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2012

Friday/Saturday

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YOUR FRIDAY/SATURDAY WEEKEND PLANNER ART TOUR:

HERITAGE:

OUTDOORS:

FAREWELL:

Quileute Days starting in LaPush

Galleries, studios open in Sequim

Big kings caught in salt water

Popular band’s final appearance

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PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Welcome to LAVENDER Weekend Today’s Tod day’s bonus

DIANE URBANI

DE LA

PAZ/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Jahanna Shipp of Puyallup inspects the crop at Purple Haze Lavender Farm, open for the 2012 Sequim Lavender Weekend, at last year’s event.

Pleasantly purple in Sequim area BY DIANE URBANI

DE LA

PAZ

ALSO . . .

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SEQUIM — Fourteen open farms, two free fairs, one mellowing scent: Sequim Lavender Weekend promises a plenitude of pleasure. With the Sequim Lavender Farmers Association and the Sequim Lavender Growers Association both hosting full-fledged farm tours, vendors’ gatherings and stages full of live music, Sequim and the Dungeness Valley are a multisensory mecca today through Sunday. “Follow the fragrance,” advised farmer Paul Jendrucko of the growers association. “Follow the sound,” too, he added: At the Fir Street Fair, sponsored by the growers association, and at Lavender in the Park at Carrie Blake Park, hosted by the farmers association, there’s free music of just about every stripe.

■ Map of Sequim Lavender Weekend attractions/A7

Hot Club Sandwich, for example, will play gypsy jazz at 11 a.m. Saturday and 12:15 p.m. Sunday at the Street Fair, which is on Fir Street between Third and Sequim avenues. The fair, this year nicknamed “Lavenderstock,” also showcases the Shula Azhar belly dancers at 3:15 p.m. today, country blues by Blue Rooster at 5:30 p.m. Saturday and 10 other bands during the weekend. At Carrie Blake Park, 202 N. Blake Ave., the James Center band shell is the venue for another full slate of musical acts. To start the festivities today, the 133rd Army Band will strike KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS up at 10:30 a.m., and gardening Camile the cat strolls amid the lavender of Roger guru Ciscoe Morris will host Fell, owner of Peninsula Nurseries, this week. opening ceremonies at 11:45 a.m. The nursery is an attraction during Lavender TURN

TO

LAVENDER/A7 Weekend.

BALLOTS FOR THE all-mail primary election ending Aug. 7 have been distributed, and so is the PDN’s North Olympic Peninsula Primary Voter Guide with this edition. Candidates’ photos, biographies and answers to questions are featured in the 20-page magazine in all the primary races in Jefferson and Clallam counties as well as in the 6th Congressional District. Ballot measures in Port Angeles and Sequim also are featured. Look for the Voter Guide, along with Peninsula Spotlight weekly entertainment magazine and a tribute section marking the grand opening of Country Aire Natural Foods in downtown Port Angeles — all inside this PDN edition!

Redskins PT mascot issue rises BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — The Port Townsend High School mascot, the Redskins, is the center of controversy again over whether it demeans Native Americans. “I believe I speak for many in this community who are offended, embarrassed and ashamed by our school mascot,” said Andrew Sheldon of Port Townsend in a June 5 letter to the School Board. “Nothing positive is going to happen in our district until we remove the negative stigma that comes with a racist and offensive mascot.” Terri McQuillen — daughter of the late Makah elder Mary McQuillen, who died in 2007 after living much of her life in Port Townsend — is not offended by the mascot and intends to speak out in support of keeping it in place. TURN

Enthusiastic crowd greets canoes in PT BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — Canoes traveling in the 2012 Paddle to Squaxin came ashore at Fort Worden State Park on Thursday, with pullers greeted by an enthusiastic crowd. Twenty-two canoes landed on the beach between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., though four got right back

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The Reinvented

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Members of the Jamestown S’Klallam tribe’s summer friends camp, which includes children from 5 to 11 years old, help greet canoes at Fort Worden State Park in Port Townsend on Thursday.

into the water to travel to the next stop on the journey, Port Gamble, and more may have landed later in the day. Port Townsend does not have a resident tribe, so the three tribes of the Klallam nation — the Lower Elwha, Jamestown and Port Gamble — joined together to provide a warm welcome. TURN

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INSIDE TODAY’S PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 96th year, 174th issue — 6 sections, 82 pages

BUSINESS B5 C1 CLASSIFIED B11 COMICS COMMENTARY/LETTERS A8 B11 DEAR ABBY B7 DEATHS B11 HOROSCOPE *PS MOVIES A3 NATION/WORLD *PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PENINSULA POLL PUZZLES/GAMES SPORTS WEATHER

A2 C3 B8 B12


A2

UpFront

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Tundra

The Samurai of Puzzles

By Chad Carpenter

Copyright © 2012, 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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Circulation customer SERVICE! To subscribe, to change your delivery address, to suspend delivery temporarily or subscription bill questions: 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 (6 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday; 7 a.m.-noon Sunday) You can also subscribe at peninsuladailynews.com, or by email: subscribe@ peninsuladailynews.com If you do not receive your newspaper by 6:30 a.m. Monday through Friday or 7:30 a.m. Sunday and holidays: 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 (6 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday; 7 a.m.noon Sunday) Subscription rates: $2.85 per week by carrier. By mail: $4.10 per week (four weeks minimum) to all states and APO boxes. Single copy prices: 50 cents daily, $1.25 Sunday Back copies: 360-452-2345 or 800-826-7714

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 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 © 2012, Peninsula Daily News MEMBER

Audit Bureau of Circulations

The Associated Press

Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

Gellhorn” with 15. “Modern Family,” honored as best comedy series for the past two years, was the sitcom leader with 14 nominations and practically ran the table in sup“MAD MEN,” A piercporting actor nods, but the ingly bleak portrait of a comedy realm also saw an 1960s American anti-hero, infusion of girl power. earned a leading 17 Emmy “Girls,” creator-star nominations Thursday and Lena Dunham’s darkly the chance to set a new comedic coming-of-age New record as the most-honored York story, received a best drama in television history. comedy nod and acting, AMC’s “Mad Men,” writing and directing nomiwhich has won four best nations for her. Zooey drama series trophies and Deschanel’s offbeat charm is tied with “Hill Street in “New Girl” earned her Blues,” “L.A. Law” and “The an acting bid. West Wing,” received a fifth Competition for “Mad bid in the category. Men” and “Downton Abbey” The miniseries “Ameriincludes national security can Horror Story,” a nightdrama “Homeland,” prohimarish saga about a bition-era crime saga haunted house, received a “Boardwalk Empire,” matching 17 awards, teacher-turned-drugmaker including an acting nod for tale “Breaking Bad” and star Connie Britton. the elaborate fantasy Other leading nominees “Game of Thrones,” based include the elegant Britishon George R.R. Martin’s born soap opera “Downton novels. Abbey,” which earned 16 bids, and two miniseries, “Hatfields & McCoys,” with Willard arrested 16, and “Hemingway & Actor Fred Willard,

‘Horror Story,’ ‘Mad Man’ tie Emmy nods

perhaps best-known as a dogshow announcer in the movie “Best in Show,” has been Willard arrested on suspicion of committing a lewd act at a Hollywood adult theater. Los Angeles Police Sgt. Mark Ro said uniformed vice officers were conducting a routine investigation of the theater shortly before 9 p.m. Wednesday and saw Willard engaging in a lewd act. He said Willard appeared to be alone. The 72-year-old actor was booked at the Hollywood police station on suspicion of committing a lewd act in public. Ro said Willard was released after midnight without posting bail. A call to Willard’s agent, Mike Eisenstadt, seeking comment wasn’t immediately returned Thursday morning.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL WEDNESDAY’S QUESTION: How much does it bother you that Washington state is not considered a battleground state in the presidential election?

Passings

Bothers a lot

By The Associated Press

OMAR SULEIMAN, 76, Egypt’s former spy chief and deposed president Hosni Mubarak’s top lieutenant and keeper of secrets, died Thursday, the country’s official news agency reported. Mr. Suleiman, who served as vice president during Mubarak’s final days in office, said little but Mr. Suleiman had a finger in 2009 in virtually every vital security issue confronting Egypt, was dubbed by the media as “the black box.” Like Mubarak, he was a fierce enemy of Islamists in Egypt and throughout the region, and a friend to the United States and Israel. After the revolution, Mr. Suleiman disappeared from public view only to return earlier this year as a presidential candidate, sparking fears of a Mubarak regime comeback. He said he ran to try to prevent the Muslim Brotherhood’s rise to power, but he was disqualified, and in the end an Islamist leader, Mohammed Morsi, won presidency for the first time in Egypt’s history. The official Middle East News Agency said Mr. Suleiman had suffered from lung and heart problems for months, and his health condition had sharply deteriorated over the past three weeks. He died of a heart attack early Thursday while undergoing medical tests at a hospital in Cleveland, MENA reported, cit-

15.0%

Bothers some ing an unidentified Egyptian diplomat in Washington. Unlike many ex-regime figures who have been imprisoned or put on trial over a catalog of corruption charges, Mr. Suleiman never faced legal action. But he was among the top military and security officials who testified in Mubarak’s trial. He denied that Mubarak issued direct orders to use violence against protesters but hinted that Mubarak learned about killings when he ordered formation of a committee to investigate the killings and injuries. The ousted leader was convicted of failing to stop the killing of protesters during the uprising and sentenced to life in prison.

7.1%

launch accident. Bothers a little 5.0% He served until 1991, three years after the Not at all 69.7% resumption of shuttle I don’t vote 3.2% flights. NASA Administrator Total votes cast: 1,092 Charles Bolden said in a Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com statement that Lt. Gen. NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those McCartney was one of the 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. finest of Kennedy’s 10 directors over the past halfcentury. Setting it Straight Lt. Gen. McCartney was Corrections and clarifications a nuclear engineer by training and served as The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and faircommander of the Air ness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to Force Space Division in the clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Rex Wilson at 360-4173530 or email rex.wilson@peninsuladailynews.com. early to mid-1980s.

Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

1937 (75 years ago)

The Clallam County social security budget totalling $59,050 for the quarter ending Sept. 30 has been _________ approved by Social Security Director Charles F. Ernest. FORREST McCARTAmong the allocations: NEY, 81, a retired Air ■ Division of general Force lieutenant general assistance, $24,132, includand a former director of Kennedy Space Center who ing $10,355 for general was crucial in getting assistance; $540 for funerNASA’s shuttles flying als; $750 for the insane; again after the Challenger $2,940 for public health; tragedy, has died. $1,305 for the David Jr. Lt. Gen. McCartney died health camp; and $795 for Tuesday at a hospice near the county tuberculosis Cape Canaveral, Fla. sanitorium. Lt. Gen. McCartney took ■ Division of old-age charge of Kennedy Space assistance, $23,782, includCenter in the months foling $300 for funerals. lowing the 1986 Challenger ■ Division for children, aid to dependent children, $8,395. Lottery ■ Division of the blind, $2,040. LAST NIGHT’S LOTTERY results are available 1962 (50 years ago) on a timely basis by phoning, toll-free, 800-545-7510 Hearts are lighter and or on the Internet at www. pocketbooks seem to expand walottery.com/Winning now that the Carlsborg sawNumbers. mill is operating again.

The Carlsborg Lumber Co. mill was built in 1916. Today, it is one of the few large mills of that period still in operation — and the only one in this vicinity. When running at top capacity in the 1920s with its own railroad, shingle mill and logging operation, about 150 men were employed. At the present time, the mill, now operated by Orban Lumber Co. of Pasadena, Calif., employs 55 men.

1987 (25 years ago)

room, short-stay surgery and lab areas. Hospital commissioners unanimously voted to enlarge the hospital based on the recommendation of hospital Administrator Al Remington. Key among the expansion plans is the increase of behavioral medicine from a seven-bed ward to 12 beds, along with several extra rooms, a department director and increased services.

Seen Around

The behavioral-medicine Peninsula snapshots ward of Olympic Memorial YOUNG KIDS AT last Hospital in Port Angeles will be enlarged along with weekend’s Clallam Bay/ Sekiu parade bringing the hospital’s emergency their Halloween bags to collect candy tossed out by Laugh Lines paraders. They were not disappointed. . . . HOW DO YOU keep WANTED! “Seen Around” your husband from reading items. Send them to PDN News your email? P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles Rename the main folder Desk, WA 98362; fax 360-417-3521; or “Instruction Manual.” email news@peninsuladailynews. Your Monologue com.

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS FRIDAY, July 20, the 202nd day of 2012. There are 164 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On July 20, 1969, astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin became the first men to walk on the moon after reaching the surface in their Apollo 11 lunar module. On this date: ■ In 1861, the Congress of the Confederate States convened in Richmond, Va. ■ In 1871, British Columbia entered Confederation as a Canadian province. ■ In 1917, the draft lottery in World War I went into operation. ■ In 1942, the first detachment

of the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps — later known as WACs — began basic training at Fort Des Moines, Iowa. The Legion of Merit was established by an Act of Congress. ■ In 1944, an attempt by a group of German officials to assassinate Adolf Hitler with a bomb failed as the explosion at Hitler’s Rastenburg headquarters only wounded the Nazi leader. President Franklin D. Roosevelt was nominated for an unprecedented fourth term in office at the Democratic convention in Chicago. ■ In 1951, Jordan’s King Abdullah I was assassinated in Jerusalem by a Palestinian gunman who was shot dead on the

spot by security. ■ In 1954, the Geneva Accords divided Vietnam into northern and southern entities. ■ In 1960, a pair of Polaris missiles were fired from the submerged USS George Washington off Cape Canaveral, Fla., at a target more than 1,100 miles away. ■ In 1976, America’s Viking 1 robot spacecraft made a successful, first-ever landing on Mars. ■ In 1982, Irish Republican Army bombs exploded in two London parks, killing eight British soldiers, along with seven horses belonging to the Queen’s Household Cavalry. ■ In 1990, Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan, one of the

court’s most liberal voices, announced he was stepping down. ■ Ten years ago: Twenty-nine people died in a blaze started by bartenders who were doing tricks with fire at Utopia, an unlicensed night club in Lima, Peru. ■ Five years ago: President George W. Bush signed an executive order prohibiting cruel and inhumane treatment, including humiliation or denigration of religious beliefs, in the detention and interrogation of terrorism suspects. ■ One year ago: The last fugitive sought by the U.N.’s Balkan war crimes tribunal, Gordan Hadzic, former leader of Croatia’s ethnic Serbs, was seized in a remote mountain forest in northern Serbia.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday, July 20-21, 2012 PAGE

A3 Briefly: Nation Iowa relatives of missing girls consult a lawyer DES MOINES, Iowa — The parents of one of two Iowa cousins missing for nearly a week have consulted an attorney amid fears that investigators are targeting them due to their criminal records, an aunt of both girls said Thursday. Tammy Brousseau told The Associated Press that Misty and Dan Morrissey, parents of 10-year-old Lyric Cook-Morrissey, are being treated as suspects. Both have spent time in prison, mostly for drug charges, according to court records. She said the attorney the family consulted had advised the parents to stop talking to the media and giving polygraph exams, though she said she’s not aware that either failed one. Brousseau said a male family member briefly walked out of a police interview in frustration earlier this week. While she didn’t identify the man, the girls’ grandmother Wylma Cook told The Des Moines Register it was Dan Morrissey. Lyric and her 8-year-old cousin Elizabeth Collins were last seen leaving a house in the Waterloo suburb in Evansdale. Today, a week after the girlsdisappeared, a dive team using sonar equipment will search Meyers Lake for evidence. The cousins’ bicycles were found by the lake, and a police dog alerted to their scent there.

Parents reject claim MIRAMAR, Fla. — The parents of the unarmed teen who was shot and killed by a neighborhood watch volunteer rejected the shooter’s claim that it was a part of God’s plan. In an interview with Fox News host Sean Hannity televised Wednesday, George Zimmerman said he felt the course of the night Trayvon Martin, 17, was killed “was all God’s plan.” “We must worship a different God,” Martin’s father, Tracy Martin, told The Associated Press. “There is no way that my God wanted George Zimmerman to murder my teenage son.” Speaking Thursday on NBC’s “Today” show, the teen’s mother, Sybrina Fulton, said the notion was “ridiculous.”

City seeks bankruptcy SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. — San Bernardino declared a fiscal emergency Wednesday night, allowing the city to avoid a lengthy mediation process and head straight to federal bankruptcy court. The declaration comes after the city announced last week that it would seek Chapter 9 protection, making it the third California city in recent weeks to make the rare move. The City Council voted 5-2 to declare the emergency and file for bankruptcy protection amid a dire cash crunch that has officials worried San Bernardino can’t meet payroll in August. The city is facing a $45.8 million budget shortfall this year. The Associated Press

Briefly: World as officials said the death toll had risen to at least 31. The government said more than 100 passengers were still missing a day after the MV Skagit capsized, but hopes were fading given the challenging BUDAPEST, Hungary — A conditions. 97-year-old Hungarian man sus“Search operations continue, pected of abusing Jews and but it is now almost impossible helping deport thousands of survivors will be found,” Zanzithem during the Holocaust was bar police spokesman Mohamed taken into custody Wednesday, Mhina said. “The weather was questioned and charged with very bad; there were big waves war crimes, prosecutors said. and strong wind.” The case of The Red Cross said at least Laszlo Csa146 people were rescued. tary was The MV Skagit is a former brought to the Washington state passengerattention of only ferry that served the SeatHungarian tle-Vashon Island run. authorities It and a sister ship, the MV last year by Kalama, were sold last year and the Simon relocated to Tanzania. Wiesenthal Center, a Jew- Csatary Egyptian detainees ish organization active in hunting down CAIRO — Egyptian PresiNazis who have yet to be dent Mohamed Morsi on Thursbrought to justice. day ordered the release of 572 Prosecutors decided to people detained by the military, charge Csatary with the “unlaw- the official MENA news agency ful torture of human beings,” a reported. war crime that carries a maxiMorsi was sworn in last mum sentence of life in prison. month as Egypt’s first elected As he left a Budapest courtcivilian president. house Wednesday afternoon folHe had ordered the formalowing the house arrest hearing, tion of a committee to review Csatary did not speak with the cases of civilians tried by reporters but appeared bewilthe military. dered by the attention. A total of 11,879 Egyptians have been detained by the miliFerry deaths at 31 tary since last year’s uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak, ARUSHA, Tanzania — according to figures issued by Stormy conditions hampered the committee. Of these, 9,714 rescue efforts Thursday for a have since been released. capsized former Washington state ferry off Tanzania’s coast, The Associated Press

97-year-old Nazi suspect held in Hungary

Officials: Airport video shows Bulgaria bomber Israel says Iran behind attack THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BURGAS, Bulgaria — He looked like any other impatient tourist checking the big board at airport arrivals: a lanky, longhaired man in a baseball cap with his hands in the pockets of his plaid Bermuda shorts. Minutes later, authorities said, the man, filmed by security cameras at the Burgas airport, would board a bus filled with young Israeli tourists and blow himself up, killing six others as well. Authorities looked Thursday for clues as to who he was, using his fingerprints, his DNA and his fake Michigan driver’s license. Israel was quick to blame Iran and its Lebanese allies Hezbollah for the attack Wednesday, which killed five Israelis, including a pregnant woman.

‘Carried out by Hezbollah’ Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the bombing “was carried out by Hezbollah, the long arm of Iran.” Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast called the accusation “baseless.” Israel has attributed a series of attacks on its citizens around the world in recent months to Iran

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Security video taken at Burgas Airport in Bulgaria on Wednesday shows the bus bomber, left, police say. and its Shiite proxies, threatening to escalate a shadow war between the two arch-enemies that has escalated over Israeli allegations that the Iranians are trying to build nuclear weapons. The attack occurred shortly after the Israelis boarded a bus outside the airport in the Black Sea resort town of Burgas, a popular destination for Israeli tourists. On Thursday, Bulgarian television aired security footage showing the suspected bomber wandering around the terminal shortly before the blast. Dressed as a tourist himself, he carried a

large backpack with wheels. Interior Minister Tsvetan Tsvetanov said the backpack contained the bomb, which detonated in the luggage compartment of the bus. The bomber was believed to have been about 36 years old, Tsvetanov said. Bulgarian Prime Minister Boiko Borisov told reporters that a Michigan driver’s license was retrieved, but U.S. officials said there was “no such person in their database.” Michigan is home to one of the largest Arab communities in the United States.

Syrian president finally seen after 3 officials assassinated THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEIRUT — Syrian President Bashar Assad made his first appearance since a brazen bomb attack killed three members of his inner circle while government troops launched a wide-ranging assault Thursday to snuff out rebels in the capital, Damascus. Anti-regime activists said government troops used mortars, tanks and helicopter gunships against rebels throughout Damascus and its suburbs. But the military’s failure to swiftly vanquish lightly armed rebel forces and the deadly bombing of a high-level security meeting a day earlier made Assad’s hold on power look increasingly tenuous. The whereabouts of Assad, his wife and their three children have been a mystery since the attack that killed three top regime officials, including Assad’s brotherin-law and defense minister. A brief state TV report showed the Syrian leader dressed in a suit and tie and swearing in his

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Syrian President Bashar Assad, right, is shown swearing in Fahd Jassem al-Freij as defense minister Thursday. new defense minister. It appeared aimed at sending the message that Assad is alive and well. The station said that Assad wished the new defense minister good luck but did not say

where the swearing-in took place. Meanwhile, thousands of Syrians streamed across the Syrian border into Lebanon, fleeing as fighting in the capital entered its fifth straight day, witnesses said.

Rebels kill 21 Syrian guards, take post BAGHDAD — Rebels attacked Syrian forces Thursday on two spots along the nation’s porous border with Iraq, killing 21 soldiers and seizing control of one of the four major border posts, a senior Iraqi army official said. “We have security concerns because the border crossing now is out of the Syria government’s control,” said Iraqi Army Brig. Gen. Qassim al-Dulaimi. Al-Duliami said about a half-dozen rebels stormed the Syrian border crossing near the

Quick Read

Iraqi town of Qaim on Thursday morning. He said the rebels forced the border guards from their posts but did not cross into Iraq. Hours later, in the remote Sinjar mountain range, al-Dulaimi said rebels attacked a Syrian army outpost near the Iraqi border, killing 20 soldiers and their commander. The rebels then seized control of the outpost, al-Duliami said. The border between Iraq and Syria is 363 miles long. The Associated Press

. . . more news to start your day

West: ‘America’s toughest sheriff’ on trial in Arizona

Nation: Obama’s college digs for rent in New York

Nation: Romney’s wife says voters will ‘fire coach’

World: Bickering spouses derailed plot, lawyers say

80-YEAR-OLD JOE ARPAIO, who calls himself America’s toughest sheriff, went on trial Thursday in Phoenix in a class-action lawsuit alleging he used racial profiling in illegal immigrant patrols. A lawyer for Latinos who filed a civil suit against his department said in opening statements Thursday that the evidence will show that Arpaio and his deputies racially profiled Hispanics. Tim Casey, who is defending Arpaio, said the patrols were properly planned out and executed. Casey said that “race and ethnicity had nothing to do with the traffic stops.” If Arpaio loses the civil case, he won’t face jail time or fines.

THE NEW YORK City apartment where Barack Obama lived in the 1980s is available for rent. But there’s no guarantee it’ll inspire presidential aspirations in the next occupant. The website listing states: “Live Like the President!!!.” But a Citi Habitats broker listing the apartment this week told The Wall Street Journal that the flat was “a typical New York City walk-up.” The two-bedroom railroad apartment on Manhattan’s Upper West Side is listed for $2,400 a month. When Obama shared the 109th Street apartment with a roommate while attending Columbia University, the monthly rent was $360.

MITT ROMNEY’S WIFE is reinforcing her husband’s refusal to make public more of his of tax returns, saying “we’ve given all you people need to know” about the family’s finances. Ann Romney told ABC News she thinks the Obama campaign’s attacks on her husband, the presumptive Republican nominee, have been “beneath the dignity of the presidency.” She said she believes voters are “going to fire the coach,” meaning Obama. She said the family gives 10 percent of its income to the Mormon church and that Mitt took no salary during four years as Massachusetts governor.

PROSECUTORS HAVE TOLD a British court that a planned attack by a husband-and-wife team of would-be terrorists fell apart after the couple became embroiled in a domestic dispute. Police were called when Mohammed Sajid Khan, 33, and his 38-year-old wife, Shasta, got into an argument at their Manchester-area home last July. Officers found beheading videos, alQaida propaganda, bomb-making guides, syringes, bleach and electrical equipment in their home. Shasta Khan, who denied wrongdoing, was found guilty Thursday. Mohammed Sajid Khan pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing.


A4

PeninsulaNorthwest

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

Fire mars home on tribal land

10 pertussis cases cited BY ROB OLLIKAINEN

CDC: ’12 may be worst year for whooping cough in 50

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Health officials reported 10 new whooping cough cases on the North Olympic Peninsula since June 16. The cases are part of a declared epidemic in Washington state that has affected more than 3,000 since Jan. 1. “We’re up to 25 cases in the county,� said Iva Burks, Clallam County Health and Human Services director. Twenty-two cases of whooping cough, or pertussis, have been confirmed in Jefferson County by the state Department of Health, but no new cases have been confirmed within the past month. No deaths have been reported. Pertussis is a highly contagious bacterial disease that produces severe coughing and can lead to severe complications in infants and children. It spreads through coughing and sneezing. In rare cases, it can be fatal.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Quick action on a deck fire at a house in the Lower Elwha Klallam reservation west of Port Angeles prevented worse damage, said Chief Sam Phillips of Clallam County Fire District No. 2. No one was injured in the fire discovered at 11:56 p.m. Wednesday in the 100 block of Sampson Road, Phillips said. An alert neighbor discovered the fire on the deck of the occupied residence, immediately called 9-1-1 and ensured that the occupants left the house, the chief said in a statement. Firefighters arrived with two engines and 10 firefighters to find that Lower Elwha Tribal Police had arrived before them, said Phillips, who credited the neighbor and law enforcement officers with keeping damage limited to a small area and preventing its spread inside the home. “This could have had a much different outcome if it was not for the alert

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

CLALLAM COUNTY FIRE DISTRICT NO. 2

The blinds of a home on the 100 block of Sampson Road show damage from a fire that occurred Wednesday night in Port Angeles. neighbor and quick action on behalf of tribal law enforcement officers,� Phillips said. The fire had broken a large front window and was beginning to ignite window coverings inside when it was extinguished with a portable fire extinguisher. Homeowners removed portions of the charred

decking and used a nearby garden hose to complete extinguishment. Firefighters estimated the damage to the home at $2,500, which was limited to the deck, wall and window area. Fire investigators determined the cause of the fire to be spontaneous ignition of rags used to clean up recent deck-staining work.

nus, diphtheria and acellular pertussis. “We continue to encourage people to get Tdap shots,� Burks said. The Clallam County Health Department will offer a low-cost vaccination clinic for adults 19 and older who are uninsured or whose insurance doesn’t cover Tdap vaccinations July 27 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the health clinic in Forks at 140 C St. The cost is $12 per vaccination. The Clallam County Health Department immu-

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nized 166 uninsured adults in Port Angeles and Forks on May 18. “Infants are most at risk for very serious illness from whooping cough, and many are made sick by an adult who didn’t know they were carrying the illness,� state Health Officer Dr. Maxine Hayes said. “All teens and adults should get the Tdap shot. Even people who don’t have close contact with babies can spread the illness to babies when they’re in public.� The state Department of Health ordered 14,000 more Tdap vaccinations for uninsured adults to go with the 27,000 doses already sent to city, county and tribal jurisdictions. “Whooping cough vaccines work but don’t seem to last as long as was expected,� state Secretary of Health Mary Selecky said in a prepared statement released Thursday. “Even so, vaccinated people who get whooping cough have milder symptoms, shorter illnesses and are less likely to spread the disease to others. Our biggest concern is keeping babies from getting sick — and vaccination is still the best protection.� Of the 173 infants who have come down with whooping cough this year, 38 were hospitalized. For more information, phone the Clallam County Health and Human Services Department at 360-417-2258 or Jefferson County Public Health at 360-385-9400.

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ATLANTA — Health officials said the nation is on track to have the worst year for whooping cough in more than five decades. Nearly 18,000 cases have been reported so far — more than twice the number seen at this point last year. At this pace, the number of whooping cough cases will surpass every year since 1959. “There is a lot of this out there, and there may be more coming to a place near you,� Dr. Anne Schuchat of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday. Wisconsin and Washington each has reported more than 3,000 cases, and high numbers have been seen in a number of other states, including New York, Minnesota, Kansas and Arizona. In rare cases, pertussis can be fatal, and nine children have died so far this year. Children get vaccinated against whooping cough in five doses, with the first shot at age 2 months and the final one between 4 and 6 years. Then a booster is recommended around age 11. The vaccine’s protection does wane, and health officials have debated moving up the booster shot. The CDC is urging adults and especially pregnant women to get vaccinated so they don’t spread it to infants who are too young to get the vaccine. Whooping cough used to cause hundreds of thousands of illnesses a year, but cases fell after a vaccine was introduced in the 1940s. Starting in the late 1960s, fewer than 5,000 cases were reported annually in the United States for a stretch of about 25 years. But the numbers started to rise in the 1990s. For more information, visit www.cdc.gov.

Since the state declared an official epidemic April 3, the spread of pertussis appears to be slowing down. There were 41 new cases in Washington state last week compared with 249 new cases the week ending May 19, part of a continuing down trend. But the epidemic remains active, state health officials said. There have been 3,014 reported cases since Jan. 1, compared to 219 during the same period last year. Health officials said the best way to protect infants who are too young to be to be fully immunized is to immunize the people around them. The adult booster for pertussis is called Tdap for teta-

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FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

Former Port Angeles mayor dies at 91 BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Former Port Angeles Mayor Joan K. Sargent died early Thursday at the age of 91. Sargent had suffered a stroke two weeks ago, said her granddaughter, Shaunna Olson of Port Angeles. On Sunday, medical tests revealed that Sargent had lung cancer, and she chose to remain at her Port Angeles home during her final week of life, Olson said. “She said she had done everything she wanted out of life. She had a very full and good life,� she said. Sargent was a latecomer to the world of politics, but in the years after her retire-

ment from working as an accountant in 1982, she became a community leader and volunteer organization go-to person. “She never retired from community service,� Mayor Cherie Kidd said Thursday. Even after leaving city government, Sargent could be counted on to help with community service projects right up to the last few weeks, Kidd said. Sargent arrived in Port Angeles in 1956 and worked for Crown Zellerbach until her retirement. Her tenure on the Port Angeles City Council from 1988 through 1995 included two stints as mayor: from 1990-1991 and from 19941995. Even before she served on the council, she was

involved in city issues, speaking out against a City Council decision to fund the construction of City Hall Sargent through bonds that did not require a vote from the public. She also was well-known for initiating the city’s stillexisting fireworks ordinance in 1989.

“She was a very strong proponent of voters’ rights,� Kidd said. Port Commissioner Jim Hallett, who served on the Port Angeles City Council from 1986-1993, alternated with Sargent as mayor.

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Briefly . . . emphasizes defensive-driving techniques. Washington state offers auto insurance discounts for those who complete the course. A $14 fee is charged to PORT ANGELES — The cover the cost of materials. Port Angeles City Council AARP members receive a $2 will consider naming its discount when presenting choice for permanent city their membership number manager at a special meetat the time of registration. ing at 9 a.m. today. July and August classes The City Council will are educator-appreciation meet in council chambers at classes. Anyone associated City Hall, 321 E. Fifth St. with the field of education is It will open a public seseligible to attend the class sion after meeting in execu- for $5. tive session. To register for the class, The agenda for the open phone the Sequim Senior session is to discuss and con- Activity Center at 360-683sider possible action regard- 6806. ing the appointment of a permanent city manager. Obama campaign Port Angeles Fire Chief WASHINGTON — Dan McKeen has served as President Barack Obama is interim manager and has heading to the West Coast announced that he has next week for a three-day applied for the permanent campaign trip heavy on position, which the council has said would pay between fundraising and bracketed by speeches to top veterans $130,000 and $145,000. The position was vacated and civil rights groups. His re-election team by Kent Myers, who is now said Obama will headline serving as the city manager three Democratic fundraisfor Fredericksburg, Texas. ers in Oakland, Calif., on Monday. Boat safety class The following day, he’ll SEQUIM — An “About speak at a rally and fundBoating Safely� course will raiser in Portland, Ore., and be held at the Lodge at more fundraisers in Seattle. Sherwood Village, 660 W. Aides previously had Evergreen Farm Way, from announced plans for Obama 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday. to address the Veterans of State law now requires Foreign Wars in Reno, Nev., that everyone who operates on Monday and the a vessel driven by a 15-orNational Urban League in more-horsepower engine New Orleans on Wednesmust have an eight-hour day. safety class if he or she is Those are considered 40 or younger in 2012. “official� events — part of This class meets that his presidential duties — requirement. even though Obama has The cost is $15 a person. made a concerted effort to The class is presented win over military votes this by the U.S. Coast Guard fall and to maintain his Auxiliary. record turnout among To register or for more black voters. information, phone Sylvia Oster at 360-223-8762 or email uscgamail@yahoo. com.

PA to discuss city manager post today

BREMERTON — A Bremerton boat builder has won a Coast Guard contract worth as much as $59 million to build as many as 100 small boats. Safe Boats International is building what’s called “over the horizon� boats. Each is 26 feet long with an inboard diesel engine and no cabin. They are designed to be deployed from cutters for fast security or search-and-rescue work in cramped or shallow waters. The Kitsap Sun reported that the company employs 285 workers and expects to grow to 300 by the end of the year.

Beaches on the Strait of Juan de Fuca from Dungeness Spit west to Cape Flattery had been closed to recreational shellfish harvesting earlier because of PSP. Sequim Bay also was closed earlier this month because of both PSP and diarrhetic shellfish poisoning, or DSP. DSP is a marine toxin that can cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal cramps and chills, with symptoms typically passing quickly. Quilcene, Dabob and Discovery bays were closed earlier in July because of DSP. The discovery was the first time any toxin has been found in shellfish in either Quilcene Bay or Dabob Bay. Seasonal closures for shellfish harvesting are in effect for all Pacific Ocean beaches in both counties.

thoroughly and discard the guts. Marine biotoxins are not destroyed by cooking or freezing. People can become ill from eating shellfish contaminated with the naturally occurring marine algae containing toxins harmful to humans. Symptoms of PSP can appear within minutes or hours and usually begin with tingling lips and tongue, moving to the hands and feet, followed by difficulty breathing and potentially death. Anyone experiencing these symptoms should contact a health care provider immediately. For extreme reactions, phone 9-1-1. In most cases, the algae that contain the toxins cannot be seen and must be detected using laboratory testing. Recreational shellfish harvesters should check http://tinyurl.com/8482ksr or phone 800-562-5632 before harvesting shellfish.

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of our family,� Olson said. Sargent was born Feb. 23, 1921, in London as Joan Hart. During World War II, she was evacuated to Yorkshire with other youths of London. There, she attended a dance where she met Richard Sargent, a U.S. serviceman who was recuperating from injuries in an English hospital. She immigrated to the U.S. in 1946 and married Richard in Ohio that year. The family is planning a memorial service for Sargent for the first weekend in August, Olson said.

Sargent is survived by her husband, Richard Sargent of Port Angeles; son Lee Sargent of Bellevue; daughter Kathy Olson of Walla Walla; four grandchildren; and three great________ grandchildren. She was preceded in Reporter Arwyn Rice can be death by her daughter reached at 360-452-2345, ext. Paula Jane Sargent in 2003. 5070, or at arwyn.rice@peninsula “She was the matriarch dailynews.com.

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SEQUIM — An AARP driver-safety class will be held Tuesday and Wednesday from 8 a.m. to noon at the Clallam County District No. 3 Fire Station, 323 N. Fifth Ave. Participants will work through a curriculum that

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Survivors

PORT TOWNSEND — Elevated levels of the potentially deadly paralytic shellfish poisoning, also known as PSP, found in shellfish samples have prompted closures of Fort Flagler, Kilisut Harbor and Mystery Bay beaches to recreational shellfish harvesting. The Jefferson County Public Health Department announced the closures by the state Department of Health on Thursday. Shellfish harvested commercially are tested for toxin prior to distribution and should be safe to eat, the state Health Department has said. PSP, commonly known as Stennis turnaround “red tide,� is a neurotoxin BREMERTON — Comthat can trigger paralysis at manders of the USS John high concentrations. C. Stennis knew when the Signs have been posted at carrier returned to Bremerhigh-use beaches warning ton in March from the Midpeople not to consume shell- All shellfish east it would be a short fish from these areas, the turnaround. The closures are for recrecounty Health Department The strike group comational harvest of all shellsaid. mander, Rear Adm. Charles High levels of marine tox- fish species, including clams, Gaouette, said Wednesday ins have prompted closures oysters, mussels and scalhe told the crew last week of Dabob Bay, Quilcene Bay, lops. they’d be deploying four It does not apply to Port Townsend and Kilisut months early back to the Harbor — including Mystery shrimp. Mideast. Crabmeat is not known to Bay — Discovery Bay, The Kitsap Sun Sequim Bay and beaches contain the biotoxin, but the reported that the Stennis from Dungeness Spit to Cape guts can contain unsafe levhad a mini-maintenance els. To be safe, clean crab Flattery. period in May and June and is now completing a month of training and qualification exercises off the California coast. The Pentagon wants to When my child’s behavior started to get keep two carriers in the Middle East. out of control, I wish I’d had NAMI to The Stennis will relieve turn to. People in the National Alliance the Enterprise, and the on Mental Illness understand. I received Eisenhower will relieve the Lincoln. the knowledge I need to cope and better Peninsula Daily News support the young person I care about. and The Associated Press

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munity Concert Association, Soroptimist International of Port Angeles (Noon Club), the League of British Women, the State Council on Aging, the White House Council on Aging, the Citizens Utility and Telecommunications Advisory Committee, and the Washington Association of Cities board of directors.

“She had a concern for her community and was very much a proponent of open government, and she cared a lot about the history of our community — how we got to where we are,� Hallett said. “While we didn’t always see eye-to-eye, she was consistent in advocating her position,� he said. “We agreed on taking care of our community in the best way possible.� In 1995, as mayor, Sargent signed the sister-city agreement between Port Angeles and Mutsu City, Japan, and was a member of the initial delegation to visit Mutsu City. She was also a member of the Port Angeles Education Foundation and served on the boards of the Com-

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Wild author to appear Jefferson farmers market in PT today, Saturday to host cooking, tastings PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — Cheryl Strayed, author of Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail, is making a pair of public appearances in Port Townsend today and Saturday. The two appearances are at 7:30 tonight in the Wheeler Theater at Fort Worden State Park, Strayed 200 Battery Way, and at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Cotton Building, 607 Water St. Admission is free to both. Strayed, who taught this past week at the Port Townsend Writers’ Conference at Fort Worden State Park, will discuss Wild — which is No. 1 on The New York Times best-sellers list — as well as Tiny Beautiful

Cheryl Strayed, the author of Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Coast Trail, will make two appearances in Port Townsend this weekend.

Things, her just-published collection of advice columns from the online magazine TheRumpus.net. Tonight’s reading, also to feature writer Dana Levin, is hosted by Centrum, and

more details are at www. Centrum.org via the “Writing� link and at the Centrum office at 360385-3102. Saturday’s afternoon with Strayed is presented by the Port Townsend Library. Details can be found at 360-385-3181 and www.PTPublicLibrary.org.

Woman rescued at Worden after climbing partway down PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — An unidentified woman and her dog were rescued Thursday morning after both went over an embankment at Fort Worden State Park. There were no injuries, said Bill Beezley, spokesman for East Jefferson FireRescue. The woman scrambled about 15 feet down a 200-foot-high embankment

at the state park after her dog, which was on a leash but which escaped her and slipped over the edge, Beezley said. She gave up on reaching her dog and tried to return, getting stuck about 6 feet below the edge of the cliff, he said. Passers-by on the beach below heard her yell for help and called 9-1-1 at about 10:10 a.m. In a high-angle rescue, the woman was pulled

Hospital chef to wheel out edibles, give customers early shopping tour PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

This Saturday in Port Townsend and Sunday in Chimacum, Jefferson County Farmers Market is hosting cooking demonstrations and tastings, and vendors will sell an abundance of summer fruit. The first blueberries of the season are in from Finnriver and SpringRain, and local strawberries and raspberries are available by the flat, said Will O’Donnell, director of the markets. “Basil, zucchini, tomatoes and even a few peppers will be available at the markets,� he said. “And Nash’s Farm will be bringing over organic nectarines, peaches, apricots and cherries from their friends at Sunny Slope Ranch in Eastern Washington on Saturday only.� At 9 a.m. Saturday, chef Arran Stark of Jefferson

Healthcare and Cultivated Palate is going to be wheeling out a hospital gurney and giving customers an early morning shopping tour of the market. After he’s filled up the gurney, he will take the fresh produce over to the music stage at 10 a.m. to give an hourlong cooking demo. To sign up for the walking tour, email info@jcf markets.org. The cooking demonstration and talk are sponsored by Jefferson Healthcare, which also will staff an information booth at the market Saturday.

Feast of the Beasts The first-ever Feast of the Beasts will be at the the Chimacum Farmers Market from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday. The market will pair Peninsula chefs with local farmers.

Chefs Dan Ratigan of the Fireside Inn in Port Ludlow, Jon Luzadder of the Ajax Cafe and Tiffany Sewell of the Silverwater Cafe in Port Townsend will cook meat from the Chimacum Valley’s Short’s Beef, Westbrook Angus and SpringRain Farm. The Chimacum Market also will welcome new vendor Dabob Kabobs. Owner and grill artisan Hans Barr provides his own mini Feast of the Beasts each week when he grills local meat on cedar skewers over a homemade maple charcoal. Zoog’s BBQ also is at the Chimacum Farmers Market every Sunday. The Port Townsend Saturday Market is located on Tyler Street between Lawrence and Clay streets. The Chimacum market Sunday is located at the Chimacum Corner across from the Chevron where state Highway 19 meets Chimacum Road and Center Road. For more information, visit www.jeffersoncounty farmersmarket.org.

to safety. Park Ranger Todd Jensen said he rescued the dog, a female Corgi. Jensen climbed down the embankment about 20 feet to reach the dog, who was stuck on a small ledge about 50 feet above the water. It took Jensen about 15 minutes to rescue the dog, which did not struggle. “She was pretty happy to see me,� he said.

Mascot: Uniform color CONTINUED FROM A1 reviewed periodically,� Burkhart added. “Attitudes change and “I was raised by my ancestors to know that mores change, and it needs names don’t make people; to be talked about.� McQuillen said she people make names,� said McQuillen, who graduated would like to serve on that from Port Townsend High committee and that she already had been School in 1975. “I was taught by my approached to do so. grandpa to be proud of the Student votes Redskin name.� Saying that “if we don’t Students have voted sevhonor our history, we don’t eral times on the possibility learn from those lessons,� of changing the mascot, the she added that “what Port last time in 2000, but each Townsend has done is time chose to retain the learned from that history of Redskins. hatred and anger and hon“It was an outdated ored that name and lifted it thing to have, but it didn’t up.� offend me personally,� said

Discussion Monday The issue is on the Port Townsend School Board’s agenda for its Monday meeting, set for 6 p.m. in the high school library, 1500 Van Ness St. The board will discuss forming a committee to discuss a possible policy change concerning the mascot and report back to the board with a recommendation, said School Board member Ann Burkhart. Burkhart said the committee would include representatives of the schools and the public, and contain between eight and 10 people. “Any more than that, it would become unwieldy,� she said. “These things need to be

Bekah Howe, who attended Port Townsend High School in the late 1990s and is half Native American. “But it’s a little funny that we still have that mascot in this day and age.� Jamestown S’Klallam Tribal Chairman Ron Allen said Thursday that he had spoken out against the mascot before the School Board the last time the topic came up. He said that leaving the mascot decision to the students was inappropriate. School Board President Jennifer James Wilson agreed. “This is an adult decision that may include the kids, but they won’t make the final decision,� she said. “Last time, it brought about a lot of hard feelings,�

she said. “We don’t want the kids to be duking it out over this.� Allen has not yet determined how involved the tribe will be in the upcoming discussion and will approach his tribal council for instructions. “I previously encouraged the schools to choose a mascot that didn’t demean Native culture,� Allen said. “It’s ironic that society thinks they can choose an image or a logo that reflects an ethnic culture and say it’s OK without asking that group.� McQuillen disagreed, saying the adoption of the Redskin mascot had to do with the color of the team uniforms and had no immediate connection to the local Native American population. “It didn’t have anything to do with Indians at the beginning,� McQuillen said. “And as it evolved, it became an honor.� Burkhart said she didn’t think the issue would be resolved right away. “The School Board has a lot of pressing issues, and this is not as pressing as some others,� she said. “I don’t see a timeline for this.�

________ Jefferson County Reporter Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360-385-2335 or at charlie. bermant@peninsuladailynews. com.

CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

A canoe originating from LaPush gets a last push up the beach Thursday at Fort Worden State Park.

Canoes: Formal landing CONTINUED FROM A1 The annual journey — in which tribal members paddle canoes from their homes to that of the tribe hosting a weeklong potlatch — is a cultural revival in which Native Americans honor their heritage. “This brings people from all over the Northwest,� said Jamestown S’Klallam Tribal Chairman Ron Allen, who also was part of the welcoming party at Jamestown Beach on Wednesday. “It’s a cultural festival that ends with the potlatch,� he said. The potlatch this year will be hosted by the Squaxin Island tribe from July 30 to Aug. 5.

Filled with ceremony The day was filled with ceremony. A puller on each boat asked permission to come ashore. The greetings were warm and cordial. Allen said about 600 to 700 people planned to camp at Fort Worden before trav-

CLALLAM COUNTY FIRE DISTRICT NO. 2

eling on to Port Gamble this morning. Those camping include those traveling in each canoe — about 20 in each — while families travel between the locations by car carrying tents and food. Canoes from the Pacific Northwest and Canada traveled to Port Townsend from the last stop at Jamestown Beach. Among those taking part in the 2012 Canoe Journey were Queets, Quinault, Hoh, Quileute, Makah, Lower Elwha Klallam and Jamestown S’Klallam tribes of the North Olympic Peninsula, as well as the Tla-o-qui-aht, Stz’uminus, Ahousaht and Tsartlip. The approximately 100 people on the beach included Port Townsend residents, tourists and families along with those who

Smaller crowd The crowd was smaller than in past years, participants said. “I honestly don’t know why there are fewer people this year,� Allen said. “It’s all gone smoothly, and the weather has treated us well.� This year’s Canoe Journey will end with a formal landing in Olympia on July 29, followed by a potlatch at Squaxin Island.

________ Jefferson County Reporter Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360-385-2335 or at charlie. bermant@peninsuladailynews. com.

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greeted the travelers with song. Among the greeters were members of the Jamestown S’Klallam summer friends camp, which included youths from 5 to 11 who sang traditional songs accompanied by their drums. Another 100 people observed the event from the dock and the park as well as the bluff above the water.

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FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

A7

PA OKs new labor contract Electricians to get raises in ’13, ’14 BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Lavender: Music performances CONTINUED FROM A1 Performers at the James Center’s outdoor amphitheater include Seattle’s Pearl Django jazz band at 1 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. today. The group will then appear at the 5:30 p.m. “Jazz in the Alley� concert at BrokersGroup Real Estate, 219 W. Washington St. Admission to that event today is free, and all ages are welcome. Admission is also free to the Street Fair and to Lavender in the Park, and shuttle buses are serving both. In addition to all that music, the two events showcase local cuisine, from vegan hot dogs to lavender ice cream to grilled salmon, plus an equally diverse mix of nonprofit groups, from the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula to the Northwest Wildlife & Raptor Center.

Farm tours

Sweet-smelling weekend THE SEQUIM LAVENDER Weekend begins today and extends through Sunday. The Sequim Lavender Growers Association’s free “U-Tour� of seven lavender-growing operations is open from 10 a.m. until 5:30 p.m. today, Saturday and Sunday. The growers association’s Street Fair, on Fir Street between Sequim and Third avenues, is also free and open from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. today and Saturday and from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. The Sequim Lavender Farmers Association hosts the Heritage Farm Tour of seven farms from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. today through Sunday. Shuttle buses travel to the farms throughout ■Jardin du Soleil, 3932 Sequim-Dungeness Way. ■Olympic Lavender, 1432 Marine Drive. ■Washington Lavender, 939 Finn Hall Road. ■Lost Mountain Lavender, 1541 Taylor Cutoff Road. ■Sunshine Herb & Lavender, east of town at 274154 U.S. Highway 101. The above farms each have activities, food and drink vendors, artisans’ displays and live music today through Sunday, and all seven are served by the Heritage Farm Tour buses. Lavender lovers also can drive or bicycle to one or

the three days; they serve locations all over Sequim every 30 minutes. Admission is $15, $10 for active-duty military and spouses, or free for children 12 and younger, with tickets available at any of the participating farms. The farmers association’s Lavender in the Park, a gathering of vendors and entertainment at Carrie Blake Park, 202 N. Blake Ave., is open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. today and Saturday and from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, with free admission. Information about these and many other activities throughout this Lavender Weekend is at www.VisitSunny Sequim.com. Peninsula Daily News

Hot-air balloons

more of the stops on the growers association’s free “U-Tour�: ■Blackberry Forest, a lavender and berry farm at 136 Forrest Road. ■Graysmarsh, another expanse of lavender and fruit, at 6187 Woodcock Road. ■Nelson’s Duckpond and Lavender Farm at 73 Humble Hill Road. ■Martha Lane Lavender at 371 Martha Lane. ■Oliver’s Lavender Farm at 82 Cameron Acres Lane. ■The Lavender Connection at 1141 Cays Road. ■Peninsula Nurseries in its new location at 1060 Sequim-Dungeness Way.

As a foreshadowing of the Sequim Balloon Festival, set for Sept. 1-3, hot-air balloons will be launched — weather permitting — from the park. Starting this morning, “three balloons will be going up and down,� if wind conditions cooperate, Nagel said. These big orbs can rise to 150 feet, so “even if you’re not necessarily a lavender fan,� he added, “come to the park because this is going to be the coolest thing.� Jendrucko of the growers association likewise invites everybody, not only those who are craving the purple herb, to various facets of the weekend. “We’re trying to appeal to a lot of demographics,� he said. “I call it the modern family,� as in folks whose interests vary widely. Near the Fir Street Fair, Jendrucko noted, two other exhibitions have non-herbal appeal: the Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Show inside Sequim Middle School, 301 W. Hendrickson Road, and the Lavender Car Show, a display of antique, classic and custom rides in the middle school parking lot. All of this is coming together with a few staff people with a whole lot of help, noted Nagel. “We have more than 150 volunteers,� he said, “and they are really excited about the Lavender Weekend.�

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He added that he hoped the contract will “stop the outflow of journeymen to other utilities and allow us to attract utility members.� The contract “shows we

Olympia lawyer Claire Nickleberry of the state Public Employment Relations Commission held three mediation sessions in Port Angeles after negotiations between the city and union broke down around February, Coons said. Kelly and Coons said the issue was wages. At least two line electricians had left city employment because the hourly rate was too low, Kelly said. “The impasse was basically over the city holding the line for wages,� he said. Coons agreed with that assessment, adding that the city originally had offered a two-year contract with no wage increases. “That’s what mediation is about,� he said Thursday. “We came up with a four-year contract, and it worked.� The wage rate is now on par with Grays Harbor, Pacific and Mason counties but still about $1 less an hour than other utilities, Kelly said. “Our trade has a wage rate they try to standardize, and that’s what this was about,� he said. “The union is trying to work with the city and the community. We are involved in the community.� Union members approved the contract July 9. Kelly would not disclose the tally.

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All across the valley, meanwhile, lavender fields are intensifying in color. Those who visit have many options: simply picking lavender, sipping beverages and nibbling on light refreshments on the growers association’s free tour, or visiting the mini-festivals at each stop on the farmers association’s Heritage Farm Tour. Admission to the latter is $15, $10 for active-duty military and spouses, or free for children 12 and younger, with tickets available at any of the participating farms: ■Purple Haze, 180 Bell Bottom Lane. ■Port Williams Lavender, 1442 Port Williams Road.

Back in town, yet another attraction may be up in the air: Scott Nagel of the farmers association is anticipating a rare sight above Carrie Blake Park.

PORT ANGELES — A new labor contract that gives 20 city electrical workers raises of 5 percent in 2013 and 5 percent in 2014 but which also has the employees paying more for health insurance was approved unanimously by the City Council this week after six months of mediation. Approval of the contract is expected to stem the departure of city Utilities and Public Works employees and be helpful in attracting new applicants, city and union officials said. The hourly pay for the line electricians will increase to $38 an hour in 2013 and to $39.91 in 2014, city Human Resources Manager Bob Coons said. The wage increases consist of a 2 percent costof-living increase and a 3 percent “market adjustment� in each of those two years and will cost the city $187,000, Coons said. As part of the four-year contract — the old pact that had expired Dec. 31, 2010, was extended — members of International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 997 agreed to increase the percentage they pay of their medical premiums from 10 percent to 12.5 percent, Coons said. That means employees who pay the family rate for health insurance will see their monthly premium payments of $183 increase to $229, Coons said. “Hopefully, we’ve turned a corner on this and can move forward,� City Councilman and former Mayor Dan Di Guilio said at Tuesday’s City Council meeting.

are looking at parity within the industry,� Public Works and Utilities Director Glenn Cutler said at the meeting. “I talked to a couple of linemen who were looking at other places, and they indicated to me that at this point in time, they hope to continue their careers here in Port Angeles.� Added Local 997 Business Manager and President Timm Kelly, in a later interview: “With the economic times, I think we accommodated the situation.� The same person who successfully mediated a recent labor dispute between Service Employees International Union Healthcare 1199NW and Olympic Medical Center also adjudicated the dispute between the city of Port Angeles and IBEW Local 997.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday, July 20-21, 2012 PAGE

A8

Life’s too short for so much email JUST THINKING ABOUT my email inbox makes me sad. Last month alone, I received more than 6,000 emails. That doesn’t include spam, notifications or daily deals, either. With all those mesNick sages, I have no desire to Bilton respond to even a fraction of them. I can just picture my tombstone: Here lies Nick Bilton, who responded to thousands of emails a month. May he rest in peace. It’s not that I’m so popular. Last year, Royal Pingdom, which monitors Internet usage, said that in 2010, 107 trillion emails were sent. A report this year from the Radicati Group, a market research firm, found that in 2011, there were 3.1 billion active email accounts in the world. The report noted that, on average, corporate employees sent and received 105 emails a day. Sure, some of those emails are important. But 105 a day? All of this has led me to believe that something is terribly

wrong with email. What’s more, I don’t believe it can be fixed. I’ve tried everything: Priority mail, filters, more filters, filters within filters, away messages, third-party email tools. None of these supposed solutions work. Last year, I decided to try to reach In-box Zero, the Zen-like state of a consistently empty inbox. I spent countless hours one evening replying to neglected messages. I woke up the next morning to find that most of my replies had received replies — and so, once again, my inbox was brimming. It all felt like one big practical joke. Meanwhile, all of this email could be increasing our stress. A research report issued this year by the University of California, Irvine, found that people who did not look at email regularly at work were less stressed and more productive than others. Gloria Mark, an informatics professor who studies the effects of email and multitasking in the workplace and is a co-author of the study, said, “One person in our email study told us after: I let the sound of the bell and popups rule my life.” Mark said one of the main problems with email is that there

SIMANCA OSMANI/CAGLE CARTOONS

isn’t an off switch. “Email is an asynchronous technology, so you don’t need to be on it to receive a message,” she said. “Synchronous technologies, like instant messenger, depend on people being present.” Although some people allow their instant messenger services to save offline messages, most cannot receive messages if they are not logged on. With email, it is different. If you go away, emails pile up waiting for your return.

Peninsula Voices

Avoiding new messages is as impossible as trying to play a game of hide-and-seek in an empty New York City studio apartment. There is nowhere to hide. I recently sent an email to a teenage cousin who responded with a text message. I responded again through email, and this time she answered with Facebook Messenger. She was obviously seeing the emails but kept choosing a more concise way to reply.

OUR READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES

AND EMAIL commissioner. All of these outstanding qualifications make him perfect for the position he is seeking. That’s why I am casting my vote for Judge Rohrer for Superior Court judge, and I hope you will, too. Valerie Russell, Beaver

For Melly

I have had the opportunity of knowing Christopher Melly since he I am writing this letter first settled in Port Angeles in support of Erik Rohrer in 1983. for Superior Court judge. I can guarantee that if I clerked for Judge Rohrer between 2005-2011. you choose to approach Mr. Melly, you will find him to I found him to possess many outstanding qualities be a very attentive, honest desirable in a judge, and engaging individual. including extensive He is no stranger to knowledge of the law and humility, and strives to measure particulates from My only wish is the Air quality the ability to absorb and serve Clallam County with Asia? financial health of this analyze information. In recent weeks, we the unwavering integrity Just recently, it beautiful community, Erik is a man filled with necessary to conduct the have read two statements measured high particulates where living-wage jobs honor and integrity, treats in the PDN attributed to very serious matters from Siberia — hardly 3 don’t seem so scarce, where people fairly and respects our Olympic Regional involved within the miles away. the community itself is their rights. Clean Air Agency that are courtroom with the utmost And again from the thriving. Bearing no prejudices, misleading. of respect to all. EPA: “Depending on the We have so many he is open-minded, The first one: “While the Consider this: If you or conditions, fine particles resources, including respectful of diversity and smaller-than-2.5-micron a loved one ever has to may persist in the Peninsula College. understands differing particulates are not atmosphere for days or cross the threshold of a I feel a resonance with needs. regulated, they are still weeks and travel hundreds Dr. Dale Holiday, her courtroom, wouldn’t you He has excellent removed by pollution or thousands of miles from values and her own want someone who has a communication skills and control devices.” their source.” background, with my story, rock-solid track record of outstanding leadership But according to the ORCAA is here to a story that isn’t all that practicing his profession abilities. Environmental Protection protect us — not to try and rare. with a total commitment to Powerfully disarming, Agency: “Efficiency due to lure us into acceptance of Dale understands the rule of law, who will Erik has a wonderful gift these collection potentially dangerous air preserving what we cherish for putting people at ease, exercise his authority mechanisms reaches most about where we live which can go a long way negligible levels between 3 pollution conditions. without bias and with a Robert Lynette, and wants to see us thrive. toward diffusing rough and 0.3 micrometers.” tempered fairness to all Sequim Her education and spots when angers flare. This is the very ultrainvolved and who can offer experience in community This has been a fine level that is so harmful the peace of mind that he and environmental tremendous asset in a to human health, and they For Holiday has steadfastly followed planning is so important. courtroom with little to no will not be effectively I am a student and a the letter of the law I appreciate her security. removed. working single mother. guaranteeing justice for forward-thinking nature He is a generous, Even more alarming is: I moved to the all? that understands that energetic individual with a “[Sequim] City leaders Peninsula to give my I can honestly say I economic and history of community attended an ORCAA daughters something I would trust Mr. Melly with environmental involvement, making him a meeting June 26, where would not have had the my life and the lives of sustainability are not much-beloved leader in his they were told any opportunity to in Seattle, those I love without any mutually exclusive and community. particulates from the where we are from. must be partnered in any He has a broad range of hesitancy. Nippon biomass burner in We live in a safe It is with greatest long-term answer to our experience, including Port Angeles will fall out of neighborhood and have a confidence that I stand fiscal future. defense work as well as the atmosphere within small home with a front behind this fine gentleman She does not shy from complex civil litigation. three miles of the plant and back yard, and we are as our next Superior Court taking a hard look at costly He has spent years and pose no threat to surrounded by natural judge, Position 1. inefficiencies. serving on the bench as a Sequim residents.” beauty. Karenann Mygind, From her work in youth District Court judge as well Is that why we have a I could not ask for more, as a Superior Court monitor on the coast to Port Angeles almost. drug and alcohol abuse

JOHN C. BREWER EDITOR AND PUBLISHER ■

Nick Bilton is a columnist and lead writer for The New York Times’ Bits Blog covering consumer technology, hackers, privacy and the future. If you wish to add to his overloaded inbox, his email address is bilton@nytimes.com.

For Rohrer

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 360-417-3500

________

prevention to her work in land planning, I feel Dale possesses a necessarily broad perspective that encompasses a multifaceted understanding of our community’s needs. As far as I’m concerned, Dale has my confidence and vote for county commissioner. Viola Ware, Port Angeles

Extreme sports I have been confused by the personal attacks on the Extreme Sports Park track [Port Angeles] and the people who own it. Have you seen it? It is unbelievable, the experience, the quality and parklike atmosphere they are giving to our community is simply amazing when you go to one of these events. They are more than trying to do it the right way or the environmentally friendly way. Can’t get any more green and American than this. You would be surprised how family-friendly and inviting it is to be a part of something like this in a small town like Port Angeles. They had every elderly and handicapped person accounted for, too. I am so shocked at the lack of compassion. This is not the place I remember. Everyone at the track was very friendly and helpful and enthusiastic. My family grew up in this community, and in the past 15 years or so, Port Angeles has been struggling with the economy. We need to bring new blood back into this area, and the money that comes in during the races will benefit all the businesses around town. I am very proud to have my family support this track. Let’s go have some family fun at the sprint boat races and the new Run A Muck obstacle course challenge. Keep the Extreme Sports Park part of our community. Please sign the petition that is going around keeping these events alive. Vickie Holmquist, Port Angeles

Our conversation moved to Twitter’s direct messages, where it was ended quickly by the 140-character limit. Later, we talked about the exchanges, and she explained that she saw email as something for “old people.” It’s too slow for her, and the messages too long. Sometimes, she said, as with a Facebook status update, you don’t even need to respond at all. Since technology hasn’t solved the problem it has created with email, it looks as if some younger people might come up with their own answer — not to use email at all. So I’m taking a cue from them. I’ll look at my email as it comes in. Maybe I’ll respond with a text, Google Chat, Twitter or Facebook message. But chances are, as with many messages sent via Facebook or Twitter, I won’t need to respond at all.

john.brewer@peninsuladailynews.com

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Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ LEAH LEACH, managing editor/news, 360-417-3531 leah.leach@peninsuladailynews.com ■ MARGARET MCKENZIE, news editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5064 margaret.mckenzie@peninsuladailynews.com ■ BRAD LABRIE, sports editor; 360-417-3525 brad.labrie@peninsuladailynews.com ■ DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ, features editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5062 diane.urbani@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 and Port Townsend offices: See Page A2

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


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

CommentaryViewpoints

Exactly who’s on America’s side? USUALLY AT THIS stage of a presidential campaign, Republicans are doing a much better job of sullying the Democratic candidate as un-American. Michael Dukakis was accused of hav- Maureen ing a funny last Dowd name and failing to say the Pledge of Allegiance 10 times a day. John Kerry was faulted for acting French and eating Philly cheese steaks with Swiss cheese. Al Gore was into the Earth and earth tones — need we say more? And the GOP has had so much practice over the past four years at skewering Barack Obama as an existentialist socialist apologist for America with a secret foreign birth certificate that it should be like shooting mahi-mahi in a barrel. The dude used to wear a sarong to do The New York Times’ Sunday crossword puzzle, for Pete’s sake — a look more exotic than Ralph Lauren’s Chinese French berets. Yet this week’s Republican attacks have been so shriekingly shrill, they make Poppy Bush campaigning at a New Jersey flag factory back in 1988 look like a masterpiece of subtlety. “I wish this president would learn how to be an American,” said John Sununu, the former New Hampshire governor, on Tuesday during a Romney campaign media conference call. (He later apologized.) He also went on Fox News to assert that the president “has no idea how the American system functions, and we shouldn’t be

surprised about that, because he spent his early years in Hawaii smoking something, spent the next set of years in Indonesia, another set of years in Indonesia, and frankly, when he came to the U.S., he worked as a community organizer, which is a socialized structure.” On Monday, the ever-delightful Rush Limbaugh weighed in: “I think it can now be said, without equivocation — without equivocation — that this man hates this country. He is trying — Barack Obama is trying — to dismantle, brick by brick, the American dream.” Limbaugh continued: “He was indoctrinated as a child. His father was a communist. His mother was a leftist. He was sent to prep and Ivy League schools where his contempt for the country was reinforced.” As it was for the Bushes and Mitt Romney? But that nonsense sounds reasonable compared with Michele Bachmann’s McCarthyesque charges that the Muslim Brotherhood is infiltrating the U.S. government. She ludicrously cited Hillary Clinton’s trusted aide, Huma Abedin, the Muslim daughter of professors of Indian and Pakistani descent and the wife of former Rep. Anthony Weiner, as someone who shouldn’t have a security clearance. It’s hard for the haters to get traction when the president and his wife are looking so all-American, smooching for the “kiss cam” at the U.S. vs. Brazil basketball game here Monday night, as the lovely Malia excitedly looked on. Campaigning Tuesday in Pennsylvania, Romney called Obama’s course as president “extraordinarily foreign.” But it is the Mitt-bot who keeps getting caught doing things

that seem strangely outside the norm to most Americans. Americans have been trained to be wary of Swiss bank accounts and tax shelters in Bermuda and the Cayman Islands. Guys who have those in the movies are always shady and greedy. George Romney set the gold standard by releasing 12 years’ worth of tax returns. But his son’s refusal to release a decent sampling is so suspicious that even some top Republicans have balked. Why would the scion of a political family who always wanted to be president tangle himself in a cat’s cradle of tax trickery in the first place? Romney contended that he had “no role” at Bain after 1999 when some of its companies went bankrupt, shipped jobs overseas and fired workers. He remained the firm’s chairman of the board, CEO, president and only stockholder until 2002. Other than that, he had nothing to do with the place. Aside from his time running the Salt Lake City Olympics, which he’s happy to publicize, Romney’s whole life — from his $250 million fortune to his tenure at the cultish Bain to his Mormonism — seems as though it’s secreted in a hidden shelter. Like W., he’s coming across as the privileged kid who grew up at the country club and got special deals because of his dad, but then runs around claiming to be a selfmade businessman. That lack of self-awareness and Romney’s refusal to take responsibility for his own company are disturbing traits in a leader.

________ Maureen Dowd is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The New York Times. Email her at http://tinyurl.com/dowdmail.

Bad banks backed by Democratic Party OBAMA CAMPAIGN ADVISER David Axelrod and his hatchet people are still yammering about GOP presidential rival Mitt Romney’s overseas investments. It’s time for Michelle the Romney campaign to Malkin educate voters about all the shady financial institutions embraced by Democrats right here on American soil. Let’s talk sleazy Democratic Partybacked banks, shall we? ■ Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac. Forget Switzerland. The mother and father of all financial industry outrages are rooted in Washington, D.C. And Obama Democrats are among the biggest winners of lavish, out-of-control compensation packages from fraud-plagued Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Obama confidante James Johnson raked in $21 million. Former Obama chief of staff and current Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel “earned” at least $320,000 for a brief 14-month gig at Freddie Mac. And Clinton Fannie Mae head and Obama economic confidante Franklin Raines bagged some $90 million in pay and stock options earned during the governmentsponsored institution’s Enronstyle accounting scandal on the public dime. Self-appointed banking policewoman and DNC Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz has, uncharacteristically, kept her mouth shut about these wealthy barons. ■ Superior Bank. One of the Obamas’ oldest Chicago friends and wealthiest billionaire bundlers, former Obama national finance chairwoman Penny Pritzker, headed up this subprime lender. Even after it went under in 2001 and left 1,400 customers destitute, Pritzker was pushing to expand its toxic subprime loan business. Pritzker and her family escaped accountability by forking

over $460 million over 15 years. Obama happily accepted the nearly $800 million in campaign and inaugural funding Pritzker drummed up for him. To protect her family’s multibillion dollar fortune, Pritzker’s enterprises park their money in the very same kind of offshore trusts her candidate is attacking Romney over. ■ Broadway Bank. In 2010, President and Mrs. Obama personally raised money for their Chicago friend and fundraiser Alexi Giannoulias. As I reported then, Giannoulias’ Greek immigrant family founded Chicago-based Broadway Bank, a now-defunct financial institution that loaned tens of millions of dollars to convicted mafia felons and faced bankruptcy after decades of engaging in risky, high-flying behavior. It’s the place where Obama parked his 2004 U.S. Senate campaign funds. And it’s the same place where a mutual friend of Obama and Giannoulias — convicted Obama fundraiser and slumlord Tony Rezko — used to bounce nearly $500,000 in bad checks written to Las Vegas casinos. Chicago’s former inspector general blasted Giannoulias and his family for tapping $70 million worth of dividends in 2007 and 2008 as the real estate crash loomed. Broadway Bank was sitting on an estimated $250 million in bad loans. The cost to taxpayers after the bank was shut down two years ago: an estimated $390 million. ■ ShoreBank. The “progressive” Chicago-based community development bank, a “green” financial institution whose mission was to “create economic equity and a healthy environment,” folded in August 2010. Obama personally had endorsed the politically connected bank and appeared in a video promoting its Kenyan microlending project. But it was a doomed social justice experiment. After regulators shut it down, Obama crony companies, including Bank of American and Goldman Sachs, took over the mess

courtesy of taxpayer subsidies. ■ Countrywide/Bank of America. Earlier this month, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee released a report on corruption-plagued Countrywide Financial Corp., which was bailed out by taxpayerbailed-out Bank of America. The House investigation confirmed the notorious favor-trading scheme, which involved sweetheart home loan deals for members of Congress and their staff, top government officials and executives of doomed mortgage giant Fannie Mae. “These relationships helped [Countrywide CEO and Democratic subprime loan king Angelo] Mozilo increase his own company’s profits while dumping the risk of bad loans on taxpayers,” according to the new report. Mozilo copped a $67.5 million plea to avert a high-stakes public trial in the heat of the 2010 midterm election season. Since then, Obama’s Justice Department has taken no action to prosecute Countrywide officials on federal bribery charges. Bank of America, which raked in $45 billion in Obama-supported TARP bailout funds and billions more in secret emergency federal loans, footed the $50 million restitution payment bill for Mozilo and another Countrywide official. In 2008, BofA’s political action committee gave its biggest contributions to Obama, totaling $421,000. And as I noted in January, Bank of America supplied the Democrats with a $15 million revolving line of credit, along with an additional $17 million loan during the 2010 midterms. Embarrassed by the party’s ties to shady Bank of America, progressives are now trying to rebrand the Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, N.C., where Obama will give his nomination acceptance address. They’re referring to it as “Panthers Stadium” instead.

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

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

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PeninsulaNorthwest

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Jefferson hospital moves accounts to First Federal BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

WILLIAM SHORE MEMORIAL POOL

GETS FACE-LIFT

Sean O’Donnell of Discovery Bay, an employee of Tacoma-based General Mechanical Inc., mixes patching material in an drained William Shore Memorial Pool in Port Angeles on Tuesday. The pool is undergoing major renovations, including replacement of pipes and plumbing, locker room improvements and new paint and decorations, with work expected to be done by Aug. 6.

Recreational crabbers can get free training Tuesday in Port Hadlock PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT HADLOCK — A free training session for recreational crabbers will be hosted Tuesday by the Washington State University Jefferson County Extension. The training will be held at the Extension office, 201 W. Patison St., at 5 p.m. The session will cover

crab biology, harvest rules, trap operation and outreach tips. Educational materials will be provided to help recreational crabbers learn the best practices to prevent crab pot losses and reduce conservation-oriented rules violations. Don Velazques and Don Rothaus of the state Depart-

ment of Fish and Wildlife will be the guest speakers. Attendees should be willing to assist in recreational crabbing outreach and education this summer. RSVPs are required. To RSVP, phone the Extension office at 360-3795610 or email mary.pitts@ wsu.edu.

PORT TOWNSEND — Jefferson Healthcare has teamed up with First Federal for its day-to-day banking. Hospital commissioners Wednesday voted 5-0 to transfer three depository accounts from Union Bank to First Federal and one payroll account from US Bank to First Federal, which is the only locally owned community bank on the North Olympic Peninsula. “First Federal has a history of giving back to the community,� Commissioner Jill Buhler said. “I really like that.� Jefferson Healthcare will keep its relationship with Bank of America for a treasury account that is used to pay bills. The treasury account is managed by the Jefferson County Treasurer’s Office, which deals with Bank of America. “Taxes come to us, and we put it in their fund,� County Treasurer Judi Morris said. Jefferson Healthcare Chief Financial Officer Hilary Whittington said it made sense to work with one bank for deposits and payroll. “We were working with three different institutions,� she said. “We’re spending money on fees that we wouldn’t need to otherwise.

We’re also manually transferring cash all of the time, which I don’t think is the safest, best or most efficient way to do things. “We started thinking: ‘Is this the best way to do this?’� Hospital officials began discussing the possibility of transferring the four accounts in March.

Line of credit The conversation started when hospital officials realized they eventually would need a line of credit for capital investments such as Epic electronic medical records. Jefferson Healthcare will be in a better position to obtain a line of credit with a stronger banking relationship, Chief Executive Officer Mike Glenn said. Immediate benefits will include lower fees, easier transfers and the fact that First Federal has branches in Port Townsend, Sequim, Port Angeles and Forks. “We’re asking our patients to stay here,� Whittington said. “So if we can, and the quality’s the same or better, we should stay here, too.� First Federal commercial relationship manager Kelly Liske thanked hospital officials for choosing the Port Angeles-based institution in the public comment portion

of Wednesday’s meeting. “We understand the process you went through and appreciate your due diligence and look forward to partnering with you to hopefully make you proud and provide the services that you need,� she said. Also in attendance was First Federal Port Townsend branch manager Laurie Liske. “It was clear that doing business with Jefferson Healthcare was important to you,� Glenn told them. “That did not go unnoticed. We appreciate that.� Last spring, Jefferson Healthcare officials identified First Federal and Kitsap Bank as the best options from a list of criteria. Jefferson Healthcare’s finance committee vetted First Federal’s proposal in separate meetings and recommended the transfer. After the meeting, Whittington said the balances in Jefferson Healthcare’s depository accounts — for patient payments and insurance payments — fluctuate from week to week but are generally no more than $2 million. The payroll account is roughly $1.3 million per pay period, she said. Olympic Medical Center and Forks Community Hospital already have accounts with First Federal, which opened in 1923 under the name Lincoln Savings and Loan.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday, July 20-21, 2012 SECTION

SPORTS, DEATHS, COMICS, BUSINESS In this section

B

Quileute tribe throws 3-day party Celebration to include games, races BY LEAH LEACH PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

LAPUSH — The Quileute are celebrating their cultural heritage this weekend, and everyone is invited to join the party. From the ALSO . . . opening cere■ See mony at 3 p.m. what’s today to the happening final stick at Quileute games at 3 p.m. Days/B2 Sunday, the Quileute will offer tastes of their tradition through singing and dancing, salmon bakes, arts and crafts vendors, and canoe races modernized with motors. A parade down Main Street and a fireworks show against the stunning sea stack vistas visible from sandy First Beach are part of the festival, along with horseshoe games, softball, bingo, poker, the traditional stick games gambling tournaments, a carnival and a fun run.

Biggest yearly celebration Quileute Days is the tribe’s biggest annual celebration, said Russell Brooks, tribal events coordinator. “It’s not just a tribal celebration, but also an invitation for people in the region to take part,” Brooks said, adding that it is organized by the Quileute Days committee and the Quileute Tribal Council. The festival itself is steeped in tradition. “I’ve talked to some of the older people, and they say it’s gone on as long as they can

LONNIE ARCHIBALD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Members of the U.S. Coast Guard Quillayute Station in LaPush participate in 2011’s Quileute Days Parade. remember — at least the 1960s or before,” Brooks said. “It’s a fixture here every summer.” The festival is conducted mostly on the main street of LaPush, which is about 12 miles from Forks on state Highway 110 and located on the Pacific Coast at the mouth of the Quillayute River. A special feature this year will be the screening of “More Than Frybread,” described by Brooks as

“a fictional comedy based on Indian Country’s love of fry bread.” It will be shown at the A-KaLat Center from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. today — and the writer, director and producer of the film will be present.

Filmmaking workshop Travis Holt Hamilton of Arizona will conduct a filmmaking workshop before the film is screened.

Studio tour shows off Dungeness Valley art

The workshop from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. today at the A-Ka-Lat Center will be free to the public. “Youth are encouraged to attend,” Brooks said. The film has an all-Native American cast, Brooks said, and is on a national tour. More comedy is in store at the performance of Another Indian Uprising, scheduled from 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Saturday at the A-Ka-Lat Center. The comedy troupe from Bur-

bank, Calif., is made up of three Native Americans — Jim Ruel, Gilbert Brown and Shishonia — who share their stories of growing up native, according to their website, www.anotherndn uprising.com. “Twilight” memorabilia will be available, Brooks said, but no actors from the movies are scheduled to appear as they have in past years.

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“Monty” was painted by Sally Cays, one of 19 artists showing their creations during this weekend’s Sequim Studio Tour. The free tour starts today and continues through Sunday. likin’s studio at 73 Idea Place, while Roberta Cooper will display her awardwinning gourd creations at Gorgeous Gourds, 241 Serpentine Ave.

Watercolors Sally Cays, another well-known Sequim painter, will showcase her lush watercolors in her studio at 101 W. Robert Place off Woodcock Road. Also during the tour, each artist donates a piece to Sequim Arts, a nonprofit group that provides scholarships and community education programs. The works are raffled off to raise money for those pro-

grams. Tickets are available at every studio and the drawings held at 5 p.m. Sunday. For much more on the artists, examples of their work and directions to their studios, visit www. SequimStudioTour.org. Brochures are also available at both Sequim visitor information centers, 1192 E. Washington St. and 163 W. Washington St. downtown. To reach the visitor center, phone 360-683-6197.

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________ Features Editor Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360452-2345, ext. 5062, or at diane. urbani@peninsuladailynews.com.

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On past tours, Rock Hollow has belonged to the “Barn Sisterhood”: Mary Franchini, who specializes in collage, mixed media and gouache; and multimedia painters Lynne Armstrong and Susan Gansert Shaw. This year, the sisters are joined by the Men in Blue: Brian Buntain and Ed Crumley, who construct one-of-a-kind jewelry pieces with precious metals and semiprecious stones. Cynthia Thomas, a sculptor and mask-maker whose studio has been part of the tour for years, hailed her fellow participants, such as Patricia Gordon and Richard O’Connor, who are showing their work together in Gordon’s studio at 346 Glenns Valley Road.

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FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

2012 Quileute Days events scheduled across three days PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Today ■ 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. — Elders Lounge, Quileute Senior Center. ■ 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. — Opening ceremony, A-KaLat Center. ■ 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. — Royalty Pageant, A-Ka-Lat Center. ■ 6 p.m. — Poker Tourney, Texas Hold ’Em, West Wing of Tribal Building. ■ 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. — Adult coed softball, Coast Guard Field. ■ 6 p.m. — Stick games, Community Center. ■ 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. — Filmmaking workshop, A-Ka-Lat Center.

■ 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. — Resources building. ■ 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. — “More Than Frybread” film screened, A-Ka-Lat Center. Relay For Life silent auction, Community Center. ■ 1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. — Saturday Salmon bake, the pit on ■ 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. — Main Street. Adult coed softball. ■ 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. — ■ 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. — Traditional dancing and Youth softball, Quileute singing, Main Street. Tribal School Field. ■ 2 p.m. — Horseshoes, ■ 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. — Coast Guard Field. Elders Lounge. ■ 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. — ■ 10:30 a.m. — Parade Poker Tourney, Texas Hold lineup, Quileute Natural ’Em. Resources building. ■ 3 p.m. — Stick games. ■ 11 a.m. to noon — ■ 3 p.m. — Bingo, LoneFloat judging. some Creek Clubhouse. ■ Noon to 1 p.m. — ■ 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. — Parade, from Quileute Nat- Kids carnival, south-side ural Resources Building lawn of Tribal Building. down Main Street. ■ 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. — ■ 1 p.m. — Canoe races, Another Indian outside Quileute Natural Uprising comedy show,

A-Ka-Lat Center. ■ 9 p.m. — Elders Lounge. ■ 9 p.m. to midnight — Street dance. ■ 10 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. — Fireworks, First Beach.

Sunday ■ 9 a.m. to noon — Adult coed softball. ■ 9 a.m. to noon — Youth softball. ■ 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. — Family 5K Fun Run, leaving from A-Ka-Lat Center. ■ 2 p.m. — Canoe races. ■ Noon to 3 p.m. — Salmon bake. ■ 1 p.m. — Bingo. ■ 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. — Poker. ■ 3 p.m. — Stick games.

MARCUS OBI

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KAYLA JACKSON

A Quileute Days volunteer wears a bright red T-shirt for the annual event.

Quileute: Modern canoe races

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CONTINUED FROM B1 been modernized. “Racers have modified The “Twilight” saga canoes with motors on movies were based on a them,” Brooks said. “It’s quite exciting,” he best-selling four-novel series about vampires and added. “A lot of people get into the canoe races.” teen love. The races on the QuillaThe series includes reference to werewolves alleg- yute River are timed to take advantage of the tides, edly from LaPush. Wolves are part of the Brooks said. The canoe races will be Quileute mythology, but werewolves have never at 1 p.m. Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday. been part of the culture. Canoe races have The start can be seen

from outside the Quileute Natural Resources building. Traditional dancing and singing will be performed from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday on Main Street. “A lot of our people who do the traditional dancing and singing right now are on the Paddle Journey,” Brooks said, referring to the 2012 Paddle to Squaxin. “They are coming back for Saturday and then they

will resume going back on the Canoe Journey,” he said. The festival is familyoriented and is alcohol-and drug-free, Brooks said. “We want people to come and enjoy themselves and leave with good memories,” he said.

________ Managing Editor/News Leah Leach can be reached at 360-4173531 or at leah.leach@peninsula dailynews.com.

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PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

Walk lake bed or see concert, film Events set across Peninsula PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Lake-bed walks, concerts, films and other events are scheduled on the North Olympic Peninsula this weekend. For more information on other local arts and entertainment, see Peninsula Spotlight, the Peninsula Daily News’ weekly entertainment guide, in today’s PDN. Other events are in the “Things to Do� calendar, available online at www. peninsuladailynews.com.

Olympic National Park Lake-bed walks OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK — Rangers will lead interpretive walks Saturday and Sunday along the Elwha River where Lake Aldwell once existed. The free guided Elwha Exploration Walks will be offered at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays through Sept. 2. The one-hour walks will leave from the former boat launch at the end of Lake Aldwell Road, which turns north off U.S. Highway 101 just west of the Elwha River bridge. The lake was formed behind Elwha Dam, which has been demolished as part of the $325 million federal project to restore the Elwha River’s legendary fish runs. Visitors should wear sturdy walking shoes or boots and be prepared for windy conditions with no shade. For more information, phone 360-452-9191.

Port Angeles Roller derby bout

Theater, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd., Port Angeles. Tickets to see Swami Beyondananda are $20 in advance at Port Book and News, 104 E. First St., Port Angeles, and Pacific Mist Books, 121 W. Washington St., Sequim. Remaining tickets will be available for $25 at the door. Proceeds will benefit Protect the Peninsula’s Future, an organization monitoring local air and water quality, and the local Sierra Club Chapter. Bhaerman has written a book, Spontaneous Evolution, with biologist Bruce Lipton.

dent Mike Webster will be held at Applebees, 130 River Road, from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. Saturday. Webster, father of two young sons and owner of Apex Flooring Co., is battling an aggressive Stage 4 brain tumor. Tickets are $10 and can be purchased in advance at the Sequim branch of Sound Community Bank, 541 N. Fifth Ave. They also will be sold at the door. Eggs, bacon, sausage, pancakes, coffee and orange juice will be served. An account has been set up in Webster’s name at Sound Community Bank. For more information, phone Shelly (Webster) Allen at 360-461-4948 or Pat Davis at 360-477-7773.

Driftwood art show SEQUIM — The Olympic Driftwood Sculptors will hold its fourth annual show at the Sequim Prairie Grange, 290 MacLeay Road, today through Sunday. Show hours are from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. today and Saturday and from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. Admission is free, and cameras are welcome. Hand-crafted driftwood pendants and other accessories, as well as unfinished driftwood, will be available for purchase. There will be a display of sculptures by numerous artists.

In addition, sculptors will present “Aviary,� a separate display of bird-related sculptures. Driftwood artists will demonstrate the technique involved in creating these art pieces and answer questions regarding this art form. Raffle tickets will be on sale for a chance to win a driftwood sculpture created by several club members. For more information, phone 360-681-2535, visit www.olympicdriftwood sculptors.org or email info@ olympicdriftwoodsculptors. org.

SARC discounts set SEQUIM — The Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center will provide admission discounts during Lavender Weekend today through Sunday. General admission prices will be discounted by 25 percent, with admission $6 for adults, $3 for youths ages 8-15 and $1.50 for children ages 3-7. SARC also will offer 10 percent off six-month SARC passes for all three days of the festival. The special price is available at both the SARC booth at Carrie Blake Park and the SARC facility at 610 N. Fifth Ave. Only checks will be accepted at Carrie Blake Park.

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Clowning workshop SEQUIM — The Laff Pack, a local not-for-profit clown troupe, will host a clowning workshop at the Dominion Terrace clubhouse, 1301 S. Third Ave., from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. Admission is $10, which includes lunch and all training sessions. Reservations are required and can be made by phoning 360417-8812 or 360-6816848. A Lakewood Costumes representative will conduct makeup and magic demonstrations and other clown-related training. Clowning supplies also will be for sale. Members of the Laff Pack also will be available to answer questions on clowning or about the group and its activities.

Band benefit set SEQUIM — The Sequim High School Band Boosters will hold a car wash benefit from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. TURN

TO

PORT ANGELES — The seventh annual Darlene Marihugh Memorial CruzIn is Saturday. Cars and motorcycles will be on display at Cowboy Country, 923 E. First St., and Puerto de Angeles Family Mexican Restaurant, 940 E. First St., beginning at 3 p.m. The Cruz-in is open to all hot rods, customs, classics, muscle cars and motorcycles. Puerto de Angeles will offer menu specials, and Cowboy Country will hold an outdoor sale in conjunction with the event. Wayne “The Peregrine� King will exhibit and “fire off� his restored record-setting 1963 Doss, Clayton and King top-fuel dragster. More than 120 door prizes donated by area businesses will be given to participants displaying their cars and bikes at the event. A raffle will be held, highlighted by a custompainted and upholstered hot-rod pedal car. Fourteen entries will be picked for special award plaques. All proceeds will go to high school seniors for scholarships in memory of Darlene Marihugh, an avid hot rodder who died Oct. 23, 2005, at the age of 40. Recent Port Angeles High School graduate Mia Piper received this year’s $2,000 scholarship. To date, the scholarship fund has given eight scholarships totaling $13,500. For more details, visit w w w. f a c e b o o k . c o m / marihughcruzin.

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Swami Beyondananda, a traveling promoter of the Right to Laugh Party, arrives today in Port Angeles.

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PORT ANGELES — Port Scandalous Roller Derby will host a doubleheader bout at Olympic Skate Center, 707 S. Chase St., at 6:30 p.m. Saturday. In the first bout, the Port Scandalous Brawl Stars will take on the Pink Pistols Roller Derby squad from Everett. In the nightcap, the Port Scandalous Roller Punks will face off in a junior bout with the I-5 Rollergirls of Seattle. Tickets are $10 in advance at Bada Bean! Bada Bloom!, 1105 E. Front St., or at www.brownpaper Sequim tickets.com. Tickets are $12 at the Free BP checks set door. SEQUIM — Free bloodA beer and wine garden pressure checks will be will be available. offered by Wright’s Home Care Agency Inc. on SunComedy show tonight day. PORT ANGELES — They will be offered from Swami Beyondananda — 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the also known as Steve Bhaer- Sequim Safeway, 680 W. man — will present “wis- Washington St. dom disguised as humor,� or maybe it’s “humor disguised Benefit breakfast as wisdom,� at 7 p.m. today. SEQUIM — A benefit The comedy show will be at Peninsula College’s Little breakfast for Sequim resi-

Cruz-In revs up Saturday PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Fill up the bus PORT ANGELES — Donations of school supplies will be accepted at a “Stuff the Bus� event Saturday at Fashion Bug near the eastside Safeway store at 709 E. U.S. Highway 101. Donors can help fill up a yellow school bus with supplies for distribution to needy students Aug. 18. KONP 1450 AM radio also will host an all-day telethon Tuesday, with an invitation to bring donations to the office at 721 E. First St. and help fill the bus with school supplies. The yellow bus will be parked at Walmart at 3411 E. Kolonels Way on July 28 to receive donations. The annual back-toschool event will be from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 18, at Jefferson Elementary School, 218 E. 12th St. School supplies will be provided free to students in need who are in kindergarten through 12th grade. Haircuts, immunizations, community service resources and back-toschool information also will be offered. The SmileMobile program will accept reservations for September appointments. The 2011 back-to-school event drew more than 200 families and served 750 students. Groups and individuals are collecting donations and school supplies now for the August distribution. Drop-off locations include First Federal’s Port Angeles branches, Sterling Bank and U.S. Bank.

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FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Never doubt divine spark within self “I AM AFRAID of things that cannot harm me, and I know it. “I yearn for things that cannot help me and I know it. “What I fear is within me and within me, too, is what I seek” (Hasidic teaching). THE ASSOCIATED PRESS All of us have times of self-doubt when we don’t believe in ourselves, our EADYING FOR AMADAN abilities, our worthiness. A Muslim child carries floral offerings on her head as she walks with her family at a We dwell on our failshrine in New Delhi on Thursday. Muslims throughout the world are preparing to ures. We blame an event or person in our past for causcelebrate the holy fasting month of Ramadan, when they refrain from eating, drinking ing us to lack self-esteem. and smoking from dawn to dusk. Ramadan should begin today, or when Islamic We become paralyzed with scholars see the new crescent moon in the night skies. fear that we really cannot possibly be worthy of good things and happiness. Life is full of tragedy. Abusive parents or partners, unexpected illnesses or accidents, or untimely Transportation is availThe sessions are for chilOlympics’ 10:30 a.m. Sundeaths can all serve to beat dren age 5 through sixth able. us down and cause us to day worship service. grade. come to expect the worst. The church is at 506 S. The talk refers to Students will explore the Francis St. We begin to believe that Joseph and imagination. natural wonders of the somehow, we cannot overFor more information, Fellowship will follow world while learning of come our past, and maybe phone 360-457-1030. the service. God’s amazing love and this is all we deserve. The church is at 2917 E. PORT ANGELES — power. I have seen very bright Unity service set Myrtle St. Bethany Pentecostal Church Music, Bible stories, students who never believe All are welcome. PORT ANGELES — will hold an “Amazing Won- crafts, games and snacks are they will do well, and I For more information, The Rev. John Wingfield ders Aviation” vacation Bible planned. wonder what happened to will present “Many-Colored phone 360-457-3981. school from 9 a.m. to noon Registration forms are cause them to doubt their Cloak” at Unity in the Peninsula Daily News abilities. available at the church. Monday through Friday. Even when they’re proven wrong, they just don’t believe their success was the result of anything they did. They are genuinely surprised. It was just a fluke. Just luck. Then I’ve worked with others who are only average students but are brimming with excitement and optimism. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN QUEEN OF ANGELS BETHANY Nothing seems to get CHURCH PENTECOSTAL CHURCH PARISH them down. 139 W. 8th Street, Port Angeles E. Fifth & Francis 209 West 11th St. Port Angeles 360-452-4781 Even if things go wrong, Port Angeles 457-1030 360.452.2351 Pastor: Ted Mattie Omer Vigoren, Pastor they always see the potenJustice, Equity Lay Pastor: Shirley Cruthers www.queenofangelsparish.org SUNDAY tial for next time. & Compassion 9:30 a.m. Sunday School Mass Schedule: Worship Hours: 8:30 & 10:00 a.m. What was it that gave 10:45 a.m., 6:30 p.m. Worship Saturday Vigil: 5:00 p.m. Nursery Provided: both services Olympic Unitarian them such confidence? WED. & SAT.: 7 p.m. Eve. Service Sunday 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Universalist Fellowship Tuesday evening 6:00 p.m. There are many “Looking for Leisure” 417-2665 Wed. thru Sat. 8:30 a.m. instances of people growing www.olympicuuf.org UNITY IN Old Latin Mass every 2nd & 4th up in homes with atrocious 73 Howe Rd., Agnew-Old Sunday 2:00 p.m. THE OLYMPICS conditions but who go on to Olympic to N. Barr Rd., right on Confession: www.unityintheolympics.org 30 minutes prior to all Masses Howe Rd. be positive and upbeat, not 2917 E. Myrtle, Port Angeles Saturday 4:00-5:00 p.m. July 22, 10:30 AM letting life get them down. 457-3981 Su sa n M o rriso n ,M in ister Sunday Services 10:30 a.m. What is the magic piece Rev. John Wingfield Fa ith Into Actio n that gives them this resilSunday 10:00 a.m. W elco m ing Co ngrega tio n ience?

R

R

Briefly . . .

Vacation Bible school starts Monday in PA

St. JOSEPH PARISH 101 E. Maple St., Sequim 360.683.6076 www.sequimcatholicchurch.org

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

Confession:

PENINSULA WCG Gardiner Community Center A Bible Based Church Services: Saturday at 1 p.m. Visitors Welcome For information 417-0826 980 Old Gardiner Road

Meeting @ Deer Park Cinemas - Hwy 101 & Deer Park Road, Port Angeles Glen Douglas, Pastor 452-9936 www.thecrossingchurch.net

Casual Environment, Serious Faith

PORT ANGELES CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Corner of 2nd & Race P.O. Box 2086 • 457-4839 Pastor Neil Castle

30 minutes prior to all Masses Saturday 4:00-5:00 p.m.

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

683-7333 45 Eberle Lane, Sequim Sunday Service 10 a.m. DayCamp Jr. 4 years-1st grade July 31 - Aug 2 9 am-12 noon at DCC DayCamp Kids grades 2-5 Aug. 1 & 2 9 am-4 pm at MacLeay Hall

FIRST UNITED METHODIST & Congregational Church CHURCH OF CHRIST 7th & Laurel, Port Angeles 1233 E. Front St., Port Angeles 360-452-8971 360-457-3839 Joey Olson, Pastor Dr. Jerry Dean, Minister SUNDAY Childcare provided A Christ–Centered message for a 8:30 a.m. Worship world weary people. 9:45 a.m. Summer Breakfast SUNDAY 11:00 a.m Worship 9:30 a.m. Sunday School Youth Activities - Contact Church 10:45 a.m. Worship Service office@pafumc.org www.pafumc.org

FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH GARBC 683-7303 7652 Old Olympic Highway Sequim Family Oriented Ministry Emphasizing Bible Preaching and Teaching

A ministry of Faith Baptist Church of Sequim (GARBC) SUNDAY 9:00 a.m. Worship 10:30 a.m. Sunday School Family Oriented Ministry Emphasizing Bible Preaching and Teaching

ST. ANDREW’S EPISCOPAL 510 E. Park Ave. Port Angeles 457-4862 Services: Sunday 8:00 and 10:00 a.m. Godly Play for Children 9:00 a.m. Monday 8:15 p.m. “Compline” Wednesday 11:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist

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

EVERY SUNDAY 9 a.m. Sunday School for all ages 10 a.m. Worship Service Nursery available during AM services EVERY WEDNESDAY 6:30 p.m. Bible Study Invite your friends & neighbors for clear, biblical preaching, wonderful fellowship, & the invitation to a lasting, personal relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ.

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

HOLY TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH (ELCA) 301 E. Lopez Ave., PA 452-2323 Pastor Richard Grinstad SUNDAY Sunday Worship at 9:30 a.m. 9:00 a.m. Adult Sunday School Nursery Provided Radio Broadcast on KONP 1450 at 10:00 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. most Sundays www.htlcpa.com

www.sequimbible.org

7th event to feature face painting, hats

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

Bible centered • Fam ily friendly

Certainly a part of one’s sense of self-esteem can be attributed to simple personality. All parents can point out that they could see their child’s emerging personality even as newborns. Maybe it is in their DNA or maybe an encounter with a good role model at just the right time that enables some to remain optimistic about life. So how does one help someone who has always seen the glass as half empty, who has either let poor childhood experiences influence them or who, despite the most encouraging of environments and a life full of accomplishments, still cannot see they are worthy of good in their lives? One of the things that drew me to Judaism is the constant emphasis that humans reflect the divine image and are born without sin. There is an essential essence of God in all of us. If we can only remember that a divine spark is at our very core, we will know that goodness is an

important part DeBey of our identity. Rabbi Karyn Kedar says in God Whispers, “To be created in the image of God is to be granted a gift.” The gift of being able to recognize the holy within ourselves can help us through our times of selfdoubt. When we find ourselves dwelling on the negative things that have happened to us in the past, it is tempting to wonder if only we had done things differently, or if only we had had better parents/spouses/ friends. It becomes easy to sink into a cycle of hopelessness about ourselves. We believe that everything we do must be perfect, and if we cannot live up to that, we give up.

Suzanna

‘Myth of perfection’ Rabbi David Cooper teaches in God is a Verb: Kabbalah and the Practice of Mystical Judaism: “The myth of perfection is one in which we constantly are dissatisfied with what is currently happening. “We are never ‘here’ because we are always trying to be ‘there,’ wherever that is. . . . “When we accept each moment as a new opportunity for fulfilling our purpose, we are always present, always succeeding, always changing the world for the better. . . . “May we all be blessed to find comfort in being less than perfect, and to find peace in the eternal chaos of life.” If we could remember that all of our experiences, good and bad, have made us who we are and brought us to our present path, we would stop saying “if only.” Even the difficult times have led us to the blessings we have today. By remembering the presence of the divine in our very being, we can believe in ourselves, not expect perfection and become the creative, joyous beings we were meant to be. “The soul that You have given me, O God, is pure! You created and formed it into me, and within me You sustain it” (Gates of Prayer). One of my most precious memories of my son, David, was when he spoke of things not knowable to such a young child. When he was not yet 2, he looked at me and said, “Mommy, you know before I was born, I was in God.” Never forget the divinity within you. Kein yehi ratzon . . . may it be God’s will. Shalom.

_________ Issues of Faith is a rotating column by seven religious leaders on the North Olympic Peninsula. Suzanne DeBey is a lay leader of the Port Angeles Jewish community.

PA church to host BBQ

847 N. Sequim Ave. • 683-4135

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

27569893

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

FAITH BAPTIST FELLOWSHIP 518 W. 8TH ST. • Port Angeles 360-683-7303

Simple personality

ISSUES OF FAITH

PORT ANGELES — First Baptist Church of Port Angeles will hold its seventh annual family barbecue celebration at the church playground, 105 W. Sixth St., from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

The celebration is an outreach project of the church and is free to all, rain or shine. There will be live music, free hot dogs and hamburgers, ice cream, face painting, games, a bounce house, crafts, balloon hats and flower arranging. For more information, phone the church at 360457-3313.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday, July 20-21, 2012 PAGE

B5

Foreclosure crisis hits older Americans hard

$ Briefly . . . ACTI aircraft assemblies sent overseas

AARP calls crash ‘brutal’ for seniors BY JOSH LEDERMAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — More than 1.5 million older Americans have lost their homes, with millions more at risk as the national housing crisis takes its toll on those who are among the worst positioned to weather the storm, a new AARP report says. Older African-Americans and Hispanics are the hardest-hit. “The Great Recession has been brutal for many older Americans,� said Debra Whitman, AARP’s policy chief. “This shows that home ownership doesn’t guarantee financial security later in life.� Even working two jobs hasn’t been enough to allow Jewel Lewis-Hall, 57, to make her monthly mortgage payments. Her husband was laid off from his job at a farmers market, and Lewis-Hall said her salary as a school cook falls short of what she needs to make the payments on her home in Washington, D.C. But panic didn’t set in until recently, when the word “foreclosure� showed up in a letter from the bank. “You’re used to living a certain way, but one thing leads to another,� Lewis-

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A foreclosure sign blows in the wind in Antioch, Calif. Hall said. “It’s not like I have a new car or anything. I’m driving one from 1991.� According to AARP: ■About 600,000 people who are 50 years or older are in foreclosure. ■About 625,000 in the same age group are at least three months behind on their mortgages. ■About 3.5 million — 16 percent of older homeowners — are underwater, meaning they now owe more than their homes are worth. AARP said that over the past five years, the proportion of loans held by older Americans that are delinquent jumped by more than 450 percent.

Americans who are 50 or older are hard-pressed to recover from the collapse of the housing market that started in 2006 and was compounded by the recession that started in 2007. Eight in 10 of them own homes, but many live on fixed incomes, have little savings or already have burned through much of their retirement savings. They also have fewer working years left to build back what they may have lost. And those who are forced to reenter the workforce often find they can’t command the same salary that they did in the past.

Microsoft posts first loss ever Accounting adjustment leads to firm’s losing $429 million THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Investors may shrug

operating system to work on touch-controlled tablet computers, as well as its traditional stronghold on desktop and laptop computers. In conjunction with Windows 8, Microsoft is planning to release its own tablet, the Surface. A revamped version of another lucrative franchise, Microsoft’s Office software that bundles word processing, spreadsheet and email programs, is also in the works. Earlier this week, Microsoft previewed how the next version of Office, expected to be released next year, will work on tablet computers running on Windows 8.

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The Walgreen pharmacy chain will begin filling prescriptions from customers in the Express Scripts network again starting in September under a new multiyear contract that ends a costly impasse between the companies. The agreement announced Thursday follows a series of disputes between Walgreen and Express Scripts that ended with the discontinuation of the contract between the drugstore operator and the pharmacy benefit manager.

NEW YORK — Spot nonferrous metal prices Thursday. Aluminum - $0.8475 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper - $3.4453 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper - $3.4730 N.Y. Merc spot Wed. Lead - $1872.50 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $0.8402 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1584.00 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1570.40 troy oz., NY Merc spot Wed. Silver - $27.345 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $27.071 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Wed. Platinum - $1416.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum - $1401.80 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Wed.

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The Peninsula Daily News wants to congratulate North Olympic Peninsula businesses celebrating anniversaries in August. On Aug. 10th, we will publish a FREE ad listing the businesses who respond to this special event by Aug. 6th. Is your business having an anniversary later this year? You can use this coupon now to let us know the date.

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NEW YORK — Safeway Inc. said Thursday its net income fell 16 percent in the second quarter, as the grocery store chain spent more on advertising and rolled out a new loyalty program. The Pleasanton, Calif.based company said it is betting that the “just for U� program, which offers personalized deals based on past purchases, will build customer loyalty. Shares of Safeway fell about 7 percent to $15.35.

Safeway income

Business Name _____________________________________________________________________ Address____________________________________________________________________________ City__________________ State________________ Type of Business________________________ Zip Telephone________________________________ What date is your anniversary?_______________________________________________________ Which anniversary is your business celebrating?______________________________________________ Please Mail or Bring to: Peninsula Daily News 305 W. 1st St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 Attn: ANNIVERSARY EVENT

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PORT ANGELES — Angeles Composite Technologies Inc. has shipped the first set of Q400 wingto-body assemblies to a Bombardier Aerospace facility in Belfast, Northern Ireland. ACTI representatives will be on-site in Belfast for installation on the aircraft later this month. “The delivery marks a major milestone for ACTI, its shareholders and each and every employee,� said ACTI President and CEO Michael Rauch. “We now have the challenge of managing and facilitating a very large program as it ramps up into full production, with our goal being 100 percent customer satisfaction.� ACTI expects delivery of a $1 million piece of equipment to be set up and operational by January 2013. It will expand ACTI’s capabilities into a new process that will be used on existing and future programs. ACTI has plans to position itself as a “onestop shop� for advanced composites structures for all commercial and defense aircraft programs.

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The aQuantive-driven setback isn’t likely to faze investors, who usually focus on what lies ahead for a company instead of dwelling on past mistakes. Microsoft’s fortunes are tied to the October release of Windows 8, the most extreme redesign of the company’s flagship operating system since 1995. Windows 8 will feature a new look that will show applications in a mosaic of tiles and boast new technology that will enable the

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Bill Gates, chairman of Microsoft, founded the software company and took it public in 1986.

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REDMOND —Microsoft said Thursday that an accounting adjustment to reflect a weak online ad business led to its first quarterly loss in its 26 years as a public company. The software company had warned that it was taking a $6.2 billion charge because its 2007 purchase of online ad service aQuantive hasn’t yielded the returns envisioned by management. The non-cash adjustment is something companies often do when the value of their assets decline. Microsoft Corp. paid $6.3 billion for aQuantive, only to see rival Google Inc. expand its share of the online ad market. The charge led to a $492 million loss in the April-June quarter, or 6 cents a share. That compares with earnings of $5.9 billion, or 69 cents, a year ago. Revenue rose 4 percent to $18.06 billion. Excluding the adjustment and the deferral of some revenue into the current quarter related to its launch of Windows 8, earn-

ings came to 73 cents per share, beating the 62 cents per share expected by analysts polled by FactSet. Although the earnings were higher than expected, analysts were looking for higher revenue at $18.15 billion. Shares were up 65 cents, or 2.1 percent, at $31.32 in after-hours trading following the release of earnings results. Microsoft, which is based in Redmond has never previously reported a quarterly loss since its initial public offering in March 1986.

Real-time stock quotations at


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FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Events: Knievel to sign

autographs at 7 Cedars CONTINUED FROM B3 The car wash will be in the Discount Tires parking lot, 981 W. Washington St. Car washes will be available by donation. Proceeds will help Sequim band students attend events during the 2012-2013 school year. This includes performances in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in Seattle, at the Husky Band Day at a University of Washington football game, at Victoria Days and the Heritage Festival, and at Disneyland in Anaheim, Calif. These costs are not covered by the Sequim School District. Each student pays for travel.

Teen movie times SEQUIM — Weekly Friday movies for teens will continue at the Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave., at 5:30 p.m. today. Today’s movie is “The Phantom of the Opera,” where a disfigured musical genius hidden away in the Paris Opera House terrorizes the opera company for the unwitting benefit of a young protégée he trains and loves. The library will present the films as part of the “Own the Night” summer reading program through July 27. The movies, selected by the library’s Young Adult Advisory Group around a “night” theme, are appropriate for teens ages 13 and older. The last film in the series, “The Chronicles of Riddick,” will screen July 27. On movie nights only, the meeting room and lobby of the Sequim Library will be open. Staff will supervise the event, and theater-style refreshments will be provided. For more information about the Teen Movie Nights and other activities for young adults at the Sequim Library, visit www. nols.org or contact the Sequim Library at 360-6831161 or Sequim@nols.org.

“The Phantom of the Opera,” starring Gerard Butler and Emmy Rossum, is today’s selection for Sequim Library’s weekly teen movies. wheels” launched his motorcycle more than 200 feet over a fleet of RVs. The first 150 guests will receive a free commemorative Knievel T-shirt.

Thrift shop open

Quilt show slated SEQUIM — The Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Club’s 26th annual Quilt Show will be held at Sequim Middle School, 301 W. Hendrickson Road, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today through Sunday. The theme of the show is “America in Bloom.” More than 200 quilts will be displayed, and visitors can attend demonstrations, shop at a country store and win raffles. A $5 donation is requested. For more information, visit www.sunbonnet suequiltclub.org.

SEQUIM — The SequimDungeness Hospital Guild’s Thrift Shop, 204 W. Bell St., will be open from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. The shop is loaded with summer apparel for men, women and children; home accessories; jewelry; and furniture. All white-tagged items will be marked at half-price during the sale. Volunteers for the shop are always needed. Baseball team benefit For more information, SEQUIM — A car show phone 360-682-7044. benefit for the Sequim U-8 baseball team will be held Autism benefit set in the Office Depot parking SEQUIM — Hardy’s lot, 1235 W. Washington St., Market, 10200 Old Olympic from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. SatHighway, will hold an Open urday. Aire Market featuring eight Classic cars and hot rods local artists from 10 a.m. to will be featured. 3 p.m. today through SunThere is no entry fee, but Daredevil signings day. donations will be accepted. It will benefit autism BLYN — Motorcycle Garden Bridal Show daredevil Kaptain Robbie awareness and education. Ice cream will be availKnievel will hold two perSEQUIM — The Cutting sonal appearances and able all weekend for $2. Garden will present its secA barbecue will be held autograph signings at 7 Cedars Casino from 4 p.m. Saturday with $3 hamburg- ond annual Garden Bridal to 6 p.m. Saturday and from ers and $2 hot dogs and ice Show from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday. cream. 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. The business at 303 An 11-year-old artist Knievel will commemorate his 1995 jump at also will make origami Dahlia Llama Lane is host7 Cedars Casino, where “the pieces for donations to sup- ing the free event. Couples can meet 22 most famous name on two port the cause. Clallam County wedding professionals. Attendees can receive special vendor discounts, win a prize basket every Ship everything hour and sample wedding you can’t live without cake. Direct to your dorm! For more information, contact Catherine Mix at catherine@cuttinggarden. Locally Owned Franchise com, visit the firm’s Face136 E. 8th St. – Port Angeles book page or phone 360Corner of 8 th & Lincoln 670-8671. 452-6602

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Genealogical event CHIMACUM — Gary Zimmerman will present “Mining for Gold at Ancestry.com” at a meeting of the Jefferson County Genealogical Society at 9:30 a.m. Saturday. The meeting will be at the Tri-Area Community Center, 10 West Valley Road. Zimmerman is president of the Fiske Genealogical Foundation. With more than 4 billion names and 29,000 searchable databases, Ancestry. com is the largest and most comprehensive online family history and genealogy resource, with more than 9 million names added daily. TURN

TO

EVENTS/B7


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

B7

Events: Puffin cruises off Protection Island set CONTINUED FROM B6 ticket to participate. Tickets are available at Although Ancestry.com the event’s sponsoring busiis a subscription-based site, nesses: Four Corners Store some of the records are free. in Discovery Bay; Westside It contains worldwide cen- Marine, The Fishin’ Hole at sus information, vital Port Townsend Fuel Dock records, newspapers, family and LPL Financial Sertrees and countless other vices/Rich Gastfield in Port records and special collec- Townsend; Eldridge Home Inc. in Port Ludlow; and tions. Zimmerman will demon- Hadlock Building Supply/ strate how to determine if Just Ask Rental in Port Ancestry has records bene- Hadlock. Suggested boat launches ficial to the researcher and are Lower Port Hadlock will provide valuable tips Boat Launch, Fort Flagler for effectively searching the State Park, Port of Port vast array of databases. Townsend Marina, Mats The meeting is free and Mats Bay or Port Ludlow. open to the public. Proceeds benefit scholarFor more information, ships provided by the ChiTufted puffins are the focus of Saturday cruises setting out on the visit wajcgs.org. macum Alumni Association.

Glacier Spirit from Point Hudson Marina in Port Townsend.

For more information, phone Billy Eldridge at 3603932, or by emailing PORT HADLOCK — 821-1007. cruises@ptmsc.org. The third annual ChimaInformation about the cum Alumni Association Puffin cruises set center at Fort Worden State Salmon Derby will be held PORT TOWNSEND — Park also is available by Saturday and Sunday. Cruises to see the tufted phone, by emailing info@ The derby is open to all puffins of Protection Island ptmsc.org or visiting www. and will be held in Marine are scheduled from 6 p.m. to ptmsc.org. Area 9. 9 p.m. this Saturday and Fishing is open from the next two Saturdays. Free Lunch Friday dawn to 3 p.m. Saturday All cruises, which are and from dawn to noon aboard the Glacier Spirit, PORT HADLOCK — Sunday. Free Lunch Friday will be depart from Point Hudson Weigh-in locations are Marina and venture close to offered today for children the Port Hadlock Marina the island at the mouth of and teens in Port Hadlock and The Fishin’ Hole at the Discovery Bay. at Irondale Church, 681 Port Townsend Fuel Dock, Nesting pairs of tufted Irondale Road. 199 Benedict St. in Port puffins are in full breeding Free Lunch Fridays are Townsend’s Boat Haven. plumage and close to Pro- scheduled from 11:30 a.m. First place will win tection Island now, said to noon through Aug. 31. $1,000, second takes $500, Anne Murphy, executive A healthy variety of food and third-place and mys- director for the marine sci- will be served. tery-weight finishers will ence center, adding that the A collaboration of four win $250. center cannot guarantee churches in Port Hadlock Prizes for fifth through puffin sightings. — Community United 10th place will be donated Naturalists provide Methodist Church, Irondale by local businesses. onboard commentary dur- Church, Lutheran Church Kids can win $100 for ing the cruises. of the Redeemer and Peach first place and bicycles for Proceeds benefit the cen- Lutheran Church — are finishing second and third. ter’s educational programs. sponsoring the program. An awards ceremony Cruises are $55 per perNo reservations are will be held at the Port son or $50 for members of needed. Hadlock Marina at 2 p.m. the center, Burke Museum, For more information, Sunday. Audubon Society or Wash- phone 360-385-1720. Prize winners need not ington Ornithological Socibe present to win. ety. Chef on shopping Tickets are $25 per Reservations are PORT TOWNSEND — adult, with kids 14 and required for each trip and may be made by phoning Chef Arran Stark will lead younger admitted free. All anglers must have a 360-385-5582 or 800-566- Port Townsend Farmers

11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday. The market will feature Peninsula chefs and pair them with local farmers. Chefs Dan Ratigan of the Fireside Inn in Port Ludlow, Jon Luzadder of the Ajax Cafe and Tiffany Sewell of the Silverwater Cafe in Port Townsend will cook up local meat from the Chimacum Valley’s Short’s Beef, Westbrook Angus and SpringRain Farm. The market also will welcome new vendor Hans Barr and his Dabob Kabobs. For more information on either market, visit www. jeffersoncountyfarmers market.org.

Forks/West End

Salmon derby set

Death and Memorial Notice ROBERT WAYNE UHT May 12, 1936 July 15, 2012

Mr. Uht ness to Sequim. Wayne had a huge heart, a twinkle in his eye, a quick wit and loved to entertain his friends and family, telling great stories and participating in community and church theater productions. With a flair for the theatrical, Wayne had a unique style and could almost always be found wearing a hat. He has a collection of unique hats for any occasion. He often sported a handlebar mustache and a monocle. He could often be found enjoying the water, as his homes were on a lake or the Strait. Canoe, skiboat, tugboat, sailboat or rowboat — it didn’t matter, he was always happy to be messing about in a boat. He enjoyed classic and antique cars, slow-pitch softball and golf. Wayne also had a passion to serve and was active in many community organizations. In Issaquah, he was an active member of the Kiwanis and the Salmon Days Festival. He continued his service in Sequim with Sunrise Rotary, having been honored with a lifetime membership. He and Jo volunteered as Ditchwalkers and helped design, build and escort nine of the Irriga-

The first blueberries of the season, along with locally grown strawberries and raspberries, will be available from vendors. The Port Townsend Farmers Market is held Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Tyler Street between Lawrence and Clay streets.

Chimacum market CHIMACUM — Hide the vegetarians for the first Feast of the Beasts at the Chimacum Farmers Market, intersection of state Highway 19 and Chimacum and Center roads, from

Car club visit set NEAH BAY — The Alfa Wannabe Car Club will visit the Makah Museum from 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Saturday. The public is welcome to stop by and view the cars free of charge. The club includes a wide variety of sports cars, including Porsches, Ferraris, Lotus, BMWs, Nissan Zs, Acura NSXs, Corvettes and a Mercedes V12 Twin Turbo SL65AMG. This year, there also will be some Alfa Romeos. Twenty-five cars are expected.

Death and Memorial Notice HARVEY LEE BOYD July 27, 1939 July 16, 2012 Harvey Lee Boyd was born to Cleo Vincent Boyd and Sena Marie Anderson Boyd on July 27, 1939, at Port Angeles General Hospital. He died at home as he wished with his beloved wife at his side. Harvey went through school in Port Angeles and Joyce and graduated from Port Angeles High School. He served three years in the Army, of which 21/2 years were served in Germany. He was also an avid World War II history buff. Soon after his discharge from the Army, he met and married Faye Alita Boyd. There were two children born of this marriage. They were later divorced. He started working for Ford when Andy Anderson invited him to be a parts man at his agency on the corner of First and Lincoln streets in Port

Mr. Boyd Angeles. He worked for Ford for 36 years. When he semi-retired, he also worked for NAPA. He was a member of the Angeles Stock Car Racing Association and helped build the Port Angeles Speedway. He was known for his ability as a custom street rod builder. Quite a few of the other car builders found their way to his garage to have their questions answered. He seldom missed a local car rally. Until the last few

weeks of his life, he enjoyed being in his garage working on his cars. Harvey is survived by his wife of 38 years, Thelma; son Steven Lee Boyd; daughter Yvonne Marie Boyd and her daughter, Sarah; and his stepchildren, Elizabeth Stallings and her three children, James Nason and his two daughters, Katherine and Mike Bretbach and their three daughters, and Kristina Nason, all of Port Angeles. He also left a sister, Karen Boyd of Sequim, and her three children and a brother, William Boyd of Nevada. In lieu of flowers, a contribution may be made to Assured Hospice of Jefferson and Clallam Counties, 24 Lee Chatfield Way, Sequim, WA 98382. Visitation will be at Harper-Ridgeview Funeral Chapel, 105 West Fourth Street, Port Angeles, today from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., after which there will be a cremation.

Death Notices

Remembering a Lifetime

Kathleen Fischer

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

Nov. 26, 1919 — July 10, 2012

Kathleen Fischer died in Sequim of age-related causes. She was 92. Services: Today at 10 a.m., funeral at St. Joseph’s Roman Catholic Church, 121 E. Maple St., Sequim, with Father Jean Pierre Kasonga officiating, followed by a graveside service at Sequim View Cemetery, 1505 Sequim-Dungeness Way, at 11:30 a.m. Sequim Valley Funeral Chapel is in charge of arrangements.

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R. Wayne Uht peacefully passed on to his heavenly home Sunday, July 15, after a long battle with Parkinson’s disease. A memorial service is planned for Monday, July 23, at 1 p.m. at Dungeness Valley Lutheran Church, 925 North Sequim Avenue, Sequim. Everyone is invited to wear a hat to honor his memory. Robert Wayne Uht was born on May 12, 1936, in Los Angeles to Frank Oliver Uht and Madge Marie White. When he was 2 years old, his family moved to the Seattle area, living in Ballard and south Seattle. During World War II, his father worked for Boeing, and they moved to Bellingham. During his high school years, the family lived in Bellevue, and he graduated from Bellevue High School in 1954. He served two years as a Navy Seabee in San Diego, California. In 1958, he married the love of his life, Johanna Hill, and they resided in Issaquah, Washington, for 32 years. They lived for two years in Renton, Washington, before moving to Sequim 18 years ago. As newlyweds, Wayne and Jo worked together at Farmers New World Life. Wayne, then joined his father to establish Custom Screen Company in Bellevue. He was also the owner of the Idea Development Company in Issaquah. In 1993, he purchased and remodeled the Lewis/ Knapman barn in Carlsborg and moved his family, employees and busi-

tion Festival floats. He also was a volunteer with the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office and attended Dungeness Valley Lutheran Church. The love for his family was always apparent as he created many beautiful treasures for each of them from baby cradles, playhouses and furniture to stained glass. He took great joy in his role as a father and grandfather, and each family member always felt his unconditional love and support. He took great pleasure in encouraging each one in their activities and interests and could often be found at the ball field, golf course or school concerts. A week before his death, all of his grandchildren and great-grandchildren gathered for a birthday celebration, and he was so proud to have each of them there. Wayne is survived by his wife of 54 years, Johanna; and daughter Renee and son-in-law Greg Mullikin of Sequim, and daughter Marci and son-in-law Michael Hibbard of Richland, Washington. He has four grandchildren, Sarah Mullikin of Sequim, Julie Mullikin of Port Angeles, Adam Columbia of Leimen, Germany, and Emily Cray of Parkland, Washington. His two great-grandsons are Henry Scott and Robert Wayne Cray. Wayne was preceded in death by his parents, Frank and Madge Uht; and his brothers, Keith and Richard. Arrangements were made by Linde-Price Funeral Service, Sequim. Memorial contributions can be made to Sequim Sunrise Rotary, P.O. Box 1521, Sequim, WA 98382; or the Northwest Parkinson’s Foundation, 400 Mercer Street, Suite 401, Seattle, WA 98109-4641.

Market customers on an early morning shopping tour of the market Saturday, taking customers to meet vendors and talking local food, nutrition, farming and more. Stark, head chef at Jefferson Healthcare and owner of catering business Cultivated Palate, will lead the tour at 9 a.m. He will use a hospital gurney to transport fresh produce over to the music stage for an hourlong cooking demonstration at 10 a.m. Email info@jcfmarkets. org to sign up for the walking tour.

Leah & Steve Ford

• 457-1210 • 683-4020 • 374-5678 • 260 Monroe Road, Port Angeles, WA 98362 email: info@drennanford.com

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Friday/Saturday, July 20-21, 2012 PAGE

B8 Outdoors

Silvers share ocean throne SALTWATER CHINOOK FISHING was so fruitful last week that it really had nowhere to go but down. And down it has gone. The drop hasn’t been too drastic, though. “It’s not as hot as it was last Lee week,” Bob AunsHorton pach of Swain’s General Store (360-452-2357) in Port Angeles said. “But it is still quite average.” And lately, kings aren’t the only salmon being caught. A high number of nice-sized coho are being reeled in, too. Let’s get an ocean salmon report for the North Olympic Peninsula.

Port Townsend The chinook fishery opened earlier this week in Marine Area 9 and is off to a strong start. “The king fishing in and around Port Townsend doesn’t get much better than it is right now,” Ward Norden, a fishing tackle wholesaler and former fishery biologist, said. Brian Menkal of Brian’s Sporting Goods and More (360-683-1950) in Sequim said he talked to one angler who put six big kings in his boat while fishing in the waters off Port Townsend. Norden said the kings are really enjoying the tiny candlefish at MidChannel Bank. He recommends fishing with a 1-ounce Point Wilson Dart jig at slack tide or trolling the small Gold Star Coho Killer Spoon. Hatchery chinook can be harvested until Aug. 31. Wild chinook must be released. The minimum size is 22 inches, and the daily limit is a combination of two salmon of any species. No chinook fishing is allowed south of a line from Foulweather Bluff to Olele Point, except from the shore between the Hood Canal Bridge and the northern boundary of Salsbury Point Park.

Port Angeles While Marine Area 6 isn’t what it was last week, Aunspach said there are still a lot of big kings being caught. That includes a 25-pounder weighed at Swain’s on Thursday. Unfortunately that angler hadn’t purchased a ticket for the monthly Port Angeles Fish Derby because his catch would have unseated Aunspach for the No. 2 spot. As such, the derby ladder remains as it was last week. Jeffrey Delia is the leader at 30.2 pounds, Aunspach’s 24.8-pound catch is second, Larry Breitbach is third with a 23.13-pounder and Jim Merriwether is in fourth place at 23.08 pounds. For more information on how to participate in the monthly fish derby, call Swain’s at 360-452-2357. Also, it appears some big silvers are making their way east. Menkal reports a 10-pound coho being caught at Freshwater Bay.

King Felix banishes K.C. Montero homers in 6-1 win THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Felix Hernandez worked quickly in the rising heat. King Felix won his fourth straight decision and Jesus Montero homered and drove in four runs as the Seattle Mariners beat the Kansas City Royals 6-1 Thursday. The temperature was 98 degrees at the first pitch and 105 degrees by the time the game ended. “I was not thinking about the heat,” Hernandez said. “I know it was hot. I just tried to t h r o w Next Game strikes and Today get quick vs. Rays outs. “I was at Tampa Bay not trying to Time: 4 p.m. pitch to con- On TV: ROOT tact, but just throw strikes. It’s hot like 103, but I don’t feel it that much. I’m trying to get quick outs and get out of the inning.” Hernandez (8-5) is 4-0 with a 1.37 ERA in his past seven starts since a loss to San Diego on June 12.

Fewer strikeouts While he leads the majors with 143 strikeouts, Hernandez struck out only three, tying his season low. He allowed one run and eight hits, throwing only 89 pitches in eight innings. Hernandez worked out of a bases-loaded, one-out jam in the eighth, striking out Alcides Escobar and retiring Billy Butler on a grounder. “He got a lot of quick outs. He was strong again today, a lot of life at end of his pitches and he was down,” Mariners manager Eric Wedge said. “He really only had to work that last inning. That was big too. That game gets real close, real quick if one of those guys comes through. He really stepped up right there those last two hitters.” Hernandez permitted four singles in the first two innings, but got double-play grounders in

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Seattle starter Felix Hernandez pitches to Kansas City’s Alex Gordon during the first inning at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo., on Thursday. both situations to keep his pitch lead to 4-0 in the fifth when Ichiro Suzuki doubled and count down. scored on Montero’s single. Montero had an RBI double Pound rookie off the left-field railing in the The Mariners jumped on seventh inning and added a sacRoyals rookie left-hander Will rifice fly in the ninth to match Smith (1-3) for three runs in the second with Montero leading off his career high with four RBIs. Hernandez’s streak of 19 2/3 the inning with his ninth home run. Michael Saunders had an scoreless innings ended in the RBI single and Brendan Ryan fifth when Eric Hosmer doubled and scored on Chris Getz’s sinadded a sacrifice fly. “It was a bad pitch 1-2,” gle. Smith, just recalled from TriSmith said. “That’s supposed to ple-A Omaha, gave up four runs be a pitcher’s count.” The Mariners increased the on eight hits in 6 1/3 innings,

REGIONAL

while walking two and striking out five. The Mariners won three of four against the Royals, who have lost 13 of 17 games. “I thought it was a great series overall,” Wedge said. “I loved the way we played, a total team effort. “You talk about a vision of the way you want your team to play and how you want to go out there and play major league baseball and this is about it. This is what we’re looking for.”

WIN IN OPENER

Sekiu Chinook tend to come in spurts, and it appears Marine Area 5 is in a bit of a lull. “As far as kings go, it’s a little slow,” Eric Hodgson of Strait Fishing LLC (360-460-2237) in Sekiu, said. “You have to work a little bit [to get them].” But the coho harvest is picking up. “The silvers are incredible. It’s amazing.” Hodgson said. “You can see them bubble at the top.” Hodgson said it isn’t uncommon for his charter boat go catch 35 to 50 coho in a day. “And that’s not fishing hard for them,” he said. “That’s taking a break from kings to go get some silvers.” TURN

TO

HORTON/B10

LONNIE ARCHIBALD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

North Olympic’s Natalie Steinman of Port Angeles is safe at first on a bunt in the opening game of the Pacific Northwest Regional Tournament at John Gable Park in Hoquiam on Thursday. North Olympic shaded host Hoquiam 11-10.


SportsRecreation

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Today’s

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.

Scoreboard Area Sports

SPORTS SHOT

Adult Softball Port Angeles Parks and Recreation Wednesday Women Playoffs Semifinals Shirley’s Cafe - 9 California Horizon - 4 Shaltry’s Orthodontics - 13 Caffeinated Clothier - 7 Women’s Championship Game Thursday Shirley’s Cafe vs. Shaltry’s Orthodontics, late Men’s Purple Division Semifinals Dominoes - 26 Elwha Young Gunz - 7 Next Door Gastropub - 12 The Moose Lodge Bulls - 8 Men’s Purple Division Championship Thursday Dominoes vs. Next Door Gastropub, late

Baseball

Ackley 2b Ichiro rf C.Wells lf JMontr dh Seager 3b Smoak 1b Jaso c MSndrs cf Ryan ss Totals

Thursday Kansas City ab r hbi ab r hbi 4 1 1 0 AGordn lf 3010 5 1 2 0 AEscor ss 4010 3 1 0 0 Butler dh 4000 4 1 3 4 Mostks 3b 4000 5 1 1 0 L.Cain rf 4000 4 1 1 0 Hosmer 1b 4 1 2 0 3 0 1 0 S.Perez c 3020 4 0 2 1 Getz 2b 3011 3 0 0 1 JDyson cf 3010 35 611 6 Totals 32 1 8 1

Seattle Kansas City

030 010 101—6 000 010 000—1

DP_Seattle 2. LOB_Seattle 8, Kansas City 5. 2B_Ichiro (15), J.Montero (15), Hosmer (16). HR_J.Montero (9). CS_Getz (2). S_Jaso. SF_J. Montero, Ryan. IP H R ER BB SO Seattle F.Hernandez W,8-5 8 8 1 1 1 3 Luetge 1 0 0 0 0 0 Kansas City W.Smith L,1-3 6 1/3 8 4 4 2 5 L.Coleman 0 1 1 1 1 0 Bueno 2 2/3 2 1 1 0 1 L.Coleman pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. WP_W.Smith 2. Umpires_Home, Mike DiMuro; First, Jim Reynolds; Second, James Hoye; Third, Jim Joyce. T_2:31. A_16,706 (37,903).

Royals 8, Mariners 7 Seattle Ackley 2b Ichiro rf C.Wells lf JMontr c Smoak 1b Seager 3b Olivo dh Jaso ph-dh MSndrs cf Ryan ss Totals

Wednesday night Kansas City ab r hbi ab r hbi 5 0 0 0 AGordn lf 5032 5 2 3 0 AEscor ss 5010 5 3 3 2 Hosmer 1b 5 0 0 0 5 1 2 2 Butler dh 3331 5 0 0 0 L.Cain cf 4222 5 1 2 2 Mostks 3b 4121 3 0 1 1 Francr rf 4000 1 0 0 0 B.Pena c 4111 3 0 1 0 Getz 2b 3121 40 20 41 714 7 Totals 37 814 8

Seattle Kansas City

Today 10 a.m. (47) GOLF USGA, U.S. Girls Junior Championship, Day 5. Site: Lake Merced Golf Club Daly City, Calif. (Live) Noon (47) GOLF PGA, True South Classic, Site: Annandale Golf Club - Madison, Miss. (Live) 1 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Tennis ATP, Atlanta Open (Live) 4 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Tennis ATP, Atlanta Open (Live) 4 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Seattle Mariners vs. Tampa Bay Rays, Site: Tropicana Field - St. Petersburg, Fla. (Live) 5:05 p.m. WGN Baseball MLB, Chicago Cubs vs. St. Louis Cardinals (Live) 6 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Boxing, Friday Night Fights, Burgos vs. Vasquez (Live) 8 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Tennis WTA, Mercury Insurance Open (Live)

Saturday

Mariners 6, Royals 1 Seattle

SPORTS ON TV

Latest sports headlines

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

B9

010 201 300—7 030 220 001—8

No outs when winning run scored. E_L.Cain (2). DP_Seattle 1. LOB_Seattle 8, Kansas City 8. 2B_Seager (23), A.Gordon 2 (31), Moustakas (22), Getz (7). 3B_Ryan (3). HR_C.Wells (6), Seager (11), Butler (18), L. Cain (2). IP H R ER BB SO Seattle Millwood 5 10 7 7 1 2 Delabar 1 2/3 0 0 0 2 0 O.Perez 1 2 0 0 0 0 Kinney L,0-1 1/3 2 1 1 0 0 Kansas City B.Chen 5 1/3 7 4 4 0 6 Mijares H,10 1 2 1 1 1 0 Crow BS,4-5 2/3 3 2 2 0 1 K.Herrera 1 2 0 0 0 2 G.Holland W,4-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 Kinney pitched to 1 batter in the 9th. WP_Millwood, Delabar. PB_B.Pena. Umpires_Home, Jim Joyce; First, Mike DiMuro; Second, Jim Reynolds; Third, James Hoye. T_3:03. A_17,312 (37,903).

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLTS

GET LUCKY

June 13, 2012, file photo, Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck throws during mini-camp in Indianapolis on June 13. The Colts have signed Luck, the No. 1 overall pick in the draft. The quarterback’s agent and uncle, Will Wilson, confirmed Thursday that the deal had been completed. Terms were not immediately released. American League West Division W L Texas 55 36 Los Angeles 50 43 Oakland 47 44 Seattle 40 54 East Division W L New York 57 34 Baltimore 48 44 Tampa Bay 48 45 Boston 47 45 Toronto 45 47 Central Division W L Chicago 50 41 Detroit 49 44 Cleveland 47 45 Kansas City 39 52 Minnesota 38 54

Pct GB .604 — .538 6 .516 8 .426 16½ Pct .626 .522 .516 .511 .489

GB — 9½ 10 10½ 12½

Texas at L.A. Angels, 1:05 p.m. Baltimore at Cleveland, 4:05 p.m. Minnesota at Kansas City, 4:10 p.m. Seattle at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m. Toronto at Boston, 4:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Oakland, 6:05 p.m. Sunday’s Games Chicago White Sox at Detroit, 10:05 a.m. Toronto at Boston, 10:35 a.m. Seattle at Tampa Bay, 10:40 a.m. Minnesota at Kansas City, 11:10 a.m. Baltimore at Cleveland, 12:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Oakland, 1:05 p.m. Texas at L.A. Angels, 5:05 p.m.

National League Pct GB .549 — .527 2 .511 3½ .429 11 .413 12½

Wednesday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 6, Toronto 0, 7 innings Oakland 4, Texas 3 Detroit 7, L.A. Angels 2 Boston 10, Chicago White Sox 1 Cleveland 10, Tampa Bay 6 Baltimore 2, Minnesota 1 Kansas City 8, Seattle 7 Thursday’s Games Tampa Bay 6, Cleveland 0 Detroit 5, L.A. Angels 1 Baltimore 4, Minnesota 3 Seattle 6, Kansas City 1 Chicago White Sox at Boston, late. N.Y. Yankees at Oakland, late. Today’s Games Baltimore (Mig.Gonzalez 1-1) at Cleveland (D.Lowe 8-7), 4:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Peavy 7-6) at Detroit (Verlander 10-5), 4:05 p.m. Seattle (Iwakuma 1-2) at Tampa Bay (Shields 8-6), 4:10 p.m. Toronto (Laffey 1-1) at Boston (Beckett 5-7), 4:10 p.m. Minnesota (Blackburn 4-5) at Kansas City (Hochevar 6-8), 5:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Nova 10-4) at Oakland (Milone 9-6), 7:05 p.m. Texas (D.Holland 6-4) at L.A. Angels (Weaver 11-1), 7:05 p.m. Saturday’s Games Chicago White Sox at Detroit, 1:05 p.m.

East Division W L Washington 53 37 Atlanta 50 41 New York 47 45 Miami 44 48 Philadelphia 41 52 Central Division W L Cincinnati 52 40 Pittsburgh 51 40 St. Louis 47 45 Milwaukee 44 47 Chicago 38 53 Houston 34 58 West Division W L San Francisco 51 41 Los Angeles 49 44 Arizona 44 48 San Diego 38 55 Colorado 35 56

Pct GB .589 — .549 3½ .511 7 .478 10 .441 13½ Pct GB .565 — .560 ½ .511 5 .484 7½ .418 13½ .370 18 Pct .554 .527 .478 .409 .385

GB — 2½ 7 13½ 15½

Wednesday’s Games Milwaukee 4, St. Louis 3 L.A. Dodgers 5, Philadelphia 3, 12 innings Pittsburgh 9, Colorado 6 San Diego 8, Houston 4 Washington 4, N.Y. Mets 3 Arizona 7, Cincinnati 1 San Francisco 9, Atlanta 4, 11 innings Chicago Cubs 5, Miami 1, 8 innings Thursday’s Games Atlanta 3, San Francisco 2 Cincinnati 7, Arizona 6 N.Y. Mets 9, Washington 5 Chicago Cubs 4, Miami 2 Houston at San Diego, late.

Today’s Games Atlanta (Hanson 10-5) at Washington (Strasburg 10-4), 4:05 p.m. Miami (Nolasco 8-7) at Pittsburgh (Correia 6-6), 4:05 p.m. San Francisco (Lincecum 3-10) at Philadelphia (Worley 5-5), 4:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Harang 6-5) at N.Y. Mets (J. Santana 6-6), 4:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Estrada 0-3) at Cincinnati (Bailey 8-6), 4:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Dempster 5-3) at St. Louis (Lohse 9-2), 5:15 p.m. Houston (B.Norris 5-7) at Arizona (Cahill 7-8), 6:40 p.m. Colorado (D.Pomeranz 1-4) at San Diego (Marquis 2-5), 7:05 p.m. Saturday’s Games Atlanta at Washington, 10:05 a.m., 1st game L.A. Dodgers at N.Y. Mets, 10:10 a.m. San Francisco at Philadelphia, 1:05 p.m. Atlanta at Washington, 4:05 p.m., 2nd game Miami at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 4:15 p.m. Houston at Arizona, 5:10 p.m. Colorado at San Diego, 5:35 p.m. Sunday’s Games L.A. Dodgers at N.Y. Mets, 10:10 a.m. Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 10:10 a.m. Atlanta at Washington, 10:35 a.m. Miami at Pittsburgh, 10:35 a.m. San Francisco at Philadelphia, 10:35 a.m. Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 11:15 a.m. Colorado at San Diego, 1:05 p.m. Houston at Arizona, 1:10 p.m.

Transactions Baseball American League Chicago White Sox — Recalled LHP Donnie Veal from Charlotte (IL). Optioned LHP Pedro Hernandez to Charlotte. Kansas City Royals — Agreed to terms with C Jason Kendall on a minor league contract and assigned him to Northwest Arkansas (TL). Optioned RHP Vin Mazzaro to Omaha (PCL). Recalled RHP Will Smith from Omaha. Toronto Blue Jays — Optioned RHP Sam Dyson to New Hampshire (EL). National League Los Angeles Dodgers — Assigned LHP Erick Threets to Albuquerque (PCL).

4 a.m. (26) ESPN Golf, The Open Championship, , Site: Royal Lytham & St. Annes Golf Club - Lancashire, England (Live) 6 a.m. (26) ESPN Golf, The Open Championship (Live) 9 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Auto Racing NASCAR, STP 300, Nationwide Series (Live) 11 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Auto Racing NASCAR, STP 300, Nationwide Series (Live) 11:30 a.m. (26) ESPN Soccer MLS, Philadelphia Union vs. New York Red Bulls (Live) Noon (5) KING Golf, American Century Championship (Live) Noon (47) GOLF PGA, True South Classic (Live) 12:30 p.m. (13) KCPQ Baseball MLB, Texas Rangers vs. Los Angeles Angels (Live) 2 p.m. (2) CBUT Triathlon ITU, World Cup (Live) 3 p.m. (47) GOLF USGA, U.S. Girls Junior Championship (Live) 4 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Tennis ATP, Atlanta Open (Live) 4 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Seattle Mariners vs. Tampa Bay Rays, Site: Tropicana Field - St. Petersburg, Fla. (Live) 4 p.m. WGN Baseball MLB, Chicago Cubs vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Site: Busch Stadium - St. Louis, Mo. (Live) 5 p.m. (48) FX, UFC Card, TBA (Live) 8 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Tennis WTA, Mercury Insurance Open (Live) 3 a.m. (26) ESPN Golf PGA, The Open Championship, Final Round, Site: Royal Lytham & St. Annes Golf Club - Lancashire, England (Live) 5 a.m. (26) ESPN Golf PGA, The Open Championship, Final Round, Site: Royal Lytham & St. Annes Golf Club - Lancashire, England (Live)

Delabar ends up back on M’s roster MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Left-handed reliever Charlie Furbush got to the ballpark thinking he was fine, warmed up, played catch and then threw off the mound.

Then he went on the 15-day disabled list with a strained left triceps. Steve Delabar, who was told on his birthday he had been optioned to Tacoma, then spent a day with his wife and family here and

was heading to the airport for morning for a flight to Triple-A. Instead, he was recalled by the Mariners and was in the bullpen against the Royals. “It’s a strange game,” Delabar said.

“I tried to look at it as a positive. I didn’t focus on being sent down. I thought about how great it was spending a day with my family and my wife. “I was going to the airport and came to the ballpark, instead.”

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B10

SportsRecreation

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Horton: Lake Crescent best in America? CONTINUED FROM B8 and 10 coho; July 11: 24 boats 47 anglers caught 33 chinook one coho; July 12: Better yet, the silvers 35 boats 70 anglers caught are big, weighing in at 6-7 34 chinook; July 13: 16 pounds at a time of year when they are typically 4-5 boats 26 anglers caught 21 chinook; July 14: 84 boats pounds. 177 anglers caught 74 chiNeah Bay nook and one coho; July 15: Thursday’s edition of 33 boats 70 anglers caught this column discussed the 22 chinook. one-chinook limit put into ■ Port Angeles West effect in Marine Area 4 due ramp — July 14: 43 boats to the harvest happening too quickly. 99 anglers caught 41 chiStephen Jimmicum of nook; July 15: 28 boats 59 Big Salmon Resort (360anglers caught 33 chinook. 645-2374) in Neah Bay ■ Olson’s Resort — July said the chinook fishery is 9: 28 boats 64 anglers “steady.” caught 13 chinook and Hodgson didn’t come seven coho; July 11: 97 home empty-handed when boats 238 anglers caught he took a break from the 107 chinook and 49 coho; Sekiu area to fish off Neah July 12: 58 boats 138 Bay. anglers caught 38 chinook “It’s really cool out and 38 coho; July 14: 76 there. You can get kings, boats 185 anglers caught silvers, lingcod and rock 55 chinook and 13 coho; bass,” Hodgson said. July 15: 107 boats 263 “It’s a good way to load anglers caught 50 chinook up the freezer with some and 32 coho. meat.” ■ Van Riper’s Resort — LaPush July 9: 13 boats 23 anglers The chinook are stepcaught six chinook and two ping aside to give the coho coho; July 12: 30 boats 55 some time in the spotlight anglers caught 22 chinook in Marine Area 3, as well. and 26 coho; July 13: 26 “There’s lots of silvers, boats 54 anglers caught 30 and a few kings here and chinook and nine coho. there,” Randy Lato of AllWays Fishing (360-374Crabbin’ ain’t easy 2052) in LaPush said. Because the crab is in Going with the trend, season, I feel obligated to the silvers are larger than mention it. usual. But there isn’t much to Even with the slowing of the chinook harvest, the report. By all accounts, the season is still slow. overall salmon fishery off “People are still getting LaPush is doing well. them,” Menkal said. “But “A few days last week it’s taking longer to get were phenomenal,” Lato them.” said. “We limited by 9:30 a.m.”

Catch reports Here are last week’s sport fishing results for the Peninsula: ■ Freshwater Bay ramp — July 13: 23 boats 36 anglers caught 36 chinook; July 15: 16 boats 31 anglers caught eight chinook. ■ Ediz Hook ramp — July 10: 17 boats 37 anglers caught 12 chinook

Eric Thomson hooked these two large chinook off Port Angeles this past Saturday. He caught the salmon while vertical jigging a 2-ounce Kandlefish jig in a green back with a pearl white belly. His best day with this same lure was in 2009 when he stopped counting after releasing 100 chinook and pink salmon.

doesn’t get fished a lot because of the restrictions, but there are some nice fish there, including Beardslee trout, which are unique to Lake Crescent. Ted Arneson, general manager of Log Cabin Resort (360-928-3325) on Lake Crescent, said fish Lake Crescent can be caught from the As reported by the Pen- dock and shore as easily as in the deeper parts of the insula Daily News earlier lake. this week (visit http:// “They won’t be as big, tinyurl.com/crescentbestlake), Lake Crescent is one but usually you just want the thrill of catching it,” of the 15 nominees for Arneson said. America’s best lake in a Areneson added that USA Today Internet conthose who want to venture test. Crescent is a catch-and- out into what he refers to release, but provides a good as the “big water,” can rent paddle and row boats from fishing experience. Aunspach said the lake the resort.

To cast a vote for Lake Crescent, visit http:// tinyurl.com/83kx7bg and post a comment, or send a tweet to @USATODAY Travel. Voting is open until Friday, July 27. If you don’t know how to get to Lake Crescent, then you must be newer to the Peninsula than I am. All you need to do is take U.S. Highway 101 west from Port Angeles or north from Forks and you’ll find it.

More lakes There is some good action on lakes right now. Lake Leland maintains its 2012 dominance as the

Peninsula’s most consistent lake. Aunspach said many anglers are getting kokanee on Lake Sutherland Finally, Norden reports that the lakes around Port Townsend are picking up and doing well.

31, also from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Menkal recommends participants bring a pen, chair and notepad. For more details, call Menkal at 360-683-1950.

Send photos, stories

Have a photograph, a fishing or hunting report, an anecdote about an outMenkal is once again doors experience or a tip on offering a free class on gear or technique? river fishing at Brian’s Send it to sports@peninSporting Goods and More suladailynews.com or P.O. at 542 W. Washington St. in Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA Sequim. 98362. The course consists of ________ two sessions.

River fishing class

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

Part one will be held Tuesday from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Part two will be the following Tuesday, July

Walk in park gives Scott British Open lead BY DOUG FERGUSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LYTHAM ST. ANNES, England — Unlike the guys in charge of the weather forecast, Adam Scott got everything just about right Thursday in the British Open. Scott was determined not to take himself out of contention in the opening round at Royal Lytham & St. Annes, as he had done in the first two majors this year. Caddie Steve Williams gave him a pep talk to play the first hole like it was the last one. Even more inspiration came from the international flags posted above the massive grandstand down the left side of the first tee. They weren’t flapping. They were sagging. In surprisingly calm conditions, Scott raced out to the lead and almost into the record book. He stood on the 18th tee needing a birdie to break the major championship scoring record, and instead made bogey to settle for a 6-under 64. It matched the lowest Open round ever at Royal Lytham and gave the Australian a one-shot lead over

Paul Lawrie, Zach Johnson and Nicolas Colsaerts. “It was just like a nice walk in the park today,” Scott said. “And it was not what we’ve experienced in the practice rounds. I’m sure there’s going to be some weather elements thrown at us the next three days, so just going to have to knuckle down to handle that. “But I’m confident. My ball striking is good. I think I can get it around no matter what the conditions are.” The proof was in limp flags and red numbers on the scoreboards. Scott was among three dozen players with rounds in the 60s, a group that included Tiger Woods. Trying to end a four-year drought in the majors, Woods raced out to four birdies in seven holes to take the early lead, only to settle into a series of pars and one adventure through grass up to his knees for a lone bogey that gave him a 67. In his third Open at Lytham, Woods said it was as easy as he had ever seen it play. “The wind wasn’t blowing, and we’re backing golf

balls up,” Woods said. “That’s something we just don’t see.” Lawrie won his British Open in nasty conditions at Carnoustie in 1999, and the Scot showed he could handle the calm weather with equal aplomb. He ran off three birdies over the last five holes. Johnson, who won the 2006 Masters in the wind and cold at Augusta National, flirted with a major record-tying 63 until a bogey on the 17th hole. Colsaerts, the big hitter from Belgium, holed out with an 8-iron on the 481yard second hole for eagle and added four birdies for his 65. Brandt Snedeker was another shot behind at 66. “We had a little wind early on the front nine, but it kind of calmed down the second half,” Snedeker said “That’s the best Americans are going to see over here.” Rory McIlroy was panned last summer at Royal St. George’s for saying he prefers calm conditions, so maybe this was more to his liking. He wound up in the group at 67 after a wild day filled with great shots, bad luck and a bump on the

head for a 16-year-old spectator standing in the wrong spot. McIlroy was at 3 under with four holes remaining when his drive on the 15th hole sailed to the right of the fairway. It plunked the teenager in the head and caromed farther to the right. The teen was OK. The ball settled a few inches beyond the out-of-bounds stakes near a corporate tent, sending McIlroy back to the tee to play his third shot. McIlroy gave the lad a glove on which he wrote “Sorry” with a frown face and “Rory.” “He could have headed it the other way,” McIlroy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS joked later. “It would have Adam Scott plays a shot off the 11th tee during the first round of the British Open on Thursday. been on the fairway.” He bounced back from that double bogey by driving the 336-yard 16th hole and two-putting for birdie, then making birdie on the final hole to join guys like Ernie Els, Masters champion Bubba Watson, Graeme McDowell and Steve Stricker, who followed an eagle from the 13th fairway with a double bogey on the next hole.

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Fun ’n’ Advice

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Dilbert

Pickles

Garfield

Momma

DEAR ABBY: Seven years ago while on a business trip to Europe, I went to a bar, got drunk and went back to my hotel with one of the “hostesses.” It was a one-night stand, but my wife found out. I quit drinking with the help of AA and have never had another affair. However, I am a sociable, friendly person, and I like to share laughs and light-hearted conversation with members of both sexes. Although my wife claims to have forgiven me, she constantly brings up my “fling” and makes it clear that she doesn’t trust me to this day, despite my repeated apologies, my desire to make amends and my determination never to do it again. She has made my life a living hell. She has an extremely caustic tongue that she uses at every opportunity to embarrass and humiliate me. I no longer love her, but her health isn’t the best, and she hasn’t worked for several years. What can I do, Abby? I feel so alone and stuck. Desperate in the USA

by Lynn Johnston

by Brian Crane

Frank & Ernest

by Bob and Tom Thaves

Van Buren

ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

by Hank Ketcham

Doonesbury

by Garry Trudeau

her own thing. She’s a pro at it and has done it to me many times. How do I approach this without anyone’s feelings being hurt? There’s no way I can go on this trip with her. I’d rather not go. Help! Bound for Italy

Dear Bound: You may be “bound,” but were you also gagged when your sister-in-law invited herself and her family along? That’s when you should have had the gumption to say no. The longer you put off telling her, the harder it will be, so tell her now. If you don’t have the courage to do it alone, you and your husband should do it together. You have every right to go on your dream trip the way you and your husband planned it. His sister can schedule her family’s visit to Italy at another time. Dear Abby: My husband and I have clearly stated more than once that we didn’t plan to have children. Recently, however, we realized that we simply had not been ready. We have decided to try for a baby in the near future. If we are lucky enough to conceive, how will we respond to the inevitable barrage of questions about whether or not the baby was planned? Taking It Back in New York Dear Taking It Back: Just say you changed your mind, and the baby not only isn’t an accident, but is a welcome blessing.

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

The Last Word in Astrology ❘

by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer

Dennis the Menace

Abigail

Dear Abby: My husband and I are going to Italy next year and taking our two sons, ages 8 and 12, with us. We have planned and saved for this trip for five years. When my sister-in-law heard about it, she invited herself along, with her husband and two children who are my sons’ ages. Although I love all of them, I don’t want to spend my vacation of a lifetime with her. She often pawns her children off on others while she goes and does

by Mell Lazarus

Rose is Rose

DEAR ABBY

Dear Desperate: Because you are both miserable, do what other couples with troubled marriages do: Get marriage counseling to see if you and your wife can reach an understanding you both can live with. If that doesn’t work, however, and she continues to berate and humiliate you, consult a lawyer and go on with your life.

by Jim Davis

B11

Making amends not enough for wife

by Scott Adams

For Better or For Worse

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

by Eugenia Last

ARIES (March 21-April 19): A conversation or networking function will change the way you think and your immediate plans for the future. Socializing with friends or your lover will enhance your relationships and open up interesting topics that change your lifestyle. 5 stars

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Set out to have some fun. Love interests will increase, and a change of scenery will enhance personal prospects that interest you. Wisdom offered by someone older will far exceed any educational lesson you sign up for. 3 stars

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Get together with the people you enjoy most. Making personal changes will enhance your popularity and entice friends to participate in whatever you choose to do. Love is on the rise, and a promise will lead to your happiness. 5 stars

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Put your plans in motion slowly, with meticulous detail that leaves no room for error or complaint. Don’t let someone’s insensitivity or incompetence get to you. Do your own thing and follow your heart. Patience will have its benefits. 2 stars

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Stick to your to-do list and do not deviate, especially if others are counting on you. Your performance will make or break the way people view you and the opportunities that come your way in the future. Do your best. 3 stars

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Ask questions if you haven’t been given enough information to do what’s being asked of you. Don’t bend under pressure or take on responsibilities that may put you in a precarious position. Focus on what you can do, not the impossible. 3 stars

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Home, family, love and domestic changes favor you. Much can be accomplished if you stick to your budget and you don’t let impulse lead to mistakes. Reach out to someone who can offer you sound advice and workable solutions. 4 stars

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Look at the big picture and you will realize what you need to learn or master to reach your goals. This is not the time to be lazy or take shortcuts. Participate passionately and reap the rewards. Love is in the stars. 4 stars

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Let your imagination take over and you will discover a new pastime that encourages you to develop skills you haven’t used for some time. A surprise will lead to a change in the company you have been keeping. Accept the inevitable. 3 stars

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Go about your business and tie up loose ends. Don’t reveal secrets that may jeopardize your position or reputation. Stick close to home and do whatever you can to make your place conducive to pursuing your endeavors. 2 stars

The Family Circus

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Size up what needs to be done and work toward your goal. Your ability to find solutions and do the work required will impress someone special. Make changes to your home that will add to your comfort and your emotional wellness. 3 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): A secret will be revealed if you share personal information with someone you shouldn’t. Stick to getting work out of the way and to the people you know you can trust. Too much of anything will lead to a loss. 3 stars

by Bil and Jeff Keane


B12

WeatherNorthwest

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012 Neah Bay 58/54

Bellingham ha am 67/58 Y EZ E Port Angeles BR 60/54 63/55

➥

Olympic Peninsula TODAY

Sequim Olympics 60/54 Freezing level: 10,000 ft.

D

Forks 65/52

R

Port Ludlow 64/55

I Z Z L E

➥

TONIGHT

National TODAY forecast Nation

Yesterday Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 65 57 0.00 7.85 Forks 67 55 0.00 71.66 Seattle 71 58 0.00 25.08 Sequim 71 58 0.00 8.55 Hoquiam 65 57 0.00 41.60 Victoria 68 53 0.00 16.52 Port Townsend 65 57 0.00 12.23

Forecast highs for Friday, July 20

Last

New

Billings 98° | 67°

San Francisco 67° | 53°

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

61/53 Some sun through clouds

60/51 Remaining mostly cloudy

60/52 Mix of clouds and sun

62/54 Mostly sunny day on tap

Full

Jul 26

Strait of Juan de Fuca: SW wind 10 to 20 kt, becoming w 5 to 15 kt in the afternoon. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. Tonight: W wind 15 to 25 kt, becoming S 10 to 15 kt after midnight. Ocean: SSW wind to 8 kt. WNW swell 3 ft at 8 seconds. Wind waves around 1 ft. Saturday: S wind around 6 kt. Drizzle before 11 a.m., then a chance of showers.

CANADA Victoria 71° | 51° Seattle 68° | 59° Olympia 69° | 58°

Spokane 81° | 65°

Tacoma 67° | 57° Yakima 86° | 65°

Astoria 65° | 57°

ORE.

Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonset today Moonrise tomorrow

Miami 92° | 78°

Š 2012 Wunderground.com

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

Hi 86 93 96 71 88 93 101 91 104 97 82 93 96 89 89 84

Lo Prc Otlk 61 PCldy 68 .11 PCldy 67 Clr 51 PCldy 68 Rain 71 .04 Rain 73 Cldy 71 Cldy 76 .02 Rain 68 Clr 72 .13 Rain 67 PCldy 69 Cldy 66 1.80 PCldy 76 .02 Cldy 66 Cldy

TODAY High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 1:23 a.m. 7.9’ 8:15 a.m. -1.3’ 2:38 p.m. 6.8’ 8:21 p.m. 1.8’

TOMORROW High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 2:03 a.m. 7.7’ 8:50 a.m. -1.2’ 3:11 p.m. 7.1’ 9:04 p.m. 1.5’

SUNDAY High Tide Ht Low Tide 2:45 a.m. 7.5’ 9:25 a.m. 3:45 p.m. 7.4’ 9:50 p.m.

Port Angeles

2:58 a.m. 5.9’ 10:12 a.m. -1.1’ 5:36 p.m. 6.9’ 10:59 p.m. 4.5’

3:51 a.m. 5.7’ 10:48 a.m. -0.7’ 6:02 p.m. 7.0’ 11:44 p.m. 3.9’

4:47 a.m. 5.3’ 11:26 a.m. 6:29 p.m. 7.0’

-0.1’

Port Townsend

4:35 a.m. 7.3’ 11:24 a.m. -1.2’ 7:13 p.m. 8.5’

5:28 a.m. 7.0’ 12:12 a.m. 5.0’ 7:39 p.m. 8.6’ 12:01 p.m. -0.8’

6:24 a.m. 6.6’ 12:57 a.m. 8:06 p.m. 8.7’ 12:39 p.m.

4.3’ -0.1’

Dungeness Bay*

3:41 a.m. 6.6’ 10:46 a.m. -1.1’ 6:19 p.m. 7.7’ 11:34 p.m. 4.5’

4:34 a.m. 6.3’ 11:23 a.m. -0.7’ 6:45 p.m. 7.7’

5:30 a.m. 5.9’ 12:19 a.m. 7:12 p.m. 7.8’ 12:01 p.m.

3.9’ 0.7’

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

2012 CLOSEOUTS CHEVROLET SUBARU

KOENIG

Low

High

Burlington, Vt. 81 Casper 96 Charleston, S.C. 91 Charleston, W.Va. 92 Charlotte, N.C. 94 Cheyenne 89 Chicago 94 Cincinnati 97 Cleveland 87 Columbia, S.C. 95 Columbus, Ohio 96 Concord, N.H. 87 Dallas-Ft Worth 99 Dayton 93 Denver 98 Des Moines 103 Detroit 88 Duluth 72 El Paso 95 Evansville 103 Fairbanks 58 Fargo 84 Flagstaff 81 Grand Rapids 91 Great Falls 96 Greensboro, N.C. 93 Hartford Spgfld 100 Helena 96 Honolulu 86 Houston 92 Indianapolis 99 Jackson, Miss. 96 Jacksonville 90 Juneau 60 Kansas City 106 Key West 87 Las Vegas 100 Little Rock 101

-0s

0s

10s

20s 30s 40s

50s 60s

70s

80s

90s 100s 110s

Cartography Š Weather Underground / The Associated Press

54 Clr Los Angeles 64 Clr Louisville 76 Cldy Lubbock 68 .59 Rain Memphis 70 Rain Miami Beach 57 PCldy Midland-Odessa 71 1.65 Cldy Milwaukee 71 .22 Rain Mpls-St Paul 70 .03 Rain Nashville 73 .02 Cldy New Orleans 71 Rain New York City 53 Clr Norfolk, Va. 79 PCldy North Platte 71 .05 Rain Oklahoma City 64 PCldy Omaha 73 Clr Orlando 72 .13 Rain Pendleton 62 Cldy Philadelphia 74 PCldy Phoenix 76 Rain Pittsburgh 52 .17 Rain Portland, Maine 67 Clr Portland, Ore. 56 Cldy Providence 71 .29 Rain Raleigh-Durham 57 Clr Rapid City 72 Rain Reno 69 .33 PCldy Richmond 61 PCldy Sacramento 75 Clr St Louis 74 PCldy St Petersburg 73 .40 Rain Salt Lake City 73 .46 Rain San Antonio 75 Rain San Diego 47 PCldy San Francisco 40 .02 Clr San Juan, P.R. 82 Clr Santa Fe 81 PCldy St Ste Marie 79 PCldy Shreveport

79 99 94 99 90 95 81 83 95 93 100 96 100 101 99 90 91 100 106 91 83 72 96 98 98 89 96 84 106 84 96 89 80 68 88 89 78 95

TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States: â– 108 at Death Valley, Calif., and Topeka, Kan. â– 36 at West Yellowstone, Mont. GLOSSARY of abbreviations used on this page: Clr clear, sunny; PCldy partly cloudy; Cldy cloudy; Sh showers; Ts thunderstorms; Prc precipitation; Otlk outlook; M data missing; Ht tidal height; YTD year to date; Kt knots

66 PCldy Sioux Falls 94 66 .01 Clr 73 .03 Rain Syracuse 87 60 Cldy 72 PCldy Tampa 84 77 .13 Cldy 77 Cldy Topeka 108 75 .29 Clr 77 Clr Tucson 100 77 PCldy 69 Cldy Tulsa 103 85 PCldy 70 .80 Cldy Washington, D.C. 101 79 Rain 69 .83 Cldy Wichita 106 75 PCldy 71 .22 Rain Wilkes-Barre 97 68 .69 Cldy 75 .21 Cldy Del. 101 75 Rain 73 1.76 Cldy Wilmington, _________________ 79 PCldy Hi Lo Otlk 58 .11 Clr 57 54 Cldy 78 Clr Auckland 122 85 Clr 71 Clr Baghdad 88 74 Ts 74 Cldy Beijing Berlin 66 50 Cldy 60 Cldy 67 50 Sh 77 Cldy Brussels 99 76 Clr 89 Clr Cairo 69 .35 Rain Calgary 78 58 PCldy 57 Clr Guadalajara 80 60 Ts 62 Cldy Hong Kong 94 83 PCldy 67 .71 Cldy Jerusalem 93 67 Clr 76 Rain Johannesburg 67 44 Clr 67 PCldy Kabul 92 67 Clr 67 Cldy London 66 53 Ts 73 .02 Rain Mexico City 73 55 Ts 59 Cldy Montreal 79 55 Clr 84 Cldy 71 54 Rain/Wind 79 .16 Cldy Moscow 97 81 PCldy 66 PCldy New Delhi 71 53 Sh 73 .15 Cldy Paris Rio de Janeiro 77 60 Clr 69 PCldy Rome 90 69 Clr 56 Cldy 62 53 Sh 78 .24 Rain Sydney 75 69 Rain 57 PCldy Tokyo 78 63 PCldy 60 PCldy Toronto 68 59 Sh 77 PCldy Vancouver

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Ht -0.9’ 1.3’

Warm Stationary

Aug 1

9:04 p.m. 5:37 a.m. 9:31 p.m. 8:42 a.m.

Nation/World

Washington TODAY

Marine Weather

LaPush

Atlanta 90° | 73°

Cold

Aug 17

New York 75° | 69°

Detroit 80° | 66°

Fronts

Aug 9

Cloudy

Washington D.C. 88° | 77°

Los Angeles 86° | 64°

-10s

Tides

Chicago 83° | 70°

Denver 99° | 65°

El Paso 91° | 71° Houston 95° | 75°

First

Pt. Cloudy

Minneapolis 88° | 66°

Cartography by Keith Thorpe / Š Peninsula Daily News

SATURDAY

Low 54 Mostly cloudy

Sunny

Seattle 68° | 59°

Almanac

Brinnon 71/56

Aberdeen een 64/55

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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C2 FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

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ESTATE SALE 122 Heather Circle (Monterra) Fri.-Sat, 9-2 Collectibles, books, 5 0 s bl o n d b e d r o o m s u i t e, b o o k s h e l ve s, yarn, materials, clothing and tons more! FAMILY Sale: Sat. only, 8-3, 1603 S. Golf Course Rd. Kids stuff, household goods, 5 drawer office desk, NordicTrack, for mica table, Trail-ABike and much more. FREEZER: 20.6 cf upright, frost free, excellent condition. $325. (360)417-1087

FSBO: 1963 custom 1 , 8 0 9 s f. 1 . 1 6 a c r e s. Hardwood flooring, brick fireplace with inser t, vaulted ceiling, 4 Br., 2 bath. Lg. master, walk-in closet, steam shower. Energy efficient windows, 8 fruit trees. 936 sf garage/shop with attached wood storage. $264,900 (360)457-6889 or (360)802-4331.

GARAGE Sale: Fri.-Sat., DODGE: ‘88 Wheelchair 8-2 p.m., 861 E. Hamvan. $2,300. mond. Household goods (360)797-1508 baby items. DRIVER: Class B CDL needed, benefits, good pay, repetative heavy lifting of drywall. (360)452-4161

G A R AG E S a l e : Fr i . Sat., 9-3 p.m., 109 E. 14 th. A little bit of everything and no earlies. (360)460-6442

3023 Lost

4070 Business Opportunities

A D U LT C A R E h o m e LOST: Cat. Small gray, n o w h a s o n e r o o m Hamilton school/Shane available. 360-374-9740 Park area, P.A., approxiSENIOR LADY would mately 9 mos old, very like to meet a senior friendly. (360)477-4303. gentleman for companLOST: Dog. Black and ionship. Send reply to w h i t e s p aye d B e a g l e Peninsula Daily News Hound mix, floppy ears, PDN#309/Sr. Lady answers to Bayah. CherPort Angeles, WA Thr iving & Profitable! ry Street, P.A. (360)46098362 The Blackbird Coffee2745. house FOR SALE $149,000. Contact: LOST: Maroon sweat3020 Found Adam (360)224-9436 shirt. Says Hideaway on back. Shane Park, P.A. FOUND: Dog. Border (360)681-3528 4026 Employment Collie, male, KitchenGeneral Dick Rd., Sequim. Call LOST: Watch. Gold, Set o i d e n t i f y. ( 3 6 0 ) 4 7 7 - quim or P.T. 2783. AIDES/RNA OR CNA (360)452-6025 Best wages, bonuses. FOUND: Dog. Yor kie, Wright’s. 457-9236. ver y friendly, Caroline MISSING: Healed Haule r. 3 w h e e l - c a r t , g a s St., P.A. (360)477-1275. ARE YOU THE BEST? powered, Vautier Rd., FOUND: “The Woodha- Sequim. Reward for in- All Positions - Available Drug free, valid license ven” firewood rack cov- formation leading to re& background check. er. Found near P.A. Es- covery and arrest. Wage DOE, Benefits (360)681-7571 tuary. 457-4561. Apply in person Air Flo Heating Co. 4070 Business 221 West Cedar St. 3023 Lost Opportunities Sequim L O S T: C a t . A d o ra bl e short hair Tabby, white on chest and lower tummy, since May 27th, 17th and C St., P.A. (360)417-2652

LANDSCAPE SUPPLY BUSINESS Email name and number fatshedandsoil@ hotmail.com

CAREGIVER jobs available now Benefits included. Flexible hours. Call P.A., 452-2129, Sequim, 582-1647.

GARAGE Sale: Sat., 9-3 MISC: Antique button p.m., 1712 S. D Street. collection, serious buyers only, $3,700. Button G A R AG E S a l e : s a t . - hooks collection, $300. 4 Sun., 8:30-3 p.m., 2716 W i n d s o r c h a i r s, $ 7 5 . S. Laurel. His and hers. C o m b o / s t e p c l i m b e r, $ 5 0 . B i r d fe e d e r a n d G A R AG E S a l e : S a t . - feed, $25. Antique milk Sun., 9-3 p.m., 819 S. can, $15. Cash only. 208 Laurel. Boat motors old E. Spruce, Sequim. a n d n e w, t o o l s , c o l lectibles, JBL speakers, MISC: Sony 46” LCD china set, books, scoot- HDTV and 3’ x 6’ book e r, o l d 3 3 r e c o r d s , shelves, flat screen clothes and more. SONY TV, brand new, still in box, (store value * * * * G I G A N T I C YA R D ~$700) $525. Oak finish SALE! **** Sat. 7/21, book shelves, 3’ x 6’, 9-2 p.m. If raining will f i n e c o n d i t i o n , $ 5 0 . hold 7/22. 2000 block of CASH ONLY. S. Cherry St. Furniture, (360)681-4703 baby items galore, books, bikes, clothes, Moving sale and Pet appliances, decor, toys, Adoption. 700 Mcfarmower. *All sales final!* l a n d d r. S e q u i m . H I - L A K E R : 1 6 ’ w i d e, Sports gear, footwear, deep, 60 hp Yamaha, 8 c o o k w a r e , b o o k s , hp Yamaha 4-stroke, 1 v i d e o g a m e s . A l s o electric and 1 manual a v a i l a b l e i s a b e d downrigger, Calkins trail- frame, mattresses, 5 i n - l i n e s k a t e s, n ew er, $4,500. 452-3235. snowboard boots, and HOUSESHARE 2 FURN a bunch of other aweB r . i n L g M o b i l e some items. so come $450/400 W/D TV WIFI take a look Saturday All util inc. Poss stor- and Sunday 9 am to age/garage, 1/2 mile to around 4. town Bus route, Female Non Smokers/Drinkers, MOVING Sale: Fri.-Sat., pref. See Online Ad Ref- 8-4 p.m., 471 Kemp St., off Mt. Pleasant. Rain or erences $200 Deposit. shine. Lots of fishing (360)460-7593 g e a r, m i s c . f u r n i t u r e, JUAREZ & SON’S HAN- washer and dryer, freezDY M A N S E R V I C E S . er, refrigerator, clarinet, Quality work at a rea- propane tanks, dishes, sonable price. Can han- collectibles, picnic table, dle a wide array of prob- clothes and more. lems projects. Like home maintenance, cleaning, MULTI-FAMILY clean up, yard mainteGARAGE SALE nance, and etc. Give us Fri.-Sat., 9-2 p.m., 792 a call office 452-4939 or W. S e q u i m B ay R d . cell 460-8248. Household, children’s misc., and more. LOST: Black and white spayed beagle hound M U LT I - FA M I LY S a l e : m i x , f l o p py e a r s, a n - Sat., 9 a.m., 2010 Hwy. swers to Bayah. Cherry 101 W. Lots of stuff. street. (360)460-2745 P.A.: Comm’l Building LOVELY SEQ. ACRE near CoHo landing. Super 1 Br., $725. (360)452-9078 Newer 2 Br 2 ba, $1,000 Utilities incl. Lease. www.peninsula (360)504-2979 dailynews.com

P.A.: Great locaiton, 2 Br. unfurnished. $625. (360)808-5972 PAINTERS WANTED Long term work in P.T. 360-379-4176 P.A.: Quite neighborhood, 3 Br., 2 ba, detached garage, fenced yard. $1,000. 683-6164. P.T.: 831 Jackson St., 3 Br., 1 ba, nicely restored home, uptown with beautiful garden. $1,100 mo. (360)531-0902 RN-RCM MANAGER AND PRN LN IF YOU’RE AN RN WITH LONG TERM CARE EXPERIENCE AND A “POSITIVE ATTITUDE” WE WOULD LIKE TO TALK TO YOU! At Crestwood Convalescent Center 1116 E. Lauridsen Blvd Port Angeles, WA 452-9206 SERVICE ADVISOR Experience required. The Wilder Auto Group Arlin (800) 927-9379 TOP SOIL: Free delivery. $20 yd, lawn/garden ready. (360)452-1010 or (360)460-1032. TRAILER:’05 25’ Sportsm a s t e r. L i ke n ew. Q u e e n B e d . Aw n i n g . Only used 5 times. $9,000 (360)582-1531 TREADMILL: Sears Proform XP542S treadmill. $350. (360)460-1591. YARD Sale: Sat.-Sun. 10-5 pm, 206 Cameron Rd. Across from Reddick Road off Hwy. 101 W. New mountain bike, fridge, glass top table, tons of mens, womens and kids clothes and lots of everything.

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General CAREGIVER: Wanted live in caregiver/companion. To live with elderly female. Duties inc l u d e m a k i n g m e a l s, light cleaning and laundry. Please call (360)775-6788 CASE MANAGER Full-time with ParentChild Assistance Program at First Step Family Support Center. Email resumes to Susan Norlund at susan_fstep@ olypen.com. RN-RCM MANAGER AND PRN LN IF YOU’RE AN RN WITH LONG TERM CARE EXPERIENCE AND A “POSITIVE ATTITUDE” WE WOULD LIKE TO TALK TO YOU! At Crestwood Convalescent Center 1116 E. Lauridsen Blvd Port Angeles, WA 452-9206 PAINTERS WANTED Long term work in P.T. 360-379-4176

“ON-CALL” RESIDENTIAL AIDE Promote daily living skills of residents at 2 sites. Req. H.S./GED & cooking/housekeeping skills. Work experience with chronic mental illness/substance abuse preferred. $11.41-$13.25 h r. , D O E . R e s u m e t o PBH, 118 E. 8th St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. Details at www.peninsulabehavioral.org Equal Opportunity Employer. INTERN-ENGINEERING DEPT. City of Por t Angeles: $14.88 hr. must be currently enrolled in pre-engineering or engineering c u r r i c u l u m . Po s i t i o n open until filled go to w w w. c i t y o f p a . u s t o download City application. Call 417-4510 for more information. COPA is an E.O.E. IMMEDIATE OPENING for busy multi-task position, computer and medical experience a definite plus. Send resume to Peninsula Daily News PDN#311/Multi-Task Port Angeles, WA 98362

Mental Health MHP FT w/benes to suppt DCFS contracts, M A & 2 y r s. C h i l d & Fa m i l y ex p. r e q . Pe r Diem posns: RN, LPN, Medical Assistant, 1 yr exp. req. Resume & cvr ltr to: PBH, 118 E. 8th St., Por t Angeles, WA 98362 EOE www. peninsulabehavioral.org LICENSED NURSE Looking for a great place to work? Go no further! Flexibility a must. Contact Cherrie 360-683-3348

CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507 VISIT: WWW.PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM OR E-MAIL: 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.

5000900

0 5 H O N DA S H A D OW 1100 SPIRIT Like new. Runs perfectly.Only 15K mi. Leather saddlebags. Regularly serviced. Garaged. Aprox 50 MPG. Tons of torque.Below Book. Must see. For appointment 360-477-7088

ESTATE SALE 122 Heather Circle (Monterra) Fri.-Sat, 9-2 Collectibles, books, 5 0 s bl o n d b e d r o o m s u i t e, b o o k s h e l ve s, yarn, materials, clothing and tons more!

TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD:

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4080 Employment General General Wanted Director of Finance The Director of Finance is the Chief Financial Officer of the Port of Port Angeles and reports directly to the Executive Director. The Director is responsible for planning, organizing and directing the Por t’s finance, accounting, audit, insurance, and risk management functions. The position also is responsible for preparation of budgets including the Port’s capital and operating budget, inter nal a u d i t s, a n d f i n a n c i a l planning; for direction and supervision of department staff; and as a member of the management team, contributes to the Port’s overall strategic foundation goals and strategies. The qualified candidate will have Bachelor’s degree in accounting, business, public administration or closely related field, a CPA certification, experience as a director for at least 5 yrs., 5-10 yrs. of experience directing financial services includi n g i n ve s t m e n t s a n d budget administration. Public employment exper ience preferred. Salary is DOE with an anticipated hiring range of $75,000 to $100,000. Applications and job descriptions may be obtained at the Port Admin Office, 338 West 1st St., Port Angeles between 8 a.m.-5 p.m M-F or online at www.por tofpa.com. Applications will be accepted until 5pm August 3, 2012. Letters and resumes without an application will not be accepted. Drug testing is required. Local Tax Accounting firm looking for F/T Accountant/Account Specialist. QuickBooks required. EOE. Email r e s u m e t o mrchire@hotmail.com.

SOCIAL STUDIES/PE POSITION Middle/high school. Complete job description and application at OFFICE POSITION www.crescent Prefer sales experience, schooldistrict.org both counter and phones or contact and some knowledge of (360)928-3311, ext. 102. antiques and hardware. Resumes to sales@ SERVERS AND HOSTS vintagehardware.com or Hiring full and part-time. fax to (360)379-9029. Apply in person Oak Table Cafe, Sequim. DRIVER: Class B CDL needed, benefits, good SERVICE ADVISOR pay, repetative heavy Experience required. lifting of drywall. The Wilder Auto Group (360)452-4161 Arlin (800) 927-9379

PUBLISHER Sound Publishing is seeking a proven leader with the entrepreneurial skills to build on the solid growth of its twice weekly community newspapers and its 24/7 online presence on the beautiful Whidbey Island. Ideally, the candidate will have a good understanding of all facets of newspaper operations with emphasis on sales, marketing, and financial management. The publisher will help develop strategy for the newspapers as they continue to serve a rapidly expanding and diverse suburban marketplace. Sound Publishing Inc. is Washington’s largest private, independent newsp a p e r c o m p a n y. I t s broad household distribution blankets the entire Greater Puget Sound region, extending nor th from Seattle to Canada, south to Portland, Oregon, and west to the Pacific Ocean. If you have the ability to think outside the box, a r e c u s t o m e r - d r i ve n , success-or iented and want to live in one of the most beautiful and livable areas in Washington State, then we want to hear from you. Please submit your resume, cover letter with salary requirements to: tbullock@soundpublishing.com

or: Sound Publishing Inc., Human Resources/ Publisher, 19351 8th Ave NE, Suite 106, Poulsbo, WA 98370. VIMO, your community free clinic, is seeking a motivated, organized individual to manage its day-to-day operations. A background in health-care desired. A RN or MA can expand their skills in management and still delivery healthcare. (A RN lic. or MA cert. is NOT required to apply.) Complete job description: w w w. v i m o c l i n i c . o r g Salary DOE. Contact: VIMO, Clinic Manager Position, 909 Georgian a S t Po r t A n g e l e s WA. 98362

BIZY BOYS LAWN & YARD CARE Mowing, weeding, edging,hedge trimming, pruning, landscape maintenance & general clean-up. Tom at (360)452-3229. Computer Care. Senior/disabled discounts. 21 yrs exp. Machine running slow? Internet problems. Custom builds, repairs. (360)780-0159

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.

Lawn/Garden Care ENVIOUS GREENS Fast R e l i a bl e R e a s o n a bl e Rates Fall Clean-up Gutter Cleaning Weed Pulli n g / W h a ck i n g , B r u s h Clearing Debris Hauling Sequim/P.A. Area Local: 681-3521 or cell: 541-420-4795

L o o k i n g fo r a ke n n e l technician at Olympic Peninsula Humane Society to work with cats. Please apply at 2105 W Hwy 101, P.A.

Registered, private caregiver available. Very experienced with good loc a l r e fe r e n c e s , f r o m short hours to live-in. (360)775-5988 RUSSELL ANYTHING Call today 775-4570. SCUBA DIVER FOR HIRE Call 681-4429

105 Homes for Sale Clallam County

1+ ACRE MINI-FARM Port Angeles Getaway! 4 Br., 1 bath Cape Cod style home with beautiful fireplace wall and trex deck, detached garage, w o r k s h o p, w o o d c r i b, g r e e n h o u s e , c h i cke n coop and 1 Br., 1 bath guest house on 1.08 acres 3 min. from town. Call for appt. Just 4080 Employment $275,000. ML263738. Wanted Rita Erdmann 417-9873 Aaron’s Garden Serv. COLDWELL BANKER Weed whack, pruning, UPTOWN REALTY gen. clean-up. 808-7276 GARAGE SALE ADS HOUSEKEEPING: $15 Call for details. hr. your supplies, refer360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714 encs. (360)477-3062.


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

DOWN 1 Hail, with “down” 2 Far from the front 3 1953 Pulitzerwinning playwright 4 Highland denial

By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle –– horizontally, vertically, diagonally, even backward. Find them and CIRCLE THEIR LETTERS ONLY. DO NOT CIRCLE THE WORD. The leftover letters spell the Wonderword. VIDAL SASSOON (1928-2012) Solution: 8 letters

H A M M E R S M I T H B M O C By David Steinberg

5 Newt with a large vocabulary 6 Dryer place 7 Shorthand pioneer 8 Give one star, say 9 Family nickname 10 Non-dorm resident 11 Queen of Talk 12 State bordering Thuringia 15 “Kickboxer” actor Jean-Claude Van __ 18 Rabbit’s food? 23 Bard’s time of day 24 Brolly carrier 25 Forget to mention 26 Barnyard bleats 27 Family gathering visitor 28 Super Bowl XXVII MVP 31 Do that’s picked, briefly 32 Much-liked prez 33 Yeshiva student 35 Botanical knot 36 Way in the distance 38 Morlock prey

7/20/12 Thursday’s Puzzle Solved

N A N C Y N I H S N A D O R E

G N I T T U C E A N R E D O M

S T A R S S A L O N S J E S R

© 2012 Universal Uclick

L O O T R C A R E D R O S ‫ ګ‬ M S H E ‫ ګ‬ R R A D ‫ ګ‬ E A D E P R I T R ‫ ګ‬ E V E G M P M I S H H S K S S S C L R A A S S O O W W E D G L A R U T S L O N D Y R A D N www.wonderword.com

I I L K H Y A E T E N E A O E

M V W O E P R C N W R B N N G

Beautiful custom 3 Br. 2 bath, Mountain view home on 2 plus acres FSBO 2,600+ sf. Great room concept. Open and bright. Family room with gas fireplace, beautiful l a n d s c a p e d ya r d a n d patios with spa. Hardwood, crown molding, jetted master tub, walk in closet. Too many features to list. $321,000. Call (360)452-7855 or (360)775-6714. BETTER THAN NEW Looking for a “move in ready” home in an established neighborhood? Looking forward to enjoying your own yard this summer? This is it! 3 Br. home in Seamount Estates has been updated significantly in the last two years. New flooring, new faucets, new lighting fixtures to name a few. Fenced backyard is beautifully landscaped and you’ll love spending time on the spacious deck. $256,00. ML#263824. Pili Meyer (360)417-2799 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY FOR SALE BY OWNER 3 Br., 2 ba, 2.9 acres, secluded, access to Olympic Discovery Trail, no neighbors. $160,000/obo. (360)461-9903

CHARMING 1999 MONTERRA HOME 55+ community where you own your own land. Between Sequim/P.A., bright, sunny cheerful home with great floor plan, 1.500 sf PLUS new 280’ MULTI-PURPOSE sunroom, living/dining combo plus windowed b r e a k fa s t r o o m , s p a cious kitchen with island, 2 Br., walk-in closets, 2 baths, plus den/office, garage, storage shed, 1 2 x 1 6 c ove r e d d e ck , wonderful corner lot with circular drive, fruit trees. $ 1 7 5 , 0 0 0 F S B O. C a l l (360)801-9370 for appt. or photos.

N D O S H A M P O O S B I O L

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

C A T Y A T E E R T S D N O B

7/20

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Adore, Bond Street, Care, Catya, Comb, Cutting, David, Dryers, Eden, Elan, Hairdresser, Hammersmith, Height, Jack, Kwan, Legendary, London, Model, Modern, Movie, Nancy, Natural, Oley, Perm, Pixie Crop, Plain, Rhonda, Salons, Sassoon, Shampoos, Shapes, Shiny, Short, Simple, Slogan, Stars, Tools, Treatment, Trims, Vidal, Wash, Wear, Wedge-bob Yesterday’s Answer: Filter 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.

PINTE ©2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

FASTF (c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

39 2012 animated movie promoted by IHOP 40 Clamorous 45 “Rhoda” production co. 46 Forbes, for one 47 “__ chance!” 48 Country once known for pearl diving 49 East Coast rte. 50 Part of UNCF

7/20/12

51 “Madame Curie” star Garson 52 Like some gossip 55 “Those are my principles. If you don’t like them I have others” speaker 56 Joint with a cap 57 Baker’s amts. 60 It’s legal to poach one 61 Pocatello’s st.

RETVAN

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

A: Yesterday’s

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: BRINK CREEK OCTANE BANTER Answer: How the chiropractor saw his patients — BACK-TO-BACK

105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 139 Homes for Sale Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Port Angeles 360º WATERFRONT VIEWS! This beauty by the beach boasts 90’ of waterfront for topflight gazing. The lighthouse, ships and the majestic Mt. Baker are all in the sightlines. Great home with awesome upgrades and a feel you have to experience. $545,000. ML263069. Mark Macedo 477-9244 COLDWELL BANKER TOWN & COUNTRY

S A N L E N E D E T M O V I E

Find us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/jumble

ACROSS 1 Throw 6 Capts.’ inferiors 10 Homeric outburst? 13 Honolulu hangout 14 Toiletry product endorsed by pitcher Mariano Rivera 16 Great __ 17 Calm and kind 19 Era units: Abbr. 20 Bygone AT&T rival 21 Heady quaffs 22 Utah landscape features 24 Earn a living 26 Algebra subject 29 Posting often seen in a window 30 __ Goldfinger: 007 enemy 31 Suva is its capital 34 Code letters 37 Completely different situation 41 Farm enclosure 42 Movie mogul Marcus 43 Insight provider? 44 Schoolyard comeback 47 Like some Latin nouns 48 Suddenly stopping 53 “I’m all ears!” 54 Sister of Terpsichore 55 NASDAQ or NYSE 58 Thumb in folklore 59 Ones responsible for what’s missing from certain puzzle answers? 62 Santa __ 63 Florida wader 64 TV spot seller 65 Bug-eyed TV dog 66 Unpleasant, as details 67 Graph lines

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012 C3

LAKE SUTHERLAND HOME! It boasts 105 feet of waterfront with its own dock and large boathouse on the sunny side of the lake on 1 acre of land. Enjoy year-round living or vacation in total privac y. B e a u t i f u l l y t a ke n care of, this home has an open floor plan, large decks and a 1,000 sf garage with woodstove and large room suitable for use as office,exercise room. $479,000. ML263787. Helga Filler 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A.

FOR SALE BY OWNER 3955 O’Brien Rd., P.A. 3 Br., 2.5 ba, Northern White Cedar Hybrid Log Home built in 1998 by Childers and Bukovnik Construction. 3.5 acres, fenced for horses, panoramic mtn. view, river rock fireplace, balconies, slate patios, shed includes workshop, storage, room for horses and hay. For additional photos visit www.forsalebyowner.com LOTS OF EXTRAS CHOICE by Owner, only $380,000. 457-7766 or Fantastic views of salt$375,000. View Sequim 808-3952. w a t e r, V i c t o r i a , a n d B ay, A n g e l e s r a n g e , beautiful farmland from sunsets, 60’x10’ deck this 3 Br., 2 bath, 1,505 half covered. Extensive sf, Agnew area home on landscaping. 3 Br., 2 full 1.7 acres. Upgraded and + 2 half bath, 2,300 sf + well maintained property heated walk-out basewith large garage, finment. Lg. shop, + park 3 ished shop and RV carcars. 1783 E. Sequim port. Yard includes pet Bay Rd. (360)681-7205. kennel, storage building, F S B O : 1 9 6 3 c u s t o m fenced garden and gaCONTEMPORARY 1 , 8 0 9 s f. 1 . 1 6 a c r e s. z e b o c o ve r e d s i t t i n g HOME ON ACREAGE Hardwood flooring, brick area. $257,000. Custom home on 5 plus f i r e p l a c e w i t h i n s e r t , ML#263569 acres in Por t Angeles vaulted ceiling, 4 Br., 2 Gail Sumpter gated community, great bath. Lg. master, walk-in 477-9361 home for enter taining, closet, steam shower. Blue Sky Real Estate high end gourmet kitch- E n e r g y e f f i c i e n t w i n Sequim - 683-3900 en, gallery entry, wood- dows, 8 fruit trees. 936 working shop, artist stu- sf garage/shop with atdio, wine cellar, 3 car tached wood storage. garage and lots of stor- $264,900 (360)457-6889 age, radiant heat floor- or (360)802-4331. ing, custom doors, green house and much more. IMMACULATE 3 BR $675,000. ML262184. RAMBLER Heidi Hansen on a lot and a half, with Luxury estate for sale on 477-5322 fireplace, family room, 19.6 acres with 5 Br., 5 COLDWELL BANKER a n d d e t a c h e d d o u bl e bath. Views of the OlymTOWN & COUNTRY garage, large deck over- pic Mtns., between Selooks lovely gardens. quim & Por t Angeles. Perfect starter or retire- The property has forests ELBOW ROOM & grasses, herb, vegetaThis home has it all, ment home. mountain views from this $159,000. ML#263764. ble, & lavender gardens and a boutique vineyard. CHUCK TURNER 3 Br., 2 bath, 1,610 sf Plenty of room to ex452-3333 home on 2.08 acres with pand. Built in 1997, perPORT ANGELES fruit trees and garden fect for entertaining with REALTY area, plus detached a professional kitchen. 1,260 sf, heated RV garage with storage loft. Lake Sutherland: 1,600 Impressive master suite Great “country” neigh- sf., 3 Br., 2.5 bath, con- with fireplace, hydrob o r h o o d n o t fa r f r o m crete foundation, bulk- therapy tub and walk-in town. $299,000. head approved, septic, shower. Must see! $875,000 Kim Bower 1 0 0 ’ l a ke f r o n t a g e, 2 NWMLS 40941 477-0654 boat lifts, large dock. Call (360)461-3926 Blue Sky Real Estate $395,000. for appt. Sequim - 683-3900 (360)477-6460

MOVE-IN READY Condo close to town and amenities, 2 Br., 2 bath, recently updated roof, interior and exterior paint, kitchen counter tops, kitchen and bath flooring, light fixtures, programmable thermostat, etc., propane fireplace for cozy evenings, mountain view from dining room and back patio, HOA dues include water, septic, trash, yard care, exter ior maintenance. Must be owner occupied. $163,000. ML262906. Sheryl 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East NEW LISTING B e a u t i f u l b r i ck 3 B r. rambler on double city l o t . H a r d wo o d f l o o r s, f i r e p l a c e, e n e r g y e f f. windows. Double garage, 2 carports with covered RV parking. Many other fine features that need to be seen. Solid value at $229,900. ML#263732. Dick Brostrom (360)808-3297 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY NEW LISTING Quality built home with lots of upgrades and extras galore. New flooring throughout . Large wat e r v i ew k i t c h e n w i t h open dining room. French doors that lead to fenced yard and rose g a r d e n . RV a n d b o a t parking. Even a claw foot tub! $269,500. ML#263714. Jean Irvine (360)417-2797 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

OUTSTANDING WATER VIEWS Outstanding custom 4 Br., 3 bath home with views of the Strait and Mount Baker, upgrades include central vacuum, propane fireplace, RV dump. Great room concept with large windows provides a light and airy environment. $349,000. ML263491. Roland Miller 461-4116 COLDWELL BANKER TOWN & COUNTRY

PARADISE. See this property to appreciate it’s unique character a n d fe a t u r e s. E n j oy superb mountain views on your own 2.5 acre, quiet, secluded and private retreat with a custom built 1,586 sf, 3 Br., 2 bath open p l a n ra n c h w i t h a t tached 572 sf. garage. Private access to beach. $325,000. FSBO. 360-681-8588. Will work with buyer’s agent.

WHY PAY SHIPPING ON INTERNET PURCHASES?

QUIET CUL-DE-SAC From the moment you set your eyes on this home on a quiet cul-desac, you’ll know it’s special. The yard is beautifully landscaped and the interior is just as well maintained. Skylights keep it light and bright. Whether you want to resize up or down, this home is ready for new folks to move into. Bonus: back yard garden plot. $184,900. ML#263705. Pili Meyer (360)417-2799 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

SHOP LOCAL

LONG DISTANCE No Problem!

peninsula dailynews.com

Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714

REDUCED Dream price for dream home and shop, $10,000 price reduction makes this updated 2 Br., 1 bath home with a shop and greenhouse a buyer’s dream! Owner says let’s talk! $155,000. ML262644. Rita Erdmann 417-9873 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

ELEGANT CONDO Spacious and elegantly finished throughout, this home has light alder cabinets with rain glass doors and a corner marble fireplace. A wall of windows to the east lets in morning light, view of the patio, birds, shade trees and open space. If this is what you are looking for, call your buyer’s agent for an appointment. $294,500. ML263321. SOMETHING FOR Diann Dickey EVERYONE!! 683-4131 Gourmet kitchen for the John L. Scott Sequim cook, 19 x 19 detached shop with 220 & 110 and 220 volt heater for hob308 For Sale biest/woodworker, etc, a Lots & Acreage good sized fenced yard for kids, pets or the avid gardener. This 3 Br., 2 5 ACRES over looking bath rambler with at- Bluff and Rio Grande tached 2-car garage is in River in San Luis Valley Colorado. $18,000. desirable Mains Farm. (360)452-1260 $299,000. ML263782. The Dodds GREAT BUILDING 683-4844 LOT! Windermere Check out this 80’ wide Real Estate level lot located on a Sequim East quiet road on the south end of town, nice neighVERY PRIVATE borhood, city utilities AND SECLUDED Setting just minutes from available and even a wadowntown Port Angeles. ter view, perfect for a This one owner home s t i c k - b u i l t o r a n e w h a s m a s t e r b e d r o o m manufactured home. $79,000. ML#263805. and main living on the Kathy Brown main floor with 3 Br., a (360)417-2785 small bonus room and COLDWELL BANKER an open foyer family UPTOWN REALTY room upstairs. Detached triple garage with storNEW LAND LISTING age upstairs. Most of the acreage is left natu- This 4.8 ac parcel is located just east of Port ral so ver y little yard A n g e l e s , o n Pe a r c e work needed. Road. Seller had a well $349,900. ML263812. installed, a survey and a Quint Boe perc test all completed in 457-0456 2009. Private location WINDERMERE P.A. and par tially wooded. C o m e a n d bu i l d yo u r VIEWS, VIEWS, dream home. $78,000. VIEWS! ML263565 Bell Hill custom home 3 Tim Riley Br., 3.5 bath, 3,723 sf, 417-2783 separate master baths COLDWELL BANKER and walk-in closets, 3 UPTOWN REALTY car garage with works h o p, s e c o n d h o b b y room/wor kshop, large PLACE YOUR kitchen, office and forAD ONLINE With our new mal dining. Classified Wizard $599,000. ML263815. you can see your Dollie Sparks ad before it prints! 683-6880 www.peninsula WINDERMERE dailynews.com SUNLAND

308 For Sale Lots & Acreage

NEW LISTING 5 acres with 1 acre buildable in a fabulous n e i g h b o r h o o d . Wa t e r and power to driveway. Priced to sell. $65,000. ML#263679. Amy Powell (360)417-9871 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

REALLY NICE LAYOUT To this 1 story, 3 Br., 2 bath home. The family room and kitchen are s e p a ra t e d by a l a r g e breakfast bar. A new deck off the family room overlooks the golf course. The formal living room has a vaulted ceiling and free-standing wood stove. Formal dining area. NICE. $175,000 ML#263725 Marc Thomsen (360)417-2782 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

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Classified

C4 FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012 308 For Sale Lots & Acreage

311 For Sale 311 For Sale Manufactured Homes Manufactured Homes

READY TO BUILD! 2 w o n d e r f u l bu i l d i n g sites between Port Angeles and Sequim. PUD water meter on the property with Agnew irrigation, perked for conventional system, as well as P U D p owe r i n a t t h e road, old shop with concrete floor, each parcel just over 2 acres, manufactured homes are fine, seller financing available. Individual price $100,000., if sold together, $175,000 for both. ML#263742. Jean Irvine (360)417-2797 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

G R E AT B U Y ! c l e a n , newer 2007 double wide in park. 2 Br., 2 bath, den, make offer, minimum bid $50,000. 360-683-3031 Lovely 1 Br., 1 ba singlewide in quiet sr. P.A. p a r k . S e e i t t o d a y. $4,000 fin avl. Call Barb (360)457-7009 MOBILE HOME: 12x56, 2 Br., all appliances, stacked W/D, weatheri z e d , RV p a r k n e a r downtown P.A. $9,000/ obo. (360)477-5650 or (360)477-5267.

SNAG-A-BARGAIN Don’t miss these 2.5 plus acre parcels. Great h o m e s i t e s, w o o d e d , cleared building site, OPEN HOUSE power, phone, surveyed. Fri.-Sat.-Sun., 1-4 p.m. Soils registered for conClasen Cove ventional septic. Just 10 921 Portside Way minutes from Por t AnSequim geles. Combine 2 lots for 2 Br., 2 bath ,1,448 sf a 5 acre parcel, 3 to Open design. choose from. Prices $162,500. slashed as low as 683-6785 $69,700. ML#263303. Dave Ramey SEQUIM: Newly remod(360)417-2800 eled mobile in 62 and COLDWELL BANKER older park, 2 Br., 2 ba. UPTOWN REALTY $25,500. 582-9330.

Secluded 4 acres in Port Angeles urban growth area, fabulous mountain views, development poSmall, Serene Park! tential. This secluded Interior like new. New fo u r a c r e p r o p e r t y i s yard. Cash. Contract. zoned Urban Moderate $29,995 OBO. Density which allows a multitude of uses, includjlouises@aol.com ing apartments or con206-722-7978 dos, or it would make a wonderful home site SINGLE WIDE: 70’ long, near everything. Mobile 2 Br., nice condition, home park site plan is fenced yard. Space rent. approved by the county. $315 mo. $15,000. $249,900. (360)808(360)808-5148 7107 roger@maclender.com. Agents protected. 408 For Sale PORT ANGELES

DOUBLE WIDE FOR SALE

Commercial

505 Rental Houses

Clallam County Comm’l building, Carlsborg Industrial Park, 3 lots, 2 with buildings, will 1015 W. 16th, P.A.: 3 carry contract. 457-8388 Br., 1.5 ba, gar., fenced. $950. (360)452-6144. before 7 p.m.

SEQ: 3 Br., 1 ba, $800. P.A.: 3+ Br., 1 ba, no 3 Br., 3 ba, $1,375. John smoking, pets ok. $850 L. Scott. (360)457-8593. 360-417-2810 mo., 1st, last, dep. More Properties at (360)683-8745 SEQUIM: 1 Br., separwww.jarentals.com ate garage/shop. $700 P.A.: 3 Br., 2 ba, $845. 2 Avail 8/7. 681-2611. Lake Sutherland Condo Br., 2 ba, garage, $865. SEQUIM: 3 Br., 2 ba. $950. mo. wash/dr yer, No pets. (360)452-1395 Fireplace, W/D. No pets. boat slip/launch, 2 Br., P.A.: 3 Br., 2 bath, att. $1,100 mo. 477-4192. 1.5 bath. (360)461-4890 garage, large backyard. deedalon@yahoo.com $1,000. (360)452-6750. SEQUIM: 4 Br., 2 ba. farmhouse. Across from LOVELY SEQ. ACRE schools. No smoking. Super 1 Br., $725. $1,400, 1st, last, dep. Newer 2 Br 2 ba, $1,000 360-460-2960. Utilities incl. Lease. (360)504-2979 SEQUIM: Downtown, 3 Br., 2 ba, fenced backP.A.: 1212 S. Pine, comyard. $900, 1st, last dep. peltely remodeled 3 Br., (360)797-7251 1 ba, big gar, no smokP.A.: Lrg home 5 Br., 1 ing/pets. $875 mo. full, 2-3/4 bath. Hard- Sequim: Happy Valley, (360)460-82911 wood, granite, fenced newer, clean 3 Br., 1¾ yard. Close to college. bath, 2 car garage, Mtn. P.A.: 2 Br., 1 ba, fenced, $1,600 mo., $1,000 dep. view, deck. $1100. No clean, no smoking, refer- Av a i l a b l e e a r l y Au g . smoking or pets. ences. $750. 461-1881. (360)460-8297 Chad (360)477-3760.

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683 Rooms to Rent

Roomshares CENTRAL P.A. Clean, quiet, 2 Br. Excellent refHOUSESHARE 2 FURN erences required. $700. Br. in Lg Mobile 452-3540 $450/400 W/D TV WIFI P.A.: 1 and 2 Br. $475- All util inc. Poss stor$500-$525-$600. John age/garage, 1/2 mile to town Bus route, Female L. Scott. (360)457-8593. Non Smokers/Drinkers, P.A.: Great locaiton, 2 pref. See Online Ad RefBr. unfurnished. $625. erences $200 Deposit. (360)808-5972 (360)460-7593

. 35 yrse on th la u s Penin

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CENTRAL P.A.: 3 Br., 1 ba, $750. 1 Br., 1 ba., $500. No smoking/pets. (360)457-9698.

671 Mobile Home Spaces for Rent

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Locally Operated for 24 years Contractor # GEORGED098NR

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605 Apartments Clallam County

SEQUIM: Nice 2 Br., 1 ba, carport, downtown, yardwor k incl. $725, $500 dep., background check. (360)385-5857.

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665 Rental Duplex/Multiplexes

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Diamond Point: 3 Br., 2 . 5 b a t h s, l o f t , h u g e deck, sun room, care t a k e r o n p r o p e r t y, P.A.: Comm’l Building $1,800 per month innear CoHo landing. cludes all utilities $600. (360)452-9078 Cap (360)670-9122.

Specializing in; Custom Cedar, Vinyl Chain Link

Remodels Appliances Handicap Access Painting Interior/Exterior

HOUSES/APT IN P.A. H 1 br 1 ba. ..............$500 H 1 br 1 ba ...............$525 A 2 br 1 ba ...............$575 A 2/1 util incl ............$650 H 2 br 1 ba ...............$675 Lk Suth 2 br. 1 ba...$800 H 3 br 1.5 ba. ...........$900 HOUSES/APT IN SEQ. A 2 br 1 ba ...............$725 H 3 br 1 ba. ............$1000 H 3+ br 2 ba. ..........$1350

605 Apartments Clallam County

P.A.: Quality home, wa- V E RY C L E A N ! 1 0 1 2 P.A.: Immaculate 2 Br., ter view, 3 Br. 2.5 ba. E . 9 t h , PA , 2 B R , 1 B A , 1 bath, W/D. $750. (360)808-4972 $700/mo. 452-8132. Lease $1,500. 457-4966 Properties by P.A.: Quite neighbor- WEST SIDE P.A.: 3 Br., Landmark. portangeleshood, 3 Br., 2 ba, de- 1 ba, storage garage/ landmark.com tached garage, fenced shop, fenced yard, fruit t r e e s, RV p a r k i n g , yard. $1,000. 683-6164. R O O M Y P. A . : 2 B r. , weatherized, excellent W/D. $600 + dep. 1502 cond., please no pets, Properties by C St. No smoking/pets. Landmark. portangeles- last tenants stayed 7 yrs. (360)452-3423 $850. (360)461-0175. landmark.com

3+ BDR, 1 BTH, 3BAY SHOP. Fenced yard & garden bed. No smoking. Bkgd. check is required. $1,000 per mo. + utilities. Inquire at 360457-8126.

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505 Rental Houses 505 Rental Houses 505 Rental Houses 505 Rental Houses Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County

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FENCING

408 For Sale Commercial

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Classified 6100 Misc. Merchandise

YARD SALES On t h e Pe n i n s u l a 8120 Garage Sales 8142 Garage Sales 8180 Garage Sales 8183 Garage Sales Jefferson County Sequim PA - Central PA - East 50% Off Storewide Sale Habitat for Humanity Fri.-Sat., July 20 & 21 10 a.m.- close. Sims Way, P.T. and Hwy. 101, Quil. Some art excluded.

8142 Garage Sales Sequim 3-FAMILY YARD Sale: Fri.-Sat., 8-5 p.m., 41 Lorraine Dr., off River Rd. Housewares, kitche n a p p l i a n c e s, j u n i o r and women’s clothing, baby items, books, movies, 8 tracks, fishing. ANTIQUE SALE Collectibles, prints, books, small furniture, Tiffany style lamps, jewelry, Thurs.-Fri.-Sat., 9?, 387 E. Washington. ESTATE SALE 122 Heather Circle (Monterra) Fri.-Sat, 9-2 Collectibles, books, 5 0 s bl o n d b e d r o o m s u i t e, b o o k s h e l ve s, yarn, materials, clothing and tons more! ESTATE Sale: Thurs.Fri.-Sat.-Sun., 9-5 p.m., 178 W. Spruce St. Fine furniture, oil paintings, prints, Oriental rug, clocks, huge set of Rosenthal china, crystal, lots of nice books, never before seen antiques! GARAGE Sale: Fri.-Sat., 8-2 p.m., 861 E. Hammond. Household goods baby items. GARAGE Sale: Sat., 8-4 p. m . , 6 1 S e r p e n t i n e Ave., off Woodcock Rd. Twin bed, dbl. bike/jogger trailer, wooden love seat, housewares, toys, men’s golf jackets, kids stroller bike, dbl. hoop basketball game, Thomas the Train toddler bed, misc. stuff. GARAGE SALE. Table saw, printer, antique furniture, Breyer horses, Airstream items, wood stove, trimmer reel mower. See online ad for detail and pics July 21. 9-2. 1752 E. Sequim Bay Rd. GREAT BIG AMAZING Sale: Fri.-Sat., 8-5ish, 154 W. Alder. Vintage collectibles, cottage & beach decor, garden, linens and more. L A R G E 3 - F A M I LY YARD Sale: Fr i.-Sat.Sun., 8-4 p.m., 240 S. Scott Dr., off Old Olympic Hwy. and Mantle.

683 Rooms to Rent Roomshares

* * * M OV I N G S A L E * * * 8 : 3 0 A M TO 3 P M 2 2 1 T U R N S TO N E L A N E , S E Q U I M M ov i n g a n d everything must go. Kids Toys & Clothes, Tools, Kitchen Items, Furniture. Lots of great stuff at m o v i n g a w ay p r i c e s . Everything needs to go! Moving sale and Pet Adoption. 700 Mcfarl a n d D r. S e q u i m . Sports gear, footwear, cookware, books, video games. Also available is a bed frame, mattresses, 5 i n - l i n e s k a t e s, n ew snowboard boots, and a bunch of other awesome items. so come take a look Saturday and Sunday 9 am to around 4.

* * * * G I G A N T I C YA R D SALE! **** Sat. 7/21, 9-2 p.m. If raining will hold 7/22. 2000 block of S. Cherry St. Furniture, baby items galore, books, bikes, clothes, appliances, decor, toys, mower. *All sales final!* “Haggle For It” Moving Sale: Thurs.-Fri. Sat.-Sun., 8-5 p.m., 323 E 13th St., across from librar y. Vintage pin-up BBQ apron, table saw, fiber optic American Eagle statue, lots of wine glasses, all sizes scrubs, lots of women’s summer outfits, shoes size 7.5-9, dream catchers, plus kids clothes, and much more. Let’s make a deal ‘til it all goes.

2-FAMILY YARD Sale: Sat., 9-2 p.m., 923 and 973 Strait View Drive, 4-Seasons Ranch. Lots of collectibles, old bottles, old linens, insulators, jewelery, kitchen stuff, jelly jars and large var iety of other items. Priced to sell.

6040 Electronics

T R AC TO R : ‘ 8 9 J o h n Deere model 1050, excellent condition, 534 hrs., front bucket, box scraper, PTO roll bar and canopy cover, diesel engine. $12,000. (360)385-7700

6050 Firearms & Ammunition BUYING FIREARMS Any and all, top $ paid, one or entire collection, including estates. (360)477-9659

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

6075 Heavy Equipment

CHAINSAW: Stihl 044. Great shape, runs very well, new chain. 32” bar. $350. 360-385-0822.

6065 Food & Farmer’s Market

6140 Wanted & Trades

by Lynn Johnston

WANTED TO RENT Pasture for 3-4 horses, P.A. or Sequim. (360)359-3147

TRAILER: Car, Olympic, PUPPIES: 1/2 Dachs‘07, MaxxForce, 10K, tilt, hund, 1/2 Pomeranian. open. $3,500. 477-3695. $175 ea. 808-3253.

WANTED: Local, nonaffiliated handbell choir seeking experienced bell ringers. (360)457-6993.

6115 Sporting

6125 Tools

G E N E R AT O R . 4 k w Coleman w/6HP Briggs and Stratton engine. Ve r y g o o d c o n d i t i o n . $400. (360)460-1591.

TABLE SAW: 10” Delta, c o n t r a c t o r ’s m o d e l , many extras, very good 6010 Appliances DINING ROOM TABLE condition. $650. Leave WITH CHAIRS. Duncan msg. before 7 p.m. at (360)460-4531 Phyfe Table with HarpRIPE BLUEBERRIES back Chairs Very Nice AND PLANTS FREEZER: 20.6 cf upPlace your ad at right, frost free, excellent TRACTOR: Diesel plus G&G Farms, 95 Clover Good condition 360-417peninsula condition. $325. equip., great for sm ac. Ln. off Taylor Cutoff, Se- 7573 please leave mesdailynews.com sage. quim. (360)683-8809. (360)417-1087 $5,000. (360)582-9611. FARM FRESH EGGS $3.50 per dozen. (360)417-7685

9820 Motorhomes

STANDARD AUSSIE-POO’S Home grown. Black and white. Shots, wormed. Adorable. $400 females, $300 males. 6 weeks old. 360-259-6347

TRAILER: ‘01 17’ Jayco Kiwi Hybrid. Has everything needs nothing! 12’ awning, two popouts expand to 27’. Ultra Light 2200 lbs., anything can tow it. Camping Ready! $7,500. Please call to view. (360)809-0905. TRAILER:’05 25’ Sportsm a s t e r. L i ke n ew. Q u e e n B e d . Aw n i n g . Only used 5 times. $9,000 (360)582-1531 TRAILER: ‘08 2720 Trail Manor. Hi-lo, sleeps 4, tow with 1/2 ton, extras, $9,800/obo. 460-1377. TRAILER: 29’ Terry Dakota. Lg. slide, 2 doors, f r o n t B r. , eve r y t h i n g works, hitch included. $8,800/obo. 457-9038. TRAILER: ‘86 24’ Komfo r t . B u n k h o u s e, s e l f contained, good cond. $3,200. (360)417-8044. TRAILER: ‘94 20’ Lots of new stuff, kept indoors. $6,000. 582-9611 TRAILER: Attn. hunters/ fishermen. ‘84 19’ Wilde r n e s s. R e a d y t o g o. $4,000. (360)681-8612.

9802 5th Wheels

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

9802 5th Wheels

MOTOR HOME: ‘06 Lex- ELKRIDGE: ‘11, model ANTIQUES WANTED Old postcards and bot- ington GTS 28. 3 slide- 29RKSA, 34’, two slide outs. $48,000. 681-7601 out rooms, 32” flat tles. (360)460-2791. screen tv, electric jacks, MOTOR HOME: ‘93 26’ 10 gallon water heater, BOOKS WANTED! We Gulfstream. Class C, air, 115 watt panel w/ conlove books, we’ll buy Ford chassis, 81K. trols, automatic TV sat. yours. 457-9789. $8,900. (360)460-8514. seeking system, 4 batMOTOR HOMES: Win- teries, 3,200 kw Onan 6135 Yard & nebago, M600 Dodge propane generator, easiGarden Chassie, Chrysler 440 ly pulls with Ford F-250 or quiv., excellent cond. ROTOTILLER: Troy-Bilt cubic inch engine, new $38,000. Call to see. f r i d g e , n e w M i c h e l i n Pony 15008 5hp. rototil(360)452-3933 or l e r. G a r d e n Way V i n - tires, 2 cylinder Onan (360)461-1912 or tage, they don’t make generator, rebuilt trans., (208)661-0940. them like this anymore. less than 60,000 miles, I n n e w c o n d i t i o n ! $5,500. Winnebago Le- 9808 Campers & Sharo, fwd, needs en$1,025. (360)460-1591. gine, $600/obo. Canopies (360)452-7601 TOP SOIL: Free delivCAMPER: ‘69 8’. Ice ery. $20 yd, lawn/garden box, Porta-Potti, jacks, ready. (360)452-1010 or 9832 Tents & saw horses, new 9’ awn(360)460-1032. Travel Trailers ing, hauled on short bed, TRAILER: ‘00 25’ Kom- 1 / 2 t o n p i c k u p, ve r y 7030 Horses for t. Slide, air, bunks, good condition. $800. queen bed, rear bath L e ave m s g . b e fo r e 7 and shower, microwave, p.m. at (360)460-4531. AFFORDABLE skylight, deluxe cabiRIDING LESSONS nets, AM/FM CD stereo. Beginning riding, horse- $9,000. (360)457-6066 manship and trail. Rate or 460-6178, call or text. tailored to your budget. (360)457-0300

MISC: Good riding mow- 7035 General Pets er, $350. Power drain cleaner, $270. Stand up frame for disabled, $250. ADORABLE KITTENS Electric sofa/bed for RV, All colors and sizes. $85. PFOA (360)452-0414. $100. 1,000 lb. lift for safehavenpfoa.org pickup, $60. Seat for older Dodge van, $40. AKC Alaskan Mala3-shelf work table, $50. mute Puppies. 7 wks (360)797-1508 old, champion bloodMISC: Pallet Jack mfg. l i n e s, a d o ra bl e a n d by J e t , 3 , 5 0 0 l b. c a - very loving, wormed p a c i t y, a l m o s t b r a n d and shots. $700. new, $400. Toledo plat(360)701-4891 form scale, 1,000 lb. capacity, $400. Spike tooth FREE: I’m available but harrow, 6’ wide, $350. only to a home with chil360-683-8263 dren to play with, I am a M I S C : Wa s h e r / d r ye r, loving large mixed breed $200. Leather sofa, $50. who needs playmates T V, $ 2 5 . B e d , $ 2 5 . and friends. 681-0737. Small coffee table, $30. Male kittens. AffectionDresser, $15. ate long haired looking (360)681-2406 for a loving home. First M I S C : Wa s h e r / d r ye r, shots. Love human atgreat shape, $50 ea., tention. $15. If interested $ 7 5 b o t h . G a s wa t e r call 460-8442. h e a t e r, g r e a t s h a p e , $25. Brand new propane MINI AUSSIE PUPPIES. We are just TOO CUTE! stove, $50. Six purebred pups, reg(970)208-2576 istrable. Three females, Old mossy cedar fence 3 males. Ready for new posts, 4’-7’ long. $3 ea. h o m e s o n J u l y 2 2 . or 100 for $275. Del. Merles $700. Tris $600. (360)385-1981 Avail681-8180/809-0536

SEMI END-DUMP: ‘85 Goods Freightliner. 400 Cummins BCIII, 13 sp SQHD WAVE RIDER: ‘95 Polaexc. cond. $18,000. ris SLD750, 3 passen(360)417-0153 ger, low hrs., on double Firewood: Alder 5 cord trailer. Both excellent loads delivered in log cond. $2,900. 457-6153. 6080 Home lengths, $550.00. Furnishings (360)301-1931 FIREWOOD: Quality, all types. $200 delivered. 360-477-8832

C a r g o Tr a i l e r. 7 x 1 4 Pace Amer ican with Motorcycle pkg, tandem axel, drop down rear ramp, side door, bar locks. Less than 5K miles. $2900 (360)681-2435

CHEV: ‘96 3500 HD 6.5 6105 Musical diesel, auto, disc brakes, Instruments 12’ flatbed, new batteries, alternator and glow PIANO TUNING and replugs, excellent body and glass, tires 80%. pair. Gary Freel Piano Service. Since 1984. $6,500. (360)460-3410. (360)775-5480 DOZER: 850 Case, 6-way blade, rake, full logging package, 4,300 hrs. $30,000/obo. 417-5159 or 460-6924

For Better or For Worse

CARGO TRAILER: ‘09 Load Ranger 6x12. Excellent. Dual axle. 5K mi. $3,400/obo. 460-2850.

MISC: ‘48 Massey Ferg u s o n t r a c t o r, f r o n t bucket and brush hog, great cond., runs good, $3,200. Diamond plate truck tool box, $100. 12 volt electric winch, $50. A BA R N S a l e : S wa p Stihl chainsaw, $75. Finmeet in barn behind Port ish gun nails, $30. (360)477-3156 Angeles Les Schwab, 9-3 p.m., Fri.-Sat. Come MISC: 6x12 single axle join us for a large space, j u s t $ 1 0 p e r d a y . tilt bed trailer, $1,000/ o b o. 2 b o t t o m p l o w, (360)452-7576 for info. $400. 6’ reversible back FAMILY Sale: Sat. only, blade for tractor, $250. (360)452-3051 8-3, 1603 S. Golf Course Rd. Kids stuff, house- MISC: Air conditioner, hold goods, 5 drawer of- window, Shar pe 1200 fice desk, NordicTrack, b t u , 1 5 ” x 2 2 ” x ” x 2 2 ” , for mica table, Trail-A- $150. Shower stall door, Bike and much more. 55”x72”, $370 new, asking $150. HP View Sonic GARAGE Sale: Fri.-Sat., color monitor, 13”, $25. 9-3 p.m., 232 Leighland 2 office chairs, $25 ea. Ave. White wicker glass Fo l d i n g gr o c e r y c a r t , top table with 4 chairs, $ 1 0 . D e s k c h a i r, $ 5 . coffee and side table, 457-1900 in Sequim Shopsmith, chop saw, planer, generator, Snap- MISC: Antique button per lawn mower, clothes collection, serious buy(some new), area rugs ers only, $3,700. Button and more. No early birds hooks collection, $300. 4 W i n d s o r c h a i r s, $ 7 5 . MOVING Sale: Fri.-Sat., C o m b o / s t e p c l i m b e r, 8-2 p.m., 2231 E. 5th $ 5 0 . B i r d fe e d e r a n d Ave., Gales Addition. feed, $25. Antique milk S o fa , c h a i r s, k aya k s, c a n , $ 1 5 . C a s h o n l y. hundreds of books and F r i . , 9 - 1 2 , 2 0 8 E . DVDs. Spruce, Sequim.

MOVING Sale: Fri.-Sat., 9-3 p.m., 190 Morgison Loop, off West Sequim Bay Rd., right on Bell Bottom Ln, first left. Furniture, shop tools, shop vac, 5 hp compressor, M U LT I - FA M I LY S a l e : and more. Fri.-Sat., 8-3 p.m., corMOVING Sale: Sat., 9-1 ner of Peabody and Ahlp. m . , 4 1 2 W r i g h t R d . vers. 35 yr. garage sale, Everything must go! household, shop tools, camping gear, some antiques, books, lamps, MULTI-FAMILY Nordic Track, inflatable GARAGE SALE Fri.-Sat., 9-2 p.m., 792 boat, fishing sinkers, W. S e q u i m B ay R d . C o l e m a n s t ove s, a n d Household, children’s lanter ns, too much to list. No earlies, No misc., and more. checks. MOVING Sale: Fri.-Sat., 8-4 p.m., 471 Kemp St., PARKWOOD off Mt. Pleasant. Rain or 8182 Garage Sales COMMUNITY YARD shine. Lots of fishing PA - West SALE g e a r, m i s c . f u r n i t u r e, 30 homes participating in annual event. July 21, GARAGE Sale: Fri.-Sat., washer and dryer, freezSaturday, 9-3 p.m. Next 9-4 p.m., 1515 S. B St. er, refrigerator, clarinet, propane tanks, dishes, to Sears on Hwy. 101. Household items, crafts, collectibles, picnic table, and more. clothes and more. 8180 Garage Sales GARAGE Sale: Sat., 9-3 M U LT I - FA M I LY S a l e : PA - Central p.m., 1712 S. D Street. 4-Seasons Ranch. Sat., CAMPFIRE MEGA M U LT I - FA M I LY S a l e : 9-4 p.m., 33 Morse Ln. RUMMAGE SALE Sat., 9 a.m., 2010 Hwy. Antiques, bikes, children’s items, tools, fishFri.-Sat., 9-3 p.m. 101 W. Lots of stuff. ing gear and more. 619 E. 4th St. P.A. YACHT CLUB Lots of everything. INDOOR Sale: Sat., 8- YARD SALE - 4 SEAE S TAT E A P T . S a l e : noon, P.A. Yacht Club SONS RANCH Saturday Fri.-Sat., 9-3 p.m., 620 o n M a r i n e D r i v e . June 21,2012 8AM to S. Laurel #4. Furniture, P o r t a b l e b a s k e t b a l l 4PM. 33 Olympic Lane. dishes, small applianc- h o o p , j e w e l r y, d e s k Strait View Drive off 101. es, pots, pans, knick- c h a i r s , k n i c k k n a c k s , Over the bridge. Snowknacks, ladies clothes, household, much more. blower, baseball gear, b e d d i n g , s ew i n g m a - Coincides with annual tons of costume jewelry, p l u s A L OT m o r e . A l l Marine Swap Meet. chines. priced to sell! G A R AG E S a l e : Fr i . - YARD Sale: Sat.-Sun. Sat., 9-3 p.m., 109 E. 14 10-5 pm, 206 Cameron YARD Sale: Sat., 8-3 th. A little bit of every- Rd. Across from Reddick p.m., 154 Guy Kelly Rd., Road off Hwy. 101 W. o f f L a k e F a r m R d . thing and no earlies. N e w m o u n t a i n b i k e , Scrapbooking, motorcy(360)460-6442 fridge, glass top table, c e l g e a r , p e t s t u f f , G A R AG E S a l e : S a t . - tons of mens, womens books, household, elecSun., 8:30-3 p.m., 2716 and kids clothes and lots tronics, teen/kid stuff, too much to list. S. Laurel. His and hers. of everything.

P.A.: House share, uti- Ko n i c a M i n o l t a 5 4 5 0 Magicolor Laser Printer. lies included. $750 mo. Hardly used, great con(360)452-5967 dition, see online ad for photos. Like new, great 1163 Commercial for an office that needs a c o l o r l a s e r p r i n t e r, Rentals makes great copies, lab e l s, t ra n s p a r e n c i e s, COMM’L BUILDING post cards. CD and For Lease Approximately 4,000 sf printed manual instrucc o m m ’ l b u i l d i n g o n tions, original price was Washington St. in Se- $700. Sell for $250. (360)683-7700 quim, close to Costco and JC Penney. Plenty o f p a v e d p a r k i n g . Sony 46” LCD HDTV Suitable for a variety of and 3’ x 6’ book shelves. enterprises. Very attrac- Flat screen SONY TV, t i ve t e r m s. E m a i l s e - brand new, still in box: renity@olypen.com or $ 5 2 5 . 0 0 ( s t o r e va l u e call (360)452-7954 for ~ $ 7 0 0 ) C A S H O N LY and oak finish book more information. shelves, 3’ x 6’, fine condition. $50. OFFICE: W. Washington (360)681-4703 St. in Sequim. 6 offices. Lease all or separate. As low as 99 cents per sf. 6045 Farm Fencing 360-477-7589. & Equipment PROPERTIES BY LANDMARK 452-1326

G A R AG E S a l e : S a t . Sun., 9-3 p.m., 819 S. Laurel. Boat motors old a n d n e w, t o o l s , c o l lectibles, JBL speakers, china set, books, scoote r, o l d 3 3 r e c o r d s , clothes and more.

Friday, July 20, 2012 C5

D R I F T B OAT: B r a n d new Baker, trailer, LED lights, custom wheels/ tires, dual heaters, fish box, anchor nest, oars, net. Ser ious inquir ies only . $7,500. 461-6441.

GLASPAR: 16’, older, includes trailer, 60 hp Suzuki motor. $2,200. (360)681-0793

Great run around boat. 16’ Pacific Mariner, 50 hp Mercury, lots of extras. $3,500/obo. (360)808-0596 H I - L A K E R : 1 6 ’ w i d e, deep, 60 hp Yamaha, 8 hp Yamaha 4-stroke, 1 electric and 1 manual downrigger, Calkins trailer, $4,500. 452-3235.

JET SKI: ‘95 Kawasaki STS 750. 3 seater, great lake fun, never in salt water. $1,500. Call or text (360)457-6066 or (360)460-6178.

LARSEN: 15’, trailer, 60 hp and 6 hp, depth finder, downrigger, pot puller, extras. $3,000. (360)681-4803

CAMPER: ‘93, 11.5’ Lance, propane genera- LIVINGSTON : ‘03 14’ 4 - s t r o ke Ya m a h a 1 5 , tor, self contained. $5,000, (360)417-7550. electr ic star t, remote controls/steering, galvanized trailer, planes 3 adults good, rocket launchers, pole holders, compass, everything like new, ready to fish. $3,900. (360)681-2500. CAMPER: LANCE 830 (Short Bed) Cab over with rear fold down tent. Cold weather package, A/C, Microwave, awning, side entr y, side door. Great for campers with children and or pets. Euro design interior in beige c o l o r s . “ Fa s t G u n ” t u r n bu ck l e s, “ S u p e r Hitch” available. Used on Ford F350. Asking $18,500 (360)301-6261

LIVINGSTON: 14’, new 20 hp 4 stroke, electric start, power tilt, kicker, seats, galvanized trailer, fish finder, very special. $5,800. (360)681-8761.

O/B MOTOR: ‘95 Honda, 8 hp, runs very good. $800. (206)935-5169 or (360)683-8858.

OLYMPIC: ‘86 Hard top. All new wiring, new fuel system including tank, Hummingbird fish finder, new inter ior including side panels and swivel seats, dual batteries with batter y switch, 90 hp 9829 RV Spaces/ Yamaha 4 stroke and 8 Storage hp Honda 4 stroke kicker motor, EZ Loader trailer. P.A.: RV or manufac- $6,800/obo. 461-1903. utred home property with 20x20 garage. $350 mo. OLYMPIC RESORTER ‘98 22’. $18,500/obo. 808-0970. 360-477-5568 SEQUIM: RV space, PriRAYSON CRAFT: ‘66 vate, 2 min. from town. 17’, flat bottom, V-Drive $400 mo. 360-809-9095. ski boat, 326 Pontiac V8. $3,500. (360)457-5921.

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

RIENELL: 14’ ski/speed boat, EZ Load trailer, 88 hp Johnson motor, real AGGERGAARDS nice. $1,950/obo. BOAT (360)808-0611 17’ Bayliner boat, Calkins Trailer, 90 hp and SAILBOAT: ‘81 Spir it 9.9 hp Yamaha engines, 2 Scotty downriggers, 28, like new, $25,000 inLorance Fish/Depth find- vested in par ts last 5 yrs., refit and upgrades. er, cb radio, Bimini top. $25,000. (360)582-1330 $5,000/obo. 457-3540. or (360)461-9946. BARTENDER: 26’, setGrab Their up for for pot-pulling and trolling. New 12” char t ATTENTION! plotter. Looks like new boat. $25,000. Add: (360)683-1954

1998 Kit Road Ranger 5TH Wheel W/ 1996 Ford F250 4X4. 1998 Kit Road Ranger 5TH Wheel w/13’ Slide-out. All appliances in excellant working condition, including the fur nace. 9820 Motorhomes The F250 truck I use to pull it is a 1996 F250 4X4 w/6” lift, aluminum wheels, runs great. Mobil ! has been used in the truck it’s entire life. 165K on the truck. Will BAYLINER: 19’ Capri. sell individually..10K for 120 hp Merc O/B. the 5TH Wheel and 6K $2,500/obo. 452-3671. Class A Diesel Monaco for the tr uck. Contact L a P a l m a E x c c o n d . Terry 477-2756. BOAT: 32’, fiber, Navy 2006 model, 34’6” 16,500 miles. 2 slides, 5 T H W H E E L : ‘ 0 5 3 0 ’ crew launch, 6-71 GMC, p w r a w n i n g , s a t T V, Outback Keystone-Sid- + spare, rolling tlr, runs hardwood cab’s, Corian ney Ed. Lg. slide, rear good, project. $2,000. (360)437-0173 counters, 5.5kw genera- kitchen, sleeps 6, stereo, tor. $68,000 ($3k under TV, hitch neg. $17,000/ CAMPION: ‘92 21.5’ ExNADA Low Retail). (208)365-5555 plorer. Suzuki 225 hp, (360)681-3984 5TH WHEEL: ‘70s era, Lowrance FF/MP, Furuno radar, ‘92 EZ Loader G E O R G E TOW N : ‘ 0 7 , still good. $1,500/obo. trailer, big cabin, walkmodel 340, three slides, MUST SELL. 775-9921 around, super rough wa6,500 kw generator, auter boat, extras. $10,500 tomatic leveling system, 5 T H W H E E L : ‘ 9 1 2 0 ’ (360)385-7728 15,500 miles, call to see. travel trailer. $2,200/obo. (360)775-7162 (360)452-3933 or DRIFT BOAT: 16’ Willie (360)461-1912 or Visit our website at Wide Guide model. Dry (208)661-0940 storage under all seats, www.peninsula oars, anchor nest. dailynews.com MOTOR HOME: ‘03 29’ $6,000. (360)460-2837 Or email us at Class C. Only 8,000 mi., classified@ 2 tip-outs, loaded, can’t LUND: ‘01 12’, EZ Load peninsula use, must sell. $40,500 trailer, like new. $1,500/ dailynews.com firm. (360)452-5794. obo. (206)972-7868.

Pictures Borders Logos Bold Lines Yellow Highlight on Sunday 360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714 www.peninsula dailynews.com PENINSULA CLASSIFIED

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Classified

C6 FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012 9050 Marine Miscellaneous

Automobiles 9434 Pickup Trucks 9434 Pickup Trucks 9434 Pickup Trucks 9817 Motorcycles 9292 Others Others Others Others

SAILBOAT: Lancer 25, SUZUKI: ‘05 DRZ110. near new sails, 7.5 kick- BBR shift kit, new plastic e r, w i r e l e s s t a ck t i ck , & graphics, lots of extras $800. (360)477-2322. auto-pilot, with trailer. $5,900. (360)461-7284. VICTORY: ‘03 7,900 mi., SEA KAYAK: 18’, fiber- new tires and drive belt, glass. Spray skir t and 1500 cc engine, windshield, back rest with Werner paddle. $850. rack, saddle bags. 360-452-7967 $5,200. Leave msg. beSEA RAY: ‘74 24’ HT fore 7 p.m. 460-4531. C r u i s e r, o c e a n / r o u g h weather capable, repow- YAMAHA: ‘01 WR 400, ered with Merc Horizon Enduro, licensed for the engine & BRAVO-3 (du- road. $2,500. 461-1381. al prop) stern drive (115 YAMAHA: ‘06 Warrior, hrs.), Garmin electron- cruiser, 1700cc, blue. i c s, r e i n fo r c e d s t e r n , $6,000. (520)841-1908. new canvas, circ. water h e a t i n g , Ya m a h a 9 . 9 kicker, E-Z Load trailer 9805 ATVs with disc brakes (1,800 mi), electric winch, other extras. $52K invested. QUAD: ‘07 450R. Like $23,500. (360)681-5070. new, low hrs., lots of extras. $3,500. 461-6441. SUNSET: 14’ fiberglass, exc condition, includes, 9740 Auto Service galvanized EZ Loader & Parts trailer with new axle, hubs and bearings, boat c ove r, 4 0 h p e l e c t r i c TRANS: Chev, 4 sp., start Yamaha, new water Borg Warner T-10, expump and ther mostat, tras. $850. 460-1796. new prop Complete package. $3,000. 457-9142 or 460-5969

9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect.

CHEV: ‘99 Cavalier. 5 sp, runs great. $1,699. (360)477-5887 CHRYS: ‘93 Impala, new b r a k e s , r u n s , g o o d ‘01 F250 XL Super Duty. transportation. $1,500. 5.4ltr, V8, seats 6, good (360)457-4066 rubber, towing pkg., running boards, tie downs, CHRYSLER ‘09 300 runs great, $5,500/obo. TOURING EDITION Economical 2.7 liter v6, Sequim 154K mi. 360-780-0159 auto, A/C, cruise, tilt, AM/FM/CD, power win- CHEV: ‘68, 3/4 ton pu dows, locks and seat, 327, 99K, restorable. k e y l e s s e n t r y, a l l o y $1,850. (360)797-4230. wheels, only 12,000 miles, beautiful 1 owner CHEV: ‘75 3/4 ton. Auto corporate lease return, ‘350’, 98K, good work spotless Carfax report, $1,000. (206)972-7868. non-smoker, near new CHEV: ‘81 1/2 ton 4WD condition. shor t box. Clean and $18,995 straight, great paint. REID & JOHNSON 175K. Runs great. MOTORS 457-9663 $2,600. 457-6710. reidandjohnson.com FORD: ‘92 Thunderbird SC. Runs, drives,looks great! 109,000 orig. mi., 2nd owner, Auto, A/C, PW Evythg, Fog Lamps, Leather Int. Sun//Moon roof, 3.8L V6,reliable car! $3,250 firm. Call/txt (360)477-9714

FORD: ‘95 Mustang. Needs head gasket, tires. $1,000/obo. T I D E R U N N E R : 1 8 ’ , 1955 Studebaker Presi(360)809-0781 great boat, good shape, dent 4 Door. 2nd ownerlots of extra goodies. completely original, ap- FORD: ‘97 Mustang, V6, $9,995/obo. 670-6166. p r ox 3 9 , 0 0 0 - o r i g i n a l black, 5-speed, 146K, miles. Little to no rust, 1 new performance tires. s m a l l d i n g i n d o o r . $3,500/obo. 670-1386. 9817 Motorcycles Needs minor work, origiFORD: ‘99 Mustang GT, nal paint. Automatic with 3 5 t h a n n . e d . , w h i t e, V-8. Options are visor, 95K. $6,000. 461-4010. fender skirts, twin mirrors, fog lamps twin mir- FORD: ‘99 Police Interrors, full wheel covers, ceptor. Black, 4.6 V8, radio not installed. It is a 134K mi., excellent conmust see to Appreciate. dition, Air, cruise, power, $7,500. Call 683-7841. Flowmaster, Autogauge, Goodyear Z, Mustang Cobra, Panasonic CD. 0 5 H O N DA S H A D OW $4,400/obo. 460-6979. 1100 SPIRIT Like new. Runs perfectly.Only 15K JEEP: ‘92 Cherokee Lomi. Leather saddlebags. redo, excellent. condiRegularly serviced. Gartion, ver y clean, well aged. Aprox 50 MPG. maintained, $1,950. Tons of torque.Below (360)710-4966, after 5. Book. Must see. For ap- ‘59 Belair 4dr sedan. LINCOLN ‘00 pointment 360-477-7088 283 with 103k miles! LS V8 No rust! New gas tank, 3.9L DOHC V8, auto, a l t e r n a t o r, s e n d i n g loaded! Maroon ext in unit, recoated trunk, master brake cylinder. great cond! Tan leatherN e e d s p a i n t , s o m e int in great shape! Dual glass, and interior vi- pwr seats, moon roof, 6 disk with prem sound, nyl. $6500 firm. cruise, pwr tilt steering 2002 Harley Davidson 213-382-8691 wheel with controls, dual Roadking. Corbin seat, climate, wood trim, dual vance hines pipes, luga i r b a g s , p r e m a l l oy gage framewor k rack, wheels! VERY nice 2 braided cables, 12” bars, owner LS at our NO highway pegs, passenhaggle price of only ger floor boards and $4,995 highway pegs, Lots of ‘59 BELAIR 4dr sedan. 283 with 103k miles! No Carpenter Auto Center chrome 33,000 miles. rust! New gas tank, al681-5090 Call Ken @ 360-4612128 $ 10,900 obo. It’s a ternator, sending unit, MAZDA: ‘79 RX-7. Twin recoated trunk, master must see!!!! brake cylinder. Needs rotor, sport coupe, nice paint, some glass, and car, great driver. $2,250. (360)683-5871. interior vinyl. $6500 firm. 213-382-8691 Mitsubishi: ‘03 Outlander ‘ 6 9 R I V I E R A : L o o k s, 2 W D. 1 6 5 K ( a l l h w y runs and drives like a mileage). Second ownclassic with less than er-ZERO problems. Fully Loaded. LoJack. Power 60,000 miles should. $11,000. (360)683-1954. EVERYTHING, new tires HARLEY: ‘07 Ultra Clas(Yokohama). Call Terry sic. 7,000 mi., 96 Cubic B U I C K : ‘ 7 4 R i v i e r a for a showing. $4,950. I n c h , A M F M S t e r e o, Grand Sport, rare, #3, (360)797-4802 CD, Cruise Control, Al- $5,000. (360)683-9394. PLYMOUTH: ‘94 Accways Garaged, Never Been Down, Located in CADILLAC: ‘79, Fleet- l a i m . 4 c y l . , l ow m i . , good on gas. $1,550. Sequim. $15,500. Call wood. $800/obo. (360)-460-6367 360-379-4100 Bill 360-683-5963 Home or 360-775-9471 Cell. CADILLAC: ‘84 Eldora- SUBARU: ‘04 Outback. HARLEY: ‘96 FXDL, low do Coupe. 60K, excel- Auto, CD, 103K, recent lent condition, one own- tires, battery, timing belt miles. $7,000. er, fully loaded. $9,500. replacement, very nice. (360)452-4145 (360)452-7377 $10,500/obo. 457-4561 H O N DA : ‘ 0 3 M a g n a , CHEV: ‘56 Belair. 6 cyl., or (360)460-8997. 750, 19K miles, like new. auto, 4 door, paint, in- SUBARU: ‘91 Legacy. 4 $6,500. (360)477-9082. terior, chrome, re-done d r , A W D, a u t o , A C ,

HONDA: ‘05 230, off- to stock, California car, 2nd owner, always garroad, hardly ridden. $1,700. (360)460-4448. aged. Not smoked in. $22,500. (360)683-7789. HONDA: ‘06 CRF230R. CHEV: ‘64 Covair. Ramp All Original, low hours. side pickup. Runs. EXCELLENT condition. $2,000. (360)670-3476. $2,900 obo. 808-1303. CHEV: ‘65 Covair Corsa. H O N D A : ‘ 0 8 R e b e l , Plus parts car, runs. 250cc, 2K mls, extras. $1,500. (360)670-3476. $2,500. (360)477-9082 CHEV: ‘65 Impala. HONDA ‘08 SHADOW $12,500. (360)457-6359. SPIRIT 750 750cc V-Twin 2 cylinder, windshield, highway bar, Vance & Hines exhaust, s i s s y b a r, p a s s e n g e r seat, saddle bags, extra headlights, chrome dress on engine, radiator, and horn, bike cover, heated gloves. This is a CHEV: ‘76 Monte Carlo, ver y nice, one owner, hardtop, all original, solid motorcycle! Full service c a r, 3 6 0 V- 8 e n g i n e, records! lots of extra’s! 84K, dark green metallic g e a r I n c l u d e d ! g r e a t paint, no rust, black vinyl condition! stop by gray seats,rosewood vinyl inmotors today for sum- s t r u m e n t p a n e l , g a r mer fun! aged. One family owned $5,495 and maintained lifetime. GRAY MOTORS $12,995. (360)774-6547. 457-4901 DODGE: ‘71 1/2 ton graymotors.com short bed. V8, auto, facH O N D A : ‘ 6 9 C L 9 0 . tory power steering, AdGreat shape, 90 mpg, venturer Sport, paint, in6,200 mi. $1,700/obo. terior and chrome re(360)681-5350 done, California truck, black on black, garaged. HONDA: ‘80 CB-900C, $15,000. (360)683-7789 silver, street bike, nice. FORD: ‘54 Victoria. New $1,500/obo. 460-3756. 302, 4 speed. $10,500/ HONDA: ‘84 Goldwing. obo. (360)504-5664. 30K mi., runs excellent. FORD: ‘77 LTD2. 68K $2,700. (360)461-2627. orig. mi., excellent cond. HONDA: ‘85 Goldwing $3,900. (360)452-3488. Aspencade. 1200cc, black/chrome, exc. cond. PONTIAC: ‘78 Firebird, Formuia, rebuilt engine $3,500/obo. 417-0153. and trans., lots of new parts. $5,000, might take trade in. (360)457-6540 or (360)460-3105.

Honda Motorcycle. 2003 VT750 Honda ACE Deluxe Cruiser - Lots of standard chrome, plus lots of chrome extras. Showroom condition! . 10,345 easy miles. Call for an appointment : (360)477-6968

TRIUMPH: ‘72 GT6 MK3 12K on engine rebuilt. $2,200. (360)683-5557.

good/fair condition, power doors and windows. White with blue inteior. 226K mi. $1,395. (360)461-0545 TOYOTA: ‘08 Scion XB. 3 8 K , d a r k bl u e , n ew tires, DVD players, extras. $16,000. 928-3669. T OYO TA : ‘ 0 9 P r i u s . White, 55K, Nav, stereo, B.U. camera. $19, 500. (805)478-1696

TOYOTA: ‘11 Prius II, Hybrid, 4dr. hatchback, 1,800 miles\warranty, $21,500. (360)565-8009. TOYOTA ‘91 CAMRY DX SEDAN 132K orig mi!!! 2.0L 16V 4 cyl, auto! Maroon ext i n gr e a t s h a p e ! G ray cloth int in great cond! Pwr windows, Pwr door locks, Pwr mirrors, Sony C a s s e t t e p l a y e r, t i l t steering wheel, air conditioning, Excellent MPG w/ Toyota reliability at our No Haggle price of only. $2,995 Carpenter Auto Center 681-5090 VW: ‘02 Golf, 50K miles, great condition, loaded. $10,000/obo. 452-9685.

9350 Automobiles Miscellaneous 1997 850 GLT VOLVO: Turbo charged, $4,000 o b o. N ew t i r e s, l ow miles. Runs great! Looks great! (360) 582-3885.

9292 Automobiles Others BMW: ‘00 M-Class Roadster. Low mi., silver, 6 cylinder. (360)681-0494.

B M W : ‘ 9 6 3 2 8 i . N ew 2000 INTERNATIONAL 4700 TRUCK tranny, runs good, needs minor body work. $2,500 with tuck away lift gate. Engine -- Diesel - T (360)440-4028 QUAD: ‘07 Yamaha 700 444E -- 195 HP. 5 speed Raptor. Like new, extras. B U I C K : 8 3 R e g a l . 2 m a nu a l t ra n s m i s s i o n . Price reduced to $5,300 door, leather inter ior, Box -- 24’L x 102’H x firm. (360)452-3213. 48K, excellent condition. 96’W. Roll-up door. Mile$3,000/obo. 457-6153. age 195,600. Well MainSCOOTER: ‘08 Bali 250 cc, with trunk, helmet BUICK: ‘93 Regal Limit- tained. $14,000. Call Karen, and gloves incl., 1 own- ed, 91K, exc. cond. (425)355-0717 Ext.1560 er, 1,000 mi., fun and $2,050. (360)477-4234. Located in Everett. economical. $2,300. CHEV: ‘07 Corvette. 19K (360)374-6787 CHECK OUT OUR mi., Monterey red with NEW CLASSIFIED SUZUKI: ‘05 DRZ110. leather, removable hard WIZARD AT BBR shift kit, new plastic top, auto with paddle www.peninsula & graphics, lots of extras shift. $35,000. dailynews.com $800. (360)477-2322. (360)681-2976

C H E V: ‘ 9 7 1 5 0 0 4 x 4 stepside. Regular cab. $5,000. 360-327-3649.

FORD: ‘03 F150 Harley Davidson Special Edition pickup. 17,301 mi., many extras, V8 factory super charged. Leather interior, heated driver seat, padded bed cover, chrome wheels and much more! $25,000. 360-457-6156 after 10 am FORD: ‘88 1 ton. 4WD, new brakes, good rubber, truck needs work. $1,000. 360-808-1052. FORD RANGER ‘00 XLT SUPER CAB 4X4 pickup - 4.0L V6, automatic, alloy wheels, good tires, spray-In bedliner, tow package, rear sliding window,privacy glass, keyless entry, 4 opening doors, power windows, door locks,and mirrors, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, sony CD stereo, dual front airbags. Sparkling clean inside and out! Kelley blue book value of $8,597! Priced to sell fast! Stop by Gray Motors today! $5,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

CHEVROLET ‘07 COLORADO SHORTBED WORK TRUCK 2.9 liter 4-cyl, auto, A/C, cruise, tilt, spray on bedliner, 77,000 miles. 1owner corporate lease return, spotless Carfax report. $8,995 GMC ‘04 SIERRA 1500 REID & JOHNSON EXTENDED CAB Z71 MOTORS 457-9663 4X4 pickup - 5.3L Vortec reidandjohnson.com V 8 , a u t o m a t i c , a l l oy wheels, new tires,Westin CHEVROLET ‘98 Nerf Bars, tow package, SILVERADO Z71 3500, 4x4, automatic, privacy glass, keyless long bed. Financing your entry, 4 opening doors, future not your past!! We key l e s s e n t r y, p ow e r have three trucks under windows door locks,mir$7000 and three cars rors, and drivers seat, under $5000!!! Military cruise control, tilt, dual discounts! 90 days same zone air conditioning, CD stereo, Information as cash!!! We finance. center, steering wheel $6,995 controls,dual front airThe Other Guys Auto and Truck Center bags. Kelley Blue Book value of $18,972! Like 360-417-3788 new condition inside and out! Only 72,000 miles! DODGE ‘85 RAM stop by Gray Motors toCHARGER SE day to save some bucks ROYALE 5.9 liter V8, auto, 4x4, on your next truck! $16,995 power locks, alloy GRAY MOTORS wheels, privacy glass, 457-4901 tow package, r unning graymotors.com boards, fog lamps, 104,000 believable GMC: ‘94 Sierra 1/2 ton. miles, very very clean and well cared for older 4WD, V6, 19 mpg, long SUV, garage kept, sen- box. $2,100. 732-4511 ior owned, non-smoker, spotless Carfax report. must see to appreciate. $3,995 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com DODGE: ‘91, D-15, auto, white, low miles. $1,800/obo. 460-3756. DODGE: Cherry Dakota 4x4. Midnight blue, excellent condition inside and out. Hemi motor runs beautifully. Must see and drive to appreciate! $10,000/ obo. (360)797-3892.

NISSAN ‘08 TITAN Crew cab, 2WD, SB, Leer Tonneau, alloy wheels, 6 pass, new tires, running boards, tow pkg. with hitch and controller, tinted glass, sliding rear window, 6-disc CD, MP3 ready, hi-flow exhaust, up to 22 mpg, 41K. Asking $18,900/obo. (360)649-3962 or (360)649-4062

FORD: ‘00 F150 4WD. Super cab, 68K, 5.4L V8 power equip., bed cover. VW: ‘70 dbl cab pu, re$9,575. (360)460-1179. stored, blue, exc. cond. FORD: ‘08 F150. Ext. $14,995. (360)452-4890. cab, 4x4, tow pkg., AlasPLACE YOUR ka undercoat, spray-in AD ONLINE bedliner, chrome pkg., With our new 51K. $20,500. 928-2182. Classified Wizard you can see your FORD: ‘08 F150 XLT. ad before it prints! 4x4 Crew cab. Low mi., www.peninsula loaded! $20,000. dailynews.com 360-912-1599

9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County

NISSAN ‘99 FRONTIER SE KING CAB 4X4 ~3.3L V6, 5 speed manual, alloy wheels, new tires, Nerf Bars, tow package, rear sliding window, privacy glass, sunroof, power windows, door locks, and mirrors, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, Kenwood CD stereo, dual front airbags. Kelley Blue Book value of $8,147! Sparkling clean inside and out! Loaded with options! Stop by Gray Motors today! $7,495 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

9556 SUVs Others 2 0 0 2 Fo r d E x c u r s i o n Limited 4X4 93k miles, leather, nav, rear ent, 8” lift, 37” toyo tires, black ext, clean condition, runs great, must see... 360 460-9909

2 0 0 3 Fo r d E x p l o r e r XLT. One owner, garaged, 71K miles, very well maintained, see PDN online photos, 3rd seat, air, V8, meticulous inter ior, no rust, great body, new t ra n s m i s s i o n 1 2 / 0 9 . Call 683-3687.

2006 Honda Element EX AWD. 2006 Honda Elem e n t E X AW D a u t o, 77,000 miles. Nighthawk black ext. black/gray interior. One owner very well taken care of. Synthetic oil, 25 MPG. Extremely dependable,versatile auto. $14,500. 360-417-9401 CHEV: ‘91 S-10 Blazer. 1 2 7 K m i . , l o t s n e w. $1,800. (206)972-7868. C H E V : ‘ 9 3 S u bu r b a n 4x4. Newer everything. $3,000/obo. 452-9685. CHEV: ‘96 Blazer, 4x4, 184K, fully loaded, clean, exc. condition. $4,000/obo. 452-1292. KIA: ‘03 Sorento, 149K, $6,995/obo. 683-2716.

9931 Legal Notices Clallam County VENDOR LIST P.U.D. No. 1 of Clallam County is soliciting the names of vendors who would like to be included on a Vendor list for the purchase of major electric, water, and officer mater ial supply items over $15,000 in accordance with State of Wa s h i n g t o n r e q u i r e ments. If you would like to be included on the list, contact the P.U.D. Materials Superintendent, Charlie McCaughan at 360.565.3510. Legal No. 405362 Pub: July 20, 2012

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant to R.C.W. Chapter 61.24, et seq. and 62A9A-604(a)(2) et seq. Trustee’s Sale No: 01-ALT-001493 I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Trustee, REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION, will on July 27, 2012, at the hour of 10:00 AM, at THE MAIN ENTRANCE TO THE CLALLAM COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 223 EAST FOURTH STREET, PORT ANGELES, WA, sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable at the time of sale, the following described real and personal property {hereafter referred to collectively as the “Property”), situated in the County of CLALLAM, State of Washington: LOT 4, BLOCK 193, TOWNSITE OF PORT ANGELES, CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON. SITUATE IN CLALLAM COUNTY, STATE OF WASHINGTON. Tax Parcel No: 06-30-00-019310 0000, commonly known as 920 EAST 5TH STREET, PORT ANGELES, WA, The Property is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 4/3/2006, recorded 4/7/2006, under Auditor’s/Recorder’s No. 2006 1178056, records of CLALLAM County, Washington, from DARREN RICHARDS, AN UNMARRIED MAN, as Grantor, to LAND TITLE AND ESCROW COMPANY, as Trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC AS NOMINEE FOR MERITAGE MORTGAGE, as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest in which is presently held by DEUTSCHE BANK NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE UNDER POOLING AND SERVICING AGREEMENT DATED AS OF JUNE 1, 2006 MORGAN STANLEY IXIS REAL ESTATE CAPITAL TRUST 2006-1. II No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. III The default(s) for which this foreclosure is/are made are as follows: FAILURE TO PAY THE MONTHLY PAYMENT WHICH BECAME DUE ON 8/1/2011, AND ALL SUBSEQUENT MONTHLY PAYMENTS, PLUS LATE CHARGES AND OTHER COSTS AND FEES AS SET FORTH. Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: Amount due as of April 27, 2012 Delinquent Payments from August 01, 2011 9 payments at $809.12 each $7,282.08 (08-01-11 through 04-27-12) Late Charges: $88.80 Beneficiary Advances: $853.29 Suspense Credit: $0.00 TOTAL: $8,224.17 IV The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: Principal $140,747.38, together with interest as provided in the note or other instrument secured, and such other costs and fees as are due under the note or other instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. V The above described real property will be sold to satisfy the expenses of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. The sale will be made without warranty, express or implied regarding title, possession, or encumbrances on July 27, 2012. The default(s) referred to in paragraph III must be cured by July 16, 2012 (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time on or before July 16, 2012, (11 days before the sale date) the default(s) as set forth in paragraph III is/are cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated at any time after July 16, 2012, (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrower, Grantor, any Guarantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance paying the entire principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust, plus costs, fees, and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI A written Notice of Default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following addresses: DARREN RICHARDS, 920 EAST 6TH STREET, PORT ANGELES, WA, 98362 SPOUSE OF DARREN RICHARDS, 920 EAST 5TH STREET, PORT ANGELES, WA, 98362 by both first class and certified mail on 2/24/2012, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and on 2/24/2012, the Borrower and Grantor were personally served with said written notice of default or the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII The Trustee’s Sale will be held in accordance with Ch. 61.24 RCW and anyone wishing to bid at the sale will be required to have in his/her possession at the time the bidding commences, cash, cashier’s check, or certified check in the amount of at least one dollar over the Beneficiary’s opening bid. In addition, the successful bidder will be required to pay the full amount of his/her bid in cash, cashier’s check, or certified check within one hour of the making of the bid. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all of their interest in the above described property. IX Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the same pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s Sale. X NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the Deed of Trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the Deed of Trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceeding under Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with section 2 of this act. DATED: 4/25/2012 Effective Date: REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION Trustee By: MARILEE HAKKINEN, AUTHORIZED AGENT Address: 616 1st Avenue, Suite 500 Seattle, WA 98104 Phone: (206) 340-2550 Sale Information: www.rtrustee.com A-4238076 06/29/2012, 07/20/2012 Pub: June 29, July 20, 2012 Legal No. 390976

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 9556 SUVs Others

9556 SUVs Others

CHEV: ‘99 Suburban. Looks great, runs great, 250K. $4,000. 452-2768.

HYUNDAI ‘01 SANTA FE AWD Economical 2.4 liter 4cyl, auto, all wheel drive, DODGE: ‘01 Durango A/C, cruise, tilt, AM/FM SLT. 5.9L, V8, 131K C D / M P 3 , p o w e r w i n m i . , t h i r d r ow s e a t , dows and locks, keyless seats 7, remote start, entry, side airbags, privent visors, chrome vacy glass, alloy wheels, step bars, rear air con- only 28,000 miles, baltrol, tow pkg. ance of factory 5/60 war$5,000/obo. 477-8826. ranty, non-smoker, spotless Carfax report. F O R D : ‘ 0 2 E x p l o r e r, $19,995 4x4, 3rd row seat, V6, REID & JOHNSON 55K miles. $9,995. MOTORS 457-9663 (360)460-6367 reidandjohnson.com FORD: ‘10 Escape Hybrid. Black, loaded, 59K. J E E P : ‘ 9 9 W r a n g l e r. $21,950/obo 79K, brand new tires, (360)796-9990 exc. cond, garaged. $10,500. (360)457-9013. FORD ‘97 EXPLORER XLT 4X4 112K orig mi!! 4.0L V6, rare 5sp manual trans! Red ext in great shape! Gray cloth int in great cond! Pwr windows, pwr door locks, pwr mirrors, Kenwood CD, A/C, dual airbags, pri glass, roof rack, cruise, tilt, alloy S o l i d r u n n i n g l i t t l e wheels! Great little 4x4 Trooper. 2.23 Isuzu TurSUV at our No haggle bo Diesel engine, pro rebuilt 5 speed transmisprice of only sion and transfer case. $3,495 Carpenter Auto Center New timing belt, tensioner. Good tires, roof rack, 681-5090 cruise, rear air deflector, GMC: ‘96 Jimmy. Motor lockout hubs. All gauges s e i z e d , o t h e r w i s e i n work. Nice body, interior good condition, Great OK. 243k miles, star ts car for parts and tires or easy. 27-33 mpg. Great re-build project, clean ti- WVO conversion engine! tle. $850. 452-4319 or Nice tow behind vehicle. lightfoot.jeff@gmail.com 86 4 door gas trooper included for parts. $4650. TOYOTA : ‘ 0 1 R a v 4 . 360-452-7439. 4WD, 150K, sunroof, air, auto, 4-cyl, excel. cond, cruise, brand new tires. WHY PAY $7,500. (360)775-0886. SHIPPING ON

9556 SUVs Others

TOYOTA : ‘ 0 3 R AV 4 , 5-speed, good condition. $9,950. (360)683-6054.

TOYOTA ‘94 4-RUNNER SR5 4X4 124K orig mi!! 3.0L V6, auto, loaded! Black ext in excell shape! Gray cloth int in excell cond! Pw, Pdl, Pm, moon roof, Alpine CD w/aux, tilt, tow, tinted windows, roof rack, running boards, 3” l i f t , 1 5 ” a l l oy ’s w / 3 3 ” BFG rubber, Magnaflow exhaust, local trade-in!! VERY nice 4-Runner at our NO Haggle price of $5,995 Carpenter Auto Center 681-5090

9730 Vans & Minivans Others CHEV: ‘89 Astro. 2WD, V6, 8 pass, all options. $1,895. (360)809-0324.

CHEVROLET ‘09 G1500 EXPRESS All wheel dr ive cargo van: 5.3 liter V8, auto, A/C, cruise, tilt, AM/FM/CD, power windows and locks, keyless entry, safety bulkhead, nice bin package, 57,000 ,miles, balance of factory 5/100 warranty, spotless Carfax report, super clean 1-owner corporate lease return, hard to find all wheel drive model. $18,995 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com DODGE: ‘88 Wheelchair van. $2,300. (360)797-1508

TOYOTA: ‘97 Rav-4. 4 cyl., 4WD, auto, 100K, n ew t i m i n g b e l t , n ew brakes, good cond. $7,000. (360)477-0401.

INTERNET PURCHASES? SHOP LOCAL

TOYOTA : ‘ 0 5 S i e n n a . Excellent condition, 1 owner, 89K, 20K on new tires/brakes. $12,300. (360)681-3714

JEEP: ‘83 CJ7. Rebuilt title. $6,500. (360)379-1277

peninsula dailynews.com

TOYOTA : ‘ 9 1 P r ev i a , new brakes, etc. $1,495. (360)452-4890

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

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant to the Revised Code of Washington Chapter 61.24, et seq. T.S. No: F534435 WA Unit Code: F Loan No: 65065041120900001/WALKER AP #1: 043035-440100 I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT the undersigned trustee, T.D. SERVICE COMPANY OF WASHINGTON, 4000 W. Metropolitan Drive, Suite 400, Orange, CA 92868, will on AUGUST 3, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 A.M. AT THE MAIN ENTRANCE TO THE CLALLAM COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 223 EAST 4TH STREET PORT ANGELES , State of WASHINGTON, sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable at the time of the sale, the following described real property, situated in the County of CLALLAM, State of WASHINGTON, to Wit: PTN S2 SE 35-30-4, SVY V14 P50 The land referred to in the guarantee is located in the County Of Clallam, State of Washington, and described as follows: That portion of the Southeast Quarter of Section 35, Township 30 North, Range 4 West, W.M., Clallam County, Washington, described as follows: Commencing at the South Quarter corner of Section 35, Township 30 North, Range 4 West, W.M.; Thence North 1°41’45” East along the North-South centerline of said Section 35, a distance of 1,278.25 feet; Thence South 88°14’56” East, parallel with the East-West centerline of said Section 35, a distance of 1,230.623 feet to the Northeast corner of parcel delineated on Survey recorded in Volume 14 of Surveys, Page 18, under Auditor’s File No. 604097, which point intersects the centerline of an underground irrigation pipeline and is the True Point of Beginning of this description; Thence South 0°03’40” East along said underground pipeline and the Easterly line of said Survey recorded in Volume 14 of Surveys, Page 18, a distance of 442.68 feel; Thence South 88°14’56” East parallel with the East-West centerline of said Section 35, a distance of 495 feet; Thence North 442.68 feet, more or less, to a point South 88°14’56” East a distance of 495 feet from the True Point of Beginning; Thence North 88° 14’ 56” West a distance of 495 feet to the True Point of Beginning. Said property is delineated on Survey recorded August 23, 1988 in Volume 14 of Surveys, Page 50. TOGETHER WITH AND SUBJECT TO an easement for ingress, egress and utilities as disclosed by Clallam County Auditor’s File No. 607953. Situate in the County of Clallam, State of Washington. The street or other common designation if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: Vacant Land: The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the above street or other common designation. which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated December 12, 2006, recorded December 15, 2006, under Auditor’s File No. 2006 1193076 in Book --- Page --- , records of CLALLAM County, WASHINGTON, from ROBERT T. WALKER, SANDRA F. WALKER as Grantor, to WELLS FARGO FINANCIAL NATIONAL BANK as Trustee, to secure an obligation in favor of WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. as Beneficiary. II No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any Court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. III The default(s) for which this foreclosure is made is/are as follows: Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: UNPAID PRINCIPAL BALANCE $208,822.98 INTEREST @ 7.8650 % FROM 06/20/11 THRU 05/04/12 $14,370.94 ACCRUED LATE CHARGES $72.16 Subtotal of amounts in arrears: $223,266.08 As to the defaults which do not involve payment of money to the Beneficiary of your Deed of Trust, you must cure each such default. Listed below are the defaults which do not involve payment of money to the Beneficiary of your Deed of Trust. Opposite each such listed default is a brief description of the action necessary to cure the default and a description of the documentation necessary to show that the default has been cured. IV The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is principal $208,822.98 together with interest as provided in the note or other instrument secured from 06/20/11, and such other costs and fees as are due under the note or other instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. V The above described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of the sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. The sale will be made without warranty express or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances on 08/03/12. The default referred to in Paragraph III must be cured prior to the sale to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time before the sale the default(s) as set forth in Paragraph III is cured and the trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated any time before the sale by the Borrower, Grantor and Guarantor or the holder of the recorded junior lien or encumbrance by paying the entire principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust, plus costs, fees and advances if any made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and or Deed of Trust and curing all other defaults. VI A written Notice of Default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following address: ROBERT T. WALKER 150 FM WEST KYLE, TX 78640 SANDRA F. WALKER 150 FM WEST KYLE, TX 78640 ROBERT T. WALKER P O BOX 1227 KYLE, TX 78640 SANDRA F. WALKER P O BOX 1227 KYLE, TX 78640 ROBERT T. WALKER 2451 FM 150 WEST KYLE, TX 78640 SANDRA F. WALKER 2451 FM 150 WEST KYLE, TX 78640 by both first class and certified mail on February 10, 2012, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and the Borrower and Grantor were personally served on February 13, 2012 , with said written Notice of Default or the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below, will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all their interest in the above-described property. IX Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s sale. X NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS The purchaser at the trustee’s sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the grantor under the deed of trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the deed of trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings, under chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. XI NOTICE TO GUARANTORS 1. If you are a guarantor of the obligations secured by the deed of trust, you may be liable for a deficiency judgment to the extent the sale price obtained at the trustee’s sale is less than the debt secured by the deed of trust. 2. You have the same rights to reinstate the debt, cure the default, or repay the debt as is given to the grantor in order to avoid the trustee’s sale. 3. You will have no right to redeem the property after the trustee’s sale. 4. Subject to such longer periods as are provided in the Washington Deed of Trust Act, Chapter 61.24 RCW, any action brought to enforce a guaranty must be commenced within one year after the trustee’s sale, or the last trustee’s sale under any other deed of trust granted to secure the same debt. 5. In any action for a deficiency, you will have the right to establish the fair value of the property as of the date of the trustee’s sale, less prior liens and encumbrances, and to limit your liability for a deficiency to the difference between the debt and the greater of such fair value or the sale price paid at the trustee’s sale, plus interest and costs. Notice and other personal service may be served on the Trustee at: T.D. SERVICE COMPANY OF WASHINGTON 520 E. Denny Way Seattle, WA 981222100 (800) 843-0260 (206) 859-6989 If you are interested in attempting to save your home from foreclosure, Wells Fargo may be able to assist you. Please contact 1-888-508-8811 for more information. DATED: April 27, 2012 T.D. SERVICE COMPANY OF WASHINGTON, SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE By CINDY GASPAROVIC, ASSISTANT SECRETARY 4000 W. Metropolitan Drive Suite 400 Orange, CA 92868 (800) 843-0260 (206) 859-6989 If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder’s sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. If available , the expected opening bid and/or postponement information may be obtained by calling the following telephone number(s) on the day before the sale: (714) 480-5690 or you may access sales information at www.tacforeclosures.com/sales TAC# 957400 PUB: 06/29/12, 07/20/12 Pub: June 29, July 20, 2012 Legal No. 396564


Craig Buhler in concert | This week’s new movies

Peninsula

Abby Mae & the Homeschool Boys bid farewell to the Peninsula

Abby Mae & the Homeschool Boys will give their last local performance this Saturday night at Olympic Cellars. A

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

THE WEEK OF JULY 20-26, 2012


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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

PS

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Coming Up

Roots, rock: Revival this Saturday

JOYCE — Deadwood Revival, purveyors of “progressive old-time jamgrass,” are coming back to the Salt Creek Restaurant and Lounge, 53821 state Highway 112, on Saturday night. Singer-guitarist Kim Trenerry, banjo man Jason Mogi and bassist-vocalist Paul Stehr-Green stir up originals and covers, from their “Daisy” to Bob Dylan’s “Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright,” beginning at 9 p.m. for a $3 cover charge. To find out more about the threesome’s forthcoming shows in Sequim, Port Angeles and Port Townsend, visit www. DeadwoodRevival.com.

Pavilion at Front and Lincoln streets alongside the strawberries, tamales, seafood and other goods from local farmers, artisans and chefs. For more details see www.Winterlings.com or www.FarmersMarket PortAngeles.com.

youth 16 and younger. Curtain is at 7:30 tonight and Saturday night and 2 p.m. Sunday, while more details and reservations can be had at 360683-7326 and www. OlympicTheatreArts.org.

Music, Camaraderie

‘Mama’ on island

VICTORIA — Big Mama Thornton, the blues singer who recorded hits such as “Hound Dog” and “Ball and Chain” well before Elvis Presley arrived, is celebrated this summer in “Big Mama! The Willie Mae Thornton Story” at the Belfry Theatre, 1291 Gladstone Ave. In this revue running Tuesday through Aug. 19, Jackie Richardson stars as the woman whose rocky, joyful life came to an end too soon. Tickets to see it unfold at the Belfry, a nonprofit Folk and farmers theater in Victoria’s FernPORT ANGELES —The wood neighborhood, range guitar-harmonica-fiddlefrom $25 to $40 plus tax. banjo duo the Winterlings For details, visit www. will give a free performance Belfry.BC.ca or phone 250at the Port Angeles Farm385-6815. ers Market on Saturday. The pair, Amanda Birdsall and Wolff Bowden, will Calling all idols sing and play their folk SEQUIM — Next music from 10 a.m. till week’s Music in the Park 1 p.m. under The Gateway event will be given over to

May we help?

a “Karaoke Idol” contest at the James Center bandstand. Singers ready to compete are encouraged to visit the city of Sequim’s website, www.SequimWa.gov, or phone City Hall at 360683-4139 before the contest Tuesday evening. Then, Karaoke Idol will go from 6 p.m. till 8 p.m. at the band shell beside Carrie Blake Park, 202 N. Blake Ave. Everyone is invited to bring lawn chairs, blankets and picnics to enjoy during the contest. The Sequim High School Band Boosters Club will be selling hot dogs and other snacks.

Two Taxi trips Locust Street Taxi is zipping across the Olympic Peninsula for two free

shows this coming week. First the ska-swing-folk foursome will do a Port Angeles Concert on the Pier from 6 p.m. till 8 p.m. Wednesday. Then it’s on to an episode of Port Townsend’s Concerts on the Dock series from 5 p.m. till 8 p.m. Thursday. Port Angeles’ City Pier at the north end of Lincoln Street provides the stage for Wednesday’s gig, and Pope Marine Park off Water Street downtown is the place the following night. To find out more about the band, visit www.Locust StreetTaxi.com.

Wine, blues, cheese SEQUIM — Blues guitarist Thom Davis returns to Dungeness Bay Wine & Cheese, 123 E. Washington St., on Saturday night. There’s no cover charge

to hear Davis’ roaming across roots, folk and country blues from 7 p.m. till 10 p.m. More details await at the wine bar and shop at 360-681-2778. To learn more about the man’s music, visit www. ThomDavis.com.

First blues fest

PORT ANGELES — The first Port Angeles Blues Festival fills the Clallam County Fairgrounds with live blues, dancing and a buffet-style dinner this September. The festivities start Last of ‘Bullshot’ with a Friday dance from SEQUIM — The final 7 p.m. till midnight with performances of “Bullshot Richard Allen & the LouisiCrummond,” the action ana Experience plus the comedy at Olympic Theatre West Coast Women’s Blues Arts, come tonight, SaturRevue on Sept. 14. day and Sunday. Then come the Cruzin’ Alexandria Edouart, Bluzers, Nick Vigarino, the Dave McInnes, David Strange Tones, the Delta Toman and Debbie Embree Rays and the West Coast star in this story of good Women’s revue, featuring versus evil at the playhouse Seattle’s Alice Stuart, Lady at 414 N. Sequim Ave. A and Vicki Stevens, stirSeats are $16.50 for ring up a musical gumbo adults, $14.50 for OTA from noon till 10:30 p.m. members and active-duty Saturday, Sept. 15. military service members and spouses, and $11.50 for TURN TO COMING UP/4

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

Jackie Richardson, center, stars in “Big Mama! The Story of Willie Mae Thornton” opening this Tuesday and running through Aug. 19 at the Belfry Theatre in Victoria.

PORT ANGELES — An afternoon of classical music and award-winning wines is planned for Friday, Aug. 10, at Camaraderie Cellars, 334 Benson Road. In this fourth annual summer gathering, Port Angeles Symphony musicians will play while patrons sip beverages and enjoy light picnic fare at 6 p.m. in Camaraderie’s garden. Tickets are $75, with proceeds to benefit the symphony. To make reservations and learn more, phone 360-457-5579 or visit www. PortAngelesSymphony.org.


PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

(

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

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(

THE

‘Ripples’ ( ( EFFECT((

Peninsula jazz musician to give three CD-release performances Sequimbased jazz artist Craig Buhler’s “Ripples” album includes Quincy Jones’ “The Midnight Sun Will Never Set.”

BY DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

When he brings the clarinet to his lips, Craig Buhler seeks one result. He seeks it with Quincy Jones’ “The Midnight Sun Will Never Set” and with George Gershwin’s “The Man I Love.” And with Duke Ellington and Bob Russell’s “I Didn’t Know About You” and Jimmy Dorsey and Paul Madeira’s “I’m Glad There Is You.” Together with three of his favorite musicians, Buhler seeks that result with his own composition, “October,” and finally with Frankie Lane and Carl Fischer’s “We’ll Be Together Again.” These are six of the 11 tracks on “Ripples,” Buhler’s new CD to be showcased in three summer concerts. The record is dedicated to Faye, the woman Buhler married 15 months ago this week. To celebrate “Ripples,” Buhler will first convene his quartet, alongside New York City-based singer Elinore O’Connell, tonight at the Dungeness Schoolhouse. This first CD-release show will go from 7:30 p.m. till 10:30 p.m. at the Schoolhouse, 2781 Towne Road. For the rare performance by O’Connell and the band, the cover charge is $10.

Buhler’s band — pianist Linda Dowdell, bassist Ted Enderle, drummer Tom Svornich — will get together again for two more CD-release parties next Saturday, July 28, at Wine on the Waterfront in Port Angeles and Sept. 15 at Manresa Castle in Port Townsend.

a passion, acquiring a clarinet in seventh grade, an alto sax in eighth grade, a tenor sax in ninth and a flute in 10th grade. Growing up in Newport Beach, Calif., Buhler earned the money for those first instruments with his newspaper route: $25 for the first saxophone and $75 for the flute.

‘What music does’ And the result they’re going for? It’s what music does, Buhler says. When played from the heart, it is “hopefully, making the world a sweeter place.” As a clarinetist and then as a flute and alto and tenor saxophone player, Buhler has sought to do so since he was a young teen. Born with two eye conditions, congenital nystagmus and ocular albinism, he never could play ball. He played music, though, with

Junior high hero “It was the band director, Richard Watts, who gave me a new lease on life when he admitted me to the Horace Ensign Junior High School band,” Buher recalled. Across California and Washington state, Buhler has collaborated with musicians of many persuasions. He was born in Pasadena, Calif., but moved to the Northwest in 1980. He’s still a member, however, of Honk!, a Laguna

Beach, Calif., surf band — as well as the leader of Sequim’s 18-piece Stardust Big Band. “There are those who make big waves in the business,” Buhler said, referring to some of his Southern California cohorts. “I make small ripples,” hence his CD’s title. These ripples feel right to Buhler. He adores the artists on this record, just as he savors the tunes they play. “What I was trying to do is pick standards you don’t hear all the time,” he said. One such cut is No. 5 on the record, Bronislau Kaper and Paul Francis Webster’s “Invitation.” Buhler also includes Gordon Parks’ “Don’t Misunderstand,” the Betty Comden-Adolph Green tune “Never Never Land” and his own treatment of Cole Porter’s “What Is This Thing Called Love?,” simply titled “What?” To begin the CD, he couldn’t resist “The Midnight Sun Will Never Set.” The tune “has this smoky, cloudy quality. So I thought: Even though it’s a ballad, I’m going to put it first.” The recording session had a chemistry, Buhler added, that was “just perfect. There was a sweetness to it. “There were no bad

Jazzman Craig Buhler celebrates his new CD, “Ripples,” with a concert tonight at the Dungeness Schoolhouse and three more performances at Port Williams Lavender this weekend. vibes at all. Linda [Dowdell] is very sensitive; she doesn’t dig a lot of cynicism you get with a lot of jazz musicians.” Buhler and the band recorded “Ripples” in his music teaching studio near McComb Gardens in Sequim; coincidentally, they will give a concert at the nursery at 751 McComb Road at 1 p.m. Aug. 5. On the CD jacket, Buhler also thanks Nancy Renner, who lent her piano, affectionately known as Gertrude Steinway, to the effort. In addition to his CDrelease parties, Buhler is looking forward to three performances this weekend at Port Williams Lavender, one of the farms on this weekend’s Heritage Farm Tour (www.SequimLavender Farms.org). In his ninth year as part of the laven-

der-festival weekend, Buhler and his ensemble will play from 2 p.m. till 5 p.m. today, Saturday and Sunday in the field at 1442 Port Williams Road. “My other passion,” Buhler added, “is directing the Stardust Big Band,” which periodically plays at 7 Cedars Casino. The outfit will close out Sequim’s free Music in the Park series with a concert — and a dance, Buhler hopes — from 6 p.m. till 8 p.m. Aug. 28 at the James Center, the bandstand beside Carrie Blake Park at 202 N. Blake Ave. “Stardust is all about dancing,” he says. But whether they’re moving to the swing tunes or just listening to the jazz on “Ripples,” his intention is the same. “I just want people to experience the joy of the music.”


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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

PS

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Coming Up

CONTINUED FROM 2 nights of music and feasting. The finale that night To purchase, visit Port will be delivered by the Book & News, 104 E. First Lloyd Jones Struggle from St., Port Angeles, Pacific Portland, Ore. Tickets are $15 per day Mist Books at 121 W. Washington St., Sequim, or for just the music; $35 per www.BrownPaperTickets. day for music and dinner or $65 for both days and com.

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The Summertime Singers, an ensemble composed of vocalists from the Wild Rose and Rainshadow chorales and other local groups, will give a concert Thursday at Port Townsend’s Trinity United Methodist Church. The singers include, from left, Pat Rodgers, Sydney Keegan, Jon Stafford, Linda Bach, Claus Janssen, Bobbie McMahon, Susan Reid, Malcolm Hepworth, Klaus Butz, Doug Rodgers and Dave Gaenicke. Taylor St. uptown. Doors will open at 6:30 p.m., and admission is by a suggested $10 donation for adults, while children get in free. Refreshments will flow after the performance. As with each monthly Candlelight Concert, proceeds benefit local Port Townsend charities and Trinity’s restoration program.

Descendants of S’Klallam Women Claiming Gender Discrimination Mobilize to Reconstitute the Clallam General Council A Meeting of the Clallam General Council (CGC) will be held on

Sunday, July 22, 2012 at 3:00 pm at the Fort Townsend State Park

For more details, phone 360-774-1644.

David Sedaris in PA PORT ANGELES — Tickets are on sale for the North Olympic Peninsula appearance by writer and humorist David Sedaris on Wednesday, Nov. 21. Sedaris, a well-loved contributor to “This American Life” and other public radio shows and the author of Naked, Me Talk Pretty One Day and other books, will appear at 7 p.m. at the Port Angeles High School auditorium, 304 E. Park Ave., in a benefit for the Jefferson Clemente Course

in the Humanities. Tickets are $30 for general reserved seating, $15 for students; a special $50 ticket guarantees a seat in the first 10 rows plus priority in line for Sedaris’ book signing afterward. Ticket outlets include Port Book & News, 104 E. First St., Port Angeles; Quimper Sound, 230 Taylor St., Port Townsend; and www. BrownPaperTickets.com. To learn more about the Jefferson Clemente Course, a provider of free college humanities courses to lowincome students, visit jeffersonclemente.word press.com. Peninsula Spotlight

Kevin Tracy

near Port Townsend, following the annual Campbell Family Potlatch beginning at noon. The purposes of this meeting will be to reconstitute the council by electing new officials, and to update the federal government regarding outstanding treaty rights claims. Certain descendants of Tammoy Woodman recently applied to the Jamestown S’Klallam for enrollment, but were denied by both the Tribal Council and Tribal Court. Interested individuals, who cannot attend the aforementioned meeting, may contact the Clallam General Council through the Tammoy Woodman Foundation, (360) 681-4860 or heachty@msn.com.

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For more information, visit www.sequimballoonfestival.com

PORT TOWNSEND — The Summertime Singers, a choir of 16 vocalists from ensembles about town, are getting together for a “Candlelight Concert” on Thursday. The singers, who come from the Wild Rose Chorale, Rainshadow and other local groups, will offer an evening of favorites by American composers including the new arrangement of the hymn “Wondrous Love” by Sue Neimoyer, a musicology professor at the University of Utah. Patriotic pieces from early America include “Hail Columbia,” a song from the first Presidential campaign, “For Jefferson and Liberty,” and William Billings’ “Chester.” The spiritual “Deep River” and Aaron Copland’s “At the River,” plus the gospel songs “Precious Lord, Take My Hand,” “Ain’t That Good News” and “He Never Failed Me Yet” lead up to the culmination: “Flowers,” a poem local composer Karl Bach set to music especially for the Summertime Singers. An audience sing-along is likely at this gathering, to start at 7 p.m. Thursday at Trinity United Methodist Church, 609

7649865

General Seating Only Available at: SEQUIM - Seven Cedars Casino–Totem Rewards Desk, Purple Haze Lavender, The Tattoo Guy, 101 Outpost, Islander Pizza and Pasta, Hardy’s Market on Old Olympic Highway. PORT ANGELES - Coogs Budget CD’s PORT TOWNSEND - The Highway 20 Road House

‘Wondrous’


PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

5

TRAVELINGTale-teller Folk singer makes stop at Coyle community center

BY DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

COYLE — A troubadour arrives at the Laurel B. Johnson Community Center this Saturday night, via London, Paris and all 50 of the United States. Rupert Wates is touring in support of his latest CD, “At the Losers’ Motel” — winner of abundant praise to go with Wates’ many songwriting awards. He’ll pull in to the intimate community center at 7:30 p.m. All ages are welcome, and admission is by donation. On “Motel,” Wates is by turns a wistful, romantic and witty tale-teller. The tracks range from “When Love Came to Stay” and “Be Near Me” to “What Will You Regret,” “Why I Had to Leave” and “Bird of Dawn.”

Inspiration all over “I find inspiration in all places,” Wates said this week. “To be on the road is always stimulating.” The London-born Wates has won more than 25 songwriting awards and released five CDs now. With 2010’s “Joe’s Cafe,” an

album of 15 songs based on true stories, he sought to tell the story of America, his adopted country: two world wars, the Dust Bowl and the Great Depression, the Vietnam War and the Civil Rights movement, all the way to the 21st century. “Joe’s Cafe,” recorded in just one night, has found appreciative audiences across this continent, Wates writes on his website, www.RupertWates Music.com. He took it to fringe festivals in Kansas City, Mo., Victoria and San Francisco, where his performance won the “best music revue” award. “At the Losers’ Motel,” recorded at Echo Mountain Studios in Asheville, N.C., is likewise enchanting the critics. “I’m not sure which to praise more: Rupert Wates’ marvellous lyrics, the spotless music, or that streetside cabaret folk voice of his,” Mark S. Tucker of the Folk And Acoustic Music Exchange writes. “This is one gifted S.O.B., throwing off song after affecting song with what appears to be complete ease.” Though Wates lived in Paris from 2001 till fall

mance, Wates responded with simplicity and candor. “Wouldn’t you rather be listening to some real live music?” he asked. For more details and directions to the Laurel B. Johnson Community Center at 923 Hazel Point Road, phone concert series promoter Norm Johnson at

360-765-3449 or 206-4596854 or email johnson 5485@msn.com. Information about forth-

coming concerts is also available at www.hazel point.info.

R-Bar proudly presents:

Jimmy Hoffman

ON STAGE

July 21st, 2012 -

Abbey Mael Boys

& the Home Schoo

Saturday, July 21st t pm - 11pm Thursday is Karaoke with DJ Carissa

Tuesday night is Game Night! with free pool and beer pong

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Rupert Wates brings his intimate folk songs to the Laurel B. Johnson Community Center on Saturday night.


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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Singersongwriter Simon Lynge appears Sunday night for another concert in the Key City Cabaret series.

Into ‘The Future’ Vocalist Lynge set to perform Key City cabaret-style concert BY DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PORT TOWNSEND — Fresh from the Alianait Arts Festival in Nunavut, Canada, Simon Lynge will bring his modern folk music back home for an intimate performance at the Key City Playhouse this Sunday. A look at Lynge’s website shows he’s a long way from your typical American singer-songwriter. Lynge grew up in Greenland in a family of Greenlandic and Danish

descent, and learned music from his accordion-playing father, Karl. “The accordion [is] a much-revered instrument in Greenland,� Lynge says. He is likewise reverent about the power of song. “As a kid I lived in Alluitsoq on the very southern tip of Greenland; it was a small village of about 40 people. It’s an incredibly beautiful place,� he says. “I think living there shaped my understanding of the oneness of everything,� Lynge adds. Yet “I still struggle when talking about it, as it seems to me

Skagit Artists Together

that words can’t really contain it. But the combination of words and music gets close.� Reviewers liken Lynge’s songs to those recorded in the 1970s by Simon and Garfunkel or Cat Stevens, yet with a modern twist. The artist accompanies himself on piano or guitar and is often joined by his wife Janna Marit, whose voice Port Townsend audiences know for her singing in Key City Public Theatre’s “Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris� revue earlier this month. Row in Nashville, at the Kashmir Club in London Optimism and at Copenhagen’s Tivoli Gardens. Oh, and then he Lynge, who recently stopped in at Seattle’s Tritoured Europe, has ple Door for a gig May 9. released a CD titled “The Lynge said this week Future,� which he introthat he’s more than ready duces on his website with for Sunday the Key City an optimistic sentiment. He “has been to the future, Playhouse. He adores the intimate setting, and noted and he likes what he saw that he’ll play a variety of . . . the mountains and the rivers and the beauty of us his new original songs. “I’m in the process of all,� the home page prorecording the follow-up to claims. my debut album,� he said, Lynge moved to the “but I’ll play older songs as North Olympic Peninsula well, and I usually mix in a four and a half years ago, few covers,� perhaps even but has been away on the road for much of that time. some from Simon and Garfunkel. He’s opened for Emmylou Lynge’s Port Townsend Harris, performed on Music

Rezendes, a singer and guitarist who sought to create a series of performances that felt a lot like house concerts, admires Lynge’s sound and style. “Simon composes wellcrafted pop songs in the tradition of Paul Simon, James Taylor and Paul McCartney,� he said, adding that Lynge creates his music in an original, yet familiar, way.

Great range “Simon has a remarkable vocal range . . . he is also a multi-instrumentalconcert is part of the caba- ist, equally comfortable on ret concert series presented guitar, keyboards and perby Key City Public Theatre cussion,� Rezendes said. and George Rezendes’ ToolAs for Lynge, he is Shed Soundlab recording headed back onto the road studio. It’s the penultimate the day after his Port show in the series; blueTownsend show. He’ll grass artists Laurie Lewis depart Monday for Qaqorand Tom Rozum will give toq, Greenland, to do a conthe final concert Aug. 5 at cert with his father. the Key City Playhouse, Wherever he travels, the 419 Washington St. singer seeks to lift spirits. Tickets are selling “If people leave my show briskly for the Lewiswith just a little more joy Rozum evening, Rezendes in their heart than they said. came in with,� Lynge said, Tickets to each of the “I’m happy.� 7:30 p.m. cabaret concerts More information about are $15 at Quimper Sound, the Key City cabaret con230 Taylor St., and at certs awaits at www.Key Crossroads Music, 2100 CityPublicTheatre.org and Lawrence St. at 360-379-0195.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

7

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

Country western up and comer ney developed his guitar playing with the help of Lonesome Steve Mitchell, and tried out their music at Billy McHale’s Restaurant in Lynnwood. “We used to do a live acoustic show once a week for tips and steak,” McKinney recalled. For Saturday’s concert, McKinney and his band will play songs from the “Be Real” record McKinney made after winning the Music City Madness contest for best unsigned artist in 2009. Since then, he’s opened for Dwight Yoakam, Taylor Swift, Alan Jackson and George Strait.

Rising star to play ‘Quilbilly’ BY JENNIFER JACKSON FOR PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

QUILCENE — Chance McKinney may not be a Quilbilly, but he is a Lolo Logger. A Montana native, McKinney grew up in Lolo, south of Missoula, where the school mascot was the Lolo Logger. His grandfather, Merle McKinney, pioneered the logging industry in the Bitterroot Mountains. His father and uncles worked in the woods. And when he grew up, Chance did, too. “I slashed for a couple of summers, and did brush piling for my uncle’s company,” he said. “A lot of my work ethic came from logging.”

Headliner

Best-seller Chance McKinney will perform Saturday in the first “Quillbilly Country and Western” show. McKinney, who plays traditional and rock-edged country music, describes himself as a “Montana redneck” with Washingtonian overtones. After graduating from Big Sky High School in Missoula, he attended Washington State University, where

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Tickets for Saturday’s concert will be available at the gate for $20 for adults or $10 for students, while children younger than 12 get in free. Grandfather Food and drink vendors and artisans’ displays will His grandfather Merle be part of the event, while worked in the woods until proceeds will benefit the he was 62, hooking and Quilcene Historical Musedriving — working on the landing and driving logging um’s Worthington Park trucks — until the day the campaign. For more information, visit www.Linger state made him retire, LongerProductions.com or McKinney said. Kellee Bradley, a Seattle phone 360-765-3321.

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he majored in mathematics and was Division 1 AllAmerican in track and field. He went to work for the Seattle Seahawks out of college in sales and marketing, then coached track and field at the University of Washington. While in Seattle, McKin-

singer-songwriter, will open the Quilcene concert, which starts at 3 p.m. Saturday at the Linger Longer stage next to the Quilcene Historical Museum on Columbia Street, just a block off U.S. Highway 101.

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McKinney is now a country singer with a bestselling CD, “Be Real,” with a Country Music Television Music Madness award and two years of touring under his belt. He’s played to crowds of up to 18,000 at venues such as the Willamette Country Music Festival in Oregon, Seattle’s Qwest Field and the Tacoma Dome’s outdoor stage. On Saturday, he will play the first “Quilbilly Country and Western” show on the Linger Longer Stage at Worthington Park, and offer a set of songs to reflect his working-class roots. “That’s what I relate to best, what my music resonates with,” McKinney said in a phone interview this week.

Nowadays, he headlines shows throughout the Northwest and is in demand at the Boeing Co., which hired him to play for 7,000 workers at the Renton plant for the rollout celebration of the 747 Max jet. Before the Quilcene concert, McKinney will play for soldiers at Joint Base Lewis-McChord. For a sample of his style, go to www.YouTube. com, enter his name and click on “Be Real” or “Wildlife Conservation.” The former is of McKinney singing the song in a gym to the entire student body of Kamiak High School, where McKinney taught math until he went on the

road two years ago. Chance is not McKinney’s given name, but the nickname his grandfather gave him when he was going through growth spurts to reach his 6-foot-6inch height. “Growing up that fast, I was clumsy,” McKinney said. “He called me that because there was always a chance I wouldn’t get where I was going without falling down.”


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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

fond

farewell BY DIANE URBANI

DE LA

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Abby Mae & the Homeschool Boys give final Peninsula performance

PAZ

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

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ou can hear the joy, young and clear. It vibrates off the strings, and rings like a chapel bell in Abby’s voice. This musical exuberance has carried four players far and wide, from City Pier in Port Angeles to barn dances in Sequim to Seattle’s Northwest Folklife Festival — and back home again for one last show. In celebration of their new CD and their nearly three years together, Abby Mae & the Homeschool Boys will ________ give one last Port Angeles concert Saturday at Olympic Cellars. The soon-to-break-up band is, from left, Hayden Pomeroy, Abby Latson, Joey Gish and David Rivers.

Abby Mae & the Homeschool Boys, a band that first offered its revved-up folk and gospel on Thanksgiving weekend 2009, has reached its home stretch. Fortunately for the group’s fans, Abby Mae’s last local show, 7 p.m. Saturday at Olympic Cellars, is a CD-release celebration. Abby Mae & the Homeschool Boys’ self-titled, seven-song record, funded by those fans through a Kickstarter.com campaign, will go on sale just as the band members go their separate ways.

The recordings This is the third CD; the first was simply “EP 1” in 2010 and the second, “Wade in the Water” from 2011, has sold like mad over the past year and is still available via www.AbbyMaeand theHomeschoolBoys.com.

On Saturday night, the quartet will do what they have done for the past 32 months: pour souls, strings and fullthroated passion into what they call “old-timey” music. It’s on their new record in various forms: the original “Run Away Ladies,” Iron and Wine’s “Naked As We Came” and a couple of traditionally flavored fiddle tunes, “Drunken Drowsy King Joey” and “28 Red Apples Walk.” There’s “Strip It Down,” a love ballad by banjo player and guitarist David Rivers, and “Sally Cole,” an original murder ballad ironically named after a friend of the band. The Ola Belle Reed song “I’ve Endured,” with a bit of Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” embedded, is here too, with Abby Latson’s heavenward vocals and Joey Gish’s singing fiddle.

Rivers, the producer and arranger of this recording, also invited in Erin Hennessey, a teenage fiddle phenomenon from Port Angeles, as well as three local gospel singers: his father Michael Rivers, Greg Bondy and Dan Cobb. And though Abby Mae’s performances are coming to an end, the opportunity to enjoy the band’s live shows is not.

‘Bootlegs’ As soon as the new CD becomes available Saturday, nine live tracks will be downloadable via www.BandCamp. com, Rivers promised. The set of raw recordings, titled “Bootlegs,” starts with three songs recorded last summer at Gilbert Cellars in Yakima; next come three from Port Angeles’ Snowgrass festival this past winter and finally three at Studio Bob,

the Port Angeles event space, in May. These nine “are like the progression of our band,” said Rivers, who has been Abby Mae & the Homeschool Boys’ principal songwriter, manager and promoter. Rivers, 26, grew up in Port Angeles and went off to Boston to study at the Berklee College of Music, just like his father Michael, founder of the Peninsula Men’s Gospel Singers, did a couple of decades earlier.

The beginning The younger Rivers, now well-known for his guitar, banjo, vocals and wit, brought Abby Mae & the Homeschool Boys together for their first gig at Wine on the Waterfront in Port Angeles on Nov. 27, 2009. TURN

TO

FAREWELL/9


PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

The last of Abby Mae & the Homeschool Boys ABBY MAE & the Homeschool Boys will celebrate the release of their final CD with a concert at Olympic Cellars, 255410 U.S. Highway 101, at 7 p.m. Saturday. Admission is $10, with a portion of proceeds to benefit the Olympic Peninsula Rowing Association. For details, see www.OlympicCellars.com or phone the winery at 360-452-0160. ■ As of Saturday the CD, titled “Abby Mae & the Homeschool Boys,” will be available at the concert and then in two Port Angeles shops: Port Book & News at 104 E. First St. and Renaissance, 401 E. Front St. Information also awaits at www.AbbyMaeandtheHomeschoolBoys.com. ■ While Saturday’s concert is Abby Mae’s last on the North Olympic Peninsula, they have booked one more performance: at the Bainbridge Island Bluegrass Festival at Battle Point Park, Bainbridge Island, on July 28. For details phone 206-849-1968 or visit www.BainbridgeBluegrass.com. Peninsula Spotlight

Farewell: Band played

local, regional venues CONTINUED FROM 8 the community response.” Latson, who has been singing pretty much since He then took the band she could talk, feels the from small, local stages to same. major festivals across the “None of this could ever region, where fans, from have happened,” she said, youngsters on up, cheered without the love and supand stomped for Abby Mae’s renditions of the tra- port that came via encouraging words, spoken offditional “Cluck Old Hen,” stage, backstage and the Beatles’ “Come onstage. Together,” Led Zeppelin’s “Black Dog” and “Jackson,” New endeavors that sassy one made famous by Johnny and At 23, Latson is June Carter Cash. embarking on a new musical endeavor: Standing on Big lineup Shoulders. It’s an acoustic At Wintergrass in Belle- folk duo composed of Latvue this past February, the son and her sweetheart, Dillan Witherow; they’re to band hit a fresh pinnacle, take the Lavender Festiand joined a lineup that included Ricky Skaggs and val’s Fir Street Fair stage at 11 a.m. this Sunday as Kentucky Thunder and well as the Clallam County Tim O’Brien as well as Fair stage the evening of bluegrass groups from Italy, Sweden, Switzerland Aug. 16. “Standing on Shoulders and the Czech Republic. is going to be spectacular,” “We were in disbelief,” said Rivers. Rivers recalls. As for the other HomeAs Abby Mae disbands, school Boys, Gish is headed he sums up his feelings for Western Washington with one word: thankful. “That defines everything University this fall; bassist the band has been about,” Hayden Pomeroy is moving he says, “the friendships, to Port Townsend and

plans to work as a studio musician and form a new band, the Good Machine, with Port Angeles singer Cole Gibson. Rivers, besides working two jobs, also plans to develop new musical frontiers. He’s taking time and care to choose them. The foursome’s last CD, meantime, is quintessential Abby Mae: frolicsome, sweet and sultry by turns. “We had so much fun recording it,” said Latson. When they did “Run Away Ladies,” though, she was having trouble getting into the song. “So to help me smile and laugh,” she recalls, “David, Joey and Hayden all started dancing where I could see them. If ever I had trouble laughing since then, the thought of three homeschool boys interpretive dancing to ‘Run Away Ladies’ cured it.” Turning serious, Latson added that she’s looking forward to seeing “what those boys wind up doing. They are all so talented. I know each of them has great things in store.”

PALOA (2)

FINAL WEEKEND FOR ‘SOUTH PACIFIC’ Above, Danielle Chamberlain and Mark Lorentzen are enchanted by one another as are Sarah Shea and Ron Graham, right, in Port Angeles Light Opera’s “South Pacific,” which has just two performances left: tonight at 7:30 and 2 p.m. Saturday at Port Angeles High School auditorium, 304 E. Park Ave.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PRESENTS

IN CONCERT

MEN of WORTH Sarah Tucker of Port Angeles transforms Studio Bob into a stage for myriad performing arts.

New PA venue emerges for Peninsula performing artists BY DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PORT ANGELES — The Allé Stage, a brandnew venue for all manner of performing arts, has its first “Open Curtain” evening this Saturday. The stage, whose name is the German word for “all,” lives upstairs inside Studio Bob, that spacious art gallery at 1181/2 E. Front St., and has as its orchestrator Sarah Tucker, the Port Angeles visual artist, costumer, singer, dancer and filmmaker.

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There’s nothing quite like this place in Port Angeles; it’s not a bar or a lounge, Tucker noted, so people of all ages will have the opportunity to perform and attend shows there. “Area coffee houses have been hosting successful open mics for years, featuring seasoned and emerging talent. Open Curtain will

take this a step further,” she added. By lining up performers in advance and giving them the chance to rehearse, she envisions “a special variety show, rather than a potluck of talent.” And this platform, promises Tucker, is “a magical stage.”

Opening act She’s assembled a band of tricksters for the premiere. They’re all over the artistic spectrum: painter and bassist Thom Catts, singer and guitarist Dan Lieberman of the SuperTrees rock’n’roll band, singer Manda Levin, drummer Andrew Harrelson. And Tucker herself will join them Saturday night to perform music by Queen, that vintage British rock band. The Open Curtain mistress of ceremonies is Shannon Cosgrove, and the frolic will begin at 7 p.m. with admission a suggested $5 donation.

“[Cosgrove’s] sharp wit and spectacular voice will guide the show,” Tucker said. She hailed Harrelson too: “Andrew is 15, and will also be performing several songs on his guitar and singing with his beautiful voice.”

Third Saturday Future Open Curtain nights, slated for the third Saturday of the month, are just one facet of the Allé Stage, Tucker noted. The space also will be a venue during downtown Port Angeles’ Second Weekend art activities. Since Studio Bob hosts a visual art exhibition from 5 p.m. till 8 p.m. every second Saturday of the month, she plans to add performers — musicians and others — who will complement that show. To find out more about the Allé Stage, search for it on Facebook or email Sarah@Tuckerart.com.


PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Soothing sounds to spill from barn Olympic Music Festival continues BY DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

QUILCENE — An Italian Serenade, some Beethoven and some Brahms will fill the barn — and much of the surrounding farm — during the Olympic Music Festival’s set of concerts this weekend. Members of the Carpe Diem String Quartet, cellist David Hardy and violist Alan Iglitzin will join together at 2 p.m. both Saturday and Sunday for these “Concerts in the Barn,” part of the summer season at the festival farm at 7360 Center Road. While Iglitzin is founder of the Olympic Music Festival, Hardy is here for the first time. A founding member of the Kennedy Center Chamber Players of Washington, D.C., he’s now a professor of cello at the Peabody Conservatory of Music at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

The Carpe Diem, back for their second weekend on the farm, are violinists Charles Wetherbee and John Ewing and violist Korine Fujiwara. The five players will offer Beethoven’s String Quartet in F Major, Brahms’ String Quintet in G Major and Hugo Wolf’s Italian Serenade not only for those seated on cushioned pews or hay bales inside the barn, but also for the people lolling on the lawn outside.

1 p.m. for those who choose to sit inside. Tickets to Olympic Music Festival concerts, which continue every weekend through Sept. 2, range from $18 to $33 depending on indoor or outdoor seating. Details await at 360-732-4800 and www. olympicmusicfestival.org.

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

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‘Pecos Bill’ to ride into Hadlock PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PORT HADLOCK — Oregon Shadow Theatre will present two performances of “Pecos Bill: A Tall Tale” at the Jefferson County Library at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Tuesday. In the folklore of the American West, Pecos Bill has been called the creator of the Rio Grande, the lasso, the rodeo and the first cowboy songs. The performance follows Bill from his childhood — he was raised by coyotes — through adven-

tures such as fighting mythical beasts, riding a cyclone and falling in love with a woman who rides catfish, to the inevitable settling of the West.

‘Back in them days’ Mick Doherty takes on the character of an old man who was a cowboy “back in them days.” Visible downstage from the shadow screen, the old man shares the story of Pecos Bill. The storyteller fades into darkness as the char-

acters come to life with colorful shadow puppets. Deb Chase brings the puppets to life as Doherty provides musical and accompanying sound effects. The events are free and open to the public. The Jefferson County Library is located at 620 Cedar Ave. in Port Hadlock. For more information, phone the library at 360385-6544 or visit the website at www.jclibrary.info.

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Across the farm The concerts, broadcast via the farm sound system, are a rustic, casual experience that has unfolded on the 55-acre estate for 29 years now. Music lovers are invited to come early — gates open at 11 a.m. — to picnic, explore the farm and shop in the “milking shed” full of snacks, beverages, CDs and souvenirs. Barn doors open at

Copy Cats to perform at PT’s Victoria House PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

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PORT TOWNSEND — The Copy Cats will perform a concert of 1950s and ’60s classic pop renditions at Victoria House, 491 Discovery Road, at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday. The public is welcome to attend the free concert. Appetizers and mocktails will be served. For more information, phone 360-379-8223.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

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PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

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Clallam County Port Angeles/Joyce Bar N9NE (229 W. First St.) — DJ Estaban, tonight, 9 p.m.; DJ Square, Saturday, 8 p.m. (with Roller Derby After Party); Justin Scott Rivet (solo, acoustic jazz, blues, rock and country), Monday, 8 p.m. to 10 p.m.; karaoke, Wednesday, 9 p.m. to 2 a.m.; open mic, Thursday, 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. Castaways Night Club (1213 Marine Drive) — The Night Beats (hits of the 1950s through the ’70s), tonight, 9 p.m.; Badd Dogs Blues Society, Saturday, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.; Jerry’s Country Jam, Thursday, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. The Coo-Coo Nest (1017 E. First St.) — Mydlyfe, Crysys Fluffy and Diimmel, Distinction and The Ungreatful Living, tonight, 10 p.m. Dupuis Restaurant (256861 U.S. Highway 101) —

Bob and Dave (blues), Wednesday through Saturday, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.

W. First St.) — Mick and Barry (acoustic country and folk), Sunday, 6 p.m.

Fairmount Restaurant (1127 W. U.S. Highway 101) — Les Wamboldt and Olde Tyme Country with guest Bill Camuso, tonight, 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.; country jam, Sunday, 5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.; Dave and Rosalie Secord’s Luck of the Draw Band with guest yodeler Wanda Bumgarner, Tuesday, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Olympic Cellars (255410 U.S. Highway 101) — Abby Mae and the Homeschool Boys (last appearance concert in support of the Olympic Peninsula Rowing Association Health and Wellness Program), Saturday, 7 p.m.

Front Street Alibi (1605 E. Front St.) — Night Beats, Saturday, 8:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. The Junction Roadhouse (U.S. Highway 101 and state Highway 112, junction) — Hambone Wilson (rocking/ dancing blues with guest Evan John), tonight, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.; Ches Ferguson, Tuesday, 7 p.m.; Jason Mogi and Deadwood Experiment, Thursday, 8 p.m. Next Door Gastropub (113

Port Angeles Senior Center (Seventh and Peabody streets) — Wally and the Boys (ballroom dance favorites), Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., $5, first timers free. R Bar (132 E. Front St) — Karaoke, Thursday, 8 p.m. Salt Creek Restaurant and Lounge (state Route 112 and Camp Hayden Road, Joyce) — Deadwood Revival (oldtime Appalachia, soulful roots and jam-band improvisation), Saturday, 9 p.m., $3. Wine on the Waterfront

(115 E. Railroad Ave.) — R&B (Rachael and Barry play Motown and classic rock), Saturday, 8 p.m., $3.

Sequim and Blyn The Cedars at Dungeness Stymie’s Bar and Grill (1965 Woodcock Road) — Trevor and Sam (sea shanties and Irish pub songs), tonight, 6 p.m. Dungeness Bay Wine and Cheese Bar (123 E. Washington St.) — Thom Davis (acoustic blues), Saturday, 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. Oasis Sports Bar and Grill (301 E. Washington St.) — Gil Yslas and Ruby Jean, tonight, 5:30 p.m.; Final Approach (boomer music), Wednesday, 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

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Alchemy (842 Washington St.) — Trevor Hanson (classical guitar), Monday, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. The Boiler Room (711 Water St.) — Open mic Thursday, sign up 7 p.m., starts at 8, an all ages venue. Ichikawa Japanese Cuisine (1208 Water St.) — Trevor Hanson (classical guitar), Thursday, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.

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

Hadlock House (141 Chimacum Road) — Karaoke, tonight and Saturday, 9 p.m. to 1:30 a.m.

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July 20-22, 2012

7 Cedars Casino (270756 U.S. Highway 101) — Joey James Dean (party band plays country and rock), tonight, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.; The Move (high-energy dance band), Saturday, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.; Hell’s Belles (AC/DC tribute band), Sunday, 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.; Comedy Night, Wednesday, 8:30 p.m.

The Owl Sprit (218 Polk St.) — Steve Grandinetti (solo guitar), Thursday, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Port Townsend Brewing Co. (330 10th St.) — Tim Halpin and the Better Half (blues, with guest Andy Koch), tonight, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.; Skip Morris Trio (Skip with Dirk Anderson on string bass and Tom Svornich on drums, jazz), Sunday, 3 p.m. to 6 p.m.; Jenny Davis (jazz vocalist), Wednesday, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sirens (823 Water St.) — Sirens Summer Tiki Beach DJ Dance Party, tonight, 10 p.m.; The Omega Moo, Saturday, 10 p.m., $5; Uno Dos Trio (straight and Latin jazz), Sunday, 7 p.m.; fiddler jam session, Tuesday, 7 p.m.; open mic, Wednesday, 9 p.m.; karaoke, Thursday, 9 p.m.

Port Hadlock

Pondicherri West (119 E. Washington) — “Jazzy� Judy Clark, tonight and Saturday from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.

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Sequim Senior Activity Center (921 E. Hammond St.) — Kelly and Victor host an open mic, Wednesday 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. (sign up 6 p.m.)

9122 Rhody Drive chimacumcorner.com

Key City Cabaret (419 Washington St.) — Simon Lynge (singer/songwriter), Sunday, 8 p.m., $15. Northwest Maritime Center Cafe (421 Water St.) — Steve Grandinetti (solo guitar), Thursday, noon to 2 p.m.

Upstage (923 Washington St.) — Jim Nyby and the F Street Band (New Orleans style rock, blues and roots), tonight, 8 p.m., $6; Hot Rod’s Blues Revue, Saturday, 8 p.m., $12 advance tickets; Rex Rice’s Penultimate Sunday Jazz Jam, Sunday, 6 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., $5; open mic, Monday, 5 p.m.; Centrum Port Townsend Jazz Fest Jazz Jam, Tuesday and Wednesday, 7 p.m.; Jazz in the Clubs Jazz Port Townsend with Tamir Hendelman, piano, Martin Wind, bass and Matt Wilson, drums, Thursday. Uptown Pub (1016 Lawrence St.) — Open mic hosted by Greg Vinson, Tuesday, 8 p.m. This listing, which appears every Friday, announces live entertainment at nightspots in Clallam and Jefferson counties. Call in your information by Tuesday to 360-417-3527, fax it to 360417-3521, or e-mail news@ peninsuladailynews.com.

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

Peninsula Spotlight Every Friday in PENINSULA DAILY NEWS


PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

13

ASH THAT MAN RIGHT W A NN O G I’M OUT OF MY HAIR...

... AND GO SEE THE

FINAL PERFORMANCES OF

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Christian Bale as Bruce Wayne, left, and Anne Hathaway as Selina Kyle in the action thriller “The Dark Knight Rises,” opening tonight.

PS

PALOA MUSICAL THEATER’S Rodgers & Hammerstein’s

At the Movies: Week of July 20-26

Port Angeles “The Amazing SpiderMan” (PG-13) — Peter Parker (Andrew Garfield) finds a clue that might help him understand why his parents disappeared when he was young. His path puts him on a collision course with Dr. Curt Connors (Rhys Ifans), his father’s former partner. Also starring Emma Stone and Martin Sheen as Uncle Ben. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes 4:30 p.m., 7:10 p.m. and 9:50 p.m. daily, plus 1:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.

“Brave” (PG — Animated) — Determined to make her

“The Dark Knight Rises” (PG-13) — Eight years after Batman (Christian Bale) took the fall for Two Face’s crimes, a new terrorist leader, Bane (Tom Hardy), overwhelms Gotham’s finest, and the Dark Knight resurfaces to protect a city that has branded him an enemy. With Gary Oldman, Michael Caine, Anne Hathaway and Liam Neeson. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes 4:15 p.m., 5:15 p.m., 7:25 p.m., 8:25 p.m. and 9:25 p.m. daily, plus 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. “Ice Age: Continental Drift” (PG — Animated) — Manny, Diego and Sid embark upon another adventure after

their continent is set adrift. Using an iceberg as a ship, they encounter sea creatures and battle pirates as they explore a new world. With the voices of Ray Romano, Denis Leary and John Leguizamo. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes 4:45 p.m., 6:45 p.m. and 8:45 p.m. daily, plus 12:45 p.m. and 2:45 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. “Magic Mike” (R) — A male stripper teaches a younger performer how to party, pick up women and make easy money. Starring Channing Tatum, Alex Pettyfer, Olivia Munn and Matthew McConaughey. At Lincoln Theater. Showtimes 6:45 p.m. and 9 p.m. daily, plus 4:30 p.m. today through Sunday. “Savages” (R) — Pot growers (Ben Aaron Johnson) and Chon (Taylor Kitsch) face off against the Mexican drug cartel who kidnapped their shared girlfriend (Blake Lively). At Lincoln Theater. Showtime and 9:45 p.m. daily.

TURN TO AT THE MOVIES/15

FINAL TWO PERFORMANCES!

Fri, July 20, 7:30 Sat, July 21, 2:00 Tickets $20, $16 & $12

Port Angeles Performing Arts Center

www.paloa.org TICKETS AVAILABLE AT

Sequim Gym 145 E Washington St, Sequim

(360) 681-2555

Northwest Fudge and Confections 108 W First St, PA

(360) 452-8299

27638794

“The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel” (PG-13) — British retirees travel to India to take up residence in what they believe is a newly restored hotel. Less luxurious than its advertisements, the Marigold Hotel nevertheless slowly begins to charm in unexpected ways. Starring Judi Dench, Bill Nighy and Maggie Smith. At Lincoln Theater. Showtimes 7:15 p.m. daily, plus 4:45 p.m. today through Sunday.

own path in life, Princess Merida (voice of Kelly MacDonald), a skilled archer and impetuous daughter of King Fergus (voice of Billy Connolly) and Queen Elinor (voice of Emma Thompson), defies an age-old custom sacred to the lords of the land. At Deer Park Cinema. Showtimes 5 p.m. and 7:05 p.m. daily, plus 12:50 p.m. and 2:55 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.


14

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

2012 SUMMER SEASON $ISCOVER 0ASS NOT REQUIRED FOR ENTRY

Wycliffe Gordon

0/24 4/7.3%.$ WRITERS’ CONFERENCE Erin Belieu, Artistic Director

3UN *ULY n 3AT *ULY Daily lectures at 4PM and daily readings at 7:30 PM take place at the Joseph F. Wheeler Theater, and are open to the public at no cost. 6)3)4 777 #%.425- /2' 72)4).' for full schedule of festitval participants and author readings. &RIDAY *ULY 4:00 pm Lecture: Dorothy Allison 7:30 pm Reading: Cheryl Strayed and Dana Levin 3ATURDAY *ULY 7:30 pm Reading: Pam Houston

*!:: 0/24 4/7.3%.$ John Clayton, Artistic Director All-Festival Package: $128/$98/$77 Mainstage Package $90/$60/$39

&RI *ULY -C#URDY 0AVILION PM $38/$29/$19 Eric Reed Trio with special guest Walter Smith III Eric Reed (p), Mike Gurrola (b), Kevin Kanner (d), Walter Smith III (t sax)

LIVE FORT WORDEN STATE PARK, PORT TOWNSEND, WA

Erin Belieu

Los Lobos

Mary Stallings

3AT !UGUST McCurdy Pavilion, 1:30 pm $36/$26/$18 Routes of the Blues Centrum Gospel Choir, Angela Hill, Director, with Rev. Robert B. Jones Orville Johnson and Grant Dermody Tim Sparks Louisiana Blues with Bruce “Sunpie� Barnes

Visit www.centrum.org/jazz for schedule ($25 Evening Club Pass)

Ann Rabson

4HURS *ULY PM n PM Venues: The Public House / The Upstage / NW Maritime Center

Chicago Blues with Billy Flynn and Daryl Davis

&RI *ULY 3AT *ULY PM n AM Venues: The Public House / The Upstage Castle Key / Rose Theatre / Undertown / Key City Playhouse / NW Maritime Center

Kevin Kanner Sherrie Maricle

John Clayton

Kelby MacNayr

Dawn Clement

Eric Reed Trio

Chuck Deardorf

Walter Smith III

Graham Dechter

Gary Smulyan

Dena DeRose

Terell Stafford

Bruce Forman

Mary Stallings

3 3AT *ULY -C#URDY 0AVILION PM $47/$34/$22

Benny Green

Jay Thomas

Rodney Green

Byron Vannoy

Benny Green Trio with special guest Gary B Smulyan Benny Green (p), Ben Wolfe (b), Rodney Green (d), Gary Smulyan, (b sax)

Wycliffe Gordon

Sachal Vasandani

Mike Gurrola

Laura Welland

Randy Halberstadt

Jiggs Whigam

Introducing Dena DeRose Dena DeRose (p/v), Martin Wind (b), Matt Wilson (d)

Jon Hamar

Matt Wilson

Jeff Hamilton

Martin Wind

The Shadow of Your Smile: The Music of Johnny Mandel Centrum Faculty All-Star Big Band directed by NEA Jazz Master Johnny Mandel

Tamir Hendelman

Ben Wolfe

“Drummage� Jeff Hamilton and Matt Wilson (d (drums) T Tamir Hendelman (p), Chuck Deardorf (b), R Rodney Green (d)

Daryl Davis, Artistic Director All-Festival Package: $66/$56/$51 (includes clubs)

*!:: in the clubs

Jeff Clayton

“Six String Masters� with Bruce Forman and Graham Dechter (guitars)

0/24 4/7.3%.$ ACOUSTIC BLUES FESTIVAL

Robert Belfour and Phil Wiggins

BLUES in the clubs Visit www.centrum.org/blues for schedule ($25 Evening Club Pass) &RI !UGUST AND 3AT !UGUST PM TO AM %XPANDED 6ENUES The Public House / The Upstage / Undertown / Key City Playhouse / Khu Larb Thai / American Legion / The Boiler Room Ahmad Baabahar Bruce “Sunpie� Barnes Terry “Harmonica� Bean Robert Belfour Mark Brooks Elan Chalford Billy Citrin Crow Quill Night Owls Daryl Davis Guy Davis Rich DelGrosso Grant Dermody Ari Eisinger Eleanor Ellis Mary Flower Billy Flynn

Angela Hill Steve James Orville Johnson Rev. Robert B. Jones Gary Copeland Lilley Jimmi Mayes Arthur Migliazza John Miller Dean Mueller Jenny Petersen Ann Rabson Lauren Sheehan Tim Sparks Elijah Wald Lightnin’ Wells Phil Wiggins

Cheryl Strayed

Dena DeRose

! 0ROCESSING &EE !PPLIES

Robert Belfour

FREE FRIDAYS AT THE FORT

CONCERTS FOR KIDS

The lunchtime concert series on the lawn of the Nora Porter Commons, from noon to 1:00 pm free to the public. s *ULY Simon Lynge

&ORT 7ORDEN #HAPEL n !Kids: Free (ages 3 and up) Adults: $5 (at door only)

s *ULY

Jazz Port Townsend Participant Showcase

s !UG

John Miller / Gary Copeland Lilley & Ahmad Baabahar

&RI !UG Lightnin’ Wells

LOS LOBOS 3UN !UG -C#URDY 0AVILION PM $55/$40/$25

27626856

Johnny Mandel

Graham Dechter Quartet with Special Guests Graham Dechter (g), Tamir Hendelman (p), John Clayton (b), Jeff Hamilton (d), with Terell Stafford (tr), Jiggs Whigham (tb), Jeff Clayton (as), Walter Smith III (ts), Gary Smulyan (bs)

Gary Hobbs

James and Nelly Tretter, The Welland Family, The Congdon-Hanson Family, The Richard and Anne Schneider Director’s Creative Fund

Ann Rabson

Mary Stallings with the Eric Reed Trio Mary Stallings (v), Eric Reed (p), Mike Gurrola (b), Kevin Kanner (d)

George Cables

4)#+%43 777 #%.425- /2' OR CALL Eric Reed

3AT *ULY -C#URDY 0AVILION PM $38/$29/$19

Clarence Acox

Dynamic Duos: “A Tribute to JJ & Kai� featuring Wycliffe Gordon and Jiggs Whigham (trombones)

experience

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT


PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

Mark Duplass, from left, Emily Blunt and Rosemarie DeWitt star in “Your Sister’s Sister.”

15

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

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Olympic Theatre Arts Presents

PS At the Movies CONTINUED FROM 13 “Ted” (R) — As the result of a childhood wish, John Bennett’s teddy bear, Ted, came to life and has been by John’s side ever since — a friendship that’s tested when Lori, John’s girlfriend of four years, wants more from their relationship. Starring Mark Wahlberg and Mila Kunis with the voice of Seth MacFarlane as Ted. At Lincoln Theater. Showtimes 7 p.m. and 9:15 p.m. daily, plus 5 p.m. today through Sunday.

Port Townsend “The Dark Knight Rises” (PG-13) — See synopsis under Port Angeles listings. At Rose Theatre. Showtimes 3:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. daily.

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

ton. At Rose Theatre. Showtime 4 p.m. daily. “Your Sister’s Sister” (R) — Iris (Emily Blunt) invites her friend Jack (Mark Duplass) to stay at her family’s island getaway after the death of his brother. At their remote cabin, Jack’s drunken encounter with Hannah (Rosemarie DeWitt), Iris’ sister, kicks off a revealing stretch of days. At Rose Theatre. Showtimes 7:20 p.m. daily, plus 2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. “Savages” (PG-13) — See synopsis under Port Angeles listings. At the Uptown Theatre. Showtimes 5 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. today, 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, 7:30 p.m. Monday

through Thursday. “Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted” (PG — Animated) — Not-so-wild animals Alex, Marty, Gloria and Melman still are fighting to get home to their beloved Big Apple. Their journey takes them through Europe where they find the perfect cover: a traveling circus, which they reinvent — Madagascar style. With the voices of Ben Stiller, Chris Rock and David Schwimmer. And, “Brave” (PG — Animated) — See synopsis under Port Angeles listings. At Wheel-In Motor Movie. Showings Wednesday through Sunday. Box office opens at 8:15 p.m. Showtime at dusk. Movies may change Wednesday.

by Ron House Diz White John Neville-Andrews Alan Shearman & Derek Cunningham

Directed by Debbie Embree Featuring David Toman Debbie Embree David McInnes Alexandria Edouart Garret Hess Brice Embree Steve Shultz

July 20 & 21 at 7:30 and July 22 at 2:00 General Admission $16.50 OTA Members $14.50 Active Military $14.50 Youths (16 and under) $11.50

Reserved seating tickets available at: Box office - 360.683.7326 On-line at www.olympictheatrearts.org

Olympic Theatre Arts 414 N. Sequim Ave., Sequim WA Produced by special arrangement with Samuel French, Inc.

27640870

“Moonrise Kingdom” (PG13) — A girl (Kara Hayward) and a boy (Jared Gilman), both 12, run off to a remote inlet on an island where most of the adults seem disappointed and more than a little sad. The girl and boy are very serious, about love, their plans, books and life itself and often act older than their age. With Bruce Willis, Edward Norton, Bill Murray, Frances McDormand and Tilda Swin-

Where to find the cinemas


16

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

Performing LIVE | august 9 | 8PM

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