be Courtney Martinez of Concerned Citizens, an employment services provider. Lunch costs $8; a bowl of soup, $4.75; and a cup of soup, $4. The entree will be taco salad.


D2

BusinessPoliticsEnvironment

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

$ Briefly . . . CONTINUED FROM D1 Schmidt coordinates 4-H volunteers, member enrollment and special events in Clallam County. She succeeds Gena Royal, who retired. Schmidt has a degree in education from Minnesota State University-Mankato. She has experience with schools, colleges and many volunteer organizations and was an avid 4-H member while growing up. Clallam County 4-H clubs teach life skills such as leadership, citizenship, animal husbandry, gardening, crafts and sciences. Youths in grades K-12 are eligible to participate. Clubs are organized and facilitated by trained, screened volunteer leaders. For more information, visit the WSU Extension office, Suite 15, in the courthouse or phone 360417-2398.

New hairstylist PORT ANGELES — Hairstylist Samantha Richards has joined Sassy Kat Salon, 105 E. First St. Richards specializes in color and said she is “determined to make each client happy.� She has Richards been a hairdresser for three years, most recently at the J.C. Penney salon in Sequim, and is earning credentials to become a hair school instructor. For more information, phone Sassy Kat at 360417-0800.

Send us your business news DO YOU HAVE a business expansion planned, staffing change or a new product line? Are you starting a new business? The Peninsula Daily News is happy to mention news of your business in our daily Business Briefly column. Simply send in the information — including a phone number for us to get additional information, if necessary — to the PDN in any of the following methods: ■Fax it to 360-417-3521. ■Mail it to PDN news, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. ■Email it to news@peninsuladailynews.com. Photos are always welcome. If you’re emailing a photo, be sure it is of high resolution. Please note: We cannot publish items by private businesses soliciting business — e.g., merchandise sales, paid seminars, openings in preschools or other paid educational or training programs. These need to be addressed as paid advertisements. For questions, or to get a Business Briefly form faxed or mailed to you, please call 360-417-3527 weekdays.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS will change to Harrison HealthPartners Cardiovascular Consultants. Physicians and providers will continue to serve patients at the six clinic locations in Port Townsend, Port Ludlow, Forks, Bremerton, Port Orchard and Poulsbo. For more information, phone 360-373-2547 or 888-573-2547.

as a broker. A Sequim native, Gilles has a background in interior design, which she said will benefit clients purchasing homes. For more information, phone Gilles at 360-8083306 or 360-683-3564, or email andrea@realestate sequim.com.

DREAM

DONATION

Dream Playground Foundation board member Justin Charon accepts a $1,000 donation from First Federal Vice President/ Regional Manager Laurie Szczepczynski. The 12,000-square-foot Dream Playground was built by volunteers in 2002 and is located at Erickson Park in Port Angeles. More information is available at www.padreamplayground.org.

KONP talk guests

PORT ANGELES — Here is this week’s schedule for the 1:05 p.m. to PORT ANGELES — Artist expands line 2 p.m. local talk show segClallam Transit System PORT ANGELES — ment on KONP radio, at Operations Supervisor Randolf Frederick Co. has 1450 AM, 101.7 FM and Scott Gossard has been expanded its jewelry line, www.konp.com on the selected as CTS Employee adding 14-karat white and of the Quarter for the first Internet outside the Port gold jewelry. Angeles area. quarter of 2013. Artist Randolf Foster Station General ManGossard was selected said he believes it will add ager Todd Ortloff hosts the “for excelling in his new depth to his line of customMonday through Thursday duties as an operations handmade silver jewelry. segments. supervisor.� He offers fossils, rocks, This week’s scheduled Gossard received a cergems and classes in silverlineup: tificate of commendation smithing and lapidary at ■Monday: Clallam and a bonus. The Landing mall, 115 E. County Sheriff Bill BeneHis “easygoing personalRailroad Ave., Suite 103. dict discusses current ity and positive attitude, For more information, affairs. both with system passenvisit rfco.biz or email ■Tuesday: Matt Fast, gers and fellow employees, rfcobiz@gmail.com. the new business developenhances the workplace helps CTS accomplish ment and communications Now open Sundays and manager at the Clallam its mission goals,� his PORT ANGELES — Jas- award citation noted. County Economic Developmine Bistro, 222 N. Lincoln ment Council, discusses the St., is now open seven days Ready Response LeaderFarm store open a week, including Sundays, ship Coalition, the manuSEQUIM — Purple for lunch and dinner. facturing industry and Haze Lavender Farm Store The Thai restaurant’s upcoming seminars. is now open Saturdays and lunch hours are 11 a.m. to ■Wednesday: In the Sundays from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. first segment, Susan Hill5 p.m. Dinner is from 4:30 p.m. gren and Pam Fosnes disThe owners said they to 9 p.m. cuss a membership drive will have a “great selection For more information, for The Answer For Youth. of lavender plants� availphone 360-452-6148. In the second segment, able in time for spring Kathy Monds, executive planting. Name change set director of the Clallam The farm is located at County Historical Society, BREMERTON — Kit180 Bell Bottom Road. discusses “Whispers of the sap Cardiology Consultants Past,� a tour that will take has announced its affiliaplace at Ocean View Cemetion with Harrison Health- New broker SEQUIM — Andrea tery in Port Angeles. Partners effective June 1. Gilles has joined the staff On June 1, Kitsap Car■Thursday: Clallam diology Consultants’ name of Professional Real Estate County commissioners.

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the IRS. Organizations that fail to file reports for three consecutive years automatically lose their federal taxexempt status. Churches and churchrelated organizations are not required to file annual reports. Many organizations use the calendar year as their fiscal year, which makes May 15 the deadline for them. Organizations that need additional time to file can ask for an extension, the IRS says.

Stocks up and up NEW YORK — With the Dow and the S&P 500 setting another string of record closing highs last week, the old Wall Street adage “Sell in May and Go Away� is starting to look weak. Closing out the second week of May, the Standard & Poor’s 500 index is up 2.3 percent for the month. For the year, the benchmark S&P 500 is up a stunning 14.6 percent. Some analysts say that when the market starts off this strong, it tends to keep the upward momentum going until the end of the year. “Instead of ‘Sell in May and Go Away,’ we may be setting up for a surprise May rally,� said Ryan Detrick, senior technical analyst at Schaeffer’s Investment Research in Cincinnati, Ohio. “What’s encouraging is that small-cap stocks have been outperforming the market recently. It’s a sign that the market is going for even the riskiest sectors.� Both the Dow industrials and the S&P 500 topped major milestones for the first time in early May, with the Dow Jones industrial average surpassing 15,000 and the S&P 500 breaking through the 1,600 mark. Since then, the indexes have been steadily holding above the landmark levels. 36766444

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WASHINGTON — The nation’s top patent court has issued a deeply divided opinion on how to determine if software is eligible for legal protection, reflecting the broader debate that has split the computer industry. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, which handles all patent appeals, issued a 135page decision by 10 circuit judges that included five viewpoints and “additional reflections� from Chief Judge Randall Rader. Google, Facebook and JPMorgan Chase are among the companies that argued that patent standards for software are too lax. A group whose members include software makers Microsoft and Oracle warned the appeals court that limiting protection for software could hurt the nation’s economy.

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Girls CONTINUED FROM D1 A portion of the proceeds from the bags will benefit the Port Angeles Food Bank. Representatives from food bank will accept donations of nonperishable food at the fountain, Odyssey Bookshop and at Front and Laurel streets. Full details for Girls’ Night Out can be found at portangelesdowntown.com or Girls’ Night Out PA on Facebook.

Foolin’ CONTINUED FROM D1 Raffle prizes will include two tickets to a main stage production from Key City Public Theatre; sugar body scrub, as well as lotions, vitamins and a gift certificate from Uptown Nutrition; a set of wine glasses from Potpourri, and a free, hourlong summer building project consultation from Wallyworks Construction. “We want to extend an invitation to our neighbors and customers to join us in celebrating the town we all love,� said Mike Kenna of Printery Communications and Star Copy Center. “And what better way to celebrate than with a party?� Participating businesses include Aldrich’s and Maxwell Bean, Curly Top Collectibles, IndiGlo Holistic Massage, Key City Public Theater, Lanza’s Ristorante, The Perfect Season, Petals Flower Shop, Potpourri, Printery Communications and Star Copy, and Sweet Laurette Cafe and Bistro. Also, Uptown Fabrics, Uptown Nutrition, Uptown Pub and the Blue Moose Grill, Vasu Video and Wallyworks Construction. For more information, email Kenna at mike@ printery.com.


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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

D3

New warnings after $45 million theft mon, but the $45 million stolen in this one was at least double the amount involved in previously known cases, said Avivah Litan, an analyst who covers security issues for Gartner Inc. Middle Eastern banks and payment processors are “a bit behind� on security and screening technologies that are supposed to prevent this kind of fraud, but it happens around the world, she said. “It’s a really easy way to turn digits into cash,� Litan said. Some of the fault lies with the ubiquitous magnetic strips on the back of the cards.

BY COLLEEN LONG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — The sophistication of a global network of thieves who drained cash machines around the globe of an astonishing $45 million in mere hours sent ripples through the security world — not merely for the size of the operation and ease with which it was carried out, but also for the threat that more such thefts may be in store. Seven people were arrested in the U.S., accused of operating the New York cell of what prosecutors said was a network that carried out thefts at ATMs in 27 countries from Canada to Russia. Law enforcement agencies from more than a dozen nations were involved in the investigation, U.S. prosecutors in New York said. “Unfortunately these types of cybercrimes involving ATMs, where you’ve got a flash mob going out across the globe, are becoming more and more common,� said Rose Romero, a former federal prosecutor and regional director for the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. “I expect there will be many more� of these types of crimes, she said. Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Loretta Lynch, who called the theft “a massive 21stcentury bank heist,� announced the case Thursday in New York.

Here’s how it worked Hackers got into bank databases, eliminated withdrawal limits on pre-paid debit cards and created access codes. Others loaded that data onto any plastic card with a magnetic stripe — an old hotel key card or an expired credit card worked fine as long as it carried the account data and correct access codes. A network of operatives then fanned out to rapidly

Magnetic strips

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (2)

Elvis Rafael Rodriguez, left, and Emir Yasser Yeje took this cellphone photo of themselves as they sat with $40,000 in cash allegedly stolen using bogus magnetic swipe cards at cash machines in New York. withdraw money in multiple cities, authorities said. The cells would take a cut of the money, then launder it through expensive purchases or ship it wholesale to the global ringleaders. Lynch didn’t say where they were located. It appears no individuals lost money. The thieves plundered funds held by the banks that back up prepaid credit cards, not individual or business accounts, Lynch said.

Ori Eisen, a cybercrime expert and founder of 41st Parameter, a fraud detection and prevention firm, said the $45 million heist was on the “high-end� of what can be done by cybercriminals who exploit banking systems connected to the Internet. “Given the scale of the global credit card networks, it is almost impossible to detect every kind of attack,� he said. “This attack is not the last one, and if the modus operandi proves to be suc-

cessful crooks will exploit it time and again.� There were two separate attacks in this case, — one in December that reaped $5 million worldwide and one in February that snared about $40 million in 10 hours with about 36,000 transactions. The scheme involved attacks on two banks, Rakbank in the United Arab Emirates and the Bank of Muscat in Oman, prosecutors said. Such ATM fraud schemes are not uncom-

other countries. They were charged with conspiracy and money laundering. If convicted, they each face 10 years in prison. The accused ringleader in the U.S. cell, Alberto Yusi Lajud-Pena, was reportedly killed in the Dominican Republic late last month, prosecutors said.

More arrests More investigations continue and other arrests have been made in other countries, but prosecutors did not have details. An indictment unsealed Thursday accused LajudPena and the other seven New York suspects of withdrawing $2.8 million in cash from hacked accounts in less than a day. Arrests began in March. Lajud-Pena was found dead with a suitcase full of about $100,000 in cash, and the investigation into his death is continuing separately. Dominican officials said they arrested a man in the killing who said it was a botched robbery, and two other suspects were on the lam.

The rest of the world has largely abandoned cards with magnetic strips in favor of ones with built-in chips that are nearly impossible to copy. But because U.S. banks and merchants have stuck to cards with magnetic strips, they are still accepted around the world. Lynch would not say who masterminded the attacks globally, who the hackers are or where they were located, citing an ongoing investigation. The New York suspects were U.S. citizens originally from the Dominican Republic who lived in the New York City suburb of Yonkers. They were mostly in their 20s. A surveillance image taken from a Lynch said graphic released by the U.S. they all knew Attorney’s Office in New York City one another shows a man, identified as and were “defendant Reyes,� allegedly using r e c r u i t e d fraudulent magnetic cards to steal together, as money from one of several cash were cells in machines in Manhattan.

Last refuge from scandal? Professorships BY ARIEL KAMINER THE NEW YORK TIMES

NEW YORK — After a sex scandal forced Eliot Spitzer from the governor’s mansion in Albany, N.Y., he turned up at City College, teaching a course called “Law and Public Policy.� A f t e r another sex scandal f o r c e d James E. McGreevey from the governor’s mansion in McGreevey New Jersey, he turned up at Kean University, teaching in the global MBA program. A n d Petraeus David H. Petraeus, the general turned intelligence chief turned ribald punch line, will have not one college paycheck, but two. Last month, the City University of New York said he would be the next visiting professor of public policy at Macaulay Honors College. In addition, the University of Southern California announced that Petraeus would also be teaching there. He will split his time

between coasts. The traditional path to an academic job is long and laborious: the solitude and penury of graduate study, the scramble for one of the few open positions in each field, the blood sport of competitive publishing. But while colleges have always courted accomplished public figures, a leap to the front of the class has now become a natural move for those who have suffered spectacular career flameouts. At this point, the transition from public disgrace to college lectern is so familiar that when John Galliano, the celebrated clothing designer who lost his job at Christian Dior after unleashing a torrent of anti-Semitic vitriol in a bar, merely stepped foot on the campus of Central Saint Martins, an art and design school in London, speculation rippled around the world — incorrectly — that he would soon be teaching there. Although they rarely pay much, arrangements like these have obvious benefits. For the new professors, the jobs offer a chance to do something positive rather than sitting home with their regrets, and to begin rehabilitating their image by associating themselves with intellectual pursuits. The students get to learn about history from people

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$3,600 a semester He has taught since 2007 at Kean, a public university in New Jersey, earning $3,600 a semester. He said he hoped his story might encourage others to teach, adding, “We need teachers and adjuncts who bring from their own private life a wealth of experiences to share with America’s future leaders, however flawed those experiences may be.� But Reina I. Valenzuela, who took his class in 2009 said the class was structured around case studies, none of which were his own. “It was never a topic of discussion,� she said. David A. Paterson, who

stepped in to finish Spitzer’s term as governor, ended his campaign to win his own full term after revelations that his administration had intervened on behalf of an aide who was accused of assault. Rather than try his luck in the voting booth, he headed to New York University, where he led a seminar called “The Teachable Art of Governing.� Anthony Zangrillo, one of his students at NYU, said that he “would always give a great story every class.� He recalled Paterson discussing his attempts to pass a tax on sugary beverages and legalize gay marriage. Paterson also offered his students his thoughts on running for office. “He said, ‘They’re going to analyze every aspect of your life — the press — and you have to be somebody who can handle that and not crack under the pressure,’� Zangrillo said.

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Petraeus, who has a Ph.D. from Princeton and has taught and written extensively, entertained inquiries from many universities, his lawyer said. When he was director of the Central Intelligence Agency, however, before the world found out about his extramarital affair with his biographer, he was mentioned as a possible president of Princeton, not as a professor at CUNY or USC. But if scandal presents these schools with a bargain, it can also carry a cost. Galliano has apologized for his remarks, but an online petition opposing his arrival at Parsons has nonetheless attracted more than 2,000 signatures. Joel Towers, the executive dean of Parsons, has called the class a chance “to learn from positive and negative examples.� Galliano is volunteering his time. Anthony D. Weiner, the former congressman who had a new kind of sex scandal played out in 140-character Twitter posts, said he had had “very preliminary

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discussions� about a teaching role somewhere but decided it would create “too much of a commotion.� He is now contemplating a run for mayor of New York, but says he has not ruled out teaching. For Spitzer’s weekly seminar, which he taught from fall 2009 to spring 2012, he was paid slightly less than $5,000 a semester, which he donated to the school after other professors said it was on the high side of what adjuncts earn. Spitzer, who said he sought to make his students “both enjoy and learn how to think about questions at several different levels,� described the experience as a “huge joy, every week.� One of his students, Melissa Lynch, said he was one of her best teachers and he encouraged the class to call him on his cellphone if they had questions about readings. When it came to the mechanics of running a class, however, “he didn’t really seem to know what he was doing.� The class required one writing assignment, “but he didn’t know if it should be 2 pages or 30 pages,� she said, adding, “He kept asking us, ‘What do other professors do?’� McGreevey, who resigned as New Jersey governor after announcing that he

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who made it — though the lessons generally steer well clear of the professors’ less noble accomplishments. And the colleges get to hire someone who might otherwise be out of reach.


D4

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

BusinessPoliticsEnvironment

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

More than just Mom; now, a ‘friend’ “I promised not to stalk her, but I do need to keep an eye on it,” he says. While 13-year-olds are the most likely group to initiate a friendship with a parent, with more than 65 percent of those friendships being initiated by the child, people in their 20s are the least likely, initiating just 40 percent of the friendships with their parents, Facebook says. Rochelle Knoller of Fair Lawn, N.J., whose son Josh only reluctantly accepted her “Friend Request,” says the early days of their online relationship were dicey.

BY MARTHA MENDOZA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — Josh Knoller, a young professional in New York City, spent years refusing his mother’s “Friend Request” on Facebook before eventually “caving in.” Today, they have an agreement: She’ll try not to make embarrassing comments, and he can delete them if she does. “We actually got into some pretty big fights over this,” says Knoller, 29. “I love my Mom to death, but she’s a crazy, sweet Jewish mother, and I was a little worried about what she might post in front of my closest friends.” This Mother’s Day, 1 in 3 mothers are connected with their teens over Facebook, according to the social networking giant’s review of how users self-identify. With more than 1 billion Facebook users, that’s a lot of mothers and kids keeping in touch through social media, says Fordham University communications professor Paul Levinson, author of New New Media. ‘‘Facebook has been a boon to family relationships,” said Levinson.

But not all is told Kelly McBride, an assistant professor of communications at LaSalle University in Philadelphia, says her students who “friend” their mothers keep their

‘Dicey’ beginning

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Josh Knoller, an account manager with Nicholas & Lence Communications, looks at the Facebook page of his mother, Rochelle Knoller of Fair Lawn, N.J., on his office computer in New York City. Facebook pages benign, using other social media like Instagram or Twitter for the racy stuff. “They may be willing to ‘friend’ their mother, but when they do, they take down the drinking or partying or suggestive photographs,” she says. McBride says she’d like to get her own mother, who

is 77, onto Facebook. “I’ve offered repeatedly to make her a Facebook page so I could friend her, but she just won’t do it,” she says.

Wait until older Parenting expert Susan Newman recommends that mothers wait until their children are independent

adults before friending them. “Being a friend with your son or daughter on Facebook, to me is synonymous with reading your teenager’s diary,” she says. “Adolescents are trying to develop an identity and they have so much hovering and helicopter parenting going on, Facebook adds

another layer that seems to be very intrusive.” But Stephen Balkam, CEO of the Washington D.C.-based Family Online Safety Institute, says he was his daughter’s first “friend,” a requirement for her to even have a Facebook account when she turned 13, the minimum age allowed by the company.

“I’d write a comment, and literally no sooner would I type when the phone would ring and it would be Josh — I guess he’s on Facebook a lot — and he’d be telling me, ‘Mom, you can’t make comments like this,” she says. “My friends can’t even believe we’re friends.” She says she checks his page about three times a week and that some of his friends have even asked to be her friend. She accepted, only after checking with her son. “Today, we’re pretty much down to where I’m allowed to ‘like’ something, and I’m allowed to go on his Facebook page and see what’s going on with him,” she says. “But that is it.”

General orders extra review of nuke crew failings BY ROBERT BURNS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — The general who commands the nation’s nuclear forces has ordered further review of failings discovered among Air Force officers who operate nuclear missiles. But he told Congress he was not alarmed by their shortcomings. Gen. Robert Kehler, commander of U.S. Strategic Command, told a House Armed Services panel that the Air Force assured him it is searching for root causes of the problem among missile launch officers at Minot Air Force Base, N.D. “As I sit here today, I don’t see anything that would cause me to lose confidence” in their ability to perform their mission, Kehler said. The Associated Press reported last week that a March inspection of the 91st Missile Wing at Minot gave the missile crews the equivalent of a “D’’ grade in missile operations, leading to the removal from duty of an unprecedented 17 officers. Kehler said he has told the Strategic Command’s inspector general to review the results of the Minot inspection, which was per-

formed by the Air Force Global Strike Command. That command is responsible for the missile unit’s training and readiness but would cede responsibility for them to Strategic Command in time of war. Kehler said “the Air Force is digging into this,” and that his command’s inspector general will review the previous inspection’s results as well as the responses to it by commanders at Minot. “This has my personal attention,” Kehler said.

On the defensive At a separate House Appropriations Commiteee hearing Thursday, the Air Force chief of staff, Gen. Mark Welsh, found himself on the defensive over the Minot issue. Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen, R-N.J., told Welsh that if the Minot problem had happened in the Navy’s nuclear force, the individuals involved would have been dismissed. Welsh said Minot commanders were “concerned they were not taking the job seriously enough.” Kehler’s comments stood in contrast to the tone of a confidential email obtained

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The deactivated Delta Nine Launch Facility near Wall, S.D., which is now open to the public. by the AP in which a senior officer at Minot sketched a picture of a troubled nuclear unit. “We are, in fact, in a crisis right now,” Lt. Col. Jay Folds, a deputy commander at Minot, told subordinates in the April 12 email. His group is responsible for all Minuteman 3 missile

launch crews at Minot. In his email, Folds lamented the remarkably poor reviews the launch officers received in the March inspection. Their missile launch skills were rated “marginal,” which the Air Force told the AP was the equivalent of a “D’’ grade. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel responded to the AP report on Wednesday by demanding more information from the Air Force. Welsh said on Wednesday that the problem does not suggest a lack of proper control over the nuclear missiles but rather was a symptom of turmoil in the ranks. “The idea that we have people not performing to the standard we expect will never be good and we won’t tolerate it,” Welsh said when questioned about the problem at a congressional hearing on budget issues. Underlying the Minot

‘Ride hard’

situation is a sense among some that the Air Force’s nuclear mission is a dying field, as the government considers further reducing the size of the U.S. arsenal. Welsh noted that because there are a limited number of command positions to which missile launch officers can aspire within the nuclear force, those officers tend to believe they have no future. “That’s actually not the case, but that’s the view when you’re in the operational force,” Welsh said. “We have to deal with that.” Hagel himself, before he was defense secretary, signed a plan put forward a year ago by the private group Global Zero to eliminate the Air Force’s intercontinental ballistic missiles and to eventually eliminate all nuclear weapons. At his Senate confirmation hearing, he said he supports President Barack

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Obama’s goal of zero nuclear weapons but only through negotiations. Hagel’s spokesman, George Little, said the defense secretary was briefed on the Minot situation as reported by the AP on Wednesday and demanded that he be provided more details. Welsh’s civilian boss, Air Force Secretary Michael Donley, suggested a silver lining to the trouble at Minot. The fact that Minot commanders identified 17 underperformers was evidence that the Air Force has strengthened its monitoring of the nuclear force, he said. And he stressed that launch crew members typically are relatively junior officers — lieutenants and captains — with limited service experience.

It is the duty of commanders, Donley said, to “ride herd” on those young officers with “this awesome responsibility” of controlling missiles capable of destroying entire countries. Donley noted that he is particularly sensitive to any indication of weakness in the nuclear force because he took over as Air Force secretary in October 2008 after his predecessor, Michael Wynne, was fired by then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates for a series of nuclear embarrassments. Donley was charged with cleaning up the problem. It appeared the Minot force, which is one of three responsible for controlling — and, if necessary, launching — the Air Force’s 450 strategic nuclear missiles, is an outlier. The Air Force told the AP on Wednesday that the two other missile wings — at Malmstrom Air Force Base, Mont., and at F.E. Warren Air Force Base, Wyo. — earned scores of “excellent” in the most recent inspection of their ICBM launch skills. That is two notches above the “marginal” rating at Minot and one notch below the highest rating of “outstanding.” Each of the three wings operates 150 Minuteman 3 missiles. The Malmstrom unit was inspected in December 2012, the F.E. Warren unit in May 2012.


BusinessPoliticsEnvironment

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

D5

Woman hits officer to kick smoking habit THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Richard Vap, owner of South Valley Drywall, is shown at a home construction site with one of his crews working in the background in Lakewood, Colo.

Home building surging, but job growth isn’t yet BY ALEX VEIGA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DENVER — The resurgent U.S. housing market has sent builders calling again for Richard Vap, who owns a drywall installation company. Vap would love to help — if he could hire enough qualified people. “There is a shortage of manpower,” says Vap, owner of South Valley Drywall in Littleton, Colo. “We’re probably only hiring about 75 or 80 percent of what we actually need.” U.S. builders and the subcontractors they depend on are struggling to hire fast enough to meet rising demand for new homes. Builders would be starting work on more homes — and contributing more to the economy — if they could fill more job openings. In the meantime, workers in the right locations with the right skills are commanding higher pay. The shortage of labor ranges across occupations — from construction superintendents and purchasing agents to painters, cabinet makers and drywall installers. The National Association of Home Builders says its members have complained of too few framers, roofers, plumbers and carpenters. The shortage is most acute in areas where demand for new homes has recovered fastest, notably in Arizona, California, Texas, Colorado and Florida. The problem results largely from an exodus of workers from the industry after the housing bubble burst.

Going to new jobs

Fast pace

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

WASHINGTON — Hurricanes, floods and droughts are putting an increasingly large strain on the federal budget. A new report from the Center for American Progress finds that Congress spent at least $136 billion on disaster relief between 2011 and 2013. That works out to a perhousehold amount of $400 annually. And those costs are likely to rise in the years ahead — especially if climate change leads to more frequent extreme weather, according to the study. But the most striking part of the report, according to its authors: No one in the government — not the Federal Emergency Management Agency or the Office of Management and Budget, for example — knew exactly how much the country had been spending on

disaster relief, they said. This information isn’t easily accessible anywhere. The authors had to sift through appropriations bills and disaster-relief supplementals that Congress had passed between fiscal 2011 and fiscal 2013 to make an estimate. “If we don’t even know how much natural disasters are costing us, then Congress is going to keep underbudgeting for disaster relief and recovery,” said Daniel Weiss of the Center for American Progress, who co-authored the study with Jackie Weidman. “And lawmakers will end up doing deficit spending to pay for it.” The researchers from the liberal think tank closely aligned with the Obama administration found that a variety of federal agencies have had to spend money in response to natural disasters during the past two years.

Immigrant visas The homebuilders association is pushing Congress to let more immigrants enter the country through a worker visa program.

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For now, the industry is building faster than it’s hiring. In February, builders began work on single-family homes at the fastest pace in five years. And in March, new home construction broke the 1 million mark for the first time since June 2008. Permits for future construction are also near a five-year high. In the 12 months that ended in March, housing starts surged 47 percent. Yet over the same period, the industry’s employment grew just 3.7 percent. Normally, a rebound in home construction helps propel an economy after a recession. But even with the steady gains in housing starts, sales and prices since last year, the industry remains below levels considered healthy. The National Association of Home Builders says nearly half its members who responded to a survey in March said a scarcity of labor has led to delays in completing work. Fifteen percent have had to turn down some projects. “I can’t find qualified people to fill the positions that I have open,” says Vishaal Gupta, president of Park Square Homes in Orlando, Fla. If not for the labor shortage, “I would be able to build more homes this year

Cost of climate disasters climbs

and meet more demand The association cites than I can handle today.” census data showing that foreign-born workers make Higher pay up about 22 percent of the U.S. home construction Gupta’s company is facwork force. ing a side effect of the labor It estimates there are shortage: Demand for higher pay from qualified 116,000 unfilled jobs. Still, even if builders workers. On some occasions, he find more workers to hire, says he’s been outbid by two other factors could hold rivals that need contractors back the industry for a while: A tight supply of for their own projects. Gupta’s preferred paint building materials and contractor left for a rival ready-to-build land. Surveys by the National that paid more. His new cabinet contrac- Association of Home Buildtor is about 10 percent more ers show that builders have expensive than the one grown concerned about those obstacles. Gupta used before. In part, that’s why The higher pay they’re handing out helps explain Crowe thinks employment why builders have been in single-family home buildgradually raising prices on ing won’t return to its 2002 total until 2016. And he new homes. The median price was isn’t unhappy about that. “In a perverse sort of $247,000 in March, up about 12 percent from the way, the mild housing recovsame month in 2011, the ery is probably a good Commerce Department thing,” Crowe says. says. “We need to rebuild the The industry may have infrastructure of the industo look more aggressively try.” for workers at vocational schools, federally funded programs like Job Corps and elsewhere, says Crowe of the homebuilders group. “We’ll have to recruit more,” he says. Crowe and other economists predict that as demand for new homes strengthens further, higher wages will woo back many laborers who took up other jobs during the downturn.

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Experienced construction workers lost jobs. And many found new work — in commercial building or in booming and sometimes higher-paying industries like mining and natural gas drilling — and aren’t eager to come back. Hispanic immigrants, largely from Mexico, who had filled jobs during the boom were among those who left the industry and, in some cases, the United States. Dave Erickson, president of Greyhawk Homes in Columbus, Ga., lost an employee who took a job this year in Texas. The former employee is now installing fiber-optic cable and earning 30 percent more than he did as a construction supervisor. “I think he’s frustrated

with the cycle we went through in recent years,” Erickson says. A shortage of labor in a well-paying industry might seem incongruous in an economy stuck with a stillhigh 7.5 percent unemployment rate. But it reflects just how many former skilled construction workers have moved on to other fields. In 2006, when the boom peaked, 3.4 million people worked in homebuilding. By 2011, the figure had bottomed at about 2 million. As of last month, about 2.1 million people were employed in residential construction. Jobs in the industry did rise 4.1 percent in April from a year earlier, faster than overall U.S. job growth. But they’d have to surge 24 percent more to reach 2.6 million, their 2002 level — “the last time the market was normal,” says David Crowe, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders.

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Think you’ve heard of every way possible to quit smoking? Etta Mae Lopez came up with a new one: slap a cop so you’ll go to jail, where smoking isn’t allowed. Lopez smacked Sacramento County sheriff ’s Deputy Matt Campoy in the face Tuesday as he left the main jail at the end of his shift. He grabbed her and took her inside the jail, where she slapped his arm as soon as he turned her loose. Once she was handcuffed, the 5-foot-1-inch Lopez told Campoy she picked him because he was in uniform and she wanted to make sure she struck a law enforcement officer. “She waited all day for a deputy to come out because she knew if she assaulted a deputy she would go to jail and be inside long enough to quit her smoking habit,” Campoy told The Sacramento Bee newspaper.

The deputy said he tried to sidestep Lopez as he left the jail through the usual gathering of family members who linger outside the facility a few blocks from the state Capitol. “I stepped to the left again and she suddenly stepped into me and slapped my face,” he said. “I’ve been telling everybody that I have a new Irish name: Nick O’Derm.” Lopez, 31, pleaded no contest to misdemeanor battery on a peace officer and was sentenced Thursday to 63 days in jail, with credit for the three days she served this week, said Shelly Orio, a spokeswoman for the county district attorney’s office. Lopez also was sentenced to five days for violating her probation from a 2010 drunken driving conviction. Among the conditions included in her sentence: an order to have no contact with deputies.


D6

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

BusinessPoliticsEnvironment

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

CO2 levels reach record-breaking high BY SETH BORENSTEIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Worldwide levels of the chief greenhouse gas that causes global warming have hit a milestone, reaching an amount never before encountered by humans, federal scientists said. Carbon dioxide was measured at 400 parts per million at the oldest monitoring station, which is in Hawaii, setting the global benchmark. The last time the worldwide carbon level was probably that high was about 2 million years ago, said Pieter Tans of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. That was during the Pleistocene Era. “It was much warmer than it is today,� Tans said Friday. “There were forests in Greenland. Sea level was higher, between 10 and 20 meters (33 to 66 feet).� Other scientists say it may have been 10 million years ago that Earth last encountered this much carbon dioxide in the atmoTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS sphere. A flock of geese flies past the belching smokestacks of the Jeffrey Energy Center coal power plant as the suns sets near The first modern Emmett, Kan. humans only appeared in Africa about 200,000 years If carbon dioxide levels now happening. Mauna Loa, Hawaii. as a safe level for CO2, but and is down to 5.9 billion ago. go up 100 parts per million Last year, regional moniGenerally carbon levels scientists acknowledge they tons per year. The speed of the change over thousands or millions tors briefly hit 400 ppm in peak in May then fall don’t really know what levAnticipated number slightly, so the yearly averels would stop the effects of is the big worry, said Penn- of years, plants and animals the Arctic. The measurement was global warming. sylvania State University can adapt. But those monitoring age is usually a few parts recorded Thursday, and it is But that can’t be stations aren’t seen as a per million lower than May The level of carbon diox- climate scientist Michael only a daily figure. done at the speed it is world mark like the one at levels. ide in the air is rising faster Mann. The monthly and yearly than in the past decades, average will be smaller. despite international efforts The number 400 has by developed nations to been anticipated by climate curb it. scientists and environmenOn average the amount tal activists for years as a is growing by about 2 parts notable indicator, in part per million per year. because it’s a round number That’s 100 times faster — not because any changes than at the end of the Ice in man-made global warm- Age. ing happen by reaching it. Back then, it took 7,000 “Physically, we are no years for carbon dioxide to worse off at 400 ppm than reach 80 parts per million, we were at 399 ppm,� Princ- Tans said. eton University climate sciBecause of the burning entist Michael Oppen- of fossil fuels, such as oil heimer said. and coal, carbon dioxide lev“But as a symbol of the els have gone up by that painfully slow pace of meaamount in just 55 years. sures to avoid a dangerous Before the Industrial level of warming, it’s someRevolution, carbon dioxide what unnerving.� levels were around 280 Environmental activists, ppm, and they were closer such as former Vice President Al Gore, seized on the to 200 during the Ice Age, which is when sea levels milestone. “This number is a shrank and polar places reminder that for the last went from green to icy. There are natural ups 150 years — and especially and downs of this greenover the last several decades — we have been house gas, which comes recklessly polluting the pro- from volcanoes and decomtective sheath of atmo- posing plants and animals. But that’s not what has sphere that surrounds the Earth and protects the con- driven current levels so ditions that have fostered high, Tans said. 5/12/13 - 6/2/13 the flourishing of our civilization,� Gore said in a state- Oceans absorbing it ment. He said the amount “We are altering the should be even higher, but composition of our atmo- the world’s oceans are sphere at an unprecedented absorbing quite a bit, keeprate.� ing it out of the air. “What we see today is Thousands of years 100 percent due to human Carbon dioxide traps activity,� said Tans, a NOAA heat just like in a green- senior scientist. The burning of fossil house and most of it stays in the air for a century; fuels, such as coal for elecRADIANCE I N S P I R AT I O N some lasts for thousands of tricity and oil for gasoline, has caused the overwhelmTwin XL Queen Twin XL Queen years, scientists say. It accounts for three- ing bulk of the man-made $ $ $ $ quarters of the planet’s increase in carbon in the air, scientists say. heat-trapping gases. King King Full Full The world pumps on There are others, such as $ $ $ $ average 2.4 million pounds methane, which has a shorter life span but traps of carbon dioxide into the air every second for a total heat more effectively. Both trigger tempera- of 38.2 billion tons in 2011, tures to rise over time, sci- according international calentists say, which is causing culations published in a scisea levels to rise and some entific journal in December. China spews 10 billion weather patterns to change. When measurements of tons of carbon dioxide into VIBRANT E L AT I O N carbon dioxide were first the air per year, leading all OPTIMUM Twin XL Queen Twin XL Queen taken in 1958, it measured countries, and its emissions OPTICOOLTM SLEEP are growing about 10 per315 parts per million. $ $ $ $ EXPERIENCE Some scientists and cent annually. The U.S. at No. 2 is environmental groups proKing King Full Full mote 350 parts per million slowly cutting emissions $ $ $ $

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013 E1

-HOME INSPECTIONPENINSULA DAILY NEWS

26640437

Serving the Entire Olympic Peninsula Since 2006 Sequim, Port Angeles, Port Townsend & Beyond

Alan R. Jogerst ‡ ‡ www.inspecthost.com/hadlock

WSDA # 73667 WHI # 640

THIS WEEK’S NEW REAL ESTATE LISTINGS

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Contemporary 2668 SF lakefront home with vaulted ceilings, ďŹ replace & gourmet kitchen with eating bar. French doors of master suite open to private deck. 100+ feet of waterfront with dock. Everything is here including privacy! MLS#271024 $449,000

PORT ANGELES

35787719

35788516

35787783

35787789

Great opportunity to own both units in this duplex style condo located in North Olympic Vista. Each unit has 2 br, 2ba, and a 1 car garage. These units have been well maintained and they offer easy access to the Old Olympic Hwy and downtown Sequim. MLS#270867 $245,900

REALTY

Amazing quality and attention to detail plus beautiful mountain views in this custom home on 1.1 acres. 4 BD, 3 1/2 BA, 2742 SF, located close to town but built for privacy. Formal dining room, large master bedroom suite with door to private patio with hot tub, exposed aggregate concrete patio with beautiful waterfall, large kitchen with granite countertops and stainless appliances. Attached two car garage plus detached garage. Beautiful easy care landscaping. www.800kendall.com Call Ed Sumpter 808-1712 or Gail Sumpter 477-9361 MLS#261034 $469,000

I N C O R P O R AT E D

OfďŹ ce: 452-3333 Toll Free: 1-800-453-9157 chuck@portangelesrealty.com www.portangelesrealty.com

Tom Blore s

tom@sequim.com

YOU’VE FOUND IT! G

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Deb Kahle

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Panoramic water and mountain views surrounded by nature and wildlife. If you want privacy this is for you. Vaulted ceilings coved and crown molding. Gourmet kitchen with double ovens, warming oven, Milo Espresso Maker, Granite counter tops, birch cabinets, large island with sink, radiant heated oors throughout. 4 car garage. Incredible home. MLS#270991 $850,000

UPTOWN REALTY

UPTOWN REALTY

Jean Irvine, CRS, GRI, ASR OfďŹ ce: (360) 417-2797 Cell: (360) 460-5601 website: www.JeanIrvine.com

Jean Irvine, CRS, GRI, ASR OfďŹ ce: (360) 417-2797 Cell: (360) 460-5601 website: www.JeanIrvine.com

Jean Irvine, CRS, GRI, ASR OfďŹ ce: (360) 417-2797 Cell: (360) 460-5601 website: www.JeanIrvine.com

GREAT UPGRADES

Overlooking the Hood Canal. End of the road seclusion and privacy from this treed setting. Stunning south facing views down the Canal and the Olympic foothills to the west. Spacious living with cherrywood oors & cabinets, granite tile counters in large designer kitchen. Marble tile throughout master bathroom. You’ll enjoy lots of room-4500 sq’ if you include the unďŹ nished basement and garage. Watch the eagles and hawks soar by any window. 355’ of beach to enjoy. Jim Munn ML#327063 $375,000 Designated Broker / Owner 294843 Highway 101 0/ "OX s 1UILCENE 7! OFlCE WWW -UNN"ROS COM

TAKE 2

- 1939 CRAFTSMAN STYLE -

Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath 1842 sq ft home with a 688 sq ft garage. Great kitchen with tons of storage and oak cabinets, a breakfast bar, a dining and family room with a propane ďŹ replace. A separate large formal living room. A large master bedroom, a large master bath with a garden tub/separate shower. This property has irrigation! A sprinkler system, an amazing water feature, fenced back yard. Close to discovery trail! The sellers are including a riding mower and a hot tub! MLS#270631 $215,000

This waterfront (lagoon) home in Diamond Point also has a big view of the Straits. Enjoy a 2 level home with 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 kitchens, 2 rock ďŹ replaces and 2 outbuildings all located on 2 lots (.56 acres). Enjoy deeded beach access, boat launch and a community airport. 2 good to pass up at $279,822 MLS#264412

2 Brokers Call Barclay or Jeanine at 360-452-1210

35787713

35788785

35787718

35788519

Saltwater and Mountains. Enjoy entertaining with large living, dining & family room plus sunroom & deck. In addition to 2-car garage is multi-purpose 2000 sqft outbuilding - perfect for a variety of uses. Lots of storage. Room for RV+. Master suite opens out to patio. MLS#270083 $474,900

35788525

35787710

35787709

35787711

Enjoy a glass of wine on the front deck while you take in the expansive views of 4 Seasons Ranch, Hurricane Ridge, Golf Course, Morse Creek and Victoria. This 2100+ sqft, 2-bedroom/2-bath home includes a welcoming living room with wood oors, gourmet kitchen, den/ofďŹ ce with storage, and bonus room. MLS#270863 $355,000

UPTOWN REALTY

ALL VIEW HOME

CUSTOM WATERFRONT HOME

IN ST

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Updated 3400+ square foot multi level home. Includes spacious master bedroom, engineered oors, sunken living room, double sided ďŹ replace between kitchen and living room. Kitchen has heated oors, new Jennair stove, new Bosch dishwasher, indirect lighting on cupboards , granite counter tops, as well as eating space off the breakfast bar. Located on 1.4 beautiful acres. MLS#271034 $429,000

0RIEST 2OAD s 0/ "OX s 3EQUIM 7! s WWW BLUESKYSEQUIM COM

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WRE/SunLand

Chuck Turner

s "2 Â "! 3& 0LUS "ASEMENT s !CRE ,OT IN A #ENTRAL ,OCATION s /RIGINAL (ARDWOOD &LOORING s #EDAR ,INED 7ALK IN #LOSETS s ,OTS OF 7ORKSPACE AND 3TORAGE s 7ALK TO SHOPPING (ARBOR ETC MLS#271031 $145,000

ÂŽ WRE/Sequim - East

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35787701

UPTOWN REALTY

Cell: 360-477-5322 Email: heidi@olypen.com HeidiSellsViews.com

Previews Property Specialists (360) 808-0979 mthomsen@olypen.com

STUNNING VIEW

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Looking to be far enough away that you have peaceful seclusion and close enough in for convenience? Then this home is for you! This recent doublewide has been well cared for. Nestled on a near acre on a dead end road just shy of Joyce. Check the area. Check the price. MLS#270431 $118,500

Desirable neighborhood near college, hospital, shopping etc. Light and bright home with 2450 total sq’. Spacious living rm with attractive ďŹ replace. Hardwood ooring , formal dining, coffered ceilings. Very well built home. Full basement includes large 2nd kitchen/laundry rm with lots of cabinets. Rec rm has pool table and bar. 75x140 lot. Nice 2 car garage. This is a well loved home. MLS#270542 Now only $217,500

35787912

35787715

35787916

35788271

Pass through the gated entrance and drive through the 20 acres of forest to this 4 BR, 5 BA 4500 sq.ft. palatial home with panoramic views of Discovery Bay, Mt. Baker and the Strait. Gourmet kitchen, radiant heat. This home has everything. MLS#270778/472735 $1,200,000

View Port Angeles harbor, Strait of Juan de Fuca, & Victoria from the living room, dining room, kitchen, & bedrooms. Master & den view the Olympics. Terhunebuilt rambler boasts vaulted ceiling in the living room with a propane ďŹ replace. Wood oor entry, kitchen, &hall. Roomy master bath with two sinks, huge shower, & walk-in closet. Workshop space & utility sink in the attached double garage. MLS#270353 $299,000

Roland Miller DOC REISS Cell: 461-0613 OfďŹ ce: 457-0456

24 hours a day 7 days a week at

www.peninsuladailynews.com/hotprops

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View real estate listings online

UPTOWN REALTY Vivian Landvik, GRI OfďŹ ce: (360) 417-2795 Home: (360) 457-5231 email: vivian@olypen.com

WRE/Port Angeles

w w w . p e n i n s u l a d a i l y n e w s . c o m / h o t p r o p s

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WRE/Port Angeles

Michaelle Barnard (360) 461-2153 Email: mlee@olypen.com


Classified

E2 SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013 35788114

;IPGSQIW

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General General

3010 Announcements

3020 Found

ADOPT: Active, energetic, professional couple y e a r n s fo r 1 s t b a b y. S p o r t s , p l a y f u l p u p, beaches await! Joyce 1800-243-1658. Expenses paid.

FOUND: Dog. German Shepherd, at Serenity House, P.A., is now at Olympic Peninsula Humane Society.

FOUND: Hardware for cur tain rods sold at a ADOPT: A loving profes- garage sale in Sequim sional couple, stayhome on 5/4. (360)683-7153. mom, gracious home in horse country awaits baby. Expenses paid. 13023 Lost 800-775-4013. Mary & Larry

Andrea Gilles

as a new Broker [MXL XLI SšGI BEST MOM EVER! HAPPY MOTHER’S DAY! Andrea has been a Sequim native for 42 years and seen a great deal of changes to the beautiful Sequim Valley over the years. She brings a wealth of talent as a new Broker from her background in Interior Design that will beneďŹ t all her clients when it comes to selling homes.

Please stop by and say hello.

Cell: 360-808-3306 OfďŹ ce: 360-683-3564 Email: andrea@realestatesequim.com

FEISTY SENIOR LADY Now that spring is here, are you looking for a new relationship with a senior lady? I’m looking for a gentleman, 70+. Mail response to: Peninsula Daily News PDN#659/Lady Port Angeles, WA 98362

LOST: Cat. Black with green eyes, microchip, I n d i a n Va l l ey, a c r o s s f r o m G r a n n y ’s C a fe , P.A. (360)928-3138.

LINDA: You went against mom’s wishes! She wanted to go through Med-Cure. She wanted to help others. If it wasn’t programs like that, you wouldn’t have been alive to have your surger y. Think about that! You chose to let her stay at the funeral home for almost a week laying there! And now you want to take me to court for your stupid mistakes! Louise (360)461-6768.

L O S T: Pa r r o t . B l u e Front Amazon, Discovery Trail and Lake Farm, P.A. (360)457-2926.

3020 Found

Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714

FOUND: Camera. Nikon. Identify pictures to claim. (360)683-5871. FOUND: Cat. Long black hair, BMX bike track in P.A. (360)461-9103.

LOST: Cell phone. Blue Intensity slide phone, L i n c o l n S t . , P. A . R E WARD. (360)461-4189

4070 Business Opportunities

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

ACCOUNTANT The Port of Port Townsend is accepting applications for a full-time Accountant-Payroll/ Accounts Payable. Primary responsibilities include: the management of the Por t’s accounts payable and payroll functions, including preparing all associated payroll and benefit reports, as well as all business taxes. The position is also involved with the general ledger accounting function as well as other financial reporting issues of the Port. This is a permanent position with full benefits. Applications can be obtained at the Port Administration Office, 375 Hudson Street, or online at w w w. p o r t o f p t . c o m . Completed applications can be mailed to P.O. Box 1180, Por t Townsend, WA 98368. Closi n g d a t e i s M ay 2 9 , 2013, by 4:30 pm. The Port of Port Townsend is an equal opportunity employer.

ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETARY The Brinnon School District is accepting applications for Admin Secretary (197 8 hr. days) by mail/fax through May 17, 2013. Classified confidential position starts immediately upon hire. Job description, ClassiTHE BLACKBIRD fied Application, forms COFFEEHOUSE bsd46.org/ * * F O R S A L E * * G r e a t at: employment.html price, Thriving & Profitable.Contact Adam for AIDES/RNA OR CNA details: 360-224-9436; Best wages, bonuses. blackbirdcoffee@ Wright’s. 457-9236. gmail.com

BAKERY-CAFE Meals, Prep Cashier/Barista Exp. A+, PT-FT Olympic Bagel 802 E. 1st. St., P.A. BARTENDER and Dishwasher. Apply in person. 115 E. Railroad Ave.

Biologist, Shellfish Ja m e s t ow n S ’ K l a l l a m Tr i b e s e e k s f i s h e r i e s professional to manage, monitor, evaluate & report shellfish activities. Perform interagency liaison work, field operations, vessel care, tech s u p p o r t fo r e n h a n c e ment and aquaculture projects, supervise program monitors, dive program. Require BS in biological science with emphasis on shellfish or marine, 2 yrs marine research/mgmt exp, driver’s license, insurance, good communication skills, work with minimal supervision. Prefer MS, scuba cer t, boat handling, knowledge of Tribal fisheries, strong database skills. Indian preference. Apply: http:// jamestowntribe. iapplicants.com Kelly: (360)681-4641. Open until filled.

Career Opportunities HOUSEKEEPERS Detail oriented. Wage based directly on quality of work, with bonus oppor tunities m a y t o p $ 1 1 h o u r. Must be hard working & responsible.

Be a part of our growing success! Join the only locally headquar tered bank on the North Olympic Peninsula. Openings include: • Credit Administrator • Systems Administrator-Temporary • Pe r s o n a l B a n k e r / CSR Float • Branch Manager In Port Townsend: • Relationship Management Assistant In Poulsbo: • Loan Officer For job descriptions and to apply, please visit our BREAKFAST COOK website at www.ourfirst- Experienced. Apply in fed.com. EOE. person: Chimacum Cafe. BED & BREAKFAST Forks, WA. Seeking energetic mgmt. couple to live on-site. Compensation incl. salar y, 3 Br. home, and utilities. Daily operation of 7+ room inn, computer skills, hospitality experience required, flexibility, immediate start. New email: lynneeskis@gmail.com CNA/RNA: Ideally available for all shifts including weekends. Apply in person at Park View Villas, 8th & G Streets, P.A.

B R E A K FA S T / S AU T E COOK & DISHWASHER/PREP. Point Hudson Cafe looking for a great c o o k ! Q u a l i t y, d e pendability very important. Per manent position. Also need dish/prep. Por t Townsend (360)379-0592. ELWHA River Casino is h i r i n g Pa r t t i m e D e l i wo r ke r, H o u s e ke e p e r and Players Club Representative. Closes May 15th. Application and job descriptions available at elwharivercasino.com

LAUNDRY Available immediately. Must be hard working & responsible. Laundr y exper ience preferred but not required. FRONT DESK Available immediately. Must be hard working and reliable, office & sales experience preferred. Wage DOE. GROUNDSPERSON Highly motivated, reliable, responsible. Apply in person at 140 Del Guzzi Dr. Port Angeles. No calls please.

CAREGIVERS All shifts. Apply in person at Prairie Springs, 680 W. Prairie, Sequim.

Caregivers Home Care Te a m : Fr e e t r a i n i n g , competitive wages! Call 457-1644 or 683-7377

SUNLAND

PORT ANGELES

sequimproperty.com/sunland (360) 683-6880 1-800-359-8823

portangeles.com (360) 457-0456 1-800-786-1456

SEQUIM-EAST

PORT LUDLOW

realestate-sequim.com (360) 683-4844 1-800-431-0661

windermereportludlow.com (360) 437-1011 1-800-848-6650

Come See Us For

Or Shop Online at...

The Best in Peninsula Real Estate

www.sequimandportangeles.com

UPSCALE MT. VIEW HOME

UPSCALE MTN VIEW HOME

RARE 40 ACRE PARCEL

GREAT PRIVACY

G

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TE IVA R P

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Magical 40 acres with Salt & Bear Creek meandering through. 1923 farm house plus bunkhouse included with 2 septic systems and a water share. Many possible uses. Call for an appointment to walk this beautiful parcel. Call Harriet MLS#270842 Asking $399,000

WRE/Port Angeles

Thelma Durham (360) 460-8222 (360) 683-3158 thelma@olypen.com

WRE/Port Angeles

Harriet Reyenga (360) 457-0456 (360) 460-8759 harriet@olypen.com

35787917

Private setting on almost 2 acres. Traditional style 2 Bd, 2.5 bath. Raised panel cherry cabinets through out, hardwood oak oors, 9 foot ceilings & large bonus room. Large deck plus impeccable landscaped backyard with raised garden beds and greenhouse. g MLS#270925 $399,000

35787922

WRE/SunLand TEAM SCHMIDT 137 Fairway Drive, Sequim Mike: 460-0331 Irene: 460-4040 www.teamschmidt.withwre.com teamschmidt@olypen.com

35787919

35788522

s *UST 5NDER !CRES s "$ "! (OME /VER 3& s #HERRY #ABINETS /AK &LOORS &4 #EILINGS s 'REAT "ONUS 2OOM &AMILY 2OOM s ,ARGE $ECK ,ANDSCAPED 'ARDENS 'REENHOUSE MLS#479474/270925 $399,000

Stunning single level home in Fox Point gated community. Natural beauty surrounds. Great privacy with saltwater, Mt Baker and Elwha River views. Enjoy beach combing, close by access to Elwha River and Strait of Juan de Fuca. Gazebo for anytime outdoor fun. Large chefs kitchen, adjoining dining/sitting with cozy propane stove. MLS#264256 $429,500

WRE/Port Angeles

Paul Beck (360) 461-0644 (360) 457-0456

LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION

35787925

This is your opportunity to own a brand new home in a great neighborhood, with nature trails close by and, across the street from the bluff overlooking the Straits of Juan De Fuca. This is a pre sale with HiLine as the builder. Very livable oor plan with Great Room concept, vaulted ceilings and situated on a very large .30 acre lot. Quiet cul-de-sac location right off the Olympic Discovery Trail. MLS#270928 $237,000

WRE/Port Angeles

Find your Advertise Here new home Call Shanie in the Peninsula Daily News 360-452-2345

Advertise Here Call Shanie 360-452-2345

North Olympic Peninsula 35787703

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Quint Boe OfďŹ ce: 457-0456 1-800-786-1456

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APRIL 20-21, 2013


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5TH WHEEL: ‘96 26’ Jayco Eagle. Excellent condition. $5,000. (360)452-1646

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE TEMPORARY SUMMER POSITION $16.99 hr. This is a seasonal, Union position that expires August 30, 2013. Applications must be received by 5PM, Friday, May 31, 2013. Submit a PUD employment application form, letter of interest and resume to: Resource Manager, PUD#1 of Jefferson County, PO Box 929 Por t Hadlock WA 98339 or by email to bgraham@jeffpud.org. A copy of the employment application form and job descr iption may be found online at: jeffpud.org by clicking on the “Employment Opportunities” link or obtaining a copy at the PUD main office at 230 Chimacum Road, Port Hadlock. ELWHA River Casino is h i r i n g Pa r t t i m e D e l i wo r ke r, H o u s e ke e p e r and Players Club Representative. Closes May 15th. Application and job descriptions available at elwharivercasino.com FIFTH WHEEL: 19’ Alpenlite, no leaks. $3,295. (360)775-1288. Financial Operations Coordinator Jeff County Public Health, 40 hrs. wk. , union position, $18.44$ 1 9 . 8 6 h r. , D O E , f u l l bene. Prepares grant invoices & reports in conjunction w/fed & state requirements. Prepares budget projections, analyzes, compiles, monitors, and presents fiscal data. Adv math & exceptional skills with Excel required. Exp w/budget prep & forecasting preferred. App & job descript at Jeff Cnty Courthouse-BOCC Office, 1820 Jefferson St, Port Townsend. WA or contact jeffbocc@co.jeferson.wa.us. Must be recvd or postmarked by 5:00 pm Monday, May 27, 2013. ADA/EO.

MECHANIC: Diesel fleet full-time, experience with Ford/GM diesels a plus. Current WSDL with good 3 yr. abstract required. Salary DOE. Pick up application at 601 W. Hendrickson Rd., Suite A, Sequim or mail resumes Shop Applications, PO Box 1628, Sequim, WA 98382. No phone calls. OFFICE MANAGER Computer skills, CAD work, strong organization skills, self starter, OJT. Call Rick at (360)681-0777 P.A.: 919 W. 15th St., 4 Br., 1.5 ba, gar., no pets. $1,050. (360)452-6144. PACK MULE $1,200. (360)452-7903 or (360)775-5701. P.A.: Clean upstairs, 2 Br. $595. (360)460-4089 www.mchughrents.com PURCHASING Agent. Local aerospace manufactur ing. Requires strong sourcing negotiation skills. Ability to establish strong supplier relations, comply with engineering QA requirements, communicate at all levels of company. Two yrs exp similar position. Strong computer skills, with Excel, Word, Outlook, MRP software. Send resume with cover letter to HR@acti.aero. EEO/Drug Free S E N I O R e m p l oy m e n t training vacancy, Clallam County. 16 hrs wk, min. wage. Qualify: 55+, unemployed, low income guidelines. Update your skills. Call: O3A for info. 866-720-4863. EOE. SEQUIM: 2007 double wide, 1250 sf., 2 br., office, 2 bath, entrence ramp, excellent value, in Green Acre Par k. $50,000. (360)683-3031.

PARK MANAGER, DUNGENESS RECREATION AREA Parks, Fair & Facilities, FT (40 hrs/wk), $ 3 , 8 6 8 . 5 9 t o 4,713.48/month, union and retirement eligible position with benefits. Must live in on-site housing. Requires Bachelor’s degree from accredited college or university with major course wor k in outdoor recreation management or related field and a minimum of two years experience in the operations and maintenance of a park or public recreation area. Or, in the absence of Bachelor’s degree, requires four years of public recreation experience in the operations and maintenance of a park facility. Closes May 16, 2013, at 4:30 PM (postmark accepted). COMMUNITY HEALTH NURSE I/II Health & Human Services, PT (32 hrs/wk), $22.63 to 24.98/hr, union and retirement eligible with benefits. Will work primarily in Por t A n g e l e s bu t a l s o r e quired to work in Forks, WA office. Must be RN. Requires Bachelor’s or Associate Degree in nursing and min two yrs exp in community health. Immunizations, TB and notifiable conditions repor ting exp helpful. Open until filled To Apply: Applications and complete job announcements available o n l i n e a t w w w. c l a l lam.net/employment/, in front of Human Resources, 223 E 4th St, Por t Angeles, WA 98362, or by calling Clallam County Jobs Line 360417-2528. Resume in lieu of application not accepted. Faxed or emailed applications not accepted. EOE/Dr ug Free Workplace.

COLONEL HUDSON’S FAMOUS KITCHEN Front counter person, SEQUIM: New 2 Br, 2 must be 18. Drop reb a d u p l e x , g r a n i t e , sume and references at hardwood, gated com- 536 Marine Dr., P.A. munity, lawn care incl. H A I R S T Y L I S T: W i t h $1,200. (360)460-0432. some clientele. Lease TOY Hauler 21 ft. 2009. station. (360)683-0991. Desert Fox (Northwood) mod. 21sw. Fuel station, 4000 Gen. 2009. $19,000. Call: (360)681-0211 TOYOTA : ‘ 0 1 C o r o l l a CE. 4 dr., A/C, 5 speed, new tires / new tabs, $3,300. (360)452-4010. WEST SIDE P.A.: 2 Br. apt., 1 bath. $525 mo. (510)207-2304 YARD MAINTENANCE: Free estimates. (360)912-2990 YA R D W O R K and Oddjobs Mowing, Tr imming, Weeding, Roto-Tilling and any other yardwork or oddjob ser vice. Exper ienced Honest Dependable. $40 per hr. includes 2 men. (360)461-7772

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE TEMPORARY SUMMER POSITION $16.99 hr. This is a seasonal, Union position that expires August 30, 2013. Applications must be received by 5PM, Friday, May 31, 2013. Submit a PUD employment application form, letter of interest and resume to: Resource Manager, PUD#1 of Jefferson County, PO Box 929 Por t Hadlock WA 98339 or by email to bgraham@jeffpud.org. A copy of the employment application form and job descr iption may be found online at: jeffpud.org by clicking on the “Employment Opportunities” link or obtaining a copy at the PUD main office at 230 Chimacum Road, Port Hadlock.

Entry Level Production Jobs Prior Sawmill/Planer experience a plus but not required. Excellent wage and benefits. Apply in person at Interfor 143 Sitkum Sol Duc Rd. Forks. EEO/Drug Free Workplace Employer EXPERIENCED DINNER COOK/CHEF Apply within, Cafe Garden, 1506 E. 1st Street, P.A. FARM HELP NEEDED Planting time is here. Call Wayne at 417-6710 or 775-9313 or come to The Family Farm, 3931 Old Olympic Hwy., just west of McDonald Ck.

Financial Operations Coordinator Jeff County Public Health, 40 hrs. wk. , union position, $18.44$ 1 9 . 8 6 h r. , D O E , f u l l bene. Prepares grant invoices & reports in conjunction w/fed & state requirements. Prepares budget projections, analyzes, compiles, monitors, and presents fiscal data. Adv math & excepDAIRY FARM WORK H a r d , gr u e l i n g l a b o r, tional skills with Excel able to wor k day and required. Exp w/budget n i g h t s h i f t s , $ 9 . 2 5 - prep & forecasting preferred. App & job de$10.25/hr. 460-9499. script at Jeff Cnty Courthouse-BOCC Office, 1820 Jefferson St, Port Townsend. WA or contact jeffbocc@co.jeferson.wa.us. Must be recvd or postmarked by 5:00 pm Monday, May 27, 2013. ADA/EO. ECEAP Assistant GROOMER: Experience Teacher - PineCrest required. Apply in perTo apply: son Greywolf Veterinary www.oesd.wednet.edu Hospital, Sequim. or (360)479-0993. EOE & ADA HOUSEKEEPER Starting at $9.50/hr., apE M P L OY M E N T O p - ply in person at Tides portunity. Is Title Es- Inn, 1807 Water St., Port crow experience part Townsend. of who you are? If so, Clallam Title has employment opportunities for you. This may be your chance to be part of the best rated team on the Olympic Penins u l a . B r i n g by yo u r current resume to Loni in our Port Angeles office.

MEDICAL FRONT OFFICE Part time. Medical exp. preferred. Send resume Peninsula Daily News PDN#657/Front Office Port Angeles, WA 98362

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CLASSIFIED@PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM DEADLINES: Noon 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.

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General JEFFERSON COUNTY FLAGGER Laborer Part Time Public Works seeks part time Flagger-Laborers to perfor m manual labor and traffic control in East Jefferson County. Flagger Cer tification Card Required. Salary: $12.50 hr., Clerk Hire Position, Non-Union, No Benefits, work up to 69 hrs. mo. For minimum requirements and application contact Jefferson C o u n t y P u bl i c Wo r k s Dept, 623 Sheridan St, P o r t To w n s e n d , W A 98368; call 360/3859160; or visit www.co.jefferson.wa.us. A p p l i c a t i o n s mu s t b e postmarked/received by 5PM, Fri, May 17, 2013. EOE PART-TIME AVAIL. M-F., Age is no limit, simple lamp repair, color finishing, packing fixtures. Start $10/hr., expandable. Drug screen. (360)379-9030.

MECHANIC: Diesel fleet full-time, experience with Ford/GM diesels a plus. Current WSDL with good 3 yr. abstract required. Salary DOE. Pick up application at 601 W. Hendrickson Rd., Suite A, Sequim or mail resumes Shop Applications, PO Box 1628, Sequim, WA 98382. No phone calls.

Program Coordinator Part-time, for Prevention Works to oversee grants administer contracts, research and write grants and assist in other program segments. Excellent writing, speaking, planning and computer skills needed. Resume to PW at PO Box 1913, Port Angeles, WA 98362

Position Available Energetic, detail oriented, motivated, self driven, organized person needed for medical billing and office operations manager position. Experience in medical field preferred but will consider training the right person. Please send resume to: office@paragondermatology.com or fax to 360-681-6222

WILDER AUTO

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

Wilder Auto has the largest selection of new and used vehicles on the Olympic Peninsula. Come join our team of friendly sales professionals. No experience necessary, extensive training program and a great working environment await you.

Health & Rehabilitation

NOW HIRING

Benefits include a 401K program, medical and dental insurance, paid vacation and a great college tuition package for your children.

2ESTORATIVE .URSING !SSISTANT 7EEKEND -AINTENANCE -ANAGER

Inquire about

#ERTIlED .URSING !SSISTANTS

FREE CNA Classes!

Please call Jason or Rick at 452-3888 – or send your resume to: hr@wilderauto.com for more information and the opportunity to experience the Wilder difference.

$IRECTOR OF .URSES

"ENElTS s 4OP 7AGES

$EER 0ARK 2OAD s 0ORT !NGELES

650 W. Hemlock, Sequim, WA

360-582-2400 www.extendicareus.com/jobs.aspx EOE

VISIT: WWW.PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM

Career Opportunity

Sequim

$IRECTOR OF 3OCIAL 3ERVICES

CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507

s 2A686905

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Communications Officer/911 Dispatcher City of Port Angeles Dispatcher testing scheduled for Saturday June 15th in Por t Angeles. Applicants MUST schedule test with Public Safety Test at www.publicsafety testing.com Space is limited.

35774099

BULLDOG PUPPIES AKC registered, champion bloodlines, 9 wks. old, full health and shots. GMC: ‘91 2500 Extra $2,500-$3,000 Cab 4X4. No rust, gar(360)477-9724 aged. $2,500. 477-2334. CAREGIVERS All shifts. Apply in per- GROOMER: Experience son at Prairie Springs, required. Apply in person Greywolf Veterinary 680 W. Prairie, Sequim. Hospital, Sequim. CHEV: ‘81 3+3. Dump b ox , 4 W D, 4 5 4 a u t o. H A I R S T Y L I S T: W i t h some clientele. Lease $3,000/obo. 460-6176. station. (360)683-0991. COLONEL HUDSON’S JOHN’S Lawns. ComFAMOUS KITCHEN Front counter person, plete lawn care service, must be 18. Drop re- commercial and residensume and references at tial. Ser ving Por t Angeles and Sequim. Free 536 Marine Dr., P.A. Estimates. GIANT COMMUNITY/ (360)460-6387 MULTI-CHURCH FLEA email: MARKET SALE! johnslawns@olypen.com Sat, May 18th, 9 - 2 p.m. S e q u i m H i g h S c h o o l JOYCE: 7 acres, Full Cafeteria. Hundreds of hookup. $350+dep. (360)912-2738 large and small items being sold! Shoppers wanted! Sellers Call JUAREZ & SON’S HAN5 8 2 - 0 5 8 2 t o R S V P a DY M A N S E R V I C E S . Quality work at a reafree table. sonable price. Can hanFARM HELP NEEDED dle a wide array of probPlanting time is here. lems projects. Like home Call Wayne at 417-6710 maintenance, cleaning, or 775-9313 or come to clean up, yard mainteThe Family Farm, 3931 nance, and etc. Give us Old Olympic Hwy., just a call office 452-4939 or cell 460-8248. west of McDonald Ck.

LIVINGSTON: 14’, Galvanized EZ loader trailer, 25 hp Merc. $2,300/obo. 670-6556.

CLALLAM COUNTY

35788565

Be a part of our growing success! Join the only locally headquar tered bank on the North Olympic Peninsula. Openings include: • Credit Administrator • Systems Administrator-Temporary • Pe r s o n a l B a n k e r / CSR Float • Branch Manager In Port Townsend: • Relationship Management Assistant In Poulsbo: • Loan Officer For job descriptions and to apply, please visit our website at www.ourfirstfed.com. EOE.

CLASSIFIEDS!

TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD:

5000900

ACCOUNTANT The Port of Port Townsend is accepting applications for a full-time Accountant-Payroll/ Accounts Payable. Primary responsibilities include: the management of the Por t’s accounts payable and payroll functions, including preparing all associated payroll and benefit reports, as well as all business taxes. The position is also involved with the general ledger accounting function as well as other financial reporting issues of the Port. This is a permanent position with full benefits. Applications can be obtained at the Port Administration Office, 375 Hudson Street, or online at w w w. p o r t o f p t . c o m . Completed applications can be mailed to P.O. Box 1180, Por t Townsend, WA 98368. Closi n g d a t e i s M ay 2 9 , 2013, by 4:30 pm. The Port of Port Townsend is an equal opportunity employer.

NEW

s

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General

91190150

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Classified

E4 SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale General General Wanted Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Jefferson County Public Utility District #1 has an opening for a Systems O p e ra t o r / S C A DA / G I S Mapping person. Please see full job description and application information at www.jeffpud.org. Applicants must submit a standard PUD application form, resume, 3 references and cover letter by M ay 1 0 , 2 0 1 3 , t o kstreett@jeffpud.org or mail to Jefferson County PUD #1, PO Box 929, Po r t H a d l o c k 9 8 3 3 9 Attn. Kevin Streett.

PURCHASING Agent. Local aerospace manufactur ing. Requires strong sourcing negotiation skills. Ability to establish strong supplier relations, comply with engineering QA requirements, communicate at all levels of company. Two yrs exp similar position. Strong computer skills, with Excel, Word, Outlook, MRP software. Send resume with cover letter to HR@acti.aero. EEO/Drug Free

KWA HOMECARE Part/full-time Caregivers. Benefits, Flexible Hours. Call P.A. (360)452-2129 Sequim (360)582-1647 P.T. (360)344-3497 School Psychologist Physical Therapist Occupational Therapist To apply: www.oesd.wednet.edu or (360)479-0993. EOE & ADA

S E N I O R e m p l oy m e n t NURSING training vacancy, ClalOPPORTUNITIES lam County. 16 hrs wk, Life Care Center of min. wage. Qualify: 55+, Port Townsend unemployed, low income guidelines. Update your RN | LPN skills. Call: O3A for info. Full-time, part-time and 866-720-4863. EOE. PRN positions available for all shifts. Must be a SOUS CHEF WANTED Wa s h i n g t o n - l i c e n s e d Part-time, 2-3 days per nurse. wk. to include restaurant and banquets. Send reNAC sume to Manresa CasFull-time, part-time and tle, PO Box 574, Por t PRN positions available Townsend, WA 98368. for evening and night For questions call shift. Must be a Wash(360)385-5750 ington-certified nursing assistant. Sign-on bonus THE HOH TRIBE ava i l a bl e t o f u l l - t i m e has the following NACs. job openings

We offer great pay and HUMAN RESOURCE benefits to full-time asMANAGER s o c i a t e s i n a t e a m - Full-time position and oriented environment. must have a Bachelor’s degree in Business or Brooke Mueller Human Resources from 360-385-3555 an accredited university 360-385-7409 Fax or institution. 751 Kearney St. Port Townsend, WA HATCHERY MANAGER 98368 Full-time position, must Brooke_Mueller@ have a High School DiLCCA.com ploma, Associate or BS Visit us: LCCA.COM in Fisheries, Aquaculture EOE/M/F/V/D – 40209 or related field desirable and two years of experiOFFICE MANAGER Computer skills, CAD ence in Hatchery manwork, strong organiza- agement position or four tion skills, self starter, y e a r s i n a H a t c h e r y Technician position. OJT. Call Rick at (360)681-0777 Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Has a motor route available in Port Ludlow. The route has 180 subscribers, takes approximately 4 hours to deliver daily and is 90 miles long. Papers are picked up in Discovery Bay at 1 0 : 3 0 p. m . D e l i ve r y deadline is 6:30 a.m. Mon.-Fri. and 7:30 a.m. on Sundays. Route pays approximately $275 per week, no collecting. Call Dave Smith at 1-800-826-7714 Ext. 53-6050

Permanent and On-call positions available now at Clallam Bay Corrections Center Correctional Officer 1 Pay starts at $16.48 hourly, plus full benefits. Closes 05/28/13. Apply on-line: www.careers.wa.gov. For further information please call Laura at (360)963-3208. EOE. PREP COOK: And more. Many responsibilities incl., dishwasher, register, etc. Apply in p e r s o n a t J o s e ’s Fa mous Salsa, 126 E. Washington, Sequim. SEEKING immediate help for log loader operator and rigging slinger and chokerman position. (360)460-7292

GIS SPECIALIST Full-time position, must have a BS Degree in Geographic Information Systems or a related field. Also three years’ experience and training in GIS. Cartography or geospatial engineering is required.

ADEPT YARD CARE Weeding, mowing, etc. (360)452-2034 Experienced Caretaker Seeks long term house sitting or property caretaking position on the Olympic Peninsula. Just ending 10+ yrs. at current caretaking assignment in Sequim. Excellent references. (360)683-5385 JOHN’S Lawns. Complete lawn care service, commercial and residential. Ser ving Por t Angeles and Sequim. Free Estimates. (360)460-6387 email: johnslawns@olypen.com JUAREZ & SON’S HANDY M A N S E R V I C E S . Quality work at a reasonable price. Can handle a wide array of problems projects. Like home maintenance, cleaning, clean up, yard maintenance, and etc. Give us a call office 452-4939 or cell 460-8248.

MATH Tutoring I tutor grade school to college math. I tutor at my home office in Sequim. Please Contact Danielle Math Solutions 360-477-1573 mathsolutions db@gmail.com, http://mathsolution sdb.weebly.com MOWING, PRUNING, BARKING Honest and dependable. (360)582-7142 Mowing, trimming, mulch and more! Call Ground Control Lawn Care for honest, dependable lawn care at your home or business. Ground Control Lawn Care 360797-5782 OlyPets In-Home Pet Care offers a convenient alternative to kenneling your pets and leaving your home unattended. Call (360)565-5251 for yo u r c o m p l i m e n t a r y “ M e e t ‘ n G r e e t .” O r visit www.OlyPets.com RUSSELL ANYTHING Call today 775-4570. SCUBA DIVER FOR HIRE Call 681-4429

2127 Driftwood Place: 3 br.,2 bath, all appliances included+ w/d. Built in surround sound, French doors t o s l a t e p a t i o, b i g backyard, shed, double attatched garage, fireplace, crown molding. Great cul de sac neighborhood! Call Ta m m y n o w ! (360)457-9511 or 461-9066! ALL VIEW HOME S a l t wa t e r a n d M o u n tains. Enjoy entertaining with large living, dining and family room plus sunroom and deck. In addition to 2-car garage is multi-purpose 2,000 sf. outbuilding - perfect for a var iety of uses. Lots of storage. Room for RV+. Master suite opens out to patio. $474,900 OLS#270083 NWMLS#434748 HEIDI (360)477-5322 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East CUSTOM SEQUIM HOME Amazing quality and attention to detail plus beautiful mountain views in this custom home on 1.1 acres. 4 Br., 3 1/2 bath, 2,742 SF, located close to town but built for privacy. For mal dining room, large master bedroom suite with door to pr ivate patio with hot tub, exposed aggregate concrete patio with beautiful waterfall, large kitchen with granite countertops and stainless appliances. Attached two car garage plus detached garage. Beautiful easy care landscaping. ML#261034. $469,000. Ed Sumpter: 808-1712 Gail Sumpter: 477-9361 Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim - 360-477-9189

SMALL Excavation and For a complete job de- Tractor Work. Call Joe at LOCATION, scription and application LOCATION, LOCATION (360)460-7220 you can contact Kristina This is your opportunity Currie at the Hoh Tribe; YARD MAINTENANCE: t o o w n a b r a n d n e w kristinac@ Free estimates. home in a great neighhohtribe-nsn.org (360)912-2990 borhood, with nature or 360-374-6502. You trails close by and, can also visit our web- YA R D W O R K a n d across the street from site hohtribe-nsn.org O d d j o b s M o w i n g , the bluff overlooking the All positions close May Tr imming, Weeding, Straits of Juan De Fuca. 23, 2013 or until filled. Roto-Tilling and any This is a pre-sale with other yardwork or odd- HiLine as the builder. Therapeutic Recreajob ser vice. Exper i- Ver y livable floor plan tion Director e n c e d H o n e s t D e - with Great Room conIf you are a Qualified pendable. $40 per hr. cept, vaulted ceilings Therapeutic Recreation includes 2 men. and situated on a very Therapist or meet the large .30 acre lot. Quiet (360)461-7772 training/experience recul-de-sac location right quirements for qualifica- YO U N G c o u p l e e a r l y off the Olympic Discovtion as an Activity Direc- s i x t i e s . a va i l a b l e fo r ery Trail. tor, we would like to talk spring cleanup, weeding, $237,000 to you about an exciting t r i m m i n g , m u l c h i n g , MLS# 270928 new position. Quint Boe moss removal, complete Crestwood offers: (360)457-0456 garden restoration and Competitive salary WINDERMERE misc. yard care. ExcelUnique benefit program lent references. PORT ANGELES Career growth (360)457-1213 opportunity Looking to be far enough Requirements include: away that you have Excellent oral and writ- 105 Homes for Sale peaceful seclusion and ten communication close enough in for conClallam County ability. Energy and enve n i e n c e ? T h e n t h i s thusiasm and ability to home is for you! This reON 10TH FAIRWAY wor k with the elder ly. Master Br. on main floor, c e n t d o u bl ew i d e h a s S t r o n g o r g a n i z a t i o n bedroom suite upstairs b e e n w e l l c a r e d fo r. skills. as well, great room off Nestled on a near acre kitchen with wood fp, on a dead end road just We encourage interest- oversized 2 car garage shy of Joyce. Check the ed candidates to submit (golf cart door), patio off area. Check the price. a resume to the Admin- dining room. You won’t find a better istrator at value. $285,000 Crestwood $118,500 ML#480477/270962 Convalescent Center MLS#270431 Deb Kahle 1116 E. Lauridsen Blvd. Doc Reiss (360)683-6880 Port Angeles, WA 98362 (360)457-0456 WINDERMERE EOE WINDERMERE SUNLAND PORT ANGELES MAJESTIC MOVE Panoramic water and mountain views surrounded by nature and wildlife. If you want priva c y t h i s i s fo r yo u . Vaulted ceilings coved and crown molding. Gour met kitchen with double ovens, warming o ve n , M i l o E s p r e s s o Maker, Granite counter t o p s, b i r c h c a b i n e t s, large island with sink, radiant heated floors throughout. 4 car garage. Incredible home. $850,000. MLS#270991. Jean Irvine (360)460-5601 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

We are currently recruiting for the following positions: Physical Therapist – Home Health Lead RN-Oncology RN – Medical Short Stay RN – ICU RN – ACU nights Home Health RN Case Manager Medical Social Worker Dietary Aide-TEMP Wellness Exercise Tech Surgical Services-Staff Nurse Rehab-Physical Therapy Assistant

MAKE A TOAST Enjoy a glass of wine on the front deck while you take in the expansive views of 4 Seasons Ranch, Hurricane Ridge, Golf Course, Morse Creek and Victoria. This 2,100+ sf, 2 br., 2bath home includes a welcoming living room with wood floors, gour met kitchen, den/office with storage, and bonus room. MLS#270863. $355,000. Jean Irvine (360)460-5601 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

We are an integrated health care system partnering with Swedish Medical Center for our telemedicine stroke program, six community-based clinics, orthopedic/gynecologic/urologic/ general surgery, and much more. We offer competitive pay and benefits, ongoing training programs and educational opportunities. We are well equipped with technological equipment including fully digitized radiology. You will appreciate the talent and commitment of our diverse team of employees bringing our mission to life every day:

MOVE in ready! Located at 1715 South E Street, Port Angeles. B u i l t i n 1 9 9 4 , 3 b r, 1.75 baths, 1088 sf. Easy care yard, central location, lots of updates. OPEN HOUSE MAY 11TH 10am-3pm $164,900. Call 4779256 or 461-3544.

Excellence with Compassion and Innovation.

For other job openings and further information please check our website at:

www.jeffersonhealthcare.org 834 Sheridan, Port Townsend, WA 98368 fax: (360) 385-1548

35774357

Jefferson Healthcare - Human Resources Accredited with DNV

1939 CRAFTSMAN STYLE 3 Br., 1.5 bath, 1,527 sf plus basement. 0.16 acre lot in a central location. Original hardwood flooring. Cedar lined walk-in closets. Lots of workspace and storage. Walk to shopping, harbor, etc. MLS#271031. $145,000. Team Thomsen (360)417-2782 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

EMAIL US AT classified@peninsula dailynews.com

P.A.: 3 Br., 2 ba triple wide manufacture home, 2,300 sf, 4.8 acres, lg. covered decks, paved road. $187,500. (760)702-7721

P.A. AREA: 7-year-new home on 1 acre, with great neighbors, in private setting! 1,840 sf, great room design, 3 br., 2 full baths, master with walk-in closet, 2 car attached garage, third garage and his-and-her hobby shop in insulated and heated 960 sf building, fenced yard, with significant landscaping. $230,000. Call to see: (360)452-9957

UPSCALE MOUNTAIN VIEW HOME Private setting on almost 2 acres. Traditional style 2 Bd, 2.5 bath. Raised panel cherr y cabinets through out, hardwood oak floors, 9 foot ceilings and large bonus room. Large deck plus impeccable landscaped backyard with raised garden beds and greenhouse. $399,000 MLS#270925 Thelma Durham (360)460-8222 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES

UPSCALE MT. VIEW HOME Just under 2 acres, 3 br., 2.5 bath home over 2,700 sf, cherry cabinets, oak floors, 9’ ceilings, great bonus room and family room, large deck, landscaped, gardens, greenhouse. $399,900 RARE 40 ACRE ML#479474/270925 PARCEL Team Schmidt Magical 40 acres with (360)683-6880 Salt and Bear Creek WINDERMERE meandering through. SUNLAND 1923 far m house plus bunkhouse included with Why Not Have It All... 2 septic systems and a 3 B r. , 3 b a t h , o p e n water share. Many pos- c o n c e p t s p l i t l e v e l sible uses. Call for an h o m e w i t h v i ew s o f appointment to walk this d i s c o v e r y b a y a n d beautiful parcel. straits from both lev$399,000 els. Many upgrades: MLS#270842 new master bath, Harriet Reyenga hardwood and tile (360)460-88759 floors; 2 year old roof, WINDERMERE fireplace and wood PORT ANGELES stove; oversized masSEQUIM: 2007 double ter suite with hot tub wide, 1250 sf., 2 br., of- on deck; covered patio fice, 2 bath, entrence area off formal dining ramp, excellent value, in r o o m ; l a r g e f a m i l y G r e e n A c r e P a r k . room; newly landscaped, fully fenced, $50,000. (360)683-3031. back yard; raised garSpacious 3 br., 2 bath den beds; dog kennel. 1,842 sf. home with a $327,000.00 20 Conifer Court 688 sf. garage. Great Sequim, WA 98382 kitchen with tons of stor(Diamond Point) age and oak cabinets, a 360-670-5336 or breakfast bar, a dining 360-775-0314 and family room with a propane fireplace. A YOU’VE FOUND IT! separate large formal living room. A large master Updated 3,400+ square bedroom, a large master foot multi level home. b a t h w i t h a g a r d e n Includes spacious mast u b / s e p a r a t e s h ow e r. ter bedroom, engineered This property has irriga- f l o o r s , s u n ke n l i v i n g tion! A sprinkler system, room, double sided firean amazing water fea- place between kitchen ture, fenced back yard. and living room. Kitchen Close to discovery trail! has heated floors, new The sellers are including J e n n a i r s t o v e , n e w a riding mower and a hot Bosch dishwasher, indirect lighting on cuptub! $215,000. MLS#270631. boards , granite counter tops, as well as eating Holly Locke space off the breakfast (360)417-2809 b a r. L o c a t e d o n 1 . 4 COLDWELL BANKER beautiful acres. UPTOWN REALTY ML#271034. $429,000. S t u n n i n g s i n g l e l eve l Jean Irvine home in Fox Point gated (360)460-5601 c o m m u n i t y. N a t u r a l COLDWELL BANKER beauty surrounds. Great UPTOWN REALTY privacy with saltwater, M t . B a ke r a n d E l w h a 308 For Sale River views. Enjoy Lots & Acreage beach combing, close by access to Elwha River and Strait of Juan de Fu- JOYCE: 3.6 acres, year ca. Gazebo for anytime round creek, tree farm, outdoor fun. Large chefs perked, electric. $59,500 (360)452-0765 kitchen, adjoining dining/sitting with cozy propane stove. 311 For Sale $429,500 Manufactured Homes Paul Beck (360)461-0644 Manufactured Home WINDERMERE For Sale: 3 br., 2 bath PORT ANGELES d o u bl ew i d e m a nu fa c Stunning view of Por t tured home. Newly renoAngeles harbor, Strait of v a t e d a n d m o v e i n Juan de Fuca, and Vic- ready. Owner financing t o r i a f r o m t h e l i v i n g available OAC. $39,500. room, dining room, kitch- L o c a t e d a t t h e L a k e en, and bedrooms. Mas- Pleasant Mobile Park in ter and den view the Beaver. Also have a sinOlympics. Terhune-built glewide manufactured rambler boasts vaulted home available as well. ceiling in the living room H o m e s w i l l n o t b e with a propane fireplace. moved from park. Call Wood floor entry, kitch- (360)808-7120 for more e n , a n d h a l l . R o o m y information. master bath with two sinks, huge shower, and SEQUIM: ‘78 single wide walk-in closet. Workshop mobile home, 55+ park, space and utility sink in 2 Br., 2 bath, garage the attached double gar- with spare room, large covered deck. $29,500/ age. obo. (360)385-4882. $299,000 Michaelle Barnard SEQUIM: Excellent, (360)461-2153 1,700+ sf triple-wide in WINDERMERE Parkwood, fenced back PORT ANGELES yard, deck. $89,500. (360)797-1094 SUNNY SIDE OF THE LAKE! Contemporary 2,668 sf. lakefront home with vaulted ceilings, fireplace and gourmet kitche n w i t h e a t i n g b a r. French doors of master s u i t e o p e n t o p r i va t e deck. 100+ feet of waterfront with dock. Ever ything is here including privacy! $449,000. MLS#271024. CHUCK TURNER 452-3333 PORT ANGELES REALTY SUNRISE HEIGHTS Desirable neighborhood near college, hospital, shopping etc. Light and bright home with 2,450 total sf. Spacious living rm with attractive fireplace. Hardwood flooring, formal dining, coffered ceilings. Very well built home. Full basement includes large 2nd kitchen/laundry rm with lots of cabinets. Rec rm has pool table and bar. 75x140 lot. Nice 2 car garage. This is a well loved home. $217,500. MLS#270542. Vivian Landvik (360)417-2795 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

505 Rental Houses Clallam County 2 Br., 2 ba, completely furnished, Sequim Bay waterfront retreat, with hot and spa tubs, gourmet kitchen, fireplace, wide screen and more. $1,500. (360)808-5522. DOWNTOWN SEQUIM 1,800 sf, 3 Br., 2 ba, 2 car gar., fenced, clean, extras, near park/ schools. $1,200 mo. 582-9848 or 477-5070 JAMES & ASSOCIATES INC. Property Mgmt. (360)417-2810 HOUSES/APT IN P.A. A Studio Util Incl.....$500 A 2 br 1 ba..............$550 H 1 br 1 ba..............$650 A 2 br 1.5 ba ............$695 H 2 br 1 ba..............$750 A 3 br 1.5 ba...........$875 H 3 br 2 ba..............$990 SEQUIM A 2 br 2 ba..............$825 A 2 br 2 ba..............$875 H 2 br 1ba.............$1000 Complete List at: 11 Caroline St P.A.: 919 W. 15th St., 4 Br., 1.5 ba, gar., no pets. $1,050. (360)452-6144.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 605 Apartments Clallam County CENTRAL P.A.: Clean, quiet, 2 Br., excellent r e fe r e n c e s r e q u i r e d . $700. (360)452-3540. COLLEGE AREA P.A. 2 Br, W/D, fireplace. $600, $600 dep., pets upon approval. 452-3423. FIRST MONTH FREE EVERGREEN COURT APTS 360-452-6996 2 and 3 Br. apts avail. $685-$760. Some restrictions apply. Call today to schedule a tour of your new home.

Managed by Sparrow, Inc. PA: 1 Br., no pets/smoking, $575. (360)457-1695 P.A.: Clean upstairs, 2 Br. $595. (360)460-4089 www.mchughrents.com P.A.: Nice 2 Br., 1 bath, W/D. $725. (360)808-4972 Properties by Landmark. portangeleslandmark.com WEST SIDE P.A.: 2 Br. apt., 1 bath. $525 mo. (510)207-2304

665 Rental Duplex/Multiplexes P.A.: 1 Br., office, carpor t, view, clean and quiet, W/S inc. $675. (360)452-6611 SEQUIM: 2 Br. duplex, d e n , 2 b a , W / D, n o smoke, pets neg., 1 yr. $900. 452-4701.

671 Mobile Home Spaces for Rent MOBILE home or travel trailer space. East P.A. $320 mo. 360-452-7582.

683 Rooms to Rent Roomshares RO O M M AT E n e e d e d : Private room/bath, cable, lights, inter net. $450. (360)504-2305.

6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves FIREWOOD: $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special for $499. Credit card accepted. 360-582-7910. www.portangeles firewood.com

CARLSBORG: Rental with fenced equip. yard in indust. park. 2,880 sf., $1700. Or, 936 sf., $700. (360)683-4231 PROPERTIES BY LANDMARK 452-1326

6005 Antiques & Collectibles

6135 Yard & Garden

L AW N M OW E R : N ew Craftsman push mower with large rear wheels, never out of the box, cost $235 new. Sell for $195. (360)683-7440.

MOWER: 52” tow beh i n d , S w i s h e r b ra n d , ver y heavy duty, new $ 2 , 3 9 5 . L i ke n ew. $1,795. (360)683-7568.

RIDING MOWER Craftsman 17 hp, 42” cut, like new. $950/obo. 360-504-5664.

8142 Garage Sales Sequim

GIANT COMMUNITY/ MULTI-CHURCH FLEA MARKET SALE! Sat, May 18th, 9 - 2 p.m. Sequim High School Cafeteria. Hundreds of large and small items being sold! Shoppers wanted! Sellers Call 582-0582 to RSVP a free table.

8180 Garage Sales PA - Central ANTIQUE SHOW May 12, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Masonic Temple 622 S. Lincoln St., P.A.

G A R A G E a n d To o l Sale: Fri.-Sun., 9-8 p.m., 519 W. 5th, in the alley. Table saw, band saw, p l a i n e r, l a r g e w o o d 6075 Heavy lathe, drill press, numerEquipment ous hand and small power tools, some SEMI END-DUMP household furniture, bed, TRAILER: 30’. Electric dressers, etc. This is the tar p system, excellent former Grandpa’s Cabicondition. $7,500. nets. (360)417-0153

6080 Home

8182 Garage Sales PA - West

G A R AG E S a l e : S a t . Sun., 8-4 p.m., 1526 W. 13th St. 15kw generator, small diesel engine, maD E S K : R o l l t o p t e a k rine transmissions, boat desk. Granite top. $500. stuff, household, Tupperware, books/maga928-3178 leave msg. zines, craft supplies. No MISC: La-z-boy reclin- earlies! ers, 2, $75 each. China hutch, 44” x 74” x 16”, 7025 Farm Animals $325. Glider chair, $28. & Livestock Green rug, 5’ x 8’, $30. (360)683-1006 MISC: 2 Jacob wool sheep, $100 ea. Young 6100 Misc. hens, $5 ea. Rooster, $5. Milk cow, $1,000. Merchandise (360)477-1706 3 ” N ova M e m o r y G e l Foam mattress toppers. All sizes, pr iced $607030 Horses $105. 253-355-6765.

SEQUIM: 1 fur nished room in lg. 2 Br. apt., separate bath. $380 mo., $350 dep., share 5 PIECE office desk set. light oak desk set with electric. 417-9478. susanunpc@gmail.com separate oak filing cabinet see photos$350/obo. David, c: (707)490-7259 1163 Commercial Port Townsend Rentals

C A N O P Y: W h i t e, f i t s standard fords, ‘99 and n e w e r, r e a r d o o r / l i f t hatch, tinted sliding windows, raised roof, excellent condition. $1,000/obo. (360)640-4326 (360)640-0535

PACK MULE $1,200. (360)452-7903 or (360)775-5701.

7035 General Pets

BULLDOG PUPPIES AKC registered, champion bloodlines, 9 wks. old, full health and shots. $2,500-$3,000 (360)477-9724

CHICKS: Top quality native egg layer chicks. $3, $5, $8, $10. We take L O O M : N o r wo o d . 5 0 ” your rooster, exchange Like new. $900/obo. for chick any time. Jon, (360)681-0814 (360)809-0780

MISC: 177,000 BTU/hr PUPPIES: Golden Reheater, dual fuel, forced trievers, 12 wks., lower air, like new, $290. Com- price. $600. mercial grade 24”, 2 (360)912-2227 speed, barrel/drum fan, $100. (360)477-1761. PURE Bred Lab PupMISC: 4 Toyota pickup pies for sale. Born 3wheels/tires, 75 R126, 17-2013. 1st shots in$375. Electric dog fence, cluded. Already eating $50. Treadmill, $125. 5 regular food. Ready to BARBER’S CHAIR: An- white used vinyl win- find new loving homes. t i q u e b a r b e r ’s c h a i r, dows, $25 ea. 2 metal 1 yellow male, 1 yelgood shape. $500/obo. dog cages, $40/$60. 57 l o w fe m a l e , 1 b l a c k (360)460-6937 18” round cement pav- male, 2 black females. ers, 52 cinder blocks, $450. call (360)808-0880 $140 all. Antique tractor 6010 Appliances r a k e , $ 3 0 0 . A n t i q u e wagon, metal wheels, $300. (360)683-1851. 9820 Motorhomes UPRIGHT FREEZERS 1 upright freezer at 21 MISC: Thule utility rack, cubic feet, $299. 1 up- brand new, $400. Lumright freezer at 16 cubic b e r ra ck fo r f u l l s i ze feet, $199. Will deliver. truck, $300. 4’ claw foot Call Gary: tub with feet, $350. An(360)385-1653 or tique 1913 Kohler and (360)390-8334 Campbell upright grand piano, $2,200. Aluminum 22’x20” wide construc- M OTO R H O M E : 1 9 8 9 6042 Exercise tion plank, $500. Fleetwood Limited 37J. Equipment (360)460-6954 new 460 Ford Banks exMISC: Home gym, Nor- MISC: Utility trailer, 4x8, haust system, HYD levdic-Flex, Ultralift Training $500. Gas rototiller, 5 eling jacks, 2 tvs, nonGym. Programs for fit- hp, $85. Briggs & Strat- smoker, 5.5 Onan genness for Golds, charts, ton pressure washer, erator, driver and passenger side doors, oak and etc, $350. Treadmill, $90. (360)683-4038. cabinets, corian counterHealthRider Softstrider, Model #DRTL25061, 19” POOL TABLE: Regula- tops, hardwood floors. x 5 5 ” w a l k i n g a r e a , tion size, slate top, cues, $20,000. (360)417-0619 balls, fairly new felt. $250. (360)379-9300. $575. (360)460-5511. ARMOIRE: Antique 1880s Eastlake oak, big, excellent condition original finish, shelved interior, appraised at $950, sell $700/obo. For further information (360) 457-6410

6045 Farm Fencing & Equipment

POWER CHAIR: Used, Invacare Pronto. $500/ obo. (360)504-2710.

TRACTOR: ‘52 Fergu- WANTED: Gently used son. 6-way back blade, Kangen water alkalizer. scraper box, and ripper (360)298-0737 t o o t h , g o o d r u n n e r. MOTOR HOME: 2001 $2,500. (360)710-4966. 6115 Sporting 36’ Southwind Limited Edition. Very good conT R AC TO R : 9 N , r u n s Goods dition. 16k mi., 2 slides, very good, low hrs. on total engine rebuild. Ask- GOLF CART: ‘08 Club new levelers, rear cameing $2,495. Car. 48 volt high speed ra, drivers side door, lots (360)683-7568 motor, full enclosure, of storage inside and bag and club cover, club out. Many extras. Nonball washer, cooler, smokers. $40,000. 6050 Firearms & and (360)683-5359 many other extras, seller Ammunition is original owner, excel- MOTORHOME: ‘84 32’ lent condition. S p o r t c o a c h I I I . C h ev AK-47: $1,200. $4,250. (360)504-2581. ‘454’ eng., rear dbl. bed, (360)457-3645 full bath, new convection m i c r o, n ew f r i d g e / i c e 6140 Wanted GUN CABINET: Handmaker, wood cabinets, crafted, 13 long gun ca& Trades runs well, clean. p a c i t y a n d s p a c e fo r s e v e r a l h a n d g u n s , BOOKS WANTED! We $8,700. (360)683-1851. mounted on large draw- love books, we’ll buy MOTORHOME: ‘95 34’ e r a n d c a b i n e t u n i t . yours. 457-9789. Damon Intruder. Cum$200. (360)683-1532. mins diesel, no slides. WANTED: Antique Ring Setting. Wanted Antique $37,000. Call for info at CLASSIFIED (360)461-4515 Setting with or withcan help with all Ring out diamonds call After- MOTORHOME: Dodge your advertising noons: (360)461-1474. ‘76 Class C. 26’, good

P.A.: Clean, cozy, close. 2 Br., 1 bath, fenced yard, garage. Excellent refs., no smoke. $800. (360)452-1043

SEQUIM: Lovely 4 Br., 1.5 bath, storage, totally new inside, no pets/smoke. $1,300 f/l/d. (360)683-2426

Call today!

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

605 Apartments Clallam County

360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714

P.A.: 1 Br. lg. apt., water view, quiet, clean. $615 mo. (206)200-7244

www.peninsula dailynews.com

SEQUIM: 3 Br., 2 ba, close to town. $1,200 mo. (360)808-7778.

G U N S a n d A M M O. Colt AR15 “Light Carbine” 223 match trigger, free float aluminum HG, NIB with 100 rounds ammo $1595. CMMG AR15 300 B l a cko u t q u a d r a i l , magpul stock $1695. 1911 45ACP rail gun, hard chromed, light attached, NIB $650. Colt Diamondback 22, box, paperwork, 99% $2200. Glock 26 9mm Gen 4, Crimson Trace laser $695. Remington Mnt rifle 280 caliber, 2x7 Leopold, hinged floorplate,mint $1100. Taurus 22 PLY semiauto NIB $400. SCCY 9mm semiauto,stainless, NIB $425. 500 rounds fresh 223/5.56 wolf poly plus 55 grain hollow points $600. Pre-war model 70 in 25 Gibbs , dies, brass, etc. $500. Please, no felons or bargain hunters. 360-860-0035

SEQUIM: New 2 Br, 2 Furnishings ba duplex, granite, hardwood, gated com- BED: Twin box spring, munity, lawn care incl. mattress, frame. $175. $1,200. (360)460-0432. (360)582-3811

THE ULTIMATE IN PRIVACY Pass through the gated entrance and drive through the 20 acres of forest to this 4 Br., 5 bath 4,500 sf. palatial home with panoramic views of Discovery Bay, Mt. Baker and the Strait. Gourmet kitchen, radiant heat. This home has everything. $1,200,000. ML#270778/472735. Roland Miller (360)461-4116 TOWN & COUNTRY

Properties by Landmark. portangeleslandmark.com

6050 Firearms & Ammunition

needs:

Buying Selling Hiring Trading

WANT TO RENT: Spot to live, with some privacy, plus country setting, handyman looking for older dwelling or place for RV. Need 400 sf +/outbuilding for storage/ workshop. Pets. (360)670-5467

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

c o n d . , n ew t i r e s, l ow miles, nonsmoker, in PA. $5,000 firm. 460-7442.

PRICED TO GO! 1990 Fleetwood 34’ motorhome. Good condition, low milage, nonsmoker, 454 Chev with B a n k s Po w e r Pa ck , Onan generator. Steal at $6,700. See at 1638 W 12th. (360)452-9611.

GARAGE SALE ADS Call for details. 360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 9820 Motorhomes RV: 3 8 ’ RV a n d To w C a r. 2 0 0 1 N ew m a r Mountainaire and a 2009 Honda CRV tow car offered together or separa t e l y. T h e R V h a s 61,400 miles on a gas driven Trident V10 with a Banks system added. The interior is dark cherr y wood with corian counter tops. The RV is in very good condition. We just returned from a trip to Arizona which was trouble free. The CRV tow car is in excellent condition with 47,000 miles. Asking $40,000 for the RV and $20,000 for the CRV or $58,000 together. Please call Bill or Kathy at (360)582-0452 to see the vehicles.

9802 5th Wheels

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

5TH WHEEL: 26’ Alpenlite. New fridge/freezer, toilet, A/C, micro, dual batteries and propane tank, nice stereo, queen air adustable bed, awning, all in good condition, clean and ready to go. $3,850/obo. Leave mesTrade for camper van. sage at (360)452-4790. ‘81 Midas 21’ MH, self c o n t a i n e d , n ew t i r e s, 5TH WHEEL: 26’. Reabrakes, carb., top condi- sonalble cond. $1,900/ tion, 13 mpg at 55-60. obo. (360)461-0701 or $4,100. (360)452-2677. 461-0423 or 928-2867 5TH WHEEL: ‘89 Prowler Lynx 215. New raised a x l e s, 1 2 0 vo l t r e fe r, great shape, fully 7x16 Interstate Cargo / equipped, comes with Utility Trailer 2008 Black hitch. Reduced $2,750. $3800 Excellent condi- (360)460-6248, eves. tion, less than 300 miles 5 T H W H E E L : ‘ 9 6 2 6 ’ on it! Call 360-928-0214 Jayco Eagle. Excellent

9832 Tents & Travel Trailers

CAMPER TRAILER: ‘80 Holiday Rambler, Presidential 28’. New fridge and furnace. $3,500. (360)928-9436 KOMFORT: 17L “Lite” Travel Trailer. Immacul a t e R e f e r, 4 - b u r n e r s t ove, t u b / s h owe r. $4,500. (360)477-0321. TOY Hauler 21 ft. 2009. Desert Fox (Northwood) mod. 21sw. Fuel station, 4000 Gen. 2009. $19,000. Call: (360)681-0211 TRAILER: ‘78 19’ Prowler. Clean, nice interior, all works great, ready to go, sleeps 5 comfortably. $1,700. (406)231-3956

condition. $5,000. (360)452-1646 KOMFORT: 1997 23F 5th Wheel. Great condition, New tires, water pump (2012) 2 skylights 2 t w i n b e d s, Aw n i n g , Purchase option of deluxe hitch, Chev PU tailgate, 1000 Trails Membership, Por table grey water tank. $6,000. (360)683-4552

9808 Campers & Canopies CAMPER: ‘11 10’ Alaskan cab-over. Original owner, excellent cond. $9,000. (360)452-8968.

PACKAGE: ‘85 Dodge 350 and 11.5’ self contained camper. TRAILER: ‘90 27’ Hi-Lo. $1,900. (360)457-1153. G o o d s h a p e. $ 3 , 0 0 0 / obo. (360)683-8059.

9829 RV Spaces/

TRAVEL TRAILER: ‘08 Storage 25’ Sprinter trailer, flat screen TV, elec. jack, JOYCE: 7 acres, Full one slide. $14,500. hookup. $350+dep. 928-3187 or 461-7591. (360)912-2738 RV SITE: Near busline and casino. $375 mo. internet, utilities. 681-0748 SEQUIM AREA: Full hookup, TV, internet. $350. (360)460-5435. TRAVEL TRAILER: 17’, ‘05 Casita, Spirit Deluxe. $14,000. (360)808-0809.

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

9802 5th Wheels

BAYLINER: 17’, 70 hp Yamaha, needs some engine work but runs. $1,850. (360)460-9365.

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

LONESTAR: 17’, 100 hp Johnson motor, 9.5 kicker, motor in great shape, g a l va n i ze d E Z - l o a d e r t r a i l e r, d e p t h f i n d e r, $2,500. (360)928-9436.

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

BAYLINER: 1987 Capri 1750. GM 4 Cyl 3.0L engine with OMC stern drive. Runs great! Electronic ignition, Dual batteries, Hummingbird 587ci Fishfinder with GPS. More info on PDN online. $3,800/obo. (360)460-0460

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

BAYLINER: 27’ Buccaneer 3500 obo or trade for ‘land yacht’ +6’ headroom; 8HP Mercury longshaft recently serviced: runs great!’ Main+jib sail; small rowing skiff. Many extras Call Rob to see (360)390-8497

Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9817 Motorcycles 9180 Classics & Collect. Others Others Others YAMAHA: ‘72 Enduro MERCEDES: ‘85 SL380. BUICK ‘03 100LT2. Ready to ride, Both tops, excellent conRENDEZVOUS CX 3K original miles. $750/ dition. $10,000/obo. 3.4 liter V6, auto, all obo.(360)683-0146. (360)460-6764 wheel drive, A/C, cruise, YAMAHA: ‘74 DT360. S T U D E BA K E R : 1 9 5 0 tilt, AM/FM/CD, power 4k original miles, runs S t a r l i g h t C o u p. C o m - windows and locks, keyg o o d , a m a z i n g c o n d . plete restoration, black less entry, privacy glass, tow package, re$2,500/obo. 452-7253. cherry color, runs good, m ove a bl e r e a r s e a t s, looks excellent. $11,000. clean and reliable trade, YAMAHA: ‘79 XS 1100. (360)683-8810 non-smoker, spotless 35K, fairing, saddle bags “Autocheck” vehicle hisexcellent cond. $2,750/ V W : 1 9 7 3 B e e t l e . tory report. obo. (360)808-1922 or $2,500/obo. $5,995 (360)681-3023 after 6. (360)477-3725 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com 9805 ATVs

9292 Automobiles Others

HONDA: TRX200 4WD SLICKCRAFT: 1976 23’ ATV. $600. BMW: ‘84 325E. 90% reinboard/outboard. 302 stored. $4,800. (360)477-6547 B E L L B OY : ‘ 6 4 1 8 ’ (360)460-2931 Classic. Very good con- engine, boat and trailer. QUAD: 90 cc Eton. 2 dition, Volvo I/O, 7.5 hp $5,200. (360)457-8190. s t r o ke, l i ke n ew. R e - BUICK: ‘01 Regal TourJohnson kicker, fullc anduced $1,300. 452-3213 ing. 107+K mi. $3,000/ vas, new EZ Load trailer, obo. (702)366-4727. new tires, 2 downr ig- 9817 Motorcycles g e r s , l o t s o f ex t r a s . 9740 Auto Service C H RY S L E R : ‘ 0 3 P T $2,600. (360)417-1001. & Parts APRILIA: Scarabeo moC r u i s e r. 1 1 5 k m i l e s , BELLBOY: ‘78 24’ 20 torcycle/scooter 2009. Shar p and well mainKT Cruiser, 80 gal. fuel, This is a pristine motor- TOYOTA PARTS: Parts tained. $4,250. 30 gal. water, 1,750 watt c y c l e w i t h l e s s t h e n from Toyota ‘07 Tundra. (360)796-4270 i nve r t e r, 1 2 0 V s h o r e 1000 miles on it! Hardly White 6.5’ Leer canopy, power, 4 batteries, mi- u s e d ! N O T A S R . sliding front and side crowave, refr igerator, S C O O T E R ! 5 0 0 C C s windows, interior light; new depth finder, com- Needs a battery charge. plastic 6.5’ bed liner; aluminum front skid plate. pass, GPS, VHF, din- $3600/obo. $1,200/obo. (360)808-6160 ette, new galley, new (360)460-1870 Wallas ceramic diesel BMW: ‘74 R75/6. Airstove/heater, auto leveling trim tabs, enclosed head Boxer, excellent 9742 Tires & head, trailer with new condition, 29K mi., new Wheels disc brakes, wheels and powder coat, shocks, always garaged. $3,500/ tires. $8,000/obo. obo. (360)912-2679. (360)683-9645 C A N O E : 1 3 ’ , s q u a r e GOLDWING: ‘90 1500. stern, Old Town, excelle- Runs great, well mainnt. $600. (360)797-1771. tained. $3,000. (360)461-2619 CHRIS CRAFT: 26’ HARLEY Davidson: ‘97 Cavalier with trailer, 350 MerCruiser inboard, Bow 1 2 0 0 S p o r t . R e d a n d Thr uster, radar, GPS, Black, 15K miles, new sounder, toilet with Elec- tires and battery, custom painted tank, extra tank, tro Scan. $14,995. 4 extra seats, lots of (360)775-0054 chrome, blinkers integral in mirrors, detachable DEATH TAKES OWNER OF FISHING BOAT sissy bar, custom fen20 ft. Robolo Boat,Cen- der, 2 into 1 exhaust, adt e r C o u n s e l , w i t h 4 justable shocks. Have stroke 115 Yamaha Mo- o r i g i n a l p a r t s t o o . tor, has 400 hrs. on it. $4,250. (360)460-7893 Electronics, trailer, (gal i va n i z e d ) d u a l a xe l , HONDA: 2003 VT750 many extras. By appoint- A c e D e l u xe C r u i s e r. Showroom Condition ment. $22,000. Must see. Lots of (360)417-0277 Chrome, Many Extras. G L A S P LY : 2 6 ’ c a b i n Will not find another bike cr uiser, flying br idge, l i k e t h i s . N e v e r l e f t single Cummins diesel o u t , n e v e r d r o p p e d . engine, low hours, radar, 1 0 , 3 8 7 L o w M i l e s VHF radio, CB, depth/ $4,500. (360)477-6968. f i s h f i n d e r , d i n g h y, HONDA: ‘80 CB-900C. d o w n r i g g e r s , 1 6 ’ x 3 2 ’ S i l ve r. $ 1 , 0 0 0 / o b o o r boathouse. $27,500. t r a d e fo r g u n s / s m a l l (360)457-0684 truck. (360)460-3756.

BRAND NEW WHEELS S t i l l i n b ox ! M i ckey Thomson Classic II, black, 16x8 with bolt pattern 8x6.5. Didn’t fit our Toyota 4-Runner and don’t want to pay the restock fee. $550/obo (360)460-1301

9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect.

JET SKI: Kawasaki STX HONDA: ‘85 Goldwing 12F, 3 seater, ‘06, excel- A s p e n c a d e . 1 2 0 0 c c , lent condition, trailer. black/chrome, exc. cond. $6,800. (360)460-2689. AMC: Rare 1970 AMX $3,500/obo. 417-0153. 2-seater, 390 V/8, 4 spd, LIVINGSTON: 14’, Gal95% original. $18,000. vanized EZ loader trail(360)928-9477 er, 25 hp Merc. $2,300/obo. 670-6556. CHEV: ‘56 Belair. 6 cyl., auto, 4 door, paint, inO/B: YAMAHA 6 hp long terior, chrome, re-done shaft, fuel tank, hose, to stock, California car, excellent shape. $599. 2nd owner, always gar(360)385-7728 S C O OT E R : V K - E 5 0 0 aged. $21,000. electric, 48V/15AM, lithi(360)683-7789 PONTOON BOAT: 10’ um battery, almost new, ODC 1018, white water less than 20 mi., top C H E V: ‘ 7 9 C o r ve t t e . and still water, oars and speed 35 mpg, 30 mi. on L82, runs great, lots of wheel mount. $295/obo. 1 charge, paid $1,450. new parts! $6,000/obo. (360)912-1759 (360)457-6540 $600/obo. 504-2113.

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SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013 E5

CADILLAC ‘07 STS AWD V6 The ultimate in luxur y a n d h a n d l i n g p e r fo r mance, this car is immaculate inside and out, stunning white pearl paint, 66K mi. $18,950 heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583

CHRYSLER: 2002 LTD PT Cruiser. 78k miles New battery. Black with c h r o m e t r i m , ex t r a s . Moonroof, great stereo and a gas to drive. too much fun in the sun! One owner who loved it! $5500/obo. (360)808-6160

C A R S : V W ‘ 6 4 B u g , DATSUN: ‘64 Fairlady $3,950. Eagle ‘95 Talon convertible. Mechanic’s TSI, $1,000. 477-3495. spec. $1,500. 452-6524.

CHEV ‘99 CAMARO Z28 CONVERTIBLE V 8 , a u t o, ve r y ra r e ground effect pkg. with rear spoiler, this was a 1999 Seafair display car at the hydroplane races in Seattle. Extremely low 43K miles. $11,950 Preview at: FORD: ‘90 Taurus Wagheckmanmotors.com on. Runs fine, body OK, Heckman Motors has some issues. 111 E. Front, P.A. $850. (360)457-4399. (360)912-3583 BUICK: ‘99 Park Avenue. 64k miles, 1 owner, dealer maintained, good condition, loaded, 30+ highway mpg. $1,000 full tune up done less than 800 miles ago. Needs nothing. $5,500. firm (360)477-6218

C H RY S L E R : ‘ 0 2 P T Cruiser LTD. Silver. 93K. $4,500/obo. 457-0238.

FIFTH WHEEL: 19’ Alpenlite, no leaks. $3,295. (360)775-1288. FORD 92 LX MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE V8, this mustang is in g r e a t c o n d i t i o n , n ew convertible top, this little pony really turns heads! $4,950 heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583


Classified

E6 SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Sunday Crossword 114 “Idol� judge replaced by Ellen 115 Plant anchor 116 Passion 117 Rock or metal 118 Studied, with “over� 119 Forfeited wheels 120 Nod off, with “out� DOWN 1 Fowl house 2 Chanteuse’s fabric 3 Heaps 4 Series of misses 5 Bet first 6 Extremely cold 7 Pre-jr. high 8 One seeking justice for the peace? 9 Harshly rebuked 10 Took off to team up 11 Important drive in Freudian theory 12 Newsweek Global, e.g.

13 Commanded 14 Hearing aid of a sort 15 Get started 16 Biblical shepherd 17 Tape unit 18 Their offices often have small rms. 28 Members of the flock 30 Bench press beneficiary 32 Petite, say 34 Emmy-winning legal drama 35 Brief concession 36 Cops’ disagreement? 37 Logs 38 It’s quite a stretch 39 Drink daintily 40 “No military bigwigs allowed�? 41 Sunlit courts 42 Curbs, with “in� 44 Straightforward 45 Curiosity’s milieu

48 One of two N.T. books 49 Surround 50 Round gasket 51 Bailiwicks 54 Activate without restraint 57 Sit heavily 59 Level or bevel 60 Battery end 61 Competitive by nature 62 “Madama Butterfly� accessory 66 Desktop array 67 Humdrum 69 Start a round 70 Movado competitor 71 __ status 74 Wild way to go? 75 Do over, as a bow 76 Popeye and Porky, e.g. 79 Round number? 83 Work areas with long tables, briefly 84 Where to see rows of booths

85 Color chart components 86 Copier tray abbr. 87 Hoops franchise born in New Orleans 91 Inland Asian sea 93 Make beloved 94 You might get stuck with it 95 Heston title role 96 Chant in a ring 97 Depressed area 99 Butter-yielding bean 100 One poking around 101 Cooked up 102 Pullers of heavy loads 103 Yokum drawer 104 Catherine who outlived Henry VIII 105 Soap additive 106 Snack brand with a 2012 centennial 107 Joie de vivre 108 Potato salad ingredient, perhaps 109 Bogus locks

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Alexandra, AnnaSophia, Austin, Books, Brendan, British, Butler, Care, Carrie, Chen, Chloe, Clique, Date, Dating, Diaries, Diary, Doll, Donna, Dorrit, Editor, Ellen, Findlay, Freema, Intern, Jens, Jill, Larissa, Leader, Legal, Life, Loughlin, Love, Maggie, Matt, Mentor, Mouse, Nadia, Office, Owen, Party, Sebastian, Shallow, Simon, Sister, Sweet, Teen, Tom, Walt, Wong Yesterday’s Answer: Black Hat 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.

ALFEB Š2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

TAIRO

GINSSA

YEMMAH

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

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Solution on E7

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9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9434 Pickup Trucks Others Others Others Others Others

HONDA ‘11 FIT SPORT 4 cyl, auto, full power pkg., the Honda Fit is fun, roomy and economical to drive, the spor t pkg offers road hugging handling with paddle shifters to accelerate the true feeling of the road. One of the highest rated compact cars on the market. $16,500 heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors FORD ‘11 FUSION SE 111 E. Front, P.A. Ecnomical 2.5 liter 4-cyl, (360)912-3583 auto, A/C, cruise, tilt, AM/FM/CD, power winLEXUS ‘03 ES300 dows, locks and seat, Fully loaded, we seldom keyless entry, side air- see cars this age in this bags, fog lamps, only fine condition, don’t miss 22,000 miles, balance of this level of quality at factor y 3/36 and 5/60 this low price. warranty, non-smoker, $12,200 spotless “Autocheck� vePreview at: hicle history report. Very heckmanmotors.com clean 1-owner corporate Heckman Motors lease return. Near new 111 E. Front, P.A. condtion. (360)912-3583 $16,995 L I N C O L N : ‘ 8 8 To w n REID & JOHNSON C a r. C o z y 2 0 M P G . MOTORS 457-9663 Runs great. Good body reidandjohnson.com and interior with some HONDA: ‘06 Accord LX. rust spots. Good tires. V6, 49K. orig. owner, re- Brakes redone. All accessories work, includcent maint. $12,500. i n g A / C, 1 3 0 k m i l e s. (360)417-8859 $1,500 or best offer. Call (360)683-1683 HONDA: ‘94 Accord LX. R u n s a f t e r f u e l f i l t e r MERCEDES: ‘97 SL320. fixed. $1,000/obo. Both tops, gold/tan. (360)477-9082 $10,500. (360)683-7420.

SATURN: ‘07 Aura. Low TOYOTA ‘12 CAMRY mi. $8,000. SE (360)796-4762 4 cyl, auto, fully loaded, alloy wheels, 17K miles, SCION: ‘08 XB. 40k, ex- beautiful dark blue mecellent. $13,500. tallic, well appointed car. (360)928-3669 $20,900 heckmanmotors.com TOYOTA : ‘ 0 1 C o r o l l a Heckman Motors CE. 4 dr., A/C, 5 speed, 111 E. Front, P.A. new tires / new tabs, (360)912-3583 $3,300. (360)452-4010. TOYOTA : ‘99 Camry TOYOTA : ‘ 0 1 S o l a r a . Auto, 2 door, loaded. XLE. Great shape, all options, 4 cyl. auto OD. $4,300/obo. 461-5193. $4,250. (360)460-1207. TOYOTA : ‘ 0 4 C o r o l l a VW ‘11 JETTA TDI CE. White, auto, air, CD, TURBO DIESEL 80K, nice, safe, reliable. SEDAN $7,500. (360)670-3437. This car is immaculate, auto, fuel efficient 4 cyl. TOYOTA ‘05 CAMRY diesel, power moon roof, SOLARA SE V6, 2 door coupe, previ- leather, CD, 16� alumio u s l y o w n e d b y t o p num wheel and tire pkg., notch high performance all the amenities. Excelengine technician who lent economy without would not allow the car sacrificing power. Low to leave the garage on 2 9 K m i l e s , 4 0 M P G rainy days. This car is highway! $21,900 mechanically perfect, exPreview at: pensive upgrade tire and heckmanmotors.com wheel package, low Heckman Motors miles. Sharpest, tightest 111 E. Front, P.A. Solara I have ever seen. (360)912-3583 $10,900 Preview at: VW: ‘68 Square Back. heckmanmotors.com $4,800/obo. 457-7184 . Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. VW: ‘72 Super Beetle. (360)912-3583 Great shape. $2,600. (360)809-3656 VW: ‘66 Bug. Excellent shape. $5,000. VW: ‘74 Classic con(360)457-7022 ver tible Super Beetle. $9,500/obo. Call after 6 p.m. (360)460-2644.

The missing piece to your home selling success.

9434 Pickup Trucks Others BRUSHFIRE TRUCK 1981 4X4 1 ton dually, 4 speed manual with granny low, 5.7L V8, 250 gallon H2O tank, 4 yr old Honda GX690 pump, dual side diamond plate tool boxes, everything is in great operating condition and was meticulously maintained by an Easter n Washington fire department. Try and find one this nice! $12,950 Preview at: heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583

a nsul Peni sified Clas -8435 452

DODGE: ‘99 Ram 4X4 Flatbed tr uck. Low miles, recent oil change, transmission flush and filter changes. 3/4 ton 360 engine. call 461-4151. Photos available by request. Price reduced to $3500/obo. FORD ‘09 F150 KING RANCH 4X4 SUPER CREW This truck literally has it all! Full luxur y power, power moonroof, heated and cooled leather captains chairs, navigation system, SYNC voice activated communications and entertainment system. KING RANCH! Awesome truck! Priced right at $30,900 Preview at: heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583

�

The Last Word in Astrology � ARIES (March 21-April 19): Make personal changes that will improve your life, but be honest about your motives if other people are involved. Don’t believe everything you are told. Empty promises or information that is too good to be true will have strings attached. 4 stars

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Discuss your plans with an expert and it will ease your mind. Moving forward is important, but doing so with confidence will make a difference to the way things unfold. Call in favors and offer incentives that will ensure you get what you want. 3 stars GEMINI (May 21-June 20): An emotional situation will surface if you or someone you are dealing with has not disclosed all the information required to make an honest decision. Be prepared to initiate the changes necessary to keep moving forward. Love is highlighted. 3 stars CANCER (June 21-July 22): A secret meeting or dealing with someone from a different background will result in indecisiveness or confusion. Concentrate on your responsibilities and doing what’s best for everyone involved. A change of heart is apparent. 3 stars

9434 Pickup Trucks Others FORD: ‘98 F150. Rims, tinted, black, extended cab. Quick sale. $2,775. (360)460-0518

FORD RANGER XLT SUPER CAB 4X4 4.0L V6, automatic, alloy wheels, spray-in bedliner, tow package, rear sliding window, privacy glass, keyless entry, 4 opening doors, power w i n d ow s, d o o r l o ck s, and mirrors, bucket seats, center console, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, CD/cassette stereo, dual front a i r b a g s . Ke l l e y B l u e Book Value of $10,512! Only 62,000 original miles! Sparkling clean CHEV: ‘81 3+3. Dump FORD: ‘88 3/4 ton. Runs i n s i d e a n d o u t ! T h i s b ox , 4 W D, 4 5 4 a u t o. good. $1,000. Ranger shows the very $3,000/obo. 460-6176. (360)775-9669 best of care! Stop by Gray Motors today! CHEV: ‘88 Dually. Crew FORD: ‘94 F150 XLT. $8,995 cab. $1,500. Low mi., 4x4, runs good, GRAY MOTORS (360)477-1761 looks good. $4,500. 457-4901 (360)452-6758 graymotors.com C H E V: ‘ 9 5 3 5 0 0 H D. 8’x15’ wood deck, GMC: ‘91 2500 Extra FORD: ‘94 Ranger XLT. 84,760 mi., GTX 10-30 Cab 4X4. No rust, garevery 3,000 mi., original Runs GREAT, 4.0 V6, aged. $2,500. 477-2334. automatic with overdrive, owner. $8,500. custom wheels, AM/FM, (360)301-0050 cruise control, tilt wheel. TOYOTA: ‘05 Tacoma. TRD, double cab, 4WD, NISSAN: ‘11 Frontier, ext cab with two rear 98K mi., V6. $15,900. King Cab. 2WD, 6’ bed, side seats, slider window (360)460-6308 22,620 mi, bedliner, bed in rear, 226,000 miles c a p, Ke l l y B l u e B o o k $2,700 or trade for trav- GARAGE SALE ADS without liner or cap is el trailer 18-25’ in good Call for details. $ 1 8 , 4 8 1 . W i l l s e l l fo r wo r k i n g o r d e r. L e ave 360-452-8435 message (360)452-2970 $18,000. (360)452-6600. 1-800-826-7714

by Eugenia Last SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Give a little; take a little. Sharing 21): Emotional situations will will bring optimum results. escalate if you don’t make the Avoid anyone looking for an changes necessary to please argument. Take care of your yourself as well as your friends responsibilities and leave no and loved ones. Do your best room for criticism. A short trip or to make improvements to your someone you encounter along surroundings that will ease the way will spark original ideas stress. 3 stars and solutions. 4 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): 19): Leave the past behind you. You will gain experience if you Focus on home, family and your mingle with people who share personal future. An old friend your interests. Partnerships and or past lover will cause more proposals will give you plenty havoc than help. Take care of to think about and discuss. your responsibilities before There is plenty to gain if you you indulge in entertainment. are practical and keep your Practicality will be required. 3 emotional response under stars control. 2 stars LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Love, laughter and having fun should be your intent. Sharing the things you enjoy doing most with the people or person you love will ease your stress and help you come to a decision that you must address regarding health, legalities or finances. 5 stars

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Your surroundings can be improved with a couple of adjustments or alterations. Love is highlighted, and spending quality time with someone special will brighten your day and spark ideas and solutions that will make your life better. 5 stars

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Work hard to bring a better understanding to an important relationship. Take a creative or unique approach to the way you handle people when it comes to financial or contractual matters. Honesty must prevail, but incentives must also be offered. 3 stars

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Stick to what you know will work. A practical application will get you much further than a gamble or taking a short cut. Ask for favors and discuss agreements. Knowing where you stand will help you make the right choices. Ask questions. 2 stars

9556 SUVs Others

9556 SUVs Others

9556 SUVs Others

C H E V : ‘ 0 1 B l a z e r. 4WD, power windows, white, good cond. $2,900. (360)460-8155

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

HUMMER ‘07 H2 SUV Luxury pkg., chrome appearance pkg., navigation system, entertainment pkg., leather, moon roof, 3rd row seat, Bose premium sound system, tow pkg., 17� premium wheels and tires. And that’s just the start, too many options to list, excellent condition inside and out. Price to sell at $25,490 Preview at: heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583

FORD: ‘93 Explorer XLT. 4x4 auto, dark green, tan interior, looks great, runs great, 116K orig. mi., new front suspens i o n , n ew t ra n s, n ew brakes/wheel bearings, new head gaskets/timing chain, new rocker arms/ push rods, new radiator. $4,900. (360)457-3744.

LINCOLN: ‘04 Navigat o r. 9 5 k , AW D, 4 X 4 , leather, seats 7 comfortably, good family vehicle, new compressor FORD: ‘97 Expedition and tabs, 6 disc changer XLT. 4x4, 3rd row seat. and Bose sound syster m, ver y reliable. $2,790. (360)461-2145. $12,000/obo. Peninsula Classified GMC: ‘90 Jimmy.Rebuilt. (360)460-5421 360-452-8435 Call for details. $2,500. (360)452-6649 GMC: ‘93 Yukon. 4WD, 2 d r. , 1 5 8 K m i , r u n s great. $2,000. 683-7173. GMC: ‘96 Yukon. 4x4, 4 door auto, 109K. $3,300/ obo. (360)582-0373. GMC: ‘98 Jimmy (Blazer). Low mi. on new motor, clean, runs great, all extras. 1st $2,900 takes it. (360)452-6611.

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

NO. 13 4 0017 3 0 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF: MARJORIE A. CARPENTER, Deceased. The Personal Representative named below has been appointed as Personal Representative of this estate. Any persons having a claim against the Decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Personal Representative or the Personal Representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the Court. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Personal Representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the Notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the Decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. Date of first publication: May 5, 2013 9730 Vans & Minivans Personal Representative: Jeremy Reeves Attorney for Personal Representative: Others Curtis G. Johnson, WSBA #8675 FORD 93 ECONOLINE Address for Mailing or Service: 350 HALFBACK CON- Law Office of Curtis G. Johnson, P.S 230 E. 5th Street VERSION VAN 7.5L (460) V8, automat- Port Angeles, WA 98362 ic, good tires, running (360) 452-3895 Legal No. 477943 boards, tow package, Pub: May 5, 12, 19, 2013 trailer brake controller, roof rack, tinted win- 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices dows, power windows Clallam County Clallam County and door locks, cruise PUBLIC NOTICE control, tilt, air conditionNOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING i n g , c a s s e t t e s t e r e o. OLYMPIC REGION CLEAN AIR AGENCY Only 89,000 original miles! Rear seat con- (ORCAA) ver ts to a bed! Large cargo area with opening On May 8, 2013, at a regularly scheduled meeting; glass separator! Spark- the Board of Olympic Region Clean Air Agency ling clean inside and out! (ORCAA) requested and approved a 9:30 a.m. start Shows the very best of time for the June 12, 2013 regular Board meeting. care! Stop by Gray Mo- The meeting will be held at 2940-B Limited Lane NW, in Olympia. tors today! $4,495 The Agency operates under the provisions of ORGRAY MOTORS CAA’s Regulations, laws and codes of record of the 457-4901 State of Washington and the United States Governgraymotors.com ment. Notice is given by ORCAA’s Executive Director, Francea McNair. Phone: 360-539-7610 or 1Place your ad 800-422-5623, extension 100 with the only Pub: May 12, 2013 Legal No. 480102

DAILY Classified Section on the Peninsula! PENINSULA CLA$$IFIED 360-452-8435 or 1-800-826-8435 peninsula dailynews.com

CLALLAM COUNTY PARKS, FAIR & FACILITIES DEPARTMENT NOTICE OF CALL FOR BIDS

Clallam County 3rd Street Building Re-Roof

FAIRGROUNDS MERCHANT’S BARN PAINTING

Complete drawings and specifications may be obtained from Pen Print, Inc., 230 E. 1st Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362, phone 360.457.3404. All bidding and related questions should be directed to Beaman Architecture, Ltd in writing at mb@beamanarch.com Attention: Michael Beaman.

Complete drawings and specifications may be obtained from Pen Print, Inc., Phone 360.457.3404. All bidding and related questions should be directed to Lindberg & Smith Architects 360.452.6116.

The sealed bids must be clearly marked on the outside of the envelope, “BID PROPOSAL - FAIRGROUNDS MERCHANT’S BARN PAINTING” Address bid proposal to: Board of Clallam County Commissioners, 223 East 4th Street, Suite 4, Port Angeles, Washington 98362 or hand-deliver to 223 East 4th Street, Room 150, Port Angeles, Washington. Bid documents delivered to other offices and Clallam County will determine the lowest respon- received late by the Commissioners’ Office will not sible bidder in accordance with the terms of Clallam be considered nor will bids received by facsimile or County Code Section 3.12, and further reserves the e-mail. Note: All Bids shall include a 5% Bid Bond. right to reject any or all bids received, or to accept the bid which in its estimation best serves the inter- Clallam County hereby notifies all bidders that it will ests of Clallam County or to waive informalities in affirmatively ensure that in any contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged busithe bidding. ness enterprises as defined in Title VI of the Civil “Clallam County hereby notifies all that it will affir- Rights Act of 1964 at 49 CFR Part 23 will be affordmatively ensure that in any contract entered into ed full opportunity to submit bids in response to this pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged busi- invitation and will not be discriminated against on ness enterprises as defined in Title VI of the Civil the grounds of race, color, national origin, or sex in Rights Act of 1964 at 49 CFR Part 23 will be afford- consideration for an award. ed full opportunity to submit proposals in response to this invitation and will not be discriminated Clallam County will determine the lowest responagainst on the grounds of race, color, national ori- sible bidder in accordance with the terms of Clallam County Code Section 3.12 and reserves the right to gin, or sex in consideration for an award.” reject any or all bids and to waive informalities in the process or to accept the bid, which in its estimaConstruction Timeframe: tion best serves the interests of Clallam County. (90) Calendar Days to Final Completion The sealed bids must be clearly marked on the outside of the envelope, “Bid Proposal - Clallam County 3rd Street Building Re-Roof”. Bid documents delivered to other offices and received late by the Commissioner’s Office will not be considered nor will bids received by facsimile or e-mail.

566590 05/12

Geanene Weathers and Gary Everson, siding and insulation replacement, 1321 E. Third St., $1,600. Dale and Francesca Drake, composite installation, 905 W. Twelfth St., $2,372. David M. Hatch, composite installation, 725 W. Sixth St., $9,259. Jack P. Durrwachter, garage re-roofing, 804 W. Sixth St., $1,400. Bethany Pentecistal Church, water line replacement, 712 E. Fifth St., $0. Steven L. Callis, commercial remodeling and partition wall, 806 S. Vine St., $3,000. David L. and Deborah H. Olander, garage re-roofing, 1527 W. Twelfth St., $7,685. First Federal Savings and Loan, heat pump system replacement, 1603 E. First St., $20,717.

Sequim Safeway Inc. #1448, pharmacy remodeling, 680 W. Washington St., $33,000. Fred Foust, detached garage, 812 E. Spruce St., $23,397. John and Emily Matthews, extend propane line, 611 W. Stratford Way, $700. Dominion Terrace, install heat pump system, 1301 S. Third Ave., $9,973. Paul W. Dowling Trust, install propane tank and stove, 200 N. Honeycomb Circle, $700.

Jefferson County Nancy Rowe, residential fire sprinklers, 5523 Highway 20. Glen Hamling, detached garage, 320 Old Eaglemount Road, $20,365. David Blessing, interior remodeling, 299 Fleet Drive, $48,000. Linda Schwartz, residential renovation, 320 Sunset Blvd., $62,000.

Port Townsend Barbara A. Mahoney, residential garage, 1051 D St., $25,000.

Department reports Area building departments report a total of 26 building permits issued from April 26 to May 1, with a total valuation of $2,025,143: Port Angeles, 8 at $46,033; Sequim, 5 at $67,770; Clallam County, 8 at $1,755,975; Port Townsend, 1 at $25,000; Jefferson County, 4 at $130,365.

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NOTICE OF CALL FOR BIDS SEALED BIDS will be received by the Board of Clallam County Commissioners 223 East Fourth Street, Room 150, Port Angeles, Washington until 10:00 a.m. on Tuesday, May 28, 2013 for:

Michael J. and Colleen Hamilton, single-family dwelling with attached garage and propane tank and piping, 63 N. Windflower Lane, $266,034. Jennifer J. Weicher, change of use, 121 Sierra Drive, $16,459. Dennis and Marcia Konopinski, detached garage, 2022 Atterberry Road, $53,150. DBX2 LLC; manufacturing, storage and office; 293 Business Park Loop, $624,646. Lyle Hagen, accessory dwelling unit, 122 Ritter Road, $22,000. Marjory D. Bartee, single-family dwelling with attached garage and propane tank and piping, 84 Hunters Gate Lane, $590,507. Richard G. Hibbard, addition to single-family dwelling, 3521 Woodcock Road, $13,062. C. Anderson Homes and Development, single-family dwelling with attached garage, 173 Secluded Way, $170,117.

Port Angeles

CLALLAM COUNTY PARKS, FAIR & FACILITIES DEPARTMENT

SEALED BIDS will be received by the Board of Clallam County Commissioners at 223 East 4th Street, Room 150, Port Angeles, Washington until 10:00 am, PST, June 4, 2013, at which time they will be publicly opened and read aloud for:

There will be a mandatory on-site walk-through conducted Tuesday, May 21, 2013 at 10:00 am, PST. Bidders shall meet in the County Parks, Fair & Facilities Offices at the Historic Courthouse for a facility walk-through. Questions and clarifications will be taken at that time. This will be the only opportunity to access the facility so bring any tools needed to confirm information on drawings and specifications. (Please park in the main courthouse parking lot). We will then walk over to the building on Third Street. Date: 30 April 2013 BOARD OF 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices CLALLAM COUNTY COMMISSIONERS: Michael C. Chapman, Chair Clallam County Clallam County ATTEST: RFP - Electronic Payments Trish Holden, CMC, Clerk of the Board The Port of Port Angeles is soliciting proposals for Pub: May 5, 12, 2013 Legal No. 477698 the implementation of systems and services required to support an electronic payment solution. 9932 Port Angeles 9932 Port Angeles The solution will provide a full range of E-Payment Legals Legals services including credit cards, debit cards and checking accounts (via one time ACH) over the Summary of Ordinances Adopted by the web, mobile phone and on-behalf-of (OBO). The Port Angeles City Council complete RFP can be viewed at on the Port’s webOn May 7, 2013 site at http://www.portofpa.com/bids.aspx. Sealed proposals are due to the Port by May 20, 2013 at Ordinance No. 3477 2:00pm (PST). Please call (360) 417-3363 with any This Ordinance of the City of Port Angeles, Washquestions. Legal No. 475441 ington, amends the 2013 budget and funds. Pub: April 25, 28, May 2, 5, 9, 12, 2013 The full texts of the Ordinances are available at City 9931 Legal Notices Hall in the City Clerk’s office, on the City’s website at www.cityofpa.us, or will be mailed upon request. Clallam County Office hours are Monday through Thursday, 8:30 Invitation for Bids a.m. to 4:00 p.m., and Friday 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 North Olympic Regional p.m. These Ordinances shall take effect five days Veteran’s Housing Net- following the date of publication by summary. work (NORVHN) is soliciting bids from qualified Janessa Hurd contractors for the reha- City Clerk bilitation of The Outpost, Pub: May 12, 2013 Legal No. 480096 a 4 unit apartment building located at 517 E Lo9932 Port Angeles 9932 Port Angeles pez Ave, Port Angeles. Legals Legals A mandatory walkthrough will be held on ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS site May 20, 2013 at PHASE 1 CSO PROJECT, 10:00 am. Bid packages PROJECT NUMBER 06-01 are available from Lindberg & Smith Architects, Rayonier Diffuser Repair and Modifications 319 S Peabody St, Suite City of Port Angeles B, Po r t A n g e l e s, WA 98362. Sealed bids for the Phase 1 CSO Project, Rayonier Bids are due at Lindberg Diffuser Repair/Modifications will be received by the & Smith Architects office Director of Public Works & Utilities at 321 East Fifth by 2:00 pm on June 4, Street, P. O. Box 1150, Port Angeles, Washington 2013 and will be opened 98362, until 2:00 p.m. local time on May 31, 2013, immediately thereafter. at which time Bids will be opened and publicly read Legal No. 480039 at the City Council Chamber. The Engineer’s estiPub: May 12, 19, 2013 mated cost range for the Phase 1 CSO Project, Rayonier Diffuser Repair/ Modifications is between 9931 Legal Notices $385,000 and $415,000. Elements of work for the Rayonier Diffuser Repair and Modifications Project Clallam County include, but are not limited to the following: Initial field investigations; removal of concrete NOTICE OF blocks, separated risers, and abandoned FRP acMEETING CHANGE Peninsula Housing Au- cess flange from sea floor; cleaning of interior of ext h o r i t y w i l l h o l d t h e i r isting, unaltered, diffuser risers and exterior ends of monthly regular meeting risers to accommodate new duckbill check valves; for the Board of Com- capping of selected broken and missing risers as missioners at 803 W. outfall crown for non-salvageable damaged ports; P a r k A v e n u e , P o r t replacement of up to five (5) diffuser risers; installaTownsend WA 98363 for tion of 43, -inch-diameter (nominal) elastomeric t h e m o n t h o f M a y. duckbill check valves at existing riser terminus and Members of the public up to two (2) 6-inch-diameter (nominal) elastomeric duckbill check valves on diffuser repair risers; are invited to attend. modifications to access riser at the end of the difLegal No. 479878 fuser and installation of one (1) 20-inch-diameter Pub: May 12, 2013 duckbill check valve; cleaning and disposal of sediments removed from the diffuser section of the outfall pipeline; video documentation of completed modifications and repairs; and transfer extra and unused new parts to City.

BUILDING PERMITS Clallam County

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013 E7

A more detailed advertisement, plans, specifications, addenda, and plan holders list for this project are available on-line through Builders Exchange of Washington, Inc. at http://www.bxwa.com. Click on: “Posted Projects”, Public Works”, “City of Port Angeles”. Bidders are encouraged to “Register as a Bidder”, in order to receive automatic email notification of future addenda and to be placed on the “Bidders List”. Contact the Builders Exchange of Washington (425-258-1303) should you require further assistance. Informational copies of any available maps, plans and specifications are on file for inspection in the office of the Port Angeles Public Works Engineering Services (360-417-4700). A prebid conference including site walk will be held at 9:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m., May 17, 2013, starting at the City Hall Building at 321 East Fifth Street, Port Angeles, Washington. Driving directions are available at www.cityofpa.us. Representatives of the City will be present at the conference to discuss the Project. Prospective Bidders, subcontractors and suppliers are encouraged to attend and participate in the conference. The City will transmit to all prospective Bidders of record such Addenda as the City considers necessary in response to questions arising at the conference. No oral clarification or interpretation will be made regarding the meaning or intent of the Contract Documents. Oral statements may not be relied upon and will not be binding on the City or legally effective. Interpretations or clarifications considered necessary by the City will be issued in the form of Addenda to the Contract Documents. Minority and women owned businesses shall be afforded full opportunity to submit bids in response to this invitation, shall not be discriminated against on the grounds of gender, race, color, age, national origin or handicap in consideration of an award of any contract or subcontract, and shall be actively solicited for participation in this project by direct mailing of the invitation to bid to such businesses as have contacted the City for such notification. Further, all Bidders are directed to solicit and consider minority and women owned businesses as potential subcontractors and material suppliers for this project. It is anticipated that this project will be funded in part by the Washington State Department of Ecology. Neither the State of Washington nor any of its departments or employees are, or shall be, a party to any contract or any subcontract resulting from this solicitation for bids. Bidder questions are to be directed to Michael Szatlocky, PE, Civil Engineer, in writing by facsimile at (360) 417-4808 or by email at mszatloc@cityofpa.us. Bidders may also contact James Burke, Assistant Civil Engineer in writing by facsimile at (360) 417-4809 or by email at jburke@cityofpa.us. Glenn A. Cutler, P.E. Director of Public Works & Utilities Pub: May 12, 19, 2013 Legal No. 480086

Construction Timeframe: June 6, 2013 through July 19, 2013

There will be a mandatory on-site walk-through conducted Thursday, May 16, 2013 at 2:00 pm. All interested bidders are to meet at the site, located at Clallam County Fairgrounds (access from W. 16th Street, Blue Gate), in Port Angeles. This will be the only opportunity for bidders to review the as-built conditions. Bring any tools, equipment, etc., needed for personal documentation. Staff and the architect will be on site to answer questions and provide building access. APPROVED this 30th day of April 2013. BOARD OF CLALLAM COUNTY COMMISSIONERS: Michael C. Chapman, Chair ATTEST: Trish Holden, CMC, Clerk of the Board Pub: May 5, 12, 2013 Legal No. 477694

9932 Port Angeles 9932 Port Angeles Legals Legals

INVITATION TO BID LAURIDSEN BOULEVARD BRIDGE REPLACEMENT PROJECT TR42-99 City of Port Angeles Sealed bids will be received by the Director of Public Works & Utilities at 321 East Fifth Street, P.O. Box 1150, Port Angeles, Washington 98362, until 3:00pm, Tuesday, June 4, 2013, and not later, and will then and there be opened and publicly read at that time in the Jack Pittis Conference Room for the construction of the following improvements: Replacement of the existing 205 foot long bridge across Peabody Creek on Lauridsen Boulevard and reconstructing the Lauridsen Boulevard / Race Street intersection shall generally consist of constructing 147 foot long a single span prestressed girder structure supported by drilled shafts, soldier pile walls or structural earth walls, utilities, drainage, asphalt paving, excavation and embankment construction, ground improvement, pedestrian railing, cement concrete sidewalk, landscaping, street lighting, pedestrian lighting, traffic control, traffic signal systems, and other work, all in accordance with the attached Contract Plans, these Contract Provisions, and the Standard Specifications. The City Engineer’s estimate for this project is between $3 million and $5 million. The time of completion (performance period) for this Project is 130 working days. Plans, specifications, addenda and plan holders list for this project are available from two sources: 1.) To view a low resolution set of the plans or the plan holders list view the City of Port Angeles web site www.cityofpa.us under City Project Bid Information on the front page. Complete digital documents are available at www.questcdn.com. Bidders can download the plan documents for $10.00. Enter project number 2663789 in the websites project search page. Bidders must register with QuestCDN to download or print the documents. Contact QuestCDN at 952-233-1632 or info@questcdn.com for assistance in free membership or with questions about downloading or printing documents. 2.) Builders Exchange of Washington, Inc. at http://www.bxwa.com. Click on: “Posted Projects”, “Public Works”, “City of Port Angeles”. Bidders are encouraged to “Register as a Bidder”, in order to receive automatic email notification of future addenda and to be placed on the “Bidders List”. Contact the Builders Exchange of Washington, (425-2581303) should you require further assistance. Informational copies of any available maps, plans and specifications are on file for inspection in the office of the Port Angeles Public Works Engineering Services (360-417-4700). All questions regarding the plans and specifications shall be submitted in writing or electronically to Jim Mahlum, Project Manager, at jmahlum@cityofpa.us. All bids shall be submitted on the prescribed Bid Forms and in the manner as stated in this advertisement and in the Project Manual and said bids shall be accompanied by a bid deposit in the form of a cashier’s check, postal money order, or surety bond to the City of Port Angeles in the amount of five percent (5%) of the total amount of the bid. If a surety bond is used, said bond shall be issued by a surety authorized and registered to issue said bonds in the State of Washington. The bond shall specify the surety’s name, address, contact and phone number, and shall include a power of attorney appointing the signatory of the bond as the person authorized to execute it. Should the successful bidder fail to enter into the Contract and furnish satisfactory performance bond within the time stated in the Information for Bidders, the bid deposit shall be forfeited to the City of Port Angeles. Faxed bids and/or surety bonds will not be accepted. The City of Port Angeles, in accordance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 252, 42 U.S.C. 2000d to 2000-4 and Title 49, Code of Federal regulations, Department of Transportation, subtitle A, Office of the Secretary, Part 21, non-discrimination in Federally assisted programs of the Department of Transportation issued pursuant to such Act, hereby notifies all bidders that it will affirmatively insure that in any contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterprises will be afforded full opportunity to submit bids in response to this invitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color or national origin in consideration for an award. The City of Port Angeles reserves the right to accept the bid that is in the best interest of the City, to postpone the acceptance of bids and the award of the Contract for a period not to exceed sixty (60) days, or to reject any and all bids. If all bids are rejected, the City may elect to re-advertise for bids. Subject to the foregoing, the contract will be awarded to the lowest responsible bidder. Bids must be submitted in a sealed envelope with the outside clearly marked with the bid opening date and time, the project name and number as it appears in this advertisement and the name and address of the bidder. Bids shall be addressed to the Director of Public Works & Utilities, City of Port Angeles, 321 East Fifth Street, P.O. Box 1150, Port Angeles, Washington 98362. When awarded the Contract, the successful bidder shall promptly execute the Contract and shall furnish a bond of faithful performance of the Contract in the full amount of the Contract price. Pub: May 5, 12, 2013 Legal No. 477955

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Sunday Fun

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for May 12, 20 2013 0

Dilbert by Scott Adams


2

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

Sunday Fun

Doonesbury by Garry Trudeau

Classic Peanuts by Charles Schulz

For Better or For Worse by Lynn Johnston

Dennis the Menace by Hank Ketcham

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Sunday Fun

Blondie by Dean Young and John Marshall

H A G A R the horrible by Dik Browne

The Wizard of Id by Jeff Parker

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

3


4

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

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Zits by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

B.C. by Mastroianni and Hart

Born Loser By Art and Chip Sansom

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS


May 12 - 18, 2013

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Trip the ‘night’ fantastic Dancers return to prime time in ‘So You Think You Can Dance’ performers trying to capture the limelight. First, they’ll have to survive the auditions, callbacks and a performance s many dramas and comedies wind down for the sea- round, at which point viewer son, a wave of reality TV shows votes and judges’ critiques determine who will stay and who flood prime time. That deluge includes plenty of talent-search will take their final bow. As in Season 9, this season will once series, but one dance show again crown one female and sails miles ahead of the rest. one male dancer. No matter what style of dance gets you moving, Fox’s Auditions kicked off in hit “So You Think You Can Austin, Texas, on Jan. 18, and Dance� likely has it. From balmoved on to Detroit, Boston, let and ballroom to hip hop Memphis, Tenn., and Los Angeand modern, the series returns les. At each stop, auditioners to jazz up prime time with a poured their hearts and souls special two-night premiere be- into their routines. ginning Tuesday, May 14. However, while some of the This season marks the 10th auditions will undoubtedly be outing for the show, which breathtaking, the judges will searches for the most talented have to wade through plenty dancers in America through a of less-than-stellar auditions series of audition and perforbefore they find their dancmance rounds. “So You Think ing queen and king. If You Can Dance� is the brainpast seasons are any child of co-creators “American indication, the openIdol� producers Simon Fuller call round is likely to and Nigel Lythgoe, who also feature some horribly serves as a judge on the series. misguided auditioners Averaging just more than whose “talents� 4 million viewers by the end of leave something last season, the ratings have to be desired. declined since the show burst While it may be onto the scene with 10 million- tiresome for the plus viewers in 2005. But, it panel, it nonehas consistently ranked as one theless ups the of the top shows on network entertainment television, and Fox is happy to value for the have it back for the reality TVviewers, which is heavy summer season. why some of those “I couldn’t be more proud of auditions don’t end the amazing work that Nigel up on the cutting and the entire ‘So You Think room floor. You Can Dance’ team has done If anyone over the past nine seasons,� can put a waysaid Fox executive Mike Darward dancer in his nell in a news release. “This or her place, it’s show is truly one of the most Lythgoe. He’s compelling series on television, the only judge and I can’t wait to bring it back who’s been for Season 10.� with the series Emmy nominee Cat Deeley Nigel returns as host this season, Lythgoe as which once again invited seen in “So dancers from across America You Think to strut their stuff for a shot You Can at a cash prize and valuable exposure, a hot commodity for Dance� By Kyla Brewer TV Media

A

Are You Game for Grammar? MODIFIER ABBR. NOUNS ACRONYMS PARAGRAPH ADJ. PERIOD ANTONYM PHRASE CAPITALIZE PREFIX CASE COMPLEMENT PUNCTUATION CONJUNCTIONS QUOTES CONSONANTS SEMANTICS SENTENCE DASH DIRECT OBJECT SPEECH SPELLING FRAGMENT SUFFIX GERUND SYNTAX HYPHEN TENSE IRREGULAR VOWELS VERBS WORDS LETTERS 2

MAY 12 - 18, 2013

steadily since it premiered, welcoming fellow dance pros such as Mia Michaels, Adam Shankman and current colleague Mary Murphy to the judging table over the years, as well as a rotating roster of guest judges. Should the judges like what they see in the initial audition rounds, dancers earn a ticket to the Vegas callbacks — an intense round of auditions that tests the contestants’ stamina and abilities to adapt to different styles of dance. From that pool, the finalists are chosen, and the dancers go on to perform in live shows, first as duos and later solo. With five Emmy nominations and numerous other awards to his credit, Lythgoe deserves praise for his work both behind the scenes and in front of the camera. As a one-time professional dancer and choreographer, he has plenty of expertise when it comes to evaluating the hopefuls who take the stage before him. His career in television began with a gig as a member of the BBC’s Young Generation dance troupe in 1969, and he went on to dance with such greats as Gene Kelly and choreograph for the likes of Ben Vereen and Shirley Bassey.

His television career quickly took off with credits that include U.K. versions of “Popstars,â€? “Survivorâ€? and “Pop Idol,â€? as well as the Fox phenomenon “American Idol.â€? Although Lythgoe is notoriously tough — dubbed “Nasty Nigelâ€? by British tabloids — he isn’t the only one dancers will have to impress. Choreographer and former U.S. champion ballroom dancer Murphy has rejoined the judging panel, having previously served from 2007 to 2009, and 2011-2012. As the lighter side of the judging panel, she’s coined the term “hot tamalesâ€? for dancers she loves and provides plenty of entertainment herself with her enthusiasm for their performances. Over the years, guest judges have included celebrities and prominent choreographers, including Christina Applegate, Neil Patrick Harris, Tyce Diorio, Jean-Marc GĂŠnĂŠreux and even “Fame’sâ€? Miss Lydia Grant herself, Debbie Allen. This season’s guest judges are rumored to include Minnie Driver, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Wayne Brady and Shankman. Legendary dancer and choreographer Martha Graham once said, “great dancers are not great because of their technique, they are great because of their passion.â€? That passion is part of what makes “So You Think You Can Danceâ€? stand apart. It isn’t merely a dance showcase, but a look at what makes the dancers tick. Vignettes showcase not only the auditions, rehearsals and performances, but also provide touching back stories for many of the contestants. The athleticism and passion of the dancers are riveting, inspiring even. But it is the journey of these dancers that makes for compelling television. Don’t miss a beat of “So You Think You Can Dance,â€? premiering Tuesday, May 14, on Fox. PENINSULA DAILY NEWS


sports zone SUNDAY

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Toronto Blue Jays vs. Boston Red Sox Live WGN Baseball MLB Chicago Cubs vs. Washington Nationals Live 11:00 a.m. (5) KING (8) GBLBC Golf PGA The Player’s Championship Final Round Live 12:30 p.m. (4) KOMO Basketball NBA Playoffs Live (25) ROOT Mariners Pre-game Show Live 1:00 p.m. (7) KIRO Bull Riding PBR Last Cowboy Standing (27) ESPN2 Auto Racing American LeMans Series (25) ROOT Baseball MLB Oakland Athletics vs. Seattle Mariners Live 4:00 p.m. (2) CBUT Hockey NHL Ottawa Senators vs. Montréal Canadiens Stanley Cup Playoffs Conference Quarter-final Game 7 Live (26) ESPN Baseball Tonight Live (25) ROOT Mariners Post-game Live 4:30 p.m. (31) TNT NBA Tip-Off Live 5:00 p.m. (26) ESPN Baseball MLB Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim vs. Chicago White Sox Live (25) ROOT Soccer MLS Chivas U.S.A. vs. Portland Timbers (31) TNT Basketball NBA Playoffs Live 7:30 p.m. (31) TNT Inside the NBA Live 7:40 p.m. WGN Instant Replay 9:30 p.m. (22) KMYQ Q It Up Sports 10:00 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Baseball MLB Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim vs. Chicago White Sox 10:30 p.m. (13) KCPQ Q It Up Sports 12:30 a.m. (26) ESPN Basketball NBA Playoffs 2:30 a.m. (25) ROOT Poker WPT Borgata Open 3:30 a.m. (25) ROOT Poker WPT Borgata Open

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Players Championship Final Round 12:30 p.m. (26) ESPN College Football Live Live 1:00 p.m. (26) ESPN NFL Live Live 2:00 p.m. (25) ROOT Soccer EPL 4:00 p.m. (2) CBUT Hockey NHL Toronto Maple Leafs vs. Boston Bruins Stanley Cup Playoffs Conference Quarter-final Game 7 Live (26) ESPN Baseball MLB Live (27) ESPN2 NFL Live (25) ROOT Action Sports World Tour X Fighters 5:00 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA Playoffs Live

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12:30 p.m. (26) ESPN College Football Live Live 1:00 p.m. (26) ESPN NFL Live Live 3:30 p.m. (47) GOLF Inside the

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3:30 p.m. (47) GOLF Golf LPGA

Chicago White Sox vs. Minnesota Twins Live 11:00 a.m. (47) GOLF Golf Highlights 12:30 p.m. (26) ESPN College Football Live Live 1:00 p.m. (26) ESPN NFL Live Live 3:30 p.m. (47) GOLF European Tour Weekly (25) ROOT Mariners Pre-game Show Live 4:00 p.m. (2) CBUT Hockey NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs Live (26) ESPN Baseball MLB Live (27) ESPN2 NFL Live (25) ROOT Baseball MLB Seattle Mariners vs. New York Yankees Live (31) TNT Basketball NBA Playoffs Live 6:30 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA Playoffs Live 7:00 p.m. (26) ESPN Baseball Tonight Live (25) ROOT Mariners Post-game Live 8:00 p.m. (10) KWPX WWE Main Event 9:00 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Baseball Tonight Live (31) TNT Inside the NBA Live

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SATURDAY

6:00 a.m. (27) ESPN2 NASCAR Now Live 7:00 a.m. (26) ESPN X Games Live 9:00 a.m. (34) SPIKE Xtreme 4x4 9:30 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Lacrosse

NCAA Division I Tournament Quarterfinal Live (25) ROOT Mariners Pre-game Show Live 10:00 a.m. (5) KING Hockey NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs Live (47) GOLF Golf PGA Byron Nelson Championship Round 3 Live (25) ROOT Baseball MLB Seattle Mariners vs. Cleveland Indians Live Noon (7) KIRO Golf PGA Byron Nelson Championship Round 3 Live (26) ESPN Softball NCAA Regional Live (27) ESPN2 Lacrosse NCAA Division I Tournament Quarter-final Live (47) GOLF Golf WEB.COM BMW Charity Pro AM Round 3 Live 12:30 p.m. (8) GBLBC Golf PGA Byron Nelson Championship Round 3 Live (13) KCPQ Baseball MLB Live 1:00 p.m. (4) KOMO X Games

Physical over-the-air channel numbers have changed for many U.S. and Canadian stations with the end of analog broadcasting, but may show up correctly as “virtual” channels on many digital televisons and converters. Cable channel numbers are not expected to change.

Grid Abbreviations (L) - Live (N) - New Episode (P) - Series Premiere (25) ROOT Mariners Post-game Live 1:30 p.m. (5) KING Horse Racing The Preakness Live 2:00 p.m. (47) GOLF Golf LPGA Mobile Bay Classic Round 3 Live 2:30 p.m. (26) ESPN Softball NCAA Regional Live (27) ESPN2 Drag Racing NHRA Kansas Nationals Qualifying 4:00 p.m. (2) CBUT Hockey NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs Live (10) CITY (25) ROOT Soccer MLS Portland Timbers vs. Vancouver Whitecaps Live 5:00 p.m. (26) ESPN X Games

(SP) - Season Premiere (F) - Series Finale (SF) - Season Finale 6:00 p.m. (48) FX Mixed Martial

Arts UFC Fight Night Belfort vs. Rockhold 7:00 p.m. (2) CBUT Hockey NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs (27) ESPN2 Baseball Tonight Live 7:30 p.m. (5) KING Soccer MLS FC Dallas vs. Seattle Sounders FC Live 9:00 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Baseball Tonight Live 2:00 a.m. (47) GOLF Golf EPGA World Match Play Championship Final Day Live Port Angeles Peninsula Daily News, WA: Sports May 12, 2013 to May 18, 2013

May 12 - 18, 2013

3


feature story

Prime Time Magic

‘Once Upon A Time’ builds up to season finale come together. Season 2 of “Once Upon a Time” has seen the town’s people besieged by wicked witches, wraiths, curses, here’s no rest for the wicked. pirates and more. The season This is good news for TV finale, airing Sunday, May 12, on watchers, since there’s no shortage of wicked on television these ABC, promises to deliver even more excitement and drama. days. As “Once Upon a Time” gears Shows dealing with the up for its Season 2 finale, emosupernatural are hot, and the tions are high, and a lot is on trend shows no signs of slowing the line. In a recent interview down. Along with vampires and with “TV Line,” producer Adam werewolves (“The Vampire Diaries,” “True Blood”) and ghosts Horowitz said: “What we’re really and ghouls (“Supernatural,” excited about is the emotion that “American Horror Story”), fairy we’re going for between these tales are all the rage. “Beauty and characters and what they’re the Beast,” “Grimm” and “Once about to experience. We’re hopeUpon a Time” all have storylines fully pushing them to a new place based on fairy tales, but only one both emotionally . . . and maybe show has all of the usual suspects literally.” in once place. As the characters battle their In Storybrooke, Maine, a town own demons — and often each populated exclusively by exiled other — it sounds like something fairy-tale characters who must huge is on the horizon for Storyfight evil at every turn, all of your brooke. The last two episodes of favorite fairy-tale characters the season are titled “Second Star By Shona Dustan TV Media

T

to the Right,” “And Straight On ‘Til Morning,” implying a possible leap into Neverland, the world of Peter Pan, who has not yet made an appearance. Season 2 premiered with a bang in September, with ABC drawing its best ratings for the Sunday night timeslot in three years. The series has remained solid, thanks largely to its recognizable cast and its familiar characters. “Once Upon a Time” follows a family torn apart by a wicked witch’s spell. Snow White and Prince Charming’s daughter, Emma, escapes the spell and grows up in our world as an orphan, destined to return to her family and break the curse that holds her people captive. As this season began, Emma had succeeded in breaking the spell, and the magic of Storybrooke is restored. However, the residents remain in exile, unable to return home to their

own world. As the season progresses, more beloved fairy-tale characters are introduced, both hero (Sleeping Beauty, Mulan) and villain (Capt. Hook, Dr. Frankenstein). Weaving together storylines of the characters’ past and the present, viewers learn about their previous lives in a fairy-tale land as the current drama unfolds. “Once Upon a Time” draws heavily on the talent of its three solid female leads. These ladies have had impressive careers so far, and the show can thank their performances for its success. Ginnifer Goodwin stars as Mary Margaret Blanchard — also known as Snow White. Goodwin has appeared on the big screen frequently throughout her career, and some of her most memorable roles have been in Oscar-winning films such as “Walk the Line” (2005) and “A Single Man” (2009). The actress has also done

Jennifer Morrison stars in “Once Upon a Time.” her fair share of television, most notably co-starring in “Big Love” (2006-2011) for all five seasons. Lana Parrilla may not be a household name, but her face will definitely be familiar to most. She has had starring roles in shows such as “Spin City” (2000-2002), “24” (2005) and “Boomtown” (2002-2003), as well as gueststarring roles in “JAG,” Lost,” “NYPD Blue” and “Six Feet Under.” She is Regina Mills in “Once Upon a Time,” former evil queen and caster of the curse that landed the characters in Storybrooke. Jennifer Morrison should be familiar to most viewers — in fact, she’s hard to miss these days. Before playing Emma —

the long-lost daughter of Snow White and Prince Charming, and destined savior of Storybrooke — she was best known for her role as Dr. Allison Cameron on Fox’s much-loved “House, M.D.” She also had a memorable guest run on the popular sitcom “How I Met Your Mother” and played Captain Kirk’s mother in the J.J. Abrams reboot of “Star Trek” (2009). She infuses the character of Emma with strength and compassion and makes her a strong central character for the rest of the show to rally around. In the meantime, tune in to ABC Sunday, May 14, to find out what’s in store for your favorite fairy-tale characters in “Once Upon a Time.”

Port Townsend Television — Channel 97 Time 8:00 a.m. 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 p.m. 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 a.m. 12:30 a.m.

Monday Tai Chi w/ Michael Gilman Cook with Marie Amazing Facts Artist: Mike Biskup Quiet Time Tales Raising Chickens Tai Chi w/ Michael Gilman May Garden Praise TV Facets of Addiction Quiet Time Tales Words of Peace Olympic Portal Danny Glover LIfestyle Magazine Spiritual Things Issues and Answers Peak Moment Celebrating Aging Fritz World News Media Edge

Tuesday

Wednesday

It is Written Writer: Little Nancy Officer Smith Sea Inside Quiet Time Tales Cook: Arran Stark Kundalini Yoga Veterans Forum Joe Torre Evergreen Washington

Tai Chi w/ Michael Gilman Cook with Marie Amazing Facts Artist: Mike Biskup Quiet Time Tales Raising Chickens

Dennis Feten Presents Peak Moment Artist Workshop

Praise TV

Our View Quiet Time Tales Business Report Veterans Connect Cell Phone Wars May Garden Pedestrian Perils Grace and Truth Music: Namaste

Tai Chi w/ Michael Gilman May Garden

Facets of Addiction Quiet Time Tales Words of Peace Olympic Portal Danny Glover LIfestyle Magazine Spiritual Things Issues and Answers Peak Moment Celebrating Aging Fritz World News Media Edge

Thursday

Friday

It is Written Writer: Little Nancy Officer Smith Sea Inside Quiet Time Tales Cook: Arran Stark Kundalini Yoga Veterans Forum Joe Torre Evergreen Washington

Tai Chi w/ Michael Gilman Cook with Marie Amazing Facts Artist: Mike Biskup Quiet Time Tales Raising Chickens

Dennis Feten Presents Peak Moment Artist Workshop

Praise TV

Our View Quiet Time Tales Business Report Veterans Connect Cell Phone Wars May Garden Pedestrian Perils Grace and Truth Music: Namaste

Tai Chi w/ Michael Gilman May Garden

Facets of Addiction Quiet Time Tales Words of Peace Olympic Portal Danny Glover LIfestyle Magazine Spiritual Things Issues and Answers Peak Moment Celebrating Aging Fritz World News Media Edge

Saturday

Sunday

It Is Written Writer: Little Nancy Officer Smith Sea Inside Quiet Time Tales Cook: Arran Stark Kundalini Yoga Veterans Forum Joe Torre Evergreen Washington

Tai Chi w/ Michael Gilman Cook with Marie Amazing Facts Jesus TV

Dennis Feten Presents Peak Moment Artist Workshop

Praise TV

Our View Quiet Time Tales Business Report Veterans Connect Cell Phone Wars May Garden Pedestrian Perils Grace and Truth

Tai Chi w/ Michael Gilman May Garden

Facets of Addiction Quiet Time Tales Words of Peace Olympic Portal Danny Glover LIfestyle Magazine Spiritual Things Issues and Answers Peak Moment Celebrating Aging Fritz World News Media Edge

Music: Namaste

For up-to-the-minute schedule information, go to porttownsendtv.blogspot.com. Port Townsend City Council and Port Townsend School Board meetings air every week on Channel 98.

4

MAY 12 - 18, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS


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Wow 4 Shoe style 5 Refined 6 Actress, Patty Duke __ 7 __ Network (Cable channel) 8 DreamWorks SKG ...the ‘G’ in it 9 Fashionable magazine 10 Isaac’s elder son 11 Rip apart 16 Poet/author Ms. Angelou 19 Sound of laughter 20 Goldie’s longtime love 21 “Moby Dick” (1956) character, Captain __ 22 Pulls along 26 In _ __ (Up the proverbial creek) 27 Atkins = Low__ diet 28 Model-making purchases 32 “__, Trains and Automobiles” (1987) 33 Aristocratic title 34 Stop, for one, on a street 35 Like many superheroes

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Swordfish (2001, Thriller) Hugh Jackman, American American Futurama Futurama Bloopers Bloopers FOX Career Company Program Program Program Program Program Program Halle Berry, John Travolta. Dad Dad KCPQ Day Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Sport Big Coast Fishful Sportfis- Van. Living on

Blood on the Sun (1945, Drama) Sylvia CHEK News at 5 E! Key of Program Program Program Program Program Fishing Thinking hing Chronicles Location Sidney, Wallace Ford, James Cagney. CHEK David Hour of Power Word Church of EP Weekly Reviews Tow Biz Ed's Up Murdoch Mysteries The Shopping Murdoch Mysteries The Glenn Glenn Glenn CITY Travels the Rock Channel Liquidator Martin Martin Martin Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid

Picture This! (2008, Comedy) Robbie

Chicago (2002, Musical) Renée MNT Paid Zellweger, Richard Gere, Catherine Zeta-Jones. KZJO Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Amell, Lauren Collins, Ashley Tisdale. In Touch P. Point Is Written Answers Change King Kingdom J. Hagee Marriage J. Prince G.Dickow Potter's Enjoy-Life Lead Way R. Morris J.Osteen K. Shook KTBW Love Criminal Minds Criminal Minds "The Criminal Minds "Big Bates Motel "The Bates Motel "A Boy Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping American American American American A&E "Outfoxed" Fight" Sea" Man in Number 9" and His Dog" Wars Wars Wars Wars Hoggers Hoggers Hoggers Hoggers The Killing "72

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Mr. Deeds ('02, Com) Adam Sandler.

Nacho Libre Jack Black. COM

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Ice Age: The Meltdown Dog Blog Dog Blog Jessie Jessie Jessie A.N.T. Dog Blog Jessie Shake Up GoodLuck GoodLuck DISN Phineas SportsC- Baseball StronStronStronStronStronStronStronStronStrongman SportsCenter Baseball Tonight (L) MLB Baseball L.A. ESPN enter T. (L) gman gman gman gman gman gman gman gman A./Chi.W. (L) E:60 NCAA Lacrosse Tournament First Round (L) T op Ten SportsN- Auto Racing American LeMans Series Site: Poker 2012 World Poker 2012 World Poker 2012 World ESPN2 ation Laguna Seca Raceway -- Salinas, Calif. Series Series Series

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Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007, Adventure)

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood FAM Hairspray Rupert Grint, Daniel Radcliffe. Rupert Grint, Emma Watson, Daniel Radcliffe. Prince ('09, Adv) Daniel Radcliffe. The Salzburg Connection ('72,

The Good Son ('93, Thril)

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21 (2008, Drama) Kate Bosworth, Kevin FXM

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Forgetting Sarah Marshall ('08, Com) Mila Kunis, Jason Segel. FX Mother

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CNN COM (17) CSPAN (56)

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Coming to America ('88, Com) Arsenio Hall, Eddie Murphy. Kevin Hart: Seriously Funny Aziz/Delicious Pete Holmes: Devil (N) 107* 249* Commons Road to the Whitehouse Q&A Commons Road to the Whitehouse Washington This Week 210 350 Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Great Bear Stakeout (P) (N) Great Bear Stakeout 182* 278* "Before the Freeze" "Fueling the Fire" "Snow, Cold and Darkness" Austin/ Ally A.N.T. Farm Jessie Good Luck ... Dog Blog Shake It Up Austin/ Ally Jessie Austin/ Ally Jessie Good Luck ... A.N.T. Farm 173 291 MLB Baseball Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim vs. Chicago SportsCenter The day's news in the world SportsCenter The day's news in the world SportsCenter The day's news 140 206 White Sox Site: U.S. Cellular Field -- Chicago, Ill. (L) of sports. of sports. in the world of sports. Poker 2012 World Series Poker 2012 World Series Poker 2012 World Series Poker 2012 World Series MLB Baseball Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim vs. Chicago 144 209 Main Event Main Event Main Event White Sox Site: U.S. Cellular Field -- Chicago, Ill.

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 (2010, Adventure) Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, America's Funniest Home 180* 311* Prince ('09, Adv) Daniel Radcliffe. Daniel Radcliffe. Videos

The Social Network FXM

The Social Network (2010, Biography) Rooney FXM

Doomsday (2008, Action) Jeremy Crutchley, Rhona FMC ('10, Bio) Jesse Eisenberg. Presents Mara, Jesse Eisenberg. Presents Mitra, Caryn Peterson. Stossel Huckabee To Be Announced Stossel Fox News FNC To Be Announced Cupcake Wars (N) Iron Chef America (N) Restaurant: Impossible (N) Rest. "Ristorante Barolo" FOOD Chopped: All Stars "Final" Iron Chef America

Step Brothers ('08, Com) John C. Reilly, Will Ferrell. FX

The Waterboy ('98, Com) Kathy Bates, Adam Sandler.

Step Brothers ('08, Com) John C. Reilly, Will Ferrell. Live from the Players Championships Live from the Players Championships GOLF Live from the Players Championships Your Love Never Fails ('11, Com) Elisa Donovan. The Confession ('13, Dra) Katie Leclerc, Sheri Stringfield. Frasier Frasier HALL

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(8) GBLBC (9)

6

A Mother's Nightmare ('12, Abducted: The Carlina White Story (2012, Mystery) Sherri Army Wives "Reckoning" The Client List "What Part Abducted: The Carlina Dra) Annabeth Gish. Shepherd, Aunjanue Ellis, Keke Palmer. (N) of No" (N) White Story Keke Palmer. MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary Meet the Press Tuna "Endgame" (SF) (N) Ult.Survival "Arctic Hell" (N) Wicked Tuna "Endgame" Ult.Survival "Arctic Hell" Wicked Tuna Wicked Tuna SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob See Dad (N) W endellVinn

Clueless ('95, Com) Alicia Silverstone. Friends Friends MLS Soccer Chivas U.S.A. vs. Champions Tennis Courier vs. McEnroe -- Atlanta, Ga. MLB Baseball Oakland Athletics vs. Seattle Mariners Site: Safeco Field -- Seattle, Wash. Portland Timbers Bar Rescue

Four Brothers (2005, Action) Tyrese Gibson, Andre Benjamin, Mark

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006, Action) Brandon Lucky Wahlberg. Brendel, Zachery Ty Bryan, Lucas Black. Number Sl... Outlander

Star Trek: Generations ('94, Sci-Fi) William Shatner, Patrick Stewart.

Star Trek: Nemesis ('02, Sci-Fi) Jonathan Frakes, Patrick Stewart. Movie

Meet the Browns (2008, Comedy/Drama) Angela

Why Did I Get Married? (2007, Comedy/Drama) Sharon Leal, Janet I Can Do Bad All by Myself ('09, Bassett, Rick Fox, D. Mann. Jackson, Tyler Perry. Com/Dra) Taraji P. Henson, Tyler Perry.

Roughly Speaking ('45,

I Remember Mama (1948, Drama) Barbara Bel Geddes, Oscar The Secret of the Tomb Early Bio) Rosalind Russell. Homolka, Irene Dunne. Summer ('51) Long Island Long Island Long Island Long Island Long Island "On the Road" Medium (N) Medium (N) Breaking Amish/Brave (N) Long Island Long Island NBA Basketball Playoffs (L) Inside the NBA (L)

Biker Boyz ('03, Act) Derek Luke, Laurence Fishburne.

DOA: Dead or Alive Jaime Pressly.

Robots ('05, Ani) Ewan McGregor. TeenTita Looney The Oblongs King of Hill King of Hill Cleveland Family Guy Family Guy Jamaica Bared Extreme Trip Flip Red, White Extreme Factories (N) Burger Land Burger Land Toy Hunter Toy Hunter Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls King-Queens Law&O.:SVU "Paternity" Law & Order: SVU "Closet" Law & Order: S.V.U. "Sin" Law&O.:SVU "Responsible" Law&O.:SVU "Undercover" Suits "The Strong Survive" Met Mother Met Mother WGN News Inst. Replay 30 Rock 30 Rock Rules of Eng Rules of Eng Scrubs Scrubs Sunny Sunny

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

133 258 205 360 110* 231* 136* 248* 136* 248* 312* 112* 229* 120* 269*

Sunday bestbets

Jeff Probst hosts “Survivor: Caramoan: Fans vs. Favorites.”

Once Upon a Time (4) KOMO

8:00 p.m.

A season of magical twists and turns winds to a close in this finale. Jennifer Morrison stars as a tough young woman who’s lured into a fairy-tale land after she discovers she’s actually the daughter of Snow White and Prince Charming.

Survivor: Caramoan — Fans vs. Favorites (7) KIRO (8) GBLBC

8:00

p.m.

It all comes down to one last tribal council as the remaining players face the jury in this special two-hour season finale. Immediately after the winner is announced, Jeff Probst hosts a reunion show featuring interviews with this season’s cast.

Revenge (4) KOMO (10) CITY

9:00

p.m.

168* 241*

Danger lurks in the shadows and one catastrophic event threatens to change everyone’s lives in the first part of this season finale. Later, a shocking death forces Emily to consider the ramifications of her path of revenge.

122* 284*

Mad Men

139* 247*

(39) AMC

108* 252* 209 356 186 276 171 300 426 687

132 256 183* 280* 138* 245* 176* 296* 215* 277* 106* 304* 105* 242* 239 307

10:00 p.m.

The staff of Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce struggles to appease competing clients. At the same time, an unexpected guest blindsides Pete. Starring Golden Globe winner Jon Hamm, the drama chronicles the tumultuous lives of ad agency employees in the 1960s. MAY 12 - 18, 2013

7


WEEKDAY EARLY MORNING MAY 13 TO MAY 17 12

W (2) (4) (5)

CBC CBUT

ABC KOMO

NBC KING

(6) KONG (7)

CBS KIRO

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ION

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CW KSTW

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FOX KCPQ

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Office/K Kimmel

CITY

(M) The Office

CABLE CHANNELS Various DuckDy A&E

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M T W Th F

(49) ANPL

(70)

M T BRAVO W Th F

(24) CNBC (40)

CNN

(56)

M T COM W Th F

(17) CSPAN

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DISC

M T W Th F

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(64)

M T ESPN W Th F M T ESPN2 W Th F FAM

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FMC

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FNC

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Various Various Stroumbo- The Lang and O'Leary CoronaVarious (M) Dragon ulopoulos Exchange tion Street Off Air (:35) Burn (:05) Paid (:35) Paid (:05) Paid (:35) ABC World News Now /(:35) News Program Program Program Dateline/- (:35) Paid (M) Meet the Press / (M) (:05) (:35) Paid (M) (:05) (:35) Paid Paid /(:35) LateN Paid /LLast Call (:05) Paid Program (:05) Today Show (M) Extra Law & (M) (M) Ba- (M) (M) P aid Green/Paid/B Weekend Order: C.I. Hollywood Magazine Paid/A Access ggage Paid/M Money Program (M) Face Paid/(:35) (M) P aid Paid/(:35) Judy/(:05) (M) Up to the Minute / (:35) Up to Paid the Nation LateShow Program Paid the Minute Paid/(:05) Paid/(:35) (M) Golf The (:35) Ent. Various (:35) Paid (:05) Paid (:35) Paid Player's Ch.. Tonight Program Program Program ET Can. J.Probst (11:00) Europe Unleash the Power of the Female Brain Off Air (11:30) Perfect Health Gospel of Elvis Vera Dr. Wayne Dyer Masterpiece Classic Protect Your Memory Victor Borge: Comedy in Music Constitution USA (11:30) The Quantum Activists Happiness Advantage Extraordinary Women Various Various Various Paid Paid Always ‘70sShow/ Death/FF r- (M) Raise Your Excused Trisha Frasier Case/SScrubs Sunny Voice/D Death asier (M) The Kojak (M) Naked Night (M) P eter (M) M r. (M) Route 66 / Combat Fugitive City Gallery G/M Mission Lucky Paid/A Paid Everybody (M) Acc- (M) (M) F ox (M) F ox (M) Ray .Jim Paid/TTMZ W./PP aid TMZ/PP aid Program Loves Ray Acc.Jim/R W./PP aid Liquidation Channel

4

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PIE 10 Buildings Changed Antiques Roadshow Secrets of the Dead Paid (M Th) Paid Paid Paid Program Program 12 O'Clock High Dish Nation

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5

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5:30

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KING 5 Early Morning KING 5 News News Shepherd's Chapel America's Funniest Home Videos KIRO 7 Eyewitness KIRO 7 Eyewitness News News Early Morning News Morning News Contrary Tavis Smiley

BBC World WordWNews orld

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Clifford the Big Red Dog

Various Paid Gospel Life Today Truth J.Robison Enjoying Life Today Life J.Robison Q13 Fox News This Morning (M) Enjoying Paid/N News Life Breakfast Television

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Daniel MathSqd/(: (:55) Fuzzy 45) Animal /O On-Go! Tiger Good Morning America

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Paid Paid Bible Kenneth Paid Paid Copeland Program Program My Three Donna That Girl Sons Reed Q13 Fox News This Morning Place for Miracles

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The Cat in the Hat Knows a Lot About That Int’lFellow. Paid Program I Love Lucy

Life Today Paid J.Robison Program

Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Bounty Bounty Bounty (F) Bounty SmallTo SmallTo (:45) Stooge Paid Program (:50) CSI: Miami (:50) Stooge Movie

The Transporter (Act, '02)

Cool Runnings (Com, '93) John Candy. Small To CSI: Miami (:15)

The Truman Show (Dra, '98) Jim Carrey.

Made of Honor (Com, '08) Patrick Dempsey. (:55) Mad Men

Liar Liar (Com, '97) Jim Carrey. Small To Small To

Reign of Fire (Act, '02) Christian Bale. CSI: Miami Various WildDeep Various WildDeep Various Various Wildman Various WildDeep Various WildDeep Whale Wars: Viking Cat Diary Cat Diary Dogs 101 Married to Medicine The Real Housewives FashionQ. Watch Married to Medicine Paid Paid Paid Paid To Be Announced Program Program Program Program To Be Announced Vanderpump Rules Beverly Hills Vanderpump Rules Housewives Atlanta Million Dollar List Shahs of Sunset Millionaire Beverly Hills Millionaire To Be Announced Watch Rachel Brad Dukes Beverly Hills Watch L.A. Shrinks H.Wives Kathy Watch Housewives Atlanta To Be Announced To Be Announced Kathy (M) Special (Th F) Paid Worldwide Exchange Worldwide Exchange Squawk Box Squawk on the Street Anthony/ Piers M. R.Source/ Anderson (M) Anderson/EEarly (M) Early Start Starting Point CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Seriously Funny Tosh.O Schumer SouthPk (:35) Pete Holmes (:35) Sunny (:05) Sunny Comedy South Park A.Schumer The Daily The Work Chappelle Chappelle A.Schumer It's Always Entourage Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Tosh.O A.Schumer Show With Colbert A.Schumer Workaholics JeselnikO Sunny in Comedy Report South Park South Park Jon Work Futurama Ugly Swardson PhiladelStewart phia Tosh.O Tosh.O

Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure J.DeRosa Off Air (Tu) Politics & Public Washington Journal (F) House of Repres. (M) Politics Today / (Tu-Th) House of Repres. Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid (11:00) Great Bear Alaska/Frontier Alaska/Frontier Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced Back Oil Backyard Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch The Big Brain Theory MythBusters MythBusters To Be Announced Back Oil Back Oil Hillbilly B. Hillbilly B. Wizards Wizards SuiteL SuiteL GoodLuck Movie Wizards Wizards Suite/ Suite Suite/ Suite Fish Hooks Phineas Movie Various Einstein Chugg. Mouse Jake SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SprtC Basketball Playoffs NBA Highlight SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter Baseball MLB SportsCenter SportsCenter Baseball MLB Basketball NBA Mike & Mike ESPN First Take SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsNation SportsCenter SportsCenter E:60 E:60 SportsCenter SportsCenter Basket. Playoffs NBA NFL Live Osteen Shook Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid (M) Paid Paid Paid J. Prince Life Today Enjoy-Life Various Boy-World Boy-World Boy-World Boy-World (:15) FXM

The French Connection II (Cri, '75) FXM

The House on 92nd Street

Three Came Home (War, '50)

The Man Who Never Was (War, '56) Movie

Wizards (Ani, '77) Bob Holt. Bartok the Magnificent (Ani, '99)

Bright Eyes (Mus, '34)

Five of a Kind (Com, '38)

The Blue Bird (Fant, '76) (:45) Bartok the Magnificent

Modern Problems (Com, '81) (:35)

Hot Shots! (Com, '91)

A Wing and a Prayer (:45)

The Red Skies of Montana

Untamed (Rom, '55) Tyrone Power. Movie Movie (:50) FXM

End of the Game (Dra, '75) Jon Voight.

A Blueprint fo... (:20)

Whirlpool (Dra, '49) José Ferrer. The Eyes of Annie J... (:15) Mark of the Devil ('84) Movie

The Omen II: Damien (:50)

Heaven With a Barbe...

Margie (Com, '46) (:45)

Laura (Myst, '44) (:15)

The Man Who Never Was

Boy On a Dolphin (M) Huckabee/R Red Eye Stossel/O O’Reilly Factor FOX & Friends First Fox & Friends America's Newsroom Happening Now (:10) Mad Men (:10) CSI: Miami (11:00)

The Sentinel (Act, '06) Mad Men

MAY 12 - 18, 2013

Various

6

Steven and Chris

CHEK

(37)

(39)

1

W - Wave Broadband

(:15) CSI: Miami (:15) CSI: Miami SmallTo (:35)

The Breakfast Club (Dra, '85)

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS


WEEKDAY EARLY MORNING MAY 13 TO MAY 17 W

12

M T (53) FOOD W Th F M T W (48) FX Th F M T (47) GOLF W Th F

Iron Chef America Restaurant Restaurant Cupcake Wars Paid Program Paid Program Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Chefs of Beverly H. Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Inspect. Meat Men Restaurant Restaurant Stakeout Diners Diners Restaurant Dinner: Impossible Chopped Giving You Business Iron Chef America Chopped AceCake Invention

Baby Mama (Com, '08) Tina Fey. Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid

Baby Mama (Com, '08) Tina Fey. Paid Paid Paid Paid Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program

Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (11:00)

The Proposal (Com, '09) Smarter (10:30)

Star Trek

Kiss of the Dragon (Act, '01)

Blow (Dra, '01) Johnny Depp. (10:30)

The Fig... Two 1/2... Two 1/2... Rescue Me Justified Justified

Undisputed (Act, '02) Ving Rhames. Biased

Death Race (Act, '08) Joan Allen, Jason Statham. Paid Paid Paid Paid Smarter Smarter

Deception Live from the Players Championships Players Championship Players Championship Morning Drive Morning Drive Morning Drive Product Product Product Product Golf Central Product Paid Showcase Showcase Showcase Showcase Showcase PGA Tour Golf Cent. Card Golf Cent. Golf World Match Play Championship EPGA Site: Thracian Cliffs Golf Club Kavarna, Bulgaria Morning Drive Golf G. Goose Card G. Goose Golf World Match Play Championship Site: Thracian Cliffs Golf Club Kavarna, Bulgaria Frasier Frasier G. Girls G. Girls G.Girls G.Girls Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy G. Girls G. Girls Various (F) Rehab HouseH House Various Various Various FlipFlop Paid Program Paid Program Paid Various Various Various Various Various Ax Men Ax Men Swamp People (:05) Only in America Classroom The Real West Weird Weapons InfoInfoInfoInfoDocume- Docume- Docume- InfoInfoAmerican Pickers American Pickers American Pickers (:05) American Pickers DocumeCivil War Journal Modern Marvels ntary ntary ntary ntary Docume- Docume- Modern Marvels CountCars CountCars CountCars CountCars Restore Restore (:05) Restore (:35) Restore Alaska: Big America ntary ntary Pawn Star Pawn Star Only in America Star Trek Legacy Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People Only in America (:05) How Sex Changed Save Our History American Pickers (M) Ruth (Th) Report (Th) P .Lord (M) N ews Israel Various Various Gospel J.Prince K. Shook Various Enjoy-Life Creflo J. Hagee J. Prince B. Hinn Voice Various Various A.Wife/ DanceMom/ TBA Various Abducted:/D DanceM/TTBA Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Balance Balance Christine Frasier Various (M) Futura Various Paid Paid Paid Paid C.Faith/P Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid (M) MSNBC Doc./A All in (M) P ress/R R.Maddow First Look Way Early Morning Joe The Daily Rundown Jansing and Co. MSNBC News Live Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Crop Circles Bermuda Triangle Truth/ Lost Ark Amish: Out/ Order Amish: Out/ Order Amish: Out/ Order Program Program Program Program Program Program Outlaw Bikers Taboo Taboo Taboo Outlaw Bikers Biker Chicks Breakout Breakout Breakout Taboo Locked Up Abroad Locked Up Abroad Explorer Impossible Hotel Tokyo: Living Small Incredible Islands Hitler and the Occult Hitler's Hidden City Inside Combat Rescue Inside Combat Rescue Inside Combat Rescue When Aliens Attack (:05) Friends (:40) Friends SeeDad (:45) Lopez (:20) Lopez (:50) Lopez (:25) My Wife and Kids WifeKid Yes, Dear Yes, Dear Full House Full House Full House Sponge Sponge Sponge Max Post-game Soccer Chivas U.S.A. vs. Portland Timbers MLS Poker Borgata Open WPT Poker Borgata Open WPT UFC Unleashed Paid In Depth Mariners Paid Paid Paid Paid Program Program Program Program UFC Reloaded MMA Showdown Poker After Dark The Dan Patrick Show Sailing Fitness Paid Baseball Seattle Mariners vs. New York Yankees MLB Site: Yankee Stadium Bronx, N.Y. Dew Tour Game 365 Mariners Planet X Fitness Tenants Various Various Various Various Various Various Various Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program (11:30)

Star Trek: Insurrection Weird or What? Weird or What? Weird or What? Weird or What? CableClass Paid Warehouse 13 Paid Paid Paid Program Program Program Program Haunted Highway Warehouse 13 Continuum Continuum Continuum Paid Paid Paid Paid Program Program Weird or What? Mammoth (Sci-Fi, '06) Vincent Ventresca. Mandrake (Sci-Fi, '10) Benito Martinez. Ghost Hunters D.S. Paranormal The Life After Death Project Haunted Collector Twilight Twilight Weird or

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Our Family Wedding (Com, '10)

Norbit (Com, '07) Eddie Murphy. Married, My Name Name Earl Fresh With With Prince of Prince of With Children Is Earl The Office Conan The Office

The Upside of Anger (Dra, '05) Joan Allen. Married Children Children Bel Air Bel Air WhoLast

The Women (Com, '08) Annette Bening, Meg Ryan. For Better Children Earl

(60) HALL (30) HGTV

(42)

HIST

M T W Th F

KTBW LIFE (22) KZJO (65) MSNBC (38)

M T (63) NGEO W Th F (41)

NICK

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TBS

(35)

TCM

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TLC TNT

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USA

WGN

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The Office The Office

Confessions of a Shopaholic (Com, '09) For Better Married Married Earl Name Earl Men/Work Office Coming & Going (Rom, '11) Rhys Darby. Married Married Married Name Earl (11:30) Early Summer ('51) (:45)

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The 400 Blows Masculin-Feminin (:15)

Cimarron (West, '31) Irene Dunne, Richard Dix.

Giant (Rom, '56) Elizabeth Taylor, Rock Hudson. (:15)

Taking of Pelham One Two Three

The Secret Six (Myst, '31)

Lydia (Rom, '41) (:15)

Journey Into Fear

The Third Man (Susp, '49) Movie (11:00)

Pennies...

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Born Yesterday (Dra, '50)

A Star Is Born (Mus, '54) James Mason, Judy Garland.

My Sister Eileen (Rom, '55) Movie (:45)

A Man for All Seasons (Dra, '66) Paul Scofield. The Thrill Hunter (:15) Mad Holiday The Thirteenth Chair (:45) Pierre Of The Plains

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

MAY 12 - 18, 2013

9


WEEKDAY DAYTIME MAY 13 TO MAY 17 9

W (2) (4) (5) (6) (7)

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100 Huntley Super Dinosaur WHY! Train Paid Paid Family Family Feud Feud Leave It to Leave It to Beaver Beaver Q13 Fox News This Morning Paid Paid Program Program CityLine

PBS

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CW KSTW

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Heartland

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Dr. Phil

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Sid Wild Science Kratts Paid Paid The Steve Harvey Show Perry Mason

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Murdoch Mysteries

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As Good as It Gets (Com, '97) Helen Hunt, Jack Nicholson.

Hackers (Dra, '95) Matthew Lillard, Angelina Jolie.

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First 48/(F) The Glades Movie

Man on Fire CSI: Miami Freakshow (Act, '90) Steven Seagal. To Be Announced The Real Housewives The Real Housewives The Real Housewives Vanderpump Rules Vanderpump Rules Vanderpump Rules Beverly Hills Beverly Hills Beverly Hills Million Dollar List Million Dollar List Million Dollar List Million Dollar List Million Dollar List Millionaire Millionaire Millionaire Millionaire Dukes Brad The Rachel Zoe Project Million Dollar List Million Dollar List Million Dollar List Million Dollar List Million Dollar List Million Dollar List Million Dollar List H.Wives The Real Housewives The Real Housewives The Real Housewives The Real Housewives The Real Housewives The Real Housewives The Real Housewives L.A. Shrinks Millionaire Wedding Wedding Wedding Tardy for Wedding To Be Announced Housewives Atlanta Housewives Atlanta Housewives Atlanta Housewives Atlanta Housewives Atlanta Fast Money Halftime Power Lunch Street Signs Closing Bell Money (F) Options Mad Money The Kudlow Report CNBC Special Around the World CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom The Lead The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer OutFront Anderson Cooper 360 Work Work Work Work Work

Nacho Libre (Com, '06) Jack Black. Futurama Futurama Sunny The Daily The It's Always South Park Comedy Show With Colbert Sunny in Comedy A.Schumer Tosh.O Tosh.O Tosh.O Tosh.O Tosh.O

Saving Silverman (Com, '01) Jack Black. Futurama Futurama Sunny Jon Report Philadel- South Park RENO RENO RENO South Park South Park South Park

Welcome Home, Roscoe Jenkins Futurama Futurama Sunny Stewart phia South Park Comedy 30 Rock 30 Rock 30 Rock 30 Rock South Park South Park

Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure Futurama Futurama South Park HalfHour Half Hour

Superstar (Com, '99) Molly Shannon.

Balls of Fury (Com, '07) Dan Fogler. Futurama Futurama Sunny (M) H ouse of Repres. U.S. House of Representatives / (F) Politics & Public Policy Today U.S. House of Representatives Politics/ Hearings To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced TBA/(Tu) W ild Alaska TBA/(Tu) W ild Alaska Various Back Oil Various Various Agent Oso Gaspard Phineas GoodLuck GoodLuck GoodLuck Good Luck Dog Blog Dog Blog Dog Blog Mickey Mickey The Little Little Doc Jake and Mickey Charlie Mouse Mouse Octonauts Einsteins Einsteins J. Junction and Lisa McStuffins the Never Mouse Radio Rebel (Dra, '12) Debby Ryan. Jessie Jessie Jessie Clubhouse Clubhouse Clubhouse Land Agent Oso Dog Blog Dog Blog Dog Blog Austin Austin Austin Phineas Pirates J. Junction GoodLuck GoodLuck GoodLuck A.N.T. A.N.T. A.N.T. Jessie Jessie Jessie Sofia 1st Sofia 1st Mickey Mouse Club Sofia 1st

Cinderella III:... Toy Story

Sky High (Adv, '05) Michael Angarano. SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter Outside College NFL Live Around Pardon the SportsCenter Baseball MLB the Lines Football the Horn InterrupE:60 30 for 30 tion Baseball MLB X Games Barcelona, Spain SportsCenter SportsCenter Count Basketb. Playoffs NBA SportsC. Soccer Copa del Rey A. Mad/R. Mad. UEFA ESPN First Take Numbers Best of First Take Dan Le SportsNation NFL 32 Around Pardon the NFL Live 30 for 30 Never Lie Batard the Horn Interrup30 for 30 tion

M T DISN W Th F M T ESPN W Th F M T ESPN2 W Th SportsCenter SportsCenter Basketb. Combine NBA F Boy-World 700Club The 700 Club Gilmore Girls FAM M Young Jesse James

Murder Inc. (Dra, '60) Henry Morgan. T

Wizards (Ani, '77) Bob Holt.

Modern Problems (Com, '81) FMC W

Thunder & Light...

Robin Hood (Act, '91) Uma Thurman. Th

The Good Son

The Omen II: Damien (Hor, '78) F Movie

Satan Never Sleeps (Dra, '62) William Holden. Happening Now America Live FNC M Paid BBQ Tyler Alex's Day Good Eats Unwrapped T Program Grill It! DownH. HomeMade B. Flay 5 Fix Hungry FOOD W Th Challenge F Big Daddy

MAY 12 - 18, 2013

Out. Lines

X Games Softball Division I Tournament NCAA Update Softball Division I Tournament NCAA Full House Full House Full House Full House Reba Reba Reba Reba '70s Show '70s Show '70s Show '70s Show

21 (Dra, '08) Kate Bosworth, Jim Sturgess. FXM

Doomsday (Act, '08) Caryn Peterson. FXM

2012 (Act, '09)

Down to Earth (Com, '00) FXM

Dr. Seuss' Horton Hears ... FXM

Alvin and the Chipmunks FXM

The Express (Dra, '08) Rob Brown, Dennis Quaid. FXM

Bedazzled (Com, '00) FXM

Extract

The Forgotten (Thril, '04) FXM

Perfect Stranger (Thril, '07) FXM

Premonition (Thril, '07) FXM

Enemy at the Gates (War, '01) Jude Law. FXM

28 Weeks Later (Hor, '07) FXM

Cloverfield Studio B Your World The Five Special Report FOX Report The O'Reilly Factor Barefoot Remakes Ten Dollar Secrets of 30 Minute Giada at Giada at Barefoot Barefoot Paulas Paula Pioneer Dinners a Meals Home Home Contessa Dishes Contessa Meals H.Cook S. Kitchen Restaurant Paulas Barefoot Pioneer Chef Dishes Barefoot H.Cook S. Kitchen H.Made Mex.Easy Restaurant Restaurant Restaurant Restaurant

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WEEKDAY DAYTIME MAY 13 TO MAY 17 9

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Marley and Me (Dra, '08) Owen Wilson.

Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (Dra, '10) Michael Douglas.

The Departed (Thril, '06) Matt Damon, Leonardo DiCaprio.

Wall Street: Mo...

The Departed (Thril, '06) Matt Damon, Leonardo DiCaprio.

Blow (Dra, '01) Rachel Griffiths, Johnny Depp. Two 1/2... Two 1/2... Mother Mother

Blow (Dra, '01)

The One (Act, '01) Delroy Lindo, Jet Li.

Kiss of the Dragon (Act, '01)

Rush Hour 2 (Act, '01) Jackie Chan.

Pineapple Express (Com, '08)

The One (Act, '01) Delroy Lindo, Jet Li.

Rush Hour 2 (Act, '01) Jackie Chan.

Pineapple Express (Com, '08) Seth Rogen. Mother Mother Mother Mother Two 1/2...

Deception

Death Race (Act, '08) Joan Allen, Jason Statham.

The Green Hornet (Act, '11) Seth Rogen. Mother Mother Two 1/2... Two 1/2... Two 1/2... Soul Surfer

Golf The Players Championship PGA Site: TPC Sawgrass Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. Titleist The Golf Fix In Bag? In Bag? Feherty Big Break Mexico Golf Highlights Titleist PGA Tour PGA Tour Learn Big Break Mexico Academy Card Golf BMW Charity Pro AM Web.com Greer, S.C. G olf Pre. Golf Byron Nelson Championship PGA Irving, Texas

Morning Drive

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Home and Family Various Various Various Various Valkyrie: The Plot to Kill Hitler Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Mountain Men Mountain Men Swamp People Swamp People American Pickers American Pickers Various Various Life Today Today W&Grace W&Grace Frasier Frasier WGrace W&Grace W&Grace W&Grace WGrace W&Grace Cops Cops News Nation Wild Justice

Golf Central The Golf Fix Big Break Big Break Golf PGA Tour Academy P. Lessons Greatest Rounds Central European School Card On the Range Golf Mobile Bay Classic LPGA Mobile, Ala. Golf Byron Nelson Ch.. Golf Mobile Bay Classic LPGA Mobile, Ala. Marie/(F) Home/Family Marie Dogs Out The Waltons Little House Prairie Little House Prairie BradyB. BradyB. HouseH House Various Various Various Various Various Various Various Various Various Various 10 Things 10 Things 10 Things 10 Things 10 Things 10 Things 10 Things 10 Things 10 Things 10 Things 10 Things 10 Things Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Mountain Men Mountain Men Mountain Men Mountain Men Mountain Men Mountain Men Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers The 700 Club J. Hagee Various P.Lord (F) P raise the Lord Various Potter BeScenes Various Grey's Anatomy To Be Announced Will & Will & How I Met How I Met Grey's Anatomy Grace Grace Your Your Grey's A. cont'd next Grey's Anatomy 2/2 Wife Swap Wife Swap Mother Mother Grey's Anatomy Grey's Anatomy

Hoarders Steve Wilkos Show Maury Judge Mathis Judge Mathis Cheaters Cheaters The Ricki Lake Show Dish TMZ King of H. King of H. NOW Andrea Mitchell The Cycle Martin Bashir Hardball PoliticsNation Hardball All in With C. Hayes M Alaska State Troopers Border Wars The Numbers Game BrainGa. BrainGa. BrainGa. BrainGa. The Numbers Game The Numbers Game BrainGa. BrainGa. T The '80s: The Decade The '80s: The Decade Polygamy, U.S.A. Taboo The '80s: The Decade Polygamy, U.S.A. W Drugs, Inc. Locked Up Abroad Locked Up Abroad Breakout Drugs, Inc. Locked Up Abroad Th Alaska State Troopers Mountain Movers Polygamy, U.S.A. Taboo Alaska State Troopers Mountain Movers F Grand Canyon Extreme Expeditions Giant Crystal Cave Access 360째 World Explorer How Nature Works Umizoomi Umizoomi Dora Dora Guppies Guppies P. Rabbit Max Dora Dora Sponge Sponge Sponge Parents Parents Parents Sponge Sponge M Paid Soccer EPL ActionSpts X Fighters The Dan Patrick Show Paid Paid The Dan Patrick Show Paid T Program Program Dew Tour In Depth Mariners Baseball Seattle Mariners vs. New York Yankees Pre-game MLB Site: Yankee Stadium Bronx, N.Y. W Horns Hawg Paid The Dan Patrick Show Baseball Seattle Mariners vs. New York Yankees MLB Site: Yankee Show Stadium Bronx, N.Y. Th In Depth Paid Paid Baseball Seattle vs Cleveland MLB F Mariners CSI: NY/(F) Bar Rescue CSI: NY/(F) B ar Rescue Various Various (Tu) Auction Various (Tu) Auction Various (Tu) Auction Various Movie Various (Tu) Auction Various (Tu) Tenants M Defiance

Red Planet (Sci-Fi, '00) Val Kilmer, Carrie-Anne Moss.

Outlander (Sci-Fi, '08) Sophia Myles, James Caviezel.

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Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (Sci-Fi, '82)

Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (Sci-Fi, '84)

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (Sci-Fi, '86) Defiance F Star Trek: Next Gen. Star Trek: Next Gen. Star Trek: Next Gen. Star Trek: Next Gen. Star Trek: Next Gen. Star Trek: Next Gen.

Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (Sci-Fi, '91) Movie Friends M House of Meet the Fresh P. Accord.Jim Loves Ray American American Wipeout Loves Ray Friends Fresh Rules of Rules of Friends Friends The King Browns Prince of EngageEngageDad Dad of Queens T Payne Accord.Jim Ray Bel Air ment ment W Fresh P. Loves Ray Friends Accord.Jim Loves Ray Fresh P. Loves Ray Loves Ray Th Friends F Acc.Jim Friends Friends 2/2 M Les Carottiers Los Calaveras Washington Merry- Go- Round The Captain Hates the Sea

The Girl Downstairs S.O.S. Coast Guard (Act, '37)

Gigi (Mus, '58) T

Saratoga Trunk (Rom, '46) Gary Cooper.

Stage Door (Com, '37)

Show Boat (Mus, '36) Irene Dunne.

So Big (Dra, '53) Jane Wyman.

Kiss of Death W

Walk Softly, St... The Man With a Cloak (Dra, '51) The Steel Trap (Dra, '52)

The Angel Wore Red (War, '60)

Jack of Diamonds (Cri, '67)

Forbidden ... Th Movie

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Guess Who's Coming to Dinner? The Big Fisherman F Spring Madness (Com, '38)

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Ace in the Hole Baby Story Baby Story Various Pregnant Weddings (Tu) I Found What Not to Wear Baby Story Baby Story Coupon Coupon Not-Wear (F) Say Yes Various Various Various Various Supernatural Supernatural Supernatural Bones/(F) Supernatural Bones/(F) Supernatural Bones/(F) Supernatural Bones/(F) Supernatural Castle/B Basket./(F) Super. Basket./ Castle/ Super. M NinjaGo: Johnny MAD Tom and Tom & Jerry Looney Tunes What's What's Almost Scaredy The Johnny Johnny Amazing Amazing Adv.Time Jerry Tales New New Naked Squirrel Looney Test Test World of World of Regular T Masters of Test In Crew ScoobyScoobyAnimals Tunes Gumball Gumball Adv.Time W Spinjitzu MAD Doo? Doo? Show In Crew Finn/ Jake Th F M World's Food Paradise Eats Eats Eats Eats Eats Eats Meat Bizarre Foods Man/Food Man v. World's Anthony Bourdain: No Meat Hottest Reservations T Hottest Breakfast Paradise Border Border Airport Airport Plane Sexy Man/Food Food Feed Beast Feed Beast Bizarre Foods Hotels Hotels W Food Paradise Food Paradise Food Paradise Bizarre Foods Food Paradise Man/Food Th Roads Less Travelled Roads Less Travelled Extreme Houseboats Snacks on a Beach Bizarre Foods F Case Files: National Legends of the Parks Weird Travels Weird Travels Weird Travels The Dead Files The Dead Files The Dead Files MASH MASH MASH/LLucy MASH/LLucy MASH MASH MASH (M) MASH Gunsmoke Bonanza Bonanza (M) Reunion/B Bonanza M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M Chaos (Act, '05) NCIS NCIS NCIS NCIS NCIS NCIS NCIS NCIS T Law & Order: S.V.U. Law & Order: S.V.U. Law & Order: S.V.U. Law & Order: S.V.U. Law & Order: S.V.U. Law & Order: S.V.U. Law & Order: S.V.U. Law & Order: S.V.U. Law & Order: S.V.U. W

Miami Vice (Act, '06) Jamie Foxx, Colin Farrell. Law & Order: C.I. NCIS NCIS NCIS NCIS NCIS Th Burn Notice Burn Notice Burn Notice Burn Notice F Law & Order: C.I. Law & Order: C.I. CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene Law & Order: S.V.U. Law & Order: S.V.U. In Heat of Night News/(W) Baseball MLB Walker/ Baseball MLB (M Tu Th) Walker, TR Walker, Texas Ranger Law:CI (F) V ideos Christine Christine Funniest Home Videos Various Rules

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13


stars on screen

hollywood q&a By Adam Thomlison TV Media

By Andrew Warren TV Media

Q: I was watching “Dinosaurs” on DVD the other day and I noticed the Jim Henson logo pop up. I thought he only did puppets? A: TV and film great Jim Henson was certainly best known for his puppetry work, but in fact that’s what “Dinosaurs” was — partly, at least. The characters on the early-’90s show, structured very much as a traditional family sitcom but with dinosaurs instead of people, were a combination of puppets, robots and actors in costumes. In an interview with the Archive of American Television, series director Bruce Bilson described the set created by Jim Henson’s Creature Shop, saying that it was all made on a raised floor, which allowed puppeteers to handle some characters from below while actors in suits could walk around above. Meanwhile, the faces of these characters were robotic, manipulated via remote control by other puppeteers off-screen. It was a system that the late Henson and his production company had been refining since the classic 1982 film “The Dark Crystal,” and which had been used to great acclaim in the hit 1990 film “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles,” a year before “Dinosaurs” premiered. However, “Dinosaurs” did certainly represent an advancement of the technology. The “L.A. Times,” in a sprawling 1991 story about the show’s then-groundbreaking technology, reported that, while “The Dark Crystal” required eight people to operate a single character’s face, “Dinosaurs” brought that down to one. That brought the spirit very much back to character- and actor-based puppetry. Puppeteer Mack Wilson told the “Times” that, while it did represent a huge challenge, the possibilities were equally large. “You’re creating life at the same time you’re trying to remember dialogue and operate all these servos [robotic sensors],” Wilson said. “The combination of expressions are endless.”

Never say never: Warnings abound. Everywhere we look, labels on everyday products scream “don’t do this” and “never do that.” And it isn’t just labels — we all know better than to stick metal in the microwave oven, thanks to our parents. But for some, it’s at least a little bit tempting to ignore the warnings (not to mention common sense) to find out just what really happens if they throw caution to the wind. Well, two Canadians are shelving their wisdom and putting it all to the test. Award-winning comedian Norm Sousa (“The Sketchersons”) and Teddy Wilson (cohost of Canadian talk show “InnerSPACE”) are teaming up to cohost “Never Ever Do This At Home,” premiering on Spike Tuesday, May 28, following its premiere on Canada’s Discovery Channel earlier in the month. After getting their hands on a charming farmhouse far from the prying eyes of more safety-conscious neighbors, the unqualified duo experiment with setting off fireworks indoors, tossing a propanefilled canister into a fire and heating canned goods directly on the stove. It’s an idea that’s vaguely similar to Discovery’s hit show “Mythbusters,” and, just as in that show, co-hosts Sousa and Wilson of “Never Ever Do This At Home” will also attempt to explain the chemistry and physics behind their explosive experiments. “The combination of science, information and humor will resonate with our ever-broadening audience,” said Spike executive Tom Zappala about the show. “Never Ever Do This At

Q: I was watching “Django Unchained” the other day and thought I recognized the guy who played Butch. Who was he? A: That was James Remar, and there’s a large number of reasons why you might recognize him. He’s been a supporting actor in TV and film for 35 years, having debuted in the forgotten 1978 film “On the Yard.” These days, people know him best as Dexter’s adoptive father, Harry, on the long-running Showtime hit “Dexter.” On film it’s hard to say what his biggest role has been — he’s played an assortment of cops and bad guys in 67 different films so far. He started fairly strongly — he had a prominent role in the cultishly beloved “The Warriors” in 1979 in just his third screen role. He also played the central villain in the hit 1982 comedy “48 Hrs.” opposite Nick Nolte and Eddie Murphy’s good guys. His next role was also a notable one — he played real-life gangster Dutch Schultz in Francis Ford Coppola’s expensive but unsuccessful drama “The Cotton Club” in 1984. Remar failed to deliver on this early promise, though, and his career has settled into a long run of medium-sized roles in medium-sized pictures — “Boys on the Side” (1995), “2 Fast 2 Furious” (2003) — and, occasionally, big roles in small pictures (he played the lead in the forgotten 2009 sci-fi flick “2B”).

Have a question? Email us at questions@tvtabloid.com. Please include your name and town. Personal replies will not be provided.

14

MAY 12 - 18, 2013

Home” is based on a hit format that originated in Norway. With Spike hoping it’ll catch on on this side of the Atlantic, viewers will finally find out why one should never, ever overfill a car’s tires — without risking their own lives. TV to kill for: There’s just something about serial killers that fascinates people. From Showtime’s “Dexter” to the iconic cannibal killer Hannibal Lector (1991’s “The Silence of the Lambs” and NBC’s “Hannibal”), murderous monsters are big draws when they show up onscreen, be it big or small. Now, A&E is getting in on the act with its newest scripted series “Those Who Kill,” which heads into production later this year for a 2014 release. Based on a Danish series that was inspired by the works of bestselling author Elsebeth Egholm, “Those Who Kill” focuses on freshly minted police detective

Catherine Jensen (Chloe Sevigny), a woman who hunts down serial killers. In an interesting twist, the detective also struggles with her past as she investigates her father — a man she suspects of being a serial killer. With Sevigny headlining the cast, the network clearly isn’t pulling any punches with its newest series. The actress is an Academy Award nominee (Best Actress in a Supporting role for 1999’s “Boys Don’t Cry”) and Golden Globe winner (for her role in the HBO series “Big Love”). She’s no stranger to serial killers on screen, either: she had roles in serial killer films “American Psycho” (2000) and “Zodiac” (2007). Signed on to star alongside Sevigny is James D’Arcy (2003’s “Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World”) as forensic psychiatrist Thomas Shaffer, an ally who helps Jensen get inside the mind of serial killers. “’Those Who Kill’ is not a crime procedural about serial killers,” said Bob DeBitteo, A&E’s president. “It’s a deep, serialized character portrait of two compelling yet damaged individuals coming together through the revelation of their dark past.” Watch out for

“Those Who Kill” on A&E next year. A criminal pairing: Two networks are joining forces to bring one of America’s most memorable criminal couples to the TV screen. History and Lifetime recently began filming “Bonnie & Clyde,” a special two-part miniseries scheduled to air on both networks later this year. The real life story of the criminal couple Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker has fascinated people for decades. The Depression-era outlaw duo left a bevy of murdered police officers and civilians behind them as their string of bank robberies captured the imaginations of the nation. Their crime spree has been explored in countless books, movies and TV shows, but with the star-studded cast that’s lined up for this take on the biographical story, it’ll certainly be one to watch. In the roles of the titular Bonnie and Clyde are Holliday Grainger (Showtime’s “The Borgias”) and Emile Hirsch (2004’s “The Girl Next Door”). Other castings include Oscarwinner William Hurt (for 1985’s “Kiss of the Spider Woman”), Sarah Hyland (TV’s “Modern Family”) and Lane Garrison (TV’s “Prison Break”).

Teddy Wilson hosts “Never Ever Do This at Home.” PENINSULA DAILY NEWS


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The Ron Winnipeg Comedy Festival The National An in-depth CBC News: StroumbouJames Show look at the top news stories. Late Night lopoulos Jeopardy! Dancing With the Stars (N) C astle "Watershed" (SF) (N) KOMO 4 Jimmy 4 4 News Kimmel Live Inside The Voice "Live Top 12 Performances" The top 12 artists Revolution "The Longest KING 5 News Tonight 5 Edition perform in front of the coaches for America's vote. (N) Day" (N) Show J. Leno 5 Access Katie Katie Couric tackles a Dr. Phil Dr. Phil offers advice KING 5 News at 10 NorthWest Law & Order: 16 16 Hollywood variety of current issues. on how to lead positive lives. Sports C.I. KIRO 7 News CBS Evening EntertainOMG! Met Your The Big Bang 2 Broke Girls Mike & Molly Hawaii Five-0 "He Welo KIRO News D. Letterman 7 7 News ment Tonight Insider Mother (N) Theory (N) (N) 'Oihana" (N) (N) News Hour EntertainEnt. Tonight

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The Usual Suspects (1995, Crime Story) Gabriel

Man on Fire (2004, Action) Dakota Fanning, Marc Anthony, Denzel Washington.

The Sentinel ('06, Act) 130* 254* Byrne, Stephen Baldwin, Kevin Spacey. Kiefer Sutherland. To Be Announced River Monsters: The Giants Call Wildman Call Wildman River Monsters IceGold "Hitting the Wall" Call Wildman Call Wildman 184* 282* The Real Housewives of Housewives Atlanta A Beverly Hills Social The Real Housewives Newlyweds First Year "The Watch What Happens Live 129* 273* Beverly Hills preview of Super Bowl XLVI. "Whines by Wives" (N) Honeymoon's Over?" (N) (N) CNBC Special CNBC Special Mad Money CNBC Special CNBC Special Paid Paid 208 355 Program Program Piers Morgan Live Anderson Cooper 360 OutFront Anthony Bourdain Anderson Cooper Anthony Bourdain 200 202 Sunny Tosh.O Colbert Daily Show Key & Peele Futurama Futurama South Park South Park South Park Daily Show Colbert 107* 249* Politics & Public Policy Today Politics & Public Policy Today 210 350 To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced 182* 278*

(46) DISN Good Luck ... Jessie MLB Baseball (L) (26) ESPN

(38)

7

Mr. D

CBUT Playoffs Tor./Bos. (L)

(8) GBLBC (9)

6

Shake It Up Austin/ Ally Baseball Tonight (L)

Dog Blog Radio Rebel ('12, Dra) Sarena Parmar, Debby Ryan. Jessie Good Luck ... Austin/ Ally 173 291 SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news 140 206 in the world of sports. in the world of sports. in the world of sports. (L) in the world of sports. 30 for 30 Year of the Quarterback "The Marinovich ESPN Films "The Dotted Baseball Tonight (L) NBA Tonight NASCAR SportsNation 144 209 Project" Line" Now (L) America's Funniest Home Life of the Teenager "First Life of the Teenager "All

Matilda (1996, Family) Danny DeVito, Rhea The 700 Club 180* 311* Videos and Last" My Sisters With Me" (N) Perlman, Mara Wilson.

2012 (2009, Action) Amanda Peet, Thandie Newton, FXM

2012 (2009, Action) Amanda Peet, Thandie Newton, John Cusack. FXM 133 258 Presents Presents John Cusack. Hannity On the Record The O'Reilly Factor Hannity On the Record The Five 205 360 Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners (N) Diners Diners Diners 110* 231* Met Mother Met Mother Two and Half Two and Half

The Proposal ('09, Com) Ryan Reynolds, Betty White, Sandra Bullock.

The Proposal 136* 248* Big Break Mexico (N) F eherty (N) Golf Central Big Break Mexico Feherty The Golf Fix Titleist Inst. 136* 248* Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier 312* Cousins Cousins Love/List "House of Walls" L ove It or List It Love It or List It House Hunt. House Love It or List It 112* 229* Pickers "Psychic Pickings" Pickers "Boys' Toys" Pickers "Driving Miss Dani" Pickers "The Doctor Is In" Pickers "Pickers in the Attic" American Pickers 120* 269* To Be Announced

Madea Goes to Jail (2009, Comedy) Derek Luke, Keshia

How Stella Got Her Groove Back (1998, Drama) Taye 108* 252* Knight Pulliam, Tyler Perry. Diggs, Whoopi Goldberg, Angela Bassett. The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word All in With Chris Hayes The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word Hardball 209 356 BrainGa. (N) Brain Games Going Ape (N) Brain Games Brain Games GoingApe "The Alpha Male" Brain Games Brain Games The Numbers Game 186 276 SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Drake & Josh News (N) Full House Full House Full House The Nanny The Nanny Friends Friends 171 300 MLS Soccer Portland Timbers vs. Chivas U.S.A. Site: Home UFC Reloaded "UFC 147: Silva vs. Franklin II" WPT Poker Borgata Open 426 687 Depot Center -- Carson, Calif.

Crank 2: High Voltage (2009, Action) Amy Smart,

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006, Action) Brandon

Crank 2: High Voltage ('09, Act) Amy Dwight Yoakam, Jason Statham. Brendel, Zachery Ty Bryan, Lucas Black. Smart, Dwight Yoakam, Jason Statham.

Star Trek: Nemesis ('02, Sci-Fi) Patrick Stewart. Defiance Defiance (N) W arehouse 13 (N) Defiance King-Queens Seinfeld "The Seinfeld Seinfeld "The Family Guy Family Guy Fam.G "Killer Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Conan "Strike One" Wait Out" Comeback" Queen"

Gigi ('58, Mus) Louis

Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942, Musical) Joan Leslie, Walter

Dog Day Afternoon (1975, Action) Chris

The Jourdan, Leslie Caron. Huston, James Cagney. Sarandon, Carol Kane, Al Pacino. 400 Blows Long Island Long Island Medium "Behind the Read" Long Island Long Island To Be Announced Breaking Amish/Brave To Be Announced NBA Basketball Playoffs (L) NBA Basketball Playoffs (L) Inside the NBA (L) Castle "One Life to Lose" Adventure T. Regular Regular Adv.Time (N) Regular (N) MAD (N) King of Hill King of Hill American D. American D. Family Guy Family Guy Bizarre Foods Man v. Food Man v. Food Bizarre Foods "Twin Cities" B urger Land Burger Land Red, White Red, White Bizarre Foods "Boston" Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Loves Ray Loves Ray Loves Ray Loves Ray King-Queens King-Queens NCIS "Deception" N CIS "Family Secret" WWE Monday Night Raw NCIS: LA "Absolution" Funniest Home Videos WGN News at Nine Funniest Home Videos Rules of Eng Rules of Eng 30 Rock Scrubs 30 Rock Sunny

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Nathan Fillion stars in “Castle.”

How I Met Your Mother (7) KIRO (10) CITY

8:00 p.m.

Ted has finally finished fixing up the house he’s been working on, so he invites Lily to see it. As the season winds down, everyone prepares for Robin and Barney’s wedding, but first the couple tries to enjoy a night of relaxation.

Revolution (5) KING (10) CITY

10:00

p.m.

The heat is on as romance blossoms between two couples, but drone strikes kill the mood for the rebels. Not surprisingly, Monroe becomes even more paranoid after an assassination attempt, and Georgia Federation President Foster considers surrendering.

Bates Motel (37) A&E

10:00 p.m.

Abernathy tries to increase the pressure, but an indecisive Norman isn’t sure what to do, or even what he wants. Meanwhile, Miss Watson encourages Norman’s overactive imagination and Emma embarks on a trip. Also, Dylan and Bradley make a connection.

Castle (4) KOMO

10:00 p.m.

Beckett rethinks her career path and her relationship with Castle after an interview with a federal law-enforcement agency in this season finale. Also, the team investigates the death of a young woman whose body was found in a Skid Row flophouse. MAY 12 - 18, 2013

15


Tuesday bestbets

MAY 14

CBS KIRO

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(12) KVOS (13) (15) (16)

(7) KIRO (8) GBLBC

8:00

p.m.

Gibbs and the team find themselves under fire as the international manhunt for Eli David’s killer continues in this season closer. A federal witch-hunt ensues as the team is questioned about their unconventional methods in the case.

New Girl (13) KCPQ

9:00 p.m.

With Cece’s wedding day on the horizon, Jess and Nick make a decision about their relationship in this season finale. A shocking announcement could derail Schmidt’s plans to sabotage the wedding. Taylor Swift and Rob Reiner guest star. (5) KING

10:00 p.m.

It appears the undead may be invading Portland when Nick and Hank investigate reports of people being found dead — for a second time. Meanwhile, in Europe, Adalind tries to work out the details of her latest transaction, but there are complications.

Body of Proof (4) KOMO (10) CITY

10:00

p.m.

Shortly after a violent criminal escapes from custody during a prison transport, another man turns up dead. The evidence reveals that the victim was slated to be a witness in the escaped convict’s murder trial and the hunt is on for the killer.

16

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CBC News: Vancouver Wheel of Fortune KOMO NBC NBC Nightly KING 5 News Evening (5) Magazine KING News The Jeff Probst Show Extra (6) (7)

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6

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KONG

Zooey Deschanel as seen in “New Girl.”

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7:30

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8:30

9

PM

9:30

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11:30 S1 S2

Just for Laughs A look at Rick Mercer Halifax The National An in-depth CBC News: Stroumbouup-and-coming comedy acts. Report Comedy Fest look at the top news stories. Late Night lopoulos Jeopardy! Wipeout "Night of the Living Dancing With the Stars: Body of Proof "Breakout" KOMO 4 Jimmy 4 4 Balls" (N) The Results (N) (N) News Kimmel Live Inside The Voice Contestants battle The Voice "Live Grimm "The Waking Dead" KING 5 News Tonight 5 Edition for a recording contract. Eliminations" (N) (N) Show J. Leno 5 Access Katie Katie Couric tackles a Dr. Phil Dr. Phil offers advice KING 5 News at 10 NorthWest Law & Order: 16 16 Hollywood variety of current issues. on how to lead positive lives. Sports C.I. KIRO 7 News CBS Evening EntertainOMG! NCIS "Damned If You Do" NCIS: Los Angeles Golden Boy "Next KIRO News David 7 7 News ment Tonight Insider (SF) (N) "Descent" (SF) (N) Question" (SF) (N) Letterman News Hour EntertainEnt. Tonight NCIS "Damned If You Do" NCIS: Los Angeles Bones "The Crack in the News Hour Final ment Tonight Canada (SF) (N) "Descent" (SF) (N) Code" PBS NewsHour Antiques Roadshow American Experience Constitution USA "It's a Frontline "Never Forget to Pacific Heartbeat "Tonga: 9 9 "Seattle (Hour One)" "Annie Oakley" Free Country" (N) Lie" The Last Place on Earth" Criminal Minds "100" C .Mind "The Slave of Duty" Criminal Mind "Retaliation" Criminal Minds Criminal "Risky Business" Flash "Keep the Peace" 33 The King of King-Queens The Office The Office

Leap Year (2010, Comedy) Matthew Goode, Adam Seinfeld "The Seinfeld "The Rules of Eng Rules of Eng 11 11 Queens "Ice Cubed" "PDA" Scott, Amy Adams. Cartoon" Trip" 1/2 "Ghost Story" "Jeff Day" The Rifleman The Rifleman M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Bewitched I Dream of Mary Tyler B.Newhart The Odd The Dick Van The Twilight Perry Mason "Gun Fire" Jeannie Moore "No Sale" Couple Dyke Show Zone Two and a How I Met The Big Bang The Big Bang You Can Dance "Audition New Girl (N) T he Mindy Q13 FOX News at 10 Two and a Mother "The 13 13 Half Men Your Mother Theory Theory City #1" (SP) 1/2 (N) Project (N) Half Men Playbook" CBC News at CHEK News Wheel of Jeopardy! CBC News "BC Election Coverage" CHEK Late ABC News Six Fortune News Nightline Murdoch Mysteries Two and a Two and a Hell's Kitchen Hell's Kitchen hosts an intimate dinner for Body of Proof "Breakout" EP Daily Reviews on Half Men Half Men distinguished members of the US Army. (N) (N) the Run American American Fam.G "Livin' Family Guy The The Q13 FOX News Friends Friends 30 Rock 30 Rock "Sun 22 22 Dad Dad on a Prayer" Simpsons Simpsons Tea" J. Prince Rod Parsley Praise the Lord Interviews celebrities and evangelists. ACLJ Full Flame Kim Clement Creflo Dollar BehindScene Praise Lord Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage "A Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars American Hoggers American American 118* 265* Time to Kiln" (N) (N) Hoggers (N) "Turf War" Hoggers Hoggers

Man on Fire (2004, Action) Dakota Fanning, Marc

The Transporter (2002, Action) Shu Qi, François

The Devil's Own (1997, Suspense) Harrison Ford, 130* 254* Anthony, Denzel Washington. Berléand, Jason Statham. Rubén Blades, Brad Pitt. To Be Announced Wild Deep Wild Deep Wild Deep Wild Deep Wild Deep Wild Deep Wild Deep Wild Deep 184* 282* The Millionaire The Real Housewives of The Real Housewives of To Be Announced Don't Be To Be Watch What To Be 129* 273* Matchmaker Beverly Hills Beverly Hills Tardy... (N) Announced Happens (N) Announced Crowd Rules "Specialty CNBC Special Mad Money CNBC Special CNBC Special Paid Paid 208 355 Foods" (P) (N) Program Program Piers Morgan Live Anderson Cooper 360 OutFront Piers Morgan Live Anderson Cooper 360 OutFront 200 202 South Park Tosh.O Colbert Daily Show A.Schumer Tosh.O Tosh.O Tosh.O Tosh.O (N) S chumer (N) Daily Show Colbert 107* 249* Key Capitol Hill Hearings Key Capitol Hill Hearings 210 350 Deadliest Catch "Blood in Deadliest Catch "The Deadliest Catch: The Bait Deadliest Catch Backyard Oil Backyard Oil Deadliest Catch 182* 278* the Morning" Crooke and the Tangler" "Midseason Kings" (N) (N) Good Luck ... Jessie Shake It Up Austin/ Ally Jessie Dog Blog Shake It Up Good Luck ... Jessie Dog Blog Good Luck ... Jessie 173 291 30 for 30 Baseball Tonight (L) SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news 140 206 "Broke" in the world of sports. in the world of sports. in the world of sports. (L) in the world of sports. 30 for 30 "Pony Excess" 30 for 30 "Jordan Rides the E:60 Baseball Tonight (L) NBA Tonight NASCAR SportsNation 144 209 Bus" (L) Now (N) America's Funniest Home

Matilda (1996, Family) Danny DeVito, Rhea

Beetlejuice (1988, Comedy) Geena Davis, Alec The 700 Club 180* 311* Videos Perlman, Mara Wilson. Baldwin, Michael Keaton.

Alvin and the Chipmunks ('07, Com) FXM

Down to Earth ('00, Com) Eugene FXM

The Other Sister ('99, Dra) Giovanni FXM 133 258 Presents Presents Presents David Cross, Jason Lee. Levy, Regina King, Chris Rock. Ribisi, Diane Keaton, Juliette Lewis. Hannity On the Record The O'Reilly Factor Hannity On the Record The Five 205 360 Chopped "Spouting Off" Chopped "Get It Together!" Chopped Chopped Chopped (N) C hopped 110* 231* Met Mother Met Mother Two and Half Two and Half

Star Trek ('09, Sci-Fi) Zachary Quinto, Eric Bana, Chris Pine.

Star Trek ('09, Sci-Fi) Chris Pine. 136* 248* Golf's Greatest Rounds "2008 U.S. Open" (N) Golf Central Learn (N) Golf's Greatest Rounds "2008 U.S. Open" 136* 248* Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier 312* Million Dollar Rooms (N) H ouse House Hunt. Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Income "Serious Investors" HouseH (N) H ouse FlipFlop (N) F lip or Flop 112* 229* Modern Marvels "Wood" P awn Stars Pawn Stars CountCars CountCars CountCars CountCars Restoration Restoration Restoration Restoration 120* 269* Dance Moms Dance Moms Dance Moms "Tell All" Dance Moms "Tell All" P reachers' Daughters Dance Moms "Tell All" 108* 252* The Rachel Maddow Show Polygamy, U.S.A. (N) SpongeBob SpongeBob MLB Baseball Seattle vs N.Y. Yankees (L) Worst Tenants Tenants "Rocketfish" Fact or Faked King-Queens Seinfeld "The "Strike Too" Invitations"

Kiss of Death ('47, Dra) Richard Widmark. Long Island Long Island NBA Basketball Playoffs (L) Regular Regular Bizarre Foods "Chicago" Golden Girls Golden Girls Law&O.:SVU "Careless" Four Weddings & a Funeral

22 Minutes

The Last Word All in With Chris Hayes The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word Hardball 209 356 Taboo "Odd Couples" Polygamy, U.S.A. Polygamy "The Winter Ball" Taboo "Odd Couples" The '80s: The Decade 186 276 SpongeBob Drake & Josh Full House Full House Full House Full House The Nanny The Nanny Friends Friends 171 300 Post-game MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners vs. New York Yankees Site: Yankee Stadium -- Bronx, N.Y. Mariners WPT Poker Borgata Open 426 687 (L) Post-game Worst Worst Worst Worst Worst WorstTenan- Worst Worst Urban Tarzan Urban Tarzan 168* 241* Tenants Tenants Tenants Tenants Tenants ts "Hot Rods" Tenants (N) Tenants (N) Fact or Faked Fact or Faked Weird "Parallel Worlds" (N) Weird or What? (N) Weird or "Parallel Worlds" 122* 284* Seinfeld "The Seinfeld "The The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Gets the Last The Big Bang Conan 139* 247* Apartment" Money" Theory Theory Theory Theory Laugh? (N) Theory

Where the Sidewalk Ends ('50, Cri)

Point Blank (1967, Suspense) Lee Marvin, Keenan

The Killer ('89, Act) Sally Yeh, Danny Gene Tierney, Karl Malden, Dana Andrews. Wynn, Angie Dickinson. Lee, Chow Yun-Fat. Hitman botches his job. 132 256 American Gypsy Wedd 19 Kids 19 Kids 19 Kids (N) 19 Kids (N) Little C. (N) Little C. (N) 19 Kids 19 Kids 183* 280* NBA Basketball Playoffs (L) Inside the NBA (L) Castle 138* 245* Johnny (N) TeenTita (N) L ooney (N) Adventure T. King of Hill King of Hill American D. American D. Family Guy Family Guy 176* 296* Man v. Food Man v. Food Airport 24/7 Airport 24/7 Airport 24/7 Airport 24/7 The Layover Anthony Bourdain 215* 277* Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Loves Ray Loves Ray Loves Ray Loves Ray King-Queens King-Queens 106* 304* Law & Order: SVU "Home" Law&O.:SVU "Families" Law & Order: SVU "Futility" Law & Order: SVU "Manic" CSI "Ms. Willows Regrets" 105* 242* WGN News at Nine Funniest Home Videos Rules of Eng Rules of Eng 30 Rock Scrubs 30 Rock Sunny 239 307

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS


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(27) ESPN2 (64)

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(51)

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(23)

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(53) FOOD (48) FX (47) GOLF (60) HALL (30) HGTV (42) HIST (38)

LIFE

(65) MSNBC (63) NGEO (41)

NICK

(25) ROOT (34) SPIKE (52)

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TBS

(35)

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(61)

TLC TNT TOON TRAV TVLND USA WGN

(31) (43) (32) (50) (33)

PM

6:30

NHL Hockey Stanley Cup

7

PM

CBC News: Vancouver KOMO 4 News Wheel of Fortune NBC Nightly KING 5 News Evening News Magazine The Jeff Probst Show Extra

CBUT Playoffs (L)

(6)

(9)

6

7:30 Stroumboulopoulos Jeopardy!

Inside Edition Access Hollywood KIRO 7 News CBS Evening EntertainOMG! News ment Tonight Insider News Hour EntertainEnt. Tonight ment Tonight Canada PBS NewsHour Rick Steves' Beneath the Europe Surface

National Security ('03, Com) Steve Zahn. King-Queens The King of The Office The Office "No Orleans" Queens The Rifleman The Rifleman M*A*S*H M*A*S*H

8

PM

22 Minutes

8:30

Just for Laughs: Gags Middle "The Family Tools (N) Ditch" (N) Dateline NBC

9

PM

9:30

Dragons' Den Entrepreneurs pitch their product ideas. Modern Live With Family (N) Parents (N) Law & Order: S.V.U. "Brief Interlude" (N) Katie Katie Couric tackles a Dr. Phil Dr. Phil offers advice variety of current issues. on how to lead positive lives. 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Criminal Minds "#6" (N)

10

PM

10:30

The National An in-depth look at the top news stories. Nashville "A Picture From Life's Other Side" (N) Chicago Fire "Let Her Go" (SF) (N) KING 5 News at 10

11

PM

11:30 S1 S2

CBC News: Late Night KOMO 4 News KING 5 News

Stroumboulopoulos Jimmy 4 Kimmel Live Tonight Show J. Leno 5 NorthWest Law & Order: 16 Sports C.I. KIRO News David 7 Letterman News Hour Final

4 5 16

CSI: Crime Scene "Skin in 7 the Game" (SF) (N) Elementary "Rat Race" The Office "A.A.R.M." (N) C hicago Fire "Let Her Go" (SF) (N) Nature "Great Zebra Nova "Decoding Secrets of the Dead Prime Suspect "Errors of 9 9 Exodus" (N) Neanderthals" Judgement" 2/4 "Cavemen Cannibals" (N) WWE Main Event Flashpoint Flash "Asking for Flowers" Flash "Who's George?" 33 Arrow "Sacrifice" (SF) (N) Supernatural "Sacrifice" Seinfeld "The Seinfeld "The Rules "The Rules of Eng 11 11 (SF) (N) Strong Box" Trip" 2/2 Four Pillars" "Zygote" Bewitched I Dream of Mary Tyler Bob Newhart The Odd The Dick Van The Twilight Perry Mason Jeannie Moore Show Couple Dyke Show Zone Two and a Mother "The The Big Bang The Big Bang American Idol "Two Think You Can Dance Q13 FOX News at 10 Two and a How I Met Half Men Drunk Train" Theory Theory Finalists Compete" 1/2 (N) Half Men Your Mother 13 13 "Audition City #2" 2/2 (N) CBC News at CHEK News Wheel of Jeopardy! Bones "The Bodies in a Supernatural "Sacrifice" C HEK Late ABC News CBC News Design Six Fortune Book" News Nightline Vancouver District Murdoch Mysteries Two and a Two and a Middle "The 2 Broke Girls Modern Live With Hannibal "Fromage" (N) EP Daily Reviews on Half Men Half Men Ditch" (N) Family (N) Parents (N) the Run American American Family Guy Family Guy The The Q13 FOX News Friends Friends 30 Rock 30 Rock 22 22 Dad Dad Simpsons Simpsons J. Prince End of Age Praise the Lord Interviews celebrities and evangelists. Good News J. Duplantis Easter Creflo Dollar Praise the Lord The First 48 "Fear Factor/ Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck 118* 265* Fall Guy" Dynasty Dynasty Dynasty Dynasty Dynasty Dynasty Dynasty Dynasty Dynasty Dynasty CSI: Miami "Killer Regrets" C SI: Miami "By the Book"

The Breakfast Club (1985, Drama) Emilio Estevez,

Sixteen Candles (1984, Comedy) Anthony Michael 130* 254* Molly Ringwald, Judd Nelson. Hall, Michael Shoeffling, Molly Ringwald. To Be Announced River Monst. Bizarre Monsters "Asian Slayer" R iver Monsters River Monsters Monsters "Asian Slayer" 184* 282* Million Dollar Listing Los The Real Housewives of The Real Housewives of Rachel Zoe Project Follow Million Doll "Two Hotheads Watch What The Rachel Angeles Beverly Hills Beverly Hills celebrity stylist Rachel Zoe. and a Hurricane" (N) Happens (N) Zoe Project 129* 273* The Celebrity Apprentice "May the Spoon Be With You" Mad Money The Celebrity Apprentice Celebrities compete in business- Paid Paid 208 355 Two contestants are fired before the final task begins. (N) centred tasks to win $1,000,000 for their charities. Program Program Piers Morgan Live Anderson Cooper 360 OutFront Piers Morgan Live Anderson Cooper 360 OutFront 200 202 South Park Tosh.O Colbert Daily Show Chappelle Chappelle South Park South Park Workaholics South Park Daily Show Colbert 107* 249* Key Capitol Hill Hearings Key Capitol Hill Hearings 210 350 MythBusters "Torpedo MythBusters "JATO Rocket MythBusters "Deadliest MythBust. "Down and Dirty/ The Big Brain Theory MythBusters "Down and 182* 278* Tastic" Car: Mission Accomplished" Catch Crabtastic Special" Earthquake Survival" (N) "Three Little Pigs" (N) Dirty/ Earthquake Survival" Good Luck ... Jessie Shake It Up Austin/ Ally Dog Blog

StarStruck ('10, Mus) Brandon Smith, Danielle Campbell. Austin/ Ally Jessie Dog Blog 173 291 MLB Baseball (L) Baseball Tonight (L) SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news 140 206 in the world of sports. in the world of sports. in the world of sports. in the world of sports. 30 for 30 "The Best That 30 for 30 "June 17, 1994" 30 for 30 "Small Potatoes: Baseball Tonight (L) NBA Tonight NASCAR SportsNation 144 209 Never Was" Who Killed the USFL?" Now (N) (L)

Alice in Wonderland (2010, Adventure) Anne Hathaway, Mia

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005, Adventure) Freddie The 700 Club 180* 311* Wasikowska, Johnny Depp. Highmore, David Kelly, Johnny Depp.

FXM

Extract ('09, Com) Mila Kunis, Ben FXM

Bedazzled ('00, Com) Elizabeth FXM

The Forgotten ('04, 133 258 Presents Presents Extract Affleck, Jason Bateman. Hurley, Frances O'Connor, Brendan Fraser. Presents Thril) Julianne Moore. Hannity Diners Diners Movie Anger M. Feherty Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Property "Bachelorette Pad" Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Wife Swap

On the Record The O'Reilly Factor Hannity On the Record The Five Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant "Mad Cactus" Rest. "Drowning in Debt" Restaurant Stakeout Diners Diners Two and Half Two and Half

The Fighter ('10, Bio) Christian Bale, Amy Adams, Mark Wahlberg.

The Fighter Mark Wahlberg. Big Break Mexico Golf Central PGA Tour In the Bag? In the Bag? On the Range PGA Tour Learning C. Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier 1/2 Frasier 2/2 Frasier P roperty Brothers Cousins Call Cousins Call Property "James and David" House Hunt. House Property Brothers Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Only in America Star Trek Legacy Wife Swap Two matriarchs To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced trade households for 10 days. The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word All in With Chris Hayes The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word Hardball Locked Up Abroad (N) Breakout (N) Locked Up Abroad Breakout Locked up "Buried Alive" Drugs "High Stakes Vegas" SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Drake & Josh Full House Full House Full House Full House The Nanny The Nanny Friends Friends MLB Baseball Seattle vs N.Y. Post-game MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners vs. New York Yankees Site: Yankee Stadium -- Bronx, N.Y. Mariners Mixed Martial Arts Yankees (L) Post-game (L) Showdown

The Guardian ('06, Dra)

National Treasure: Book of Secrets (2007, Adventure) Jon Voight, Ed Harris,

National Treasure: Book of Secrets (2007, Ashton Kutcher. Nicolas Cage. Adventure) Jon Voight, Ed Harris, Nicolas Cage. Deep South Paranormal Haunted Collector Haunted Collector Haunted Collector (N) D eep South Paranormal (N) Haunted Collector King-Queens Seinfeld "The Seinfeld "The Seinfeld Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan Stranded" Theory Theory Theory "Strike Out" Mango" "Tea Peter" Theory

Forbidden Planet

Spellbound (1945, Thriller) Gregory Peck, Michael Rome: Open City (1946, Documentary) Anna Magnani,

Pennies From Heaven ('56, Sci-Fi) Walter Pidgeon. Chekhov, Ingrid Bergman. Marcello Pagliero, Aldo Fabrizi. ('81, Mus) Steve Martin. Long Island Long Island My Crazy My Crazy To Be Announced Hoarding: Buried Alive (N) To Be Announced Hoarding: Buried Alive NBA Basket. NBA Basketball Playoffs (L) Inside the NBA (L) Castle "Rise" C astle "Heroes and Villains" Adventure T. Regular Regular NinjaGo Dragons TeenTita King of Hill King of Hill American D. American D. Family Guy Family Guy Bizarre Foods "Uganda" Man v. Food Man v. Food Burger Land Burger (N) Toy/Hunt (N) Toy Hunter Extreme Factories Food Paradise Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Loves Ray Loves Ray Hot/ Cleve. The Exes King-Queens King-Queens NCIS "Dead and Unburied" N CIS "Sandblast" N CIS NCIS "Thirst" P sych "Dead Air" (N) N CIS "Defiance" Rules of Eng Rules of Eng WGN News at Nine Funniest Home Videos Rules of Eng Rules of Eng 30 Rock Scrubs 30 Rock Sunny

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Wednesday bestbets

205 360 110* 231* 136* 248* 136* 248* 312* 112* 229* 120* 269* 108* 252* 209 356 186 276 171 300 426 687

Ryan Seacrest hosts “American Idol.”

American Idol (13) KCPQ

8:00 p.m.

It’s all down to the final performances as the two singers left in the competition take the stage in Part 1 of this two-part season finale. Former winner Phillip Phillips also performs, as does pop songstress Carly Rae Jepsen.

Modern Family (4) KOMO (10) CITY

9:00

p.m.

Phil has high hopes when he gets a new RV, but Claire is skeptical it will lead to a fun family road trip. When Manny loses his backpack, Gloria and Jay break into Claire’s house, and then into Mitchell’s, looking for it. Also, Lily has a gymnastics meet.

Chicago Fire (5) KING (8) GBLBC

10:00

p.m.

Voight is back, this time as the head of the Intelligence Unit, but it appears his time in prison hasn’t changed him much. As Casey is left to deal with Voight, Mills and Dawson face challenges of their own. Also, Shay looks forward to parenthood.

122* 284*

CSI: Crime Scene Investigation

139* 247*

(7) KIRO

168* 241*

132 256 183* 280* 138* 245* 176* 296* 215* 277* 106* 304* 105* 242* 239 307

10:00 p.m.

A journalist shadows the team as they investigate a series of murders that appear to mimic the sins in “Dante’s Inferno.” This season finale includes a special appearance by legendary rockers Black Sabbath, who debut their new song “End of the Beginning.” MAY 12 - 18, 2013

17


Thursday bestbets

MAY 16

CBS KIRO

(8) GBLBC (9)

PBS

KCTS (10) ION (11)

CW KSTW

(12) KVOS (13) (15) (16)

(4) KOMO

8:00 p.m.

Host John Henson has some wild and crazy ideas for this week’s contestants. In their quest to make it to the Qualifier, contestants known as Bluegrass Boy, Health Nut and Danger Zone take on such obstacles as the Killer Croc and Wipeout Jail.

(22)

FOX KCPQ

E! CHEK CITY

MNT KZJO KTBW

(37)

A&E

(39)

AMC

(49) ANPL (70) BRAVO (24) CNBC (40)

CNN COM (17) CSPAN (56)

The Big Bang Theory

(29)

8:00 p.m.

(46)

DISN

(26)

ESPN

(7) KIRO

Leonard gets a great opportunity when he’s offered an exciting job overseas, but the news throws both Penny and Sheldon for a loop in this season finale. Physicists Leonard and Sheldon welcome their beautiful neighbor into their nerdy circle of friends.

The Office (5) KING

Past and present employees of Dunder Mifflin gather together to attend a wedding months after the premiere of the documentary in the series finale. The gathering provides an opportunity for some to bury the hatchet. Mindy Kaling and B.J. Novak guest star.

Elementary (7) KIRO (8) GBLBC

9:00

p.m.

In this special two-hour season finale, Sherlock is shocked by the reappearance of his former lover, Irene Adler. Flashbacks reveal the series of events that led to his addiction. Also, the mysterious Moriarty once again targets Sherlock and Joan.

18

DISC

(27) ESPN2 (64)

FAM

(51)

FMC

(23)

FNC

(53) FOOD (48) FX (47) GOLF

9:00 p.m.

MAY 12 - 18, 2013

PM

6:30

7

PM

CBC News: Vancouver Wheel of Fortune KOMO NBC NBC Nightly KING 5 News Evening (5) Magazine KING News The Jeff Probst Show Extra (6) (7)

Wipeout

6

NHL Hockey Stanley Cup (2) CBUT Playoffs (L) ABC KOMO 4 News (4) CBC

KONG

John Krasinski as seen in “The Office.”

W – Wave Broadband S1 - Dish Network* S2 - DirecTV* Programming on stations denoted with an * air listings 3 hours earlier

THURSDAY EVENING

(60)

HALL

(30) HGTV (42) HIST (38)

LIFE

(65) MSNBC (63) NGEO (41)

NICK

(25) ROOT (34) SPIKE (52)

SYFY

(28)

TBS

(35)

TCM

(61)

TLC TNT TOON TRAV TVLND USA WGN

(31) (43) (32) (50) (33)

7:30 22 Minutes

8

PM

8:30

The Nature of Things

9

PM

Doc Zone

9:30

10

PM

10:30

The National An in-depth look at the top news stories. Scandal "White Hat's Back On" (SF) (N) Hannibal "Fromage" (N)

11

PM

11:30 S1 S2

CBC News: Late Night KOMO 4 News KING 5 News

Stroumboulopoulos Jeopardy! Wipeout "Senior Citizens, Grey's Anatomy "Perfect Jimmy 4 4 Kids and Convicts" (N) Storm" (SF) (N) Kimmel Live Inside NBC News Special "The The Office "Finale" (F) (N) Tonight 5 Edition Office Retrospective" (N) Show J. Leno 5 Access Katie Katie Couric tackles a Dr. Phil Dr. Phil offers advice KING 5 News at 10 NorthWest Law & Order: 16 16 Hollywood variety of current issues. on how to lead positive lives. Sports C.I. KIRO 7 News CBS Evening EntertainOMG! The Big Bang The Big Bang Elementary Sherlock has flashbacks that unravel the events KIRO News David 7 7 News ment Tonight Insider Theory (N) Theory that led to his downfall into addiction. (N) Letterman News Hour EntertainEnt. Tonight King "Alicia Pratta" Elementary Sherlock has flashbacks that unravel the events News Hour Final ment Tonight Canada that led to his downfall into addiction. (N) PBS NewsHour PIE (N) Mind of a Foyle's War "Plan of Midsomer Murders "Who Vera "A Certain Samaritan" Quantum 9 9 Chef "Fresh" Attack" 2/2 Killed Cock Robin?" 2/2 Activists Trace "Malone v. Malone" Without a Trace "4.0" Criminal Minds "Parasite" Crim. Minds "Public Enemy" Crim. Minds "Mosley Lane" House 33 The King of The King of The Office Office "Todd The Vampire Diaries Beauty and the Beast Seinfeld "The Seinfeld "The Rules "Indian Rules of Eng Queens Queens Packer" "Graduation" (SF) (N) "Never Turn Back" (SF) (N) Wizard" Pitch" 1/2 Giver" "The Set Up" 11 11 The Rifleman The Rifleman M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Bewitched I Dream of Mary Tyler Bob Newhart The Odd The Dick Van The Twilight Perry Mason Jeannie Moore Show Couple Dyke Show Zone Two and a Mother "No The Big Bang The Big Bang Am. Idol "Winner Announced" The top finalists reunite one Q13 FOX News at 10 Two and a Mother "The 13 13 Half Men Pressure" Theory Theory last time before the newest 'American Idol' is revealed. (N) Half Men Window" CBC News at CHEK News Wheel of Jeopardy!

Tank Girl (1995, Sci-Fi) Ice-T, Naomi Watts, Lori CHEK Late ABC News CBC News Empowered Six Fortune Petty. News Nightline Vancouver Health Murdoch Mysteries Two and a Two and a Raising Hope Raising Hope Person of Interest (F) Scandal "White Hat's Back EP Daily Reviews on Half Men Half Men On" (SF) (N) the Run American American Family Guy Fam.G "Deep Simps. "Goo The Q13 FOX News Friends Friends 30 Rock 30 Rock 22 22 Dad Dad Throats" Goo Gai Pan" Simpsons J. Prince BHouston Praise the Lord Interviews celebrities and evangelists. H oly Land Turn. Point News Israel Creflo Dollar BehindScene Praise Lord The First 48 "The Good Son/ The First 48 "Dying The First 48 "Father and The First 48 "Birthday Girl" The First 48 "The House The First 48 118* 265* Jacked Up" Declaration/ One Last Score" Son/ Dangerous Attraction" Next Door/ The Showdown" Freakshow Freakshow Freakshow Freakshow Freakshow Freakshow Freakshow Small Town Small Town Small Town Small Town Small Town 130* 254* Security Security (N) Security "Elite Force!" Security To Be Announced Gator Boys To Be Announced North Woods Law: On The Hunt "Maine Freeze" OnTheHunt "Maine Freeze" 184* 282* The Millionaire The Millionaire Housewives Atlanta A Housewives Atlanta A Tabatha Takes Over (N) Watch What Kathy 129* 273* Matchmaker Matchmaker preview of Super Bowl XLVI. preview of Super Bowl XLVI. Happens Live CNBC Special CNBC Special Mad Money CNBC Special CNBC Special Paid Paid 208 355 Program Program Piers Morgan Live Anderson Cooper 360 OutFront Piers Morgan Live Anderson Cooper 360 OutFront 200 202 South Park Tosh.O Colbert Daily Show Futurama Futurama Tosh.O Tosh.O Sunny Sunny Daily Show Colbert 107* 249* Key Capitol Hill Hearings Key Capitol Hill Hearings 210 350 Backyard Oil Backyard Oil Backyard Oil Backyard Oil Backyard Oil Backyard Oil Hillbilly Hillbilly To Be Announced Hillbilly Hillbilly 182* 278* Blood Blood Blood Blood Good Luck ... Jessie Shake It Up Austin/ Ally Dog Blog

Sky High ('05, Adv) Kurt Russell, Michael Angarano. Jessie Good Luck ... Austin/ Ally 173 291 NBA Basketball Playoffs (L) NBA Basketball Playoffs (L) SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news 140 206 in the world of sports. in the world of sports. X Games -- Barcelona, Spain SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news Baseball Tonight (L) NBA Basketball Playoffs 144 209 in the world of sports. in the world of sports.

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005, Adventure) Freddie

Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971, Family) Peter The 700 Club 180* 311* Highmore, David Kelly, Johnny Depp. Ostrum, Jack Albertson, Gene Wilder.

Premonition (2007, Thriller) Julian FXM

Perfect Stranger ('07, Thril) Bruce FXM

28 Weeks Later ('07, Hor) Robert FXM 133 258 Presents Presents Presents McMahon, Nia Long, Sandra Bullock. Willis, Halle Berry. Carlyle, Catherine McCormack. Hannity On the Record The O'Reilly Factor Hannity On the Record The Five Chopped "Go for It!" Sweet "Glistening Genius" C hopped "Pigging Out" C hopped "Momumental" Giving "Sub-prise" (N) Iron Chef America Two and Half Anger M.

The Green Hornet ('11, Act) Jay Chou, Seth Rogen. Anger M. Two and Half Two and Half Total Biase Total Biase PGA Golf Byron Nelson Championship Golf Central G. Goose (N) P GA Golf Byron Nelson Championship Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier House Hunt. House Hunt. House House Hunt. Income Property Rehab Addict Rehab Addict HouseH (N) House Rent or Buy House Swamp "Waging War" Swamp "Deadly Chill" S wamp People Swamp People Only in America How Sex Changed Dance Moms Dance Moms

Rumor Has It (2005, Comedy) Jennifer Aniston, Mark The Rebound (2009, Comedy) Justin Bartha, Andrew Ruffalo, Kevin Costner. Cherry, Catherine Zeta-Jones. The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word All in With Chris Hayes The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word Hardball Polygamy "The Winter Ball" Taboo "Strange Syndromes" Polygamy "The Winter Ball" Taboo "Strange Syndromes" M t. Move "The Meltdown" Alaska State Troopers SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Drake & Josh Big Time (N) WendellVinn Full House Full House The Nanny The Nanny Friends Friends MLB Baseball Seattle vs N.Y. Post-game MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners vs. New York Yankees Site: Yankee Stadium -- Bronx, N.Y. Mariners Mixed Martial Arts Yankees (L) (L) Post-game Showdown DEA "The Six Million Dollar DEA "Showdown With the Impact Wrestling Watch high-risk athletic entertainment

Doom (2005, Sci-Fi) The Rock, Rosamund Pike, Karl Heroin Bust" Columbian Drug Cartel" featuring the most recognizable stars of wrestling. Urban. Warehous "The Big Snag"

Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country William Shatner.

Star Trek: First Contact ('96, Sci-Fi) Brent Spiner, Patrick Stewart. The King of Seinfeld "The Seinfeld "The Seinfeld "The Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang Men at Work The Big Bang Conan Queens Glasses" Statue" Susie" Theory Theory (N) Theory The Big Fisherman (1959, Drama) Susan Kohner, John

Francis of Assisi (1961, Religious) Dolores Hart, Stuart

Joan of Arc (1948, Biography) José Ferrer, John Saxon, Howard Keel. Whitman, Bradford Dillman. Ireland, Ingrid Bergman. Worst Tattoo Worst Tattoo Worst Tattoo Worst Tattoo Worst Tattoo Worst Tattoo Worst Tattoo Worst Tattoo To Be Announced Worst Tattoo Worst Tattoo Castle "Demons" Castle "Cops and Robbers" Castle "Cuffed" C astle "Kill Shot" C astle "Heartbreak Hotel" C SI: NY Adventure T. Regular Regular Annoying (N) Incred Crew Regular King of Hill King of Hill American D. American D. Family Guy Family Guy Bizarre Foods Man v. Food Man v. Food Mysteries at the Museum Monumental Mysteries Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Loves Ray Loves Ray Loves Ray Loves Ray King-Queens King-Queens NCIS "Kill Ari, Part 1" 1/2 N CIS "Kill Ari, Part II" 2/2 N CIS "Under Covers" N CIS "Light Sleeper" N CIS "Jack Knife" P sych "Dead Air" Met Mother Met Mother WGN News at Nine Funniest Home Videos Rules of Eng Rules of Eng 30 Rock Scrubs 30 Rock Sunny

205 360 110* 231* 136* 248* 136* 248* 312* 112* 229* 120* 269* 108* 252* 209 356 186 276 171 300 426 687 168* 241* 122* 284* 139* 247* 132 256 183* 280* 138* 245* 176* 296* 215* 277* 106* 304* 105* 242* 239 307

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS


W – Wave Broadband S1 - Dish Network* S2 - DirecTV* Programming on stations denoted with an * air listings 3 hours earlier

FRIDAY EVENING MAY 17 (2) (4) (5) (6) (7)

CBC ABC KOMO

NBC KING KONG

CBS KIRO

PBS

KCTS (10) ION (11)

CW KSTW

(12) KVOS (13) (15) (16) (22)

FOX KCPQ

E! CHEK CITY

MNT KZJO KTBW

(37)

A&E

(39)

AMC

(49) ANPL (70) BRAVO (24) CNBC (40)

CNN COM (17) CSPAN (56)

(29)

DISC

(46)

DISN

(26)

ESPN

(27) ESPN2 (64)

FAM

(51)

FMC

(23)

FNC

(53) FOOD (48) FX (47) GOLF (60) HALL (30) HGTV (42) HIST (38)

LIFE

(65) MSNBC (63) NGEO (41)

NICK

(25) ROOT (34) SPIKE (52)

SYFY

(28)

TBS

(35)

TCM

(61)

TLC TNT TOON TRAV TVLND USA WGN

(31) (43) (32) (50) (33)

PM

6:30

NHL Hockey Stanley Cup

7

PM

CBC News: Vancouver KOMO 4 News Wheel of Fortune NBC Nightly KING 5 News Evening News Magazine The Jeff Probst Show Extra

7:30 22 Minutes

8

PM

8:30

Marketplace Rick Mercer Report Shark Tank

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

11

PM

11:30 S1 S2

The National An in-depth CBC News: Stroumboulook at the top news stories. Late Night lopoulos Jeopardy! Shark Tank (SF) (N) 20/20 Interviews and hard- KOMO 4 Jimmy 4 4 hitting investigative reports. News Kimmel Live Inside Dateline NBC Featuring quality investigative features, Rock Center With Brian KING 5 News Tonight 5 Edition breaking news coverage and newsmaker profiles. Williams Show J. Leno 5 Access Katie Katie Couric tackles a Dr. Phil Dr. Phil offers advice KING 5 News at 10 NorthWest Law & Order: 16 16 Hollywood variety of current issues. on how to lead positive lives. Sports C.I. KIRO 7 News CBS Evening EntertainOMG! Under Boss "Undercover Undercover Boss Blue Bloods "Domestic KIRO News David 7 7 News ment Tonight Insider Boss: Epic Bosses" (SF) (N) Disturbance" Letterman News Hour EntertainEnt. Tonight Take It All Contestants Bones "The But in the Joke" 16x9 A hard-hitting, weekly News Hour Final ment Tonight Canada choose gifts at random. investigative news magazine. PBS NewsHour Washington Need to Doc Martin "City Slickers" Reel NW Magic Moments Performers include Mel Carter, the Four Perfect 9 9 Week (N) Know (N) Aces, the Chordettes, the Four Lads and more. Health Cold Case "Sandhogs" C old Case "Baby Blues" C old Case "Saving Sammy" C old Case "Static" C old Case "The Key" C old Case "Fireflies" 33 The King of Queens "Buy The Office The Office Nikita "Til Death Do Us Supernatural "Sacrifice" Seinfeld "The Seinfeld "The Rules of Eng Rules of Queens Curious" Part" (SF) (N) Burning" Ticket" 2/2 "3rd Wheel" Engagement 11 11 The Rifleman The Rifleman MASH "As M*A*S*H Bewitched I Dream of Mary Tyler Bob Newhart The Odd The Dick Van The Twilight Perry Mason You Were" Jeannie Moore Show Couple Dyke Show Zone "Crisis" Two and a Met Mother The Big Bang The Big Bang Kitchen Nightmares Bones "The But in the Joke" Q13 FOX Wash. Most Two and a How I Met Half Men Theory Theory News at 10 Wanted Half Men Your Mother 13 13 "Karma" "Yanni's" CBC News at CHEK News Wheel of Jeopardy! The Glades "Exposed" The Twilight The Twilight CHEK Late ABC News CBC News Yum! Six Fortune Zone Zone News Nightline Vancouver "Salads" The Best of Breakfast Two and a Two and a Cougar Town 30 Rock Curb "The Seed Mantracker EP Daily Reviews on Television Half Men Half Men Bare Midriff" the Run American American Fam.G "Killer Family Guy The The Q13 FOX Wash. Most Friends Friends 30 Rock 30 Rock 22 22 Dad Dad Queen" Simpsons News Wanted "Peterotica" Simpsons Harvest Manna Fest Praise the Lord Interviews celebrities and evangelists. F aith Praise the Lord Creflo Dollar BehindScene Praise Duck Dy Duck Storage Wars Storage "The Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars 118* 265* Drone Wars" "Samurai Si" Dynasty

Reign of Fire (2002, Action) Matthew McConaughey,

The Scorpion King (2002, Action) Kelly Hu, Steven

The Scorpion King 2: Rise of a Warrior (2008, 130* 254* Izabella Scorupco, Christian Bale. Brand, The Rock. Action) Tom Wu, Karen Shenaz David, Michael Copon. To Be Announced Call Wildman Call Wildman Swamp'd! Swamp'd! Tanked! Tanked! "Be Cool" Tanked! 184* 282* The Real Housewives of To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Atlanta Announced 129* 273* CNBC Special CNBC Special Mad Money CNBC Special CNBC Special Paid Paid 208 355 Program Program Piers Morgan Live Anderson Cooper Anthony Bourdain Piers Morgan Live Anderson Cooper 360 OutFront 200 202 South Park Tosh.O Colbert Daily Show Tosh.O Tosh.O A.Schumer Workaholics Tosh.O The Comedy Central Roast "Bob Saget" 107* 249* Politics & Public Policy Today Key Capitol Hill Hearings 210 350 Sons of Guns "Hangfire" S ons of Guns: Locked and Sons of Guns "Russian Sons of Guns "AK-47 Wild West Alaska Sons of Guns "AK-47 182* 278* Loaded "Will's Monster" Roulette" (N) Silencer" Silencer" Good Luck ... Jessie Dog Blog Dog Blog A.N.T. Farm Jessie Phineas Ferb Fish Hooks Dog Blog Good Luck ... Jessie Jessie 173 291 NBA Basketball Playoffs (L) NBA Basketball Playoffs (L) SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news 140 206 in the world of sports. in the world of sports. X Games -- Barcelona, Spain SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news NBA Tonight Baseball Tonight (L) Sportscenter 144 209 in the world of sports. in the world of sports. Top Ten (L) Melissa &

Home Alone (1990, Comedy) Joe Pesci, Daniel

Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992, Comedy) Joe Pesci, Daniel The 700 Club 180* 311* Joey Stern, Macaulay Culkin. Stern, Macaulay Culkin.

FXM

Cloverfield ('08, Thril) Jessica Lucas, FXM

Enemy at the Gates (2001, War) Joseph Fiennes, Rachel Weisz, FXM 133 258 Presents Presents Cloverfield Presents T.J. Miller, Lizzy Caplan. Jude Law.

CBUT Playoffs (L)

(8) GBLBC (9)

6

the fifth estate

Hannity On the Record The O'Reilly Factor Hannity On the Record The Five Diners Diners Giving "Wrapper's Delight" D iners Diners Diners Diners Diners (N) Diners Diners Diners Soul Surfer ('11, Act) Dennis Quaid, AnnaSophia Robb.

Grown Ups ('10, Com) Kevin James, Adam Sandler.

Jumping the Broom ('11, Com) Paula Patton. PGA Golf Byron Nelson Championship Golf Central G. Goose (N) P GA Golf Byron Nelson Championship

Daniel's Daughter ('08, Dra) Laura Leighton. The Confession ('13, Dra) Katie Leclerc, Sheri Stringfield. Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier House House House House Extreme Homes Market Flip Market Flip HouseH (N) H ouse House House American Pickers Pickers "You Betcha" Pickers "Frank's Dog Days" Pickers "When Horses Fly" Pickers "The Belly Dance" Pickers Pickers Hoarders Hoarders Compulsive Hoarders Compulsive Hoarders Compulsive Hoarders Compulsive Hoarders Compulsive hoarding is a mental illness. hoarding is a mental illness. hoarding is a mental illness. hoarding is a mental illness. hoarding is a mental illness. The Rachel Maddow Show MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary How Nature Works (N) W orld's Biggest Cave How Nature Works World's Biggest Cave Explorer SpongeBob SpongeBob Ninja Turtles Ninja Turtles Ninja Turtles Ninja Turtles Full House Full House The Nanny The Nanny Friends Friends MLB Baseball Seattle vs Post-game MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners vs. Cleveland Indians Site: Progressive Field -- Cleveland, Mariners Mixed Martial Arts Cleveland (L) Ohio Post-game (L) Showdown Bar Rescue "Tiki Curse"

Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981, Adventure) Karen Allen, Denholm

Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984, Adventure) Kate Elliott, Harrison Ford. Capshaw, Jonathan Ke Quan, Harrison Ford.

Star Trek: First Contact ('96, Sci-Fi) Patrick Stewart. WWE Smackdown! (N) Merlin (N) Defiance King-Queens Seinfeld "The Seinfeld "The Seinfeld "The Family Guy Family Guy

2 Fast 2 Furious (2003, Action) Tyrese Gibson, Eva Are We Are We There Yet? There Yet? "Dark Meet" Puffy Shirt" Heart Attack" Pothole" Mendes, Paul Walker.

Ace in the Hole ('51,

Top Banana (1954, Comedy) Danny Scholl, Judy Lynn,

It's Always Fair Weather (1955, Musical) Cyd

Our Man in Havana Dra) Kirk Douglas. Phil Silvers. Charisse, Michael Kidd, Gene Kelly. ('60, Com) Burl Ives. Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes (N) Say Yes (N) Say Yes to I Found (N) I Found (N) Say Yes to Say Yes to Supernatural Supernatural

Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring ('01, Fant) Ian McKellan, Sean Astin, Elijah Wood. Movie Adventure T. Regular Regular TeenTita Cartoon Planet King of Hill King of Hill American D. American D. Family Guy Family Guy Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files The Dead Files Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Loves Ray Loves Ray Loves Ray Loves Ray King-Queens King-Queens Law&O.:SVU "Dependent" Law&O.:SVU "Annihilated" S VU "Double Strands" S VU "Missing Pieces" S VU "True Believers" M oment "Choreographer" Met Mother Met Mother WGN News at Nine Funniest Home Videos Rules of Eng Rules of Eng 30 Rock Scrubs 30 Rock Sunny

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Mitchell B. Modell as seen in “Undercover Boss.”

Undercover Boss (7) KIRO

8:00 p.m.

Enjoy a look back at some of the most memorable employees from the past four editions in the season finale. The employees talk about how their experience on the show changed their lives and reveal what they’re doing now.

Shark Tank (4) KOMO

9:00 p.m.

Self-made tycoons give entrepreneurs one last chance to impress them in this season finale. The entrepreneurs will have just minutes to convince the Sharks to invest in their ideas. A short clip features an appearance by Dr. Doof from “Phineas and Ferb.”

Bones (8) GBLBC (13) KCPQ

9:00

p.m.

168* 241*

When a street artist falls in glue and lands on human remains, the team must find a way to separate them so they can identify the body. Meanwhile, Booth goes undercover as a stand-up comic in the hopes of finding suspects in the case.

122* 284*

Blue Bloods

139* 247*

(7) KIRO

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10:00 p.m.

Danny and Jackie look into a domestic violence case when the suspected victim recants her claim, despite obvious injury. They soon discover that the woman is involved in a secret relationship with a high-powered councilman. Richard Burgi guest stars. MAY 12 - 18, 2013

19


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Coronat-

A Bear Named Winnie (2004, Family) Stroumbo ion Street Gil Bellows, Stephen Fry, Michael Fassbender. ulopoulos Jimmy ABC News Paid Paid Paid Paid Kimmel Nightline Program Program Program Program Tonight Late Night With Last Call Paid Paid Show Jimmy Fallon w'Daly Program Program Law & Law & Order: Evening Access H. Baggage Order: C.I. Criminal Intent Magazine David The Late Late Show Paid Jack Van Paid Letterman With Craig Ferguson Program Impe Program E.T. The Jeff Probst Show Ent. WhatHPaid Canada Tonight appened Program The Heart of Perfect Health With Super Brain With Dr. Rudy Tanzi Brenda Watson Case "Lonely Hearts" C ase "Forever Blue" C old Case Frasier Frasier Scrubs Always 'Til Death Excused Sunny Perry Kojak "Mojo" Night Mission: Impossible Mason Gallery "A Game of Chess" Everybody Everybody According TMZ Paid Paid Loves Ray Loves Ray to Jim Program Program Liquidation Channel Katie

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Out There EP Daily

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MonsterM Busytown AnimalMe Super DoodleCountry ath/LLunar Mysteries ch./PP irates WHY! bops Fun Hunt Paid Paid KOMO 4 News Good Morning KOMO 4 News Program Program America Saturday (N) KING 5 Weekend KING 5 Weekend KING 5 Weekend Early Morning News Early Morning News Morning News Mad Money Missing Dog Tales Tim American Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid McCarver Athlete Program Program Program Program Program Program Paid Right This Paid Paid Saturday A discussion of current events and a KIRO 7 Eyewitness News Liberty's Program Minute Program Program variety of topics that affect our world today. Saturday Morning Kids Paid Paid 100 Off Air Paid Paid Canadian Fishful Saturday Morning News Program Program Huntley Program Program Made Thinking Independent Lens You Don't Know Jack Tavis Esmonde Sesame Street Curious The Cat in Super Dinosaur Soo Smiley (N) Technique "Finishing the Splat" George the Hat WHY! Train "The Invisible War" Paid Paid Inspiration Today Camp Meeting Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Trisha Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Rescue Nanoboy Sonic X Sonic X Program Program Program Program Program Program Heroes Combat "Counter 12 O'Clock High He-Man & She-Ra: The Green Religious Fishing Paid Green Green Punch" Masters Princess Hornet Town Hall Program Screen Screen Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Edgemont Dragonf- Swap TV On the Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program lyTV Spot CHEK Late Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid News Program Program Program Program Program Reviews Out There CityLine Out There Reviews CityLine CityLine EP Weekly Reviews

SportsCenter

Monk "Mr. Monk Paid Paid Paid Goes to the Theatre" Program Program Program Impact The Ramp Veggie Tales "Marathon" Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Wars Wars Wars Wars Wars Small

The Scorpion King (2002, Action) Kelly Hu, Steven Brand, The Rock. Town Swamp'd! Swamp'd! Wildman Wildman Swamp'd! To Be Announced

NBA Basketball Playoffs

Paid Program

Paid Program

Steven and Chris

Paid Program

Paid Program

NBA Top Ten Bassmaster Elite "Bull NASCAR Now (L) SportC A review of the day's scores, highlights, Tonight Shoals Quest" and feature stories from major sporting events. Fresh Fresh Paid Paid Paid Paid The 700 Club Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid

Home Alone (1990, Comedy) Joe Pesci, Prince Prince Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Daniel Stern, Macaulay Culkin.

Boy On a Dolphin ('57, Adv) Born Reckless ('37, Dra) Brian Let's Make It Legal The Foxes of Harrow (1947, Drama) Maureen

The Revolt of Mamie Stover

The Story on Page One Alan Ladd, Sophia Loren. Donlevy, Rochelle Hudson. Claudette Colbert. O'Hara, Richard Haydn, Rex Harrison. ('56, Dra) Jane Russell. ('59, Dra) Rita Hayworth. Red Eye The O'Reilly Factor FOX & Friends First Fox & Friends Saturday Bull Bear Cavuto Forbes Cashin' In Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Crave Seekers Paid Program BBQ Big Bite Best BestAte Movie Justified Justified Justified Justified "Reckoning" Justified Paid Paid Paid Mother Mother Mother Mother PGA Golf Paid Paid Paid Paid G. Goose EPGA Golf World Match Play Championship Day 3 Site: Thracian Cliffs Golf Club -- Kavarna, Bulgaria (L) M orning Drive (L) G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls Cheers Cheers Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy FleaFlip FleaFlip HouseH House House House Extreme Homes Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Disaster Leave It Property Property American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers Pickers Pickers Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. America Unearthed America Unearthed Hoarders Hoarders Hoarders Hoarders Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary Hardball Business Rachel Maddow Weekends-Alex Witt Up With Steve Kornacki Melissa Harris-Perry Tuna "Fish Fight" T una "Shark Attack" Wicked Tuna Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Alaska State Troopers Wicked Tuna Wicked Tuna Friends Friends G. Lopez G. Lopez G. Lopez G. Lopez My Wife and Kids Wife Kids Yes, Dear Yes, Dear Full House Full House Full House Parents Parents Sponge Sponge Poker After Dark NCAA Baseball Texas vs. TCU Boating World Match The Dan Patrick Show Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Racing Tour Program Program Program Program Program Program Indiana Bar Rescue Bar Rescue "Bad to Ways to Ways to Ways to Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Jones & ... "Bottomless Pit" the Bone" Die Die Die Merlin Defiance Warehouse 13 LostGirl "Dead Lucky" Lost Girl Stargate "Instinct" P aid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid We There We There We There

The Fast and the Furious (2001, Action)

The Forbidden Kingdom ('08, Adv) J. Married, Married, Earl "Stole My Name House of Meet the Yet? Yet? Yet? Michelle Rodriguez, Paul Walker, Vin Diesel. Michael Angarano, Jackie Chan, Jet Li. Foxworthy Children Children an RV" Is Earl Payne Browns

Our Man in

Autumn Leaves (1956, Drama) Cliff The George Raft Story ('61, Bio) The Bob Mathias Story ('54, Bio) I Met My Love Again ('38, Rom)

The Falcon Strikes Back ('43, Havana Burl Ives. Roberston, Vera Miles, Joan Crawford. Jayne Mansfield, Ray Danton. Bond Ward, Bob Mathias. Joan Bennett, Henry Fonda. Myst) Tom Conway. I Found I Found Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid

Lara Croft: Tomb Raider

Race to Witch Mountain TNT Pre. Smallville "Upgrade" LawOrder "Manhood" Law & Order LawOrder "Vendetta" Law & Order "Gaijin" Robot AquaT. Squid AmerDad AmerDad FamilyGuy FamilyGuy Robot Sealab Squid King of H. King of H. Looney Looney Scan2Go Johnny Beyblade Pokemon Ghost Adventures The Dead Files The Dead Files Ghost Adventures Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Vacations Attack Mystery Museum Queens Queens Loves Ray Loves Ray '70s Show '70s Show G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls CSI: Crime Scene CSI "Last Laugh"

War ('07, Act) Jason Statham, Jet Li. House Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Futurama 'Til Death Paid Paid Paid Paid Singsation People Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Law & Order: C.I.

MAY 12 - 18, 2013

SportsCenter

Paid Program

Best In the Recipes Kitchen Paid Paid Program Program Saturday Today (N)

Paid Paid Animal Wild Awesome Now Eat Program Program Atlas Animals Advent. This! X. Life Veggie Tales "Marathon" Storage Storage Storage Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Criminal Minds "The Criminal Minds Wars Wars Wars Fox" "Children of the Dark" The Small

The Scorpion King 2: Rise of a Warrior (2008, The The The Rifleman Rifleman The Scorpion... Town Action) Tom Wu, Karen Shenaz David, Michael Copon. Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman "Waste" "Waste" Rifleman Tanked! "Be Cool" Swamp'd! Tanked! Tanked! "Be Cool" Cat Diary Cat Diary Must Love Cats Must Love Cats To Be Announced Paid Paid Paid Paid To Be Announced Dukes of Dukes of Program Program Program Program Melrose Melrose Paid Paid Mad Money The Suze Orman Options Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Program Program Show Action Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Piers Morgan Live Anderson Cooper 360 Piers Morgan Live Weekend Early Start Early Start News CNN Saturday Morning News Money Sat. Morn. News CNN Newsroom Germain O'Connor Gabriel Iglesias

Scary Movie 4 ('06, Com) Anna Faris. Tosh.O Schumer Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Comedy Scrubs Key Capitol Hill Hearings Washington Journal Washington This Week Wild West Alaska Sons of Guns Sons of Guns "AK-47 Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Silencer" Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program "Russian Roulette" Dog Blog GoodLuck Austin Dog Blog GoodLuck

Dadnapped Moises Arias. SuiteL Cinderella III: A Twist in Time Octonauts Mickey M. Mickey M. Stuffins Jake Sofia 1st NBA Basketball Playoffs SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter X Games -- Barcelona, Spain (L)

KZJO KTBW Reflect A&E

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FOX KCPQ

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CNN (56) COM (17) CSPAN

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(64)

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LIFE

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NICK

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Absolutely Canadian Geo Journey II "The the fifth estate Best In the The Lang and O'Leary Dragons' Den News: The Marketp- NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs (L) Western Pacific Rim" Recipes Kitchen Exchange National lace Wild Ocean Recipe Food for Sea Born to Paid Paid X Games -- Barcelona, Spain Wife Swap "Kuncaitis/ Cash Cab UW 360 KOMO 4 ABC News Countd. Mysteries Rehab Thought Rescue Explore Program Program Zdazinsky" News KING 5 Weekend NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs (L) Horse Racing The Preakness Site: Pimlico Race Justin Explora- Gardening KING 5 News Morning News Course -- Baltimore, Md. (L) Time tion Ciscoe The Chica PajaniHouse HomeoThis Old Hometime Ron My Family Gardening Gardening Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Tim Paid Show mals Smarts wner House Hazelton Recipe Am Ciscoe Program Program Program Program Program Program McCarver Program Liberty's TheDoo- TheDoo- Paid Paid Paid PGA Golf Byron Nelson Championship Round 3 Site: TPC Four Seasons Paid Paid Sports Elizabeth KIRO 7 KIRO 7 Kids dlebops dlebops Program Program Program Resort -- Irving, Texas (L) Program Program Stars Stanton News News Saturday Morning Fish'n Real PowerDriving Noon PGA Golf Byron Nelson Championship Round 3 Site: TPC Ice Pilots NWT "On The The The Global News Canada Fishing boat TV Television News Four Seasons Resort -- Irving, Texas (L) the Move" Simpsons Simpsons Simpsons National Sid Thomas & Bob the SciGirls KCTS 9 Cooks "Kitchen Classics" KCTS 9 Cooks "Kitchen Classics" KCTS 9 Cooks Science Friends Builder "Kitchen Classics" Paid Paid Paid Paid Miracles Paid Paid Paid

First Knight ('95, Act) Richard Gere, Sean Connery. Monk Monk Transform Justice Dragon WWE Sat Yu-Gi-Oh! Yu-Gi-Oh! Real Life WhaddPaid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Cold Case Files Old Old ers Prime League Ball Z Kai Morning Zexal 101 yado? Program Program Program Program Program Program Christine Christine Children Workforce Travel Safari Western In The Wagon Train Gunsmoke Bonanza "Day of the The Big Valley The The To Be Announced Talk History Window Islands Dragon" Rifleman Rifleman "Lightfoot" Career Eco Weekend Marketplace Player MLB Baseball (L) W hacked Cops Unsealed: Unsealed Day Company Poll (N) Out Alien Files Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Nice Fish Fishing on Fishing Journal Oper. Smile "New

Supernova (2000, Sci-Fi) Angela Bassett, CHEK News at 5 Program Program Program Program Program Program Fly the Flats Smile, New Life" Lou Diamond Phillips, James Spader. Tow Biz Ed's Up The Most Role That Word Angry EP Weekly Reviews Tow Biz Ed's Up The Shopping Word Angry MLS Soccer Portland Timbers vs. Vancouver Amazing Changed Travels Planet Channel Travels Planet Whitecaps Site: Empire Field (L) Young Live Life Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid

Wild Hogs (2007, Comedy) William H.

Swordfish (2001, Thriller) Hugh Jackman, Icons and Win! Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Macy, Martin Lawrence, John Travolta. Halle Berry, John Travolta. Veggie "Marathon" Veggie Tales "Marathon" Changes Lives

The Passion of the Christ (Recut) James Caviezel. In Touch Ministries Fix This Fix This Sell This House: Ex Flip House "Veronica Flip This House "Flip

Signs (2002, Thriller) Joaquin Phoenix, Bates "First You Bates "Nice Town You Bates Motel "What's Yard Yard Saves the Day" in Trouble" Dream, Then You Die" Picked, Norma" Wrong With Norman?" "Tucker, GA" (N) Rory Culkin, Mel Gibson. Rawhide "Incident Of Rawhide "Incident of Rawhide "Incident at Rawhide "Incident of Rawhide "Incident at

Rio Bravo (1959, Western) Dean Martin, Ricky Nelson, John

A Knight's Tale The Day Of The Dead" the Roman Candles" Dangerfield Dip" the Shambling Man" Jacob's Well" Wayne. Heath Ledger. To Be Announced It's a Brad It's a Brad The Rachel Zoe The Rachel Zoe L.A. Shrinks L.A. Shrinks The Millionaire The Millionaire Shahs of Sunset Vanderpump Rules World World Project Project Matchmaker Matchmaker Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Money in CNBC CNBC Special Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Motion Special CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Money Next List CNN Newsroom News Sanjay CNN Newsroom The Situation Room CNN Newsroom Anderson Cooper Scrubs Scrubs

Balls of Fury ('07, Com) Dan Fogler.

There's Something About Mary Ben Stiller.

Scary Movie 4 ('06, Com) Anna Faris. Ace Ventura: When ... Washington This Week Washington This Week Comms. Washington This Week To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced

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9:30 10

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Gravity Jessie X Games -- Barcelona, Spain (L)

Jessie Jessie Shake Up Shake Up Austin Austin GoodLuck Dog Blog Softball NCAA Softball Regional (L) SportsC- X Games Update (L) enter SportsC- NCAA Lacrosse Division I Tournament Quarter- NCAA NCAA Lacrosse Division I Tournament NCAA NHRA Drag Racing Kansas Nationals NCAA NCAA Softball enter final Site: Byrd Stadium -- College Park, Md. (L) Update (L) Quarter-final Site: Byrd Stadium (L) Update (L) Qualifying Site: Heartland Park -- Topeka, Kan. Update (L) Division I Tournament

Richie Rich (1994, Comedy) John

Dennis the Menace ('93, Family) Mason

The Little Rascals (1994, Comedy) Ross

Journey to the Center of the Earth ('08,

The Sorcerer's Larroquette, Jonathan Hyde, Macaulay Culkin. Gamble, Joan Plowright, Walter Matthau. Elliot Bagley, Bug Hall, Travis Tedford. Adv) Josh Hucherson, Brendan Fraser. Apprentice The Story

Return to Peyton Place (1961, Drama) Jeff Chandler,

Cradle Will Rock (1999, Drama) Bill FXM

Mona Lisa Smile (2003, Comedy/Drama) FXM

27 Dresses ('08, on Page... Mary Astor, Carol Lynley. Murray, John Cusack. Presents Julia Stiles, Kirsten Dunst, Julia Roberts. Presents Com) Katherine Heigl. America's News HQ America's News HQ Journal E. Fox News Stossel America's News HQ America's News HQ FOX Report Saturday Huckabee Paula Paula Pioneer S. Kitchen Barefoot Giada (N) C hopped Cupcake Wars Restaurant Restaurant Stakeout Diners Diners Giving You Business Two 1/2... Two 1/2... Two 1/2... Two 1/2...

Jumping the Broom ('11, Com) Paula Patton. Soul Surfer ('11, Act) Dennis Quaid, AnnaSophia Robb.

Grown Ups ('10, Com) Adam Sandler. M. Drive Golf Pre. PGA Golf Golf Pre. Web.com Golf BMW Charity Pro AM (L) LPGA Golf Mobile Bay Classic (L) Golf Cent. PGA Golf G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls

Daniel's Daughter Laura Leighton. The Shunning ('11, Dra) Danielle Panabaker. The Confession ('13, Dra) Sheri Stringfield.

Uncorked Elbow Yard Crashers Crashers Crashers Kitchen Crashers Crashers Love It or List It HGTV Yard Takeover Extreme Homes Extreme Homes Extreme Homes America Unearthed America Unearthed America Unearthed America Unearthed America Unearthed Secret Access: The Vatican Air Force One Extreme Airports Paid Paid Paid Paid Dance Moms "Tell Reviving Ophelia (2010, Drama) Kim Dickens, Walking the Halls (2012, Drama) Jamie Luner,

Girl Fight (2011, Drama) James Tupper, Program Program Program Program All" Nick Thurston, Jane Kaczmarek. Caitlin Thompson, Doug Campbell. Jordelle Ferland, Anne Heche. Weekends With Alex Witt MSNBC News Live MSNBC News Live MSNBC News Live MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary Doomsday Preppers Doomsday Preppers Doomsday Preppers Doomsday Preppers Doomsday Preppers Doomsday Preppers Doomsday Preppers Alaska State Troopers Alaska State Troopers Sponge Parents Sponge Sponge Ninja Monsters Monsters Sponge Mega Sponge Parents Parents Parents Parents Victorious Victorious iCarly iCarly Fitness Pre-game MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners vs. Cleveland Indians Site: Progressive PostPaid Paid Paid Paid Timbers in MLS Soccer Portland Timbers vs. Vancouver Truth Field -- Cleveland, Ohio (L) game (L) Program Program Program Program 30 Whitecaps Site: Empire Field (L) (L) Xtreme HorsepTrucks! MuscleCar Worst Worst Worst Worst Worst Worst Worst Worst Worst

Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981, Adventure) Karen 4x4 ower TV (N) Tenants Tenants Tenants Tenants Tenants Tenants Tenants Tenants Tenants Allen, Denholm Elliott, Harrison Ford. Warehous "Stand" W arehouse 13 Warehouse 13 Warehouse 13 Warehouse 13 Warehouse 13 Warehous "Fractures" W arehouse 13 Warehouse 13 We There According Rules of Rules of The King

The Fast and the Furious (2001, Action)

2 Fast 2 Furious (2003, Action) Tyrese Everybody Friends Friends Friends Friends Yet? to Jim Engage. Engage. of Queens Michelle Rodriguez, Paul Walker, Vin Diesel. Loves Ray Gibson, Eva Mendes, Paul Walker.

Ride the High Country ('62, West) Pandora and the Flying Dutchman ('51, Dra)

The Virgin Queen (1955, History)

Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison (1957,

Bride of Randolph Scott, Mariette Hartley, Joel McCrea. James Mason, Nigel Patrick, Ava Gardner. Richard Todd, Joan Collins, Bette Davis. War) Deborah Kerr, Robert Mitchum. Frankenstein Property Ladder Four Houses Twisted Twisted FirstHm. FirstHm. Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo (N) T attoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Law & Order Rizzoli & Isles Rizzoli & Isles

Rules of Engagement ('00, Dra) Tommy Lee Jones.

Flags of Our Fathers ('06, Dra) Barry Pepper. We Were Soldiers Ben 10 NinjaGo Green TeenTita Tom/Jerry Tom/Jerry Johnny Johnny Johnny Gumball Gumball Gumball MAD In Crew Adv.Time Adv.Time Adv.Time Regular Layover "Chicago" Layover "Atlanta" M an/Food Man/Food Man/Food Man/Food Man/Food Man/Food Burger Burger Red, New Red, New Extreme Factories Extreme Factories Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Psych "Lassie Jerky" P sych "Dead Air" N CIS "Hiatus" 1/2 N CIS "Hiatus, Part II" N CIS "Shalom" N CIS "Faking It" N CIS "Iceman" N CIS NCIS Law & Order: C.I. Law & Order: C.I. Law & Order: C.I. Law & Order: C.I. Law & Order: C.I. Law & Order: C.I. Law & Order: C.I. Home Videos Home Videos

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A.N.T.

Jessie

Jessie

GoodLuck GoodLuck GoodLuck Jessie NCAA Softball Regional (L)

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118* 265* 130* 254* 184* 282* 129* 273* 208 355 200 202 107* 249* 210 350 182* 278* 173 291 140 206 144 209 180* 311* 133 258 205 110* 136* 136*

360 231* 248* 248* 312* 112* 229* 120* 269* 108* 252* 209 356 186 276 171 300 426 687 168* 241* 122* 284* 139* 247* 132 256 183* 138* 176* 215* 106* 105* 239

MAY 12 - 18, 2013

280* 245* 296* 277* 304* 242* 307

21


Saturday bestbets

MAY 18

KOMO

(6) (7)

NBC KING KONG

CBS KIRO

(8) GBLBC (9)

PBS

KCTS (10) ION (11)

CW KSTW

(12) KVOS (13) (15) (16) (22)

Fix This Yard 9:30 a.m.

(37) A&E

Oli and Cori once had big plans for their front yard but have decided to sell their property instead. The problem is, no one wants to buy it as is. Luckily, Alan and Amy arrive to revamp the yard and, hopefully, get potential buyers to take notice.

Bet on Your Baby (4) KOMO

8:00 p.m.

Melissa Peterman returns with more hilarious hijinks in this new episode. Little Sawyer participates in the TP Takeoff challenge, while young Ayo plays Body of Work. If Scarlet’s parents choose correctly, they could win $5,000 for her college fund.

300 8:00 p.m.

Frank Miller’s take on the epic Battle of Thermopylae comes to life in this action film. A Persian envoy offers King Leonidas a deal if he’ll bow to Xerxes, but he refuses. Instead, he gathers his best fighters and prepares for battle.

Four Houses (61) TLC

9:00 p.m.

Homeowners with a flair for interior design show off their impeccable homes in the hopes of impressing fellow decor aficionados with their unique style. The contestants score each other’s efforts and the homeowner with the highest score wins $100,000.

22

FOX KCPQ

E! CHEK CITY

MNT KZJO KTBW

(37)

A&E

(39)

AMC

(49) ANPL (70) BRAVO

MAY 12 - 18, 2013

PM

6:30

(24) CNBC

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Anthony Bourdain Anderson Cooper Anderson Cooper 360 Anderson Cooper CNN Anthony Bourdain COM Ace Ventura: When Natu...

The House Bunny ('08, Com) Colin Hanks, Anna Faris.

Hot Tub Time Machine ('10, Com) John Cusack. Washington This Week (17) CSPAN Washington This Week To Be Announced

(29)

DISC

(46)

DISN Austin/ Ally

(26)

ESPN

(64)

FAM

(51)

FMC

(23)

FNC

(53) FOOD (48) FX (60)

HALL

(30) HGTV (42) HIST (38)

LIFE

(65) MSNBC (63) NGEO (41)

NICK

(25) ROOT (34) SPIKE (52)

SYFY

(28)

TBS

(35)

TCM

(61)

TLC TNT TOON TRAV TVLND USA WGN

(31) (43) (32) (50) (33)

PM

11:30 S1 S2

C BC News: Just for Laughs A look at Winnipeg Vancouver up-and-coming comedy acts. Comedy Fest Wheel of Jeopardy! Bet on Your Baby (N) 20/20 "Rock 'n' Royalty: Music All Stars" (N) KOMO 4 Burn Notice 4 4 Fortune Weekend News NBC Nightly KING 5 News Sounders FC MLS Soccer FC Dallas vs. Seattle Sounders FC Site: NorthWest Saturday Night Live KING 5 News Sat. Night 5 5 News Pre-game (L) CenturyLink Field -- Seattle, Wash. (L) Backroads Live (SF) (N) Access Hollywood Paid Paid Law & Order "Monster" Law & Order "Cherished" KING News Inside Access Hollywood 16 16 Weekend Program Program Edition Weekend CBS Evening KIRO 7 News Entertainment Tonight Elementary 48 Hours "Death Wish" 48 Hours "Chi Drug War" KIRO News OMG! 7 7 News Weekend (N) Insider News Hour Final 24 "Anna Nicole Global Currents "Cat City" The Celebrity Apprentice "May the Spoon Be With You" News Final Sat. Night Smith" Two contestants are fired before the final task begins. (N) Live (SF) (N) KCTS 9 Cooks "Kitchen Magic Moments Performers include Mel Carter, the Four Easy Yoga for Arthritis

Hoosiers (1986, Drama) Barbara Hershey, Dennis 9 9 Hopper, Gene Hackman. Classics" Aces, the Chordettes, the Four Lads and more. With Peggy Cappy Monk Monk Monk Psych Psych Psych 33 Rules of Eng Rules of The Office The Office CSI: Miami "Dead Woman Leverage "The Ice Man Job" Criminal Minds "Roadkill" Always Always 11 11 "Dad's Visit" Engagement "Gossip" Walking" Sunny Sunny To Be Hogan "The Batman Batman Lost in Space "There are Star Trek "Miri"

The Invisible Man (1933, Sci-Fi) Gloria Stuart, Giants in the Earth" Announced Gold Rush" William Harrigan, Claude Rains. Two and a Two and a The Big Bang The Big Bang Cops "Stupid Cops Cops Cops "Street Q13 FOX Wash. Most Hell's Kitchen "9 Chefs 13 13 Half Men Half Men Theory Theory Behavior #5" Arrests #3" News Wanted Compete" CBC News at Family Wheel of Jeopardy! Operation Smile "New 48 Hours Examine a subject 48 Hours Examine a subject MiningFuture

Les Six Matters Fortune Smile, New Life" from multiple angles. from multiple angles. "The Future" Miserables Murdoch Mysteries Get Stuffed Out There Murdoch Mysteries

45 RPM (2009, Drama) Mackenzie Porter, Michael Role That Glenn Changed Martin, DDS Madsen, Jordan Gavaris. Bloopers Bloopers Bones Bones "The Man in the Q13 FOX Cops Unsealed: Unsealed Star Wars: Star Wars: 22 22 Wall" News Alien Files Clone Clone The Hour of Power Billy Graham Crusade Going My Way History Oak Tree Virtual Mem. Bates Motel "Trust Me" Bates Motel "Ocean View" B ates Motel "The Truth" Bates Motel "The Man in Bates Motel "A Boy and His Bates Motel "Underwater" 118* 265* Number 9" Dog"

A Knight's Tale (2001, Adventure) Mark Addy, Paul

300 (2006, Epic) Lena Headey, Dominic West, Gerard Butler.

300 ('06, Epic) Lena Headey, Dominic 130* 254* Bettany, Heath Ledger. West, Gerard Butler. To Be Announced My Cat From Hell My Cat From Hell America's Cutest Cat Too Cute! "Curious Kittens" My Cat From Hell 184* 282* The Real Housewives of The Real Housewives of The Real Housewives of To Be Announced To Be Announced 129* 273* Beverly Hills Beverly Hills Beverly Hills Suze Orman Show "Take CNBC CNBC CNBC Special Suze Orman Show "Take CNBC CNBC Paid Paid 208 355 Off Your Financial Blinders" Special Special Off Your Financial Blinders" Special Special Program Program

(56)

(27) ESPN2

11

NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs

(40)

(47) GOLF

(39) AMC

6

NHL Hockey Stanley Cup (2) CBUT Playoffs (L) ABC KOMO 4 News (4) CBC

(5)

From left, homeowners Juliannah, Louise, Janelle and Mark as seen in “Four Houses.”

W – Wave Broadband S1 - Dish Network* S2 - DirecTV* Programming on stations denoted with an * air listings 3 hours earlier

SATURDAY EVENING

To Be Announced

Jessie Good Luck ... Jessie X Games -- Barcelona, Spain

To Be Announced

To Be Announced

To Be Announced

Anthony Bourdain

Tommy Boy To Be Announced

200 202 107* 249* 210 350 182* 278*

Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news in the world of sports. in the world of sports. E:60 Baseball Tonight (L)

Good Luck ... Austin/ Ally Dog Blog Jessie 173 291 SportsCenter The day's news SportsCenter The day's news 140 206 in the world of sports. in the world of sports. NCAA Softball Division I Baseball Tonight (L) NBA Tonight ESPN Films "The Announcement- Magic 144 209 Tournament (L) (L) Johnson"

The Sorcerer's Apprentice ('10, Act)

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 (2010, Adventure) Emma Watson, Rupert Grint,

Batman Begins ('05, 180* 311* Alfred Molina, Jay Baruchel, Nicolas Cage. Daniel Radcliffe. Act) Christian Bale.

27 Dresses ('08, Com) FXM

27 Dresses (2008, Comedy) James Marsden, Malin FXM

Cradle Will Rock (1999, Drama) Bill Murray, John 133 258 Presents Presents Katherine Heigl. Akerman, Katherine Heigl. Cusack. Justice With Judge Jeanine Geraldo at Large Journal Edit. Fox News Justice With Judge Jeanine Geraldo at Large Red Eye With Greg Gutfeld 205 360 Iron Chef America Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners "Under the Hood" (N) Iron Chef America 110* 231* UFC Mixed Martial Arts Fight Night

Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen ('09, Act) Megan Fox, Shia LaBeouf. Live Free or Die Hard 136* 248* PGA Golf Byron Nelson Championship Site: TPC Four Seasons at Las Colinas G olf Central

Tin Cup ('96, Com/Dra) Rene Russo, Cheech Marin, Kevin Costner. 136* 248*

Uncorked Julie Benz.

I Want to Marry Ryan Banks Jason Priestley. The Seven Year Hitch ('12, Com) Darin Brooks.

Second Honeymoon 312* House Hunt. House House Hunt. House Love It or List It Love/List "Storage Siege" H ouse Hunt. House House Hunt. House 112* 229* Most Extreme Airports Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars 120* 269*

Accused at 17 (2010, Drama) Barbara Niven, William To Be Announced Trust (2010, Thriller) Catherine Keener, Liana Liberato, Clive 108* 252* R. Moses, Cynthia Gibb. Owen. MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary 209 356 Wicked Tuna (N) Ult.Survival "Arctic Hell" Wicked Tuna Ult.Survival "Arctic Hell" Alaska State Troopers Trooper "Son and a Gun" 186 276 SpongeBob SpongeBob Odd Parents Monsters vs. SpongeBob SpongeBob Big Time R. WendellVinn The Nanny The Nanny Friends Friends 171 300 MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners vs. Cleveland Indians Site: Progressive Field -- Cleveland, Ohio MLS Soccer FC Dallas vs. Seattle Sounders FC Site: MLS Soccer 426 687 CenturyLink Field -- Seattle, Wash. Por/Van

Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984, Adventure) Kate Capshaw,

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989, Adventure) Sean Connery, Julian 168* 241* Jonathan Ke Quan, Harrison Ford. Glover, Harrison Ford. Warehouse 13 Warehouse 13 Warehouse 13 Warehouse 13 Warehous "The Big Snag" Riverworld 1/2 122* 284* The King of King-Queens The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Men at Work Gets the Last 139* 247* Queens "Wild Cards" Theory Theory Theory Theory Theory Theory Theory Theory Laugh? Bride of

The Private Life of Henry VIII

Murder By Death (1976, Mystery) David Niven,

Passport to Destiny ('44, Dra) Gordon

Below 132 256 Frankenstein ('33, Bio) Elsa Lanchester, Charles Laughton. Peter Falk, Peter Sellers. Oliver, Lénore Aubert, Elsa Lanchester. the Belt Worst Tattoo Worst Tattoo To Be Announced Four Houses (N) Surreal Estate (N) T o Be Announced 183* 280*

We Were Soldiers ('02, War) Mel Gibson.

G.I. Jane ('97, Dra) Viggo Mortensen, Anne Bancroft, Demi Moore.

We Were Soldiers Mel Gibson. 138* 245* Regular Regular

Underdog ('07, Fam) Peter Dinklage, Jason Lee. Venture Bros Family Guy Family Guy Cleveland Black Dyna Boondocks 176* 296* Tricked Out Trailers Mega RV Countdown Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures 215* 277* Roseanne Roseanne Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Loves Ray Loves Ray Loves Ray Loves Ray Loves Ray King-Queens 106* 304* NCIS "Deliverance" N CIS "Rule Fifty-One" N CIS "Spider and the Fly" N CIS "Swan Song" N CIS "Pyramid"

The 40-Year-Old Virgin 105* 242* Funniest Home Videos WGN News at Nine Bones Bones 30 Rock 30 Rock Rules of Eng Rules of Eng 239 307

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS


SUNDAY EARLY MORNING W

MAY 19

(2)

CBC

(4) (5)

CBUT

ABC KOMO

NBC KING

(6)

KONG

(7)

CBS KIRO

(8) GBLBC (9)

PBS

KCTS (10) ION (11)

CW KSTW

(12) KVOS (13) (15) (16) (22)

FOX KCPQ

E! CHEK CITY

MNT KZJO KTBW

(37)

A&E

(39)

AMC

(49) ANPL (70) BRAVO (24) CNBC (40)

CNN (56) COM (17) CSPAN (29)

DISC

(46)

DISN

(26)

ESPN

(27) ESPN2 (64)

FAM

(51)

FMC

(23)

(42)

FNC FOOD FX GOLF HALL HGTV HIST

(38)

LIFE

(53) (48) (47) (60) (30)

(65) MSNBC (63) NGEO (41)

NICK

(25) ROOT (34) SPIKE (52)

SYFY

(28)

TBS

(35)

TCM

(61)

TLC TNT TOON TRAV TVLAN USA WGN

(31) (43) (32) (50) (33)

12

AM

12:30 1

AM

W – Wave Broadband

1:30

2

AM

2:30

JFL: Gags 22 Rick Marketp- Stroumbo ComedyFst Minutes Mercer lace ulopoulos (11:35) (:35) Castle (:35) Private Practice (:35) Paid Program Burn (11:30) Saturday Night (:05) The (:35) (:05) Paid (:35) Paid Live (SF) (N) 206 Almost L Program Program Leaving Las Vegas An alcoholic intent on drinking Almost Live! himself to death in Las Vegas befriends a hooker ... (:05) Paid (:35) Paid (:05) Paid (:35) Paid (:05) Paid (:35) Paid Program Program Program Program Program Program (11:35) Saturday Night (:05) PartyPoker (:05) JR (:35) Paid Live (SF) (N) Digs Program Two Films by Tadashi ...Courage "Patriotism Globe Trekker Nakamura and Civil Liberties" Psych Psych Psych That '70s 'Til Death Scrubs Judge Joe First Paid Show Brown Family Program Voyage to the Get Smart Get Smart Car 54 Car 54 Bottom of the Sea Ben and Whacked Paid Paid Paid Paid Kate Out Program Program Program Program (11:30) Les Miserables When an ex-convict is shown Liquidation Channel mercy he changes his life & becomes a respected ... The Office The Office Flipper A boy and his friend, a dolphin, try to stop toxic waste pollution in the Florida Keys. Cheaters Paid Paid Paid Paid Program Program Program Program Christian Stranger Garden Gospel Billy Graham Crusade Bates Motel "The Bates Motel "The Bates Motel "A Boy Truth" Man in Number 9" and His Dog" (10:30)

300 Small Small CSI: Miami "In the Gerard Butler. Town Town Wind" America's Cutest Cat Too Cute! My Cat From Hell (11:00) To Be To Be Announced Announced CNBC CNBC The Suze Orman The Suze Orman Special Special Show Show Anderson Cooper 360 Anderson Cooper Anthony Bourdain (11:15) Tommy Boy (:15)

The House Bunny Anna Faris. (9:00) Washington This Week To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced (11:30)

S1 - Dish Network*

S2 - DirecTV*

Programming on stations denoted with an * air listings 3 hours earlier

3

AM

3:30

4

AM

4:30

5

AM

5:30

The Nature of Things Best In the Steven and Chris Recipes Kitchen (:05) Paid Paid Paid Paid Cash Cab Mr. Box Program Program Program Program Office (:05) Paid 1st Look Open On the Sunday Today (N) Program House Money Comedy.TV On the CARS.TV Eucharist Beautiful Money Homes (:05) Judge (:35) This Paid Paid Busytown Busytown Judy Minute Program Program Mysteries Mysteries (:05) Paid (:35) Paid (:05) Paid Program Paid Dr. David Program Program Program Jeremiah Pacific "Tonga: The Frontline "Never Religion European Last Place on Earth" Forget to Lie" News Journal Paid Paid Inspiration Today Camp Meeting Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Program Program Program Program Program Program Honey Honey Burke's Law Loves of P. Silvers West West D. Gillis Show Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Program Program Program Program Program Program Reviews

Paid Program Paid Paid Program Program Holy Land MLucado Bates Motel "Underwater" CSI: Miami "Miami, We Have a Problem" Encountr Encountr L.A. Shrinks

AM

6:30

M eet the Press

Paid Paid Program Program Paid Paid Program Program What's in The Rea Name? Inventors Sesame Street "Build a Better Basket" Paid WorldCm. Paid Paid Program Program P. Silvers The Laurel Show Paid C. Faith Program Center Paid Paid Program Program Out There EP Weekly CityLine

CityLine Paid Program Bill Purvis Info-Doc.

6

Super Poko WHY! KOMO 4 News

Paid Program The Word Info-Doc.

CSI: Miami "L.A."

Tapes Tapes Paid Paid Program Program Options Paid Paid Paid Action Program Program Program Weekend Early Start Early Start Sanjay (:20) Dane Cook: Vicious Circle Comedy Washington Journal Paid Paid Paid Paid Program Program Program Program A.N.T. GoodLuck Austin Kim Possible: So the Drama SuiteL SuiteL SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter

Paid Program Abba Info-Doc.

Paid Program Lives Info-Doc.

C SI: Miami "Getting Axed" Weird Weird Paid Paid Program Program Paid Paid Program Program Sat. Morn. News Paid Paid

7

AM

7:30

AnimalMec Artzooka h./SSaveUm Good Morning America Sunday (N) KING 5 Early Morning News Paid Paid Program Program CBS Sunday Morning

AM

8:30 S1 S2

KING 5 Weekend Morning News Paid T. Arms. Program Face the Nation

Curious The Cat in George the Hat Turn Point Day Disc. In Touch With Dr. Charles Stanley and Hardy Show Key of David Paid Program CityLine

Jack Van Impe Through the Bible

Super Dinosaur WHY! Train In Touch Ministries Truth That The Transform Impact Religious Paid Town Hall Program Fox News Sunday

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7

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Tomorro- Peter w's World Popoff Tow Biz Ed's Up Paid Paid 22 22 Program Program Miracle Redempt. Criminal Minds 118* 265* "Damaged" The Killing "Bulldog" 130* 254* Untamed and Uncut Shahs of Sunset

Paid Paid Paid Paid Program Program Program Program Fareed Zakaria GPS Reliable Sources Paid Paid RENO RENO Newsm. Washington This Week Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Program Program Program Program Program Program Program Program A.N.T. Austin FishHooks Phineas Octonauts Mickey M. Mickey M. Stuffins Jake Sofia 1st SportsCenter SportC A review of the day's scores, highlights, X Games -- Barcelona, Spain (L) and feature stories from major sporting events. 30 for 30 "Winning Time: Reggie 30 for 30 "Once Brothers" E:60 E:60 Bassmaster Elite E:60 SportsC- EPL Soccer (L) Miller vs. the New York Knicks" "Winning Ways #1" enter (11:00) Batman Begins After studying with a ninja Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Z. Levitt Joseph Sunday Richie Rich A wealthy boy must thwart a Prince Mass leader, a young Bruce Wayne returns to Gotham to... Program Program Program Program Program Program Program treacherous employee's attempts to take over the... (:15) FXM

Return to Peyton Place A writer makes waves when

Love Is News (:20) Wintertime ('43, Mus) Jack (:45)

Pin-Up Girl ('44, Mus) (:10) Let's Make It Legal ('51, Will Tyrone Power. Oakie, Cornel Wilde, Sonja Henie. John Harvey, Betty Grable. Com/Dra) Claudette Colbert. Success ... Presents she publishes a book revealing her town's dark secrets. Huckabee Justice JudgeJeanine Geraldo at Large FOX & Friends Sunday News HQ Housecall America's News HQ Diners Diners Diners, Drive-Ins Iron Chef America Diners Diners Paid Program Paid Program Rachel Ray's Week in Giada S. Kitchen (11:00)

Live Free or Die Hard UFC Mixed Martial Arts Fight Night Biased Two 1/2... Paid Paid Paid Paid Smarter Smarter Smarter Smarter Paid Paid Paid Golf Cent. EPGA Golf World Match Play Championship Final Day Site: Thracian Cliffs Golf Club -- Kavarna, Bulgaria (L) Morning Drive (L) (11:00) Second Hon... G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls G. Girls Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Love It or List It HouseH House HouseH House Love It or List It Paid Program Paid Program Cousins Cousins Cousins Cousins Pawn Star Pawn Star Pawn Star Pawn Star Pawn Star Pawn Star PawnSt. PawnSt. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Human "Human Wolf" Human "Electro Man" To Be Announced Trust After his daughter became the victim of an Old Old Paid Paid Paid Paid In Touch With Dr. Paid Turning online sexual predator, a father gets revenge. Christine Christine Program Program Program Program Charles Stanley Program Point MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary Hardball Business Up With Steve Kornacki Melissa Harris-Perry Alaska State Troopers Alaska State Troopers Alaska State Troopers Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Wicked Tuna Tuna "Endgame" Ultimate "Arctic Hell" Friends Friends (:10) Lopez (:45) Lopez (:20) Lopez (:50) Lopez (:25) My Wife & Kids WifeKid Yes, Dear Yes, Dear Full House Full House Full House Parents Parents Mega Sponge (11:30) MLS Soccer Portland Poker After Dark UFC Mixed Martial Arts Johnson vs. Dodson M ixed Martial Arts Brawl Call Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Horns & Timbers vs. Vancouver Whitecaps Showdown Program Program Program Program Program Hooks

Eraser A United States marshal becomes a target Ways to Ways to Ways to Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program when he vows to protect a female witness. Die Die Die (11:00) Riverworld 1/2 Riverworld ('10, Sci-Fi) Tahmoh Penikett. 2/2

The Lost Treasure of the Grand Canyon Defiance Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid

The Replacements Replacements are brought in to Wild, Wild West Two government agents are Married, Married, Married, Friends Friends Friends Last Men at

Wild, substitute for a team of striking football players. brought together by the President to track down a... Children Children Children Laugh? Work Wild West (11:30)

Below (:15) ... All the Marbles A manager of a ladies tag- (:15)

Ten Little Indians ('66, (:45)

Mary of Scotland Biography of the flighty Here Comes Mr. Jordan A man is accidentally sent the Belt Regina Baff. team wrestling combo will do anything to be great. Myst) Shirley Eaton, Hugh O'Brian. Scottish queen who was brought down by love. to the afterworld before his time & must find a ne... Four Houses Surreal Estate To Be Announced Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid (10:30) We Were So... (:15)

Flags of Our Fathers ('06, Dra) Barry Pepper. Law & Order LawOrder "Sweeps" Law & Order Law & Order LawOrder "Magnet" Bleach Naruto Soul Eater T.Cats Sym-Bio Eureka 7 Tenchi Fullmetal Cowboy B. Cowboy B. Inu Yasha Inu Yasha Looney Looney Dragons Johnny Beyblade Pokemon Mystery Museum Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Mystery Museum Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Vacations Attack Mystery Museum Queens Queens Loves Ray Loves Ray '70s Show '70s Show '70s Show '70s Show Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby (11:00)

The 40-Year-Old Virgin WWE A.M. Raw House "Wilson" H ouse Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Christine Christine

Chicago ('02, Mus) Catherine Zeta-Jones. Tomorrow Paid Paid Facts Key David Beyond Paid Paid Paid Paid

Chicago

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

4

Sunday Morning News

Apostolic Faith Paid Paid Church Program Program Kingdom Turn Point R. Praise Walk Info-Doc. Info-Doc. Criminal Minds "Children of the Dark" Mad Men "Blowing Mad Men "Man With Smoke" a Plan" Extreme Extreme Weird Weird Shahs of Sunset Shahs of Sunset Paid Paid Program Program State of the Union Paid Paid

8

Coronat- Coronation Street ion Street KOMO 4 News

184* 282* 129* 273* 208 355 200 202 107* 249* 210 350 182* 278* 173 291 140 206 144 209 180* 311* 133 258 205 110* 136* 136*

360 231* 248* 248* 312* 112* 229* 120* 269* 108* 252* 209 356 186 276 171 300 426 687 168* 241* 122* 284* 139* 247* 132 256 183* 138* 176* 215* 106* 105* 239

MAY 12 - 18, 2013

280* 245* 296* 277* 304* 242* 307

23


In honor of

National Nursing Home Week &

Stroke Prevention Month presents DR. PAUL CUNNINGHAM

MAY 15TH AT NOON to discuss

“Stroke Preventionâ€? Dr. Paul Cunningham board certiďŹ ed geriatrician

-EDICAL $IRECTOR

Snacks & Refreshments to be provided. Reservations required. Please contact: 3EQUIM (EALTH AND 2EHABILITATION AT

650 W. Hemlock Street, Sequim, WA 98382 0HONE s &AX 24

MAY 12 - 18, 2013

34768766

www.sequimskillednursing.com

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS


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