Central Kitsap Reporter, April 03, 2015

Page 1

REPORTER CENTRAL KITSAP

KITSAP WEEK: Two local girls spur effort to fund cancer research

FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 2015 | Vol. 30, No. 26 | WWW.CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM | 50¢

IN THIS EDITION

KCSO looking for killer of mom, toddler Heather Kelso, 29, and Kaden Lum, 2, killed at mobile home park

VETERANS Remembering Vietnam, 40 years later

BY CHRIS TUCKER CTUCKER@CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Veterans Life

NEWS Celebrating OC’s Aspen Top 10 ranking

Special section

HEALTH Continuing their fight against cancer

Kitsap Week

Candles were lit in memory of Heather Kelso during a vigil hosted at Chico Alliance Church on March 31.

Chris Tucker / staff photo

Vigils held to honor memory of victims BY PETER O’CAIN AND CHRIS TUCKER

POCAIN@SOUNDPUBLISHING.COM

NEWS Naval Avenue teacher topfive in nation

A3

OPINION Seattle wage showdown

A4

Lum remembered as a Twelve, full of life POULSBO — His life was short but those who knew 2-year-old Kaden Lum say his impact will be longfelt. Heather Kelso “He was a very active and outgoing child,” said Don Jones, Kaden’s great-grandfather. “He loved life.” Around 60 people gathered at Island Lake Park near Poulsbo to remember Kaden. It was his favorite park, said Shon Otwell, Kaden’s great-uncle. He was killed in his sleep early March 28 Kaden Lum

SEE LUM AND KELSO, A9

Chris Tucker / staff photo

Officers stand near a ‘Major crimes unit’ van at Kariotis Mobile Home Park on March 28.

CENTRAL KITSAP – Kitsap County Sheriff ’s Office Detectives are following up on numerous leads and are working to identify a suspect who shot and killed a 2-year-old boy and a 29-year-old woman at the Kariotis Mobile Home Park on March 28. KCSO, Bremerton Police, and Washington State Patrol officers were at 3060 Northeast McWilliams Road in Central Kitsap north of Bremerton on March 28 to process the crime scene. The manager at the private property declined to allow press on the scene, but from the entrance to the mobile home park a KCSO “Major Crimes Unit” van, yellow police tape and several officers were visible. “We’re still trying to determine who the suspect is and what the motivation was,” KCSO Det. Lt. Earl Smith said March 28. The trouble began early that morning: Sheriff ’s deputies were dispatched to a report of gunshots heard at the mobile home park at 2:18 a.m. “We got multiple calls about multiple gunshots being fired in the park,” Sergeant Ken Dickinson said. Officers arrived to a chaotic and unsettled situation. Four people were inside the home when the shootSEE HOMICIDES, A9

CK school district prepares to ‘friend’ social media BY CHRIS TUCKER CTUCKER@CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Teachers and principals may soon be more active on Facebook and Twitter as the Central Kitsap School District develops a policy for how to handle social media.

David Beil, who is the CKSD director of community relations, said some “pockets” of district personnel are currently using social media, but not in an official capacity. A policy could be ready as soon as the end of April. Beil said the accounts could be gradually phased-in.

“We don’t think we really want to see 300 accounts spring up the day after you approve the policy,” Beil said. Beil said the district would take steps to ensure compliance with public records laws. “Does that mean if we had a Facebook account, that would be subject

to public (records law)?,” asked Board President Bruce Richards. “Oh my gosh,” he said. Beil said the district already complies with the law for email and other forms of communication. SEE SOCIAL MEDIA, A9

The Central Kitsap Reporter: Top local stories, every Friday in print. Breaking news daily on CentralKitsapReporter.com and on Facebook


Page A2

WWW.BREMERTONPATRIOT.COM | WWW.CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Friday, April 3, 2015

Protesters aim to stop retail sale of ‘puppy mill’ puppies BY CHRIS TUCKER CTUCKER@CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Around 23 people gathered outside a Silverdale pet and feed store on March 28 to protest the sale of what they said were “puppy mill” puppies. The protesters, with the group Kitsap Animal Advocates, held signs that read “Join the fight against puppy mills,” “Puppy mills sell to pet stores,” and “Honk if you love animals.” Some of the passing motorists honked in support of the protesters’ messages as they zoomed past. One of the protesters, Terry Shuck, said KAA members have been working with lawmakers at the county and state level for more than three years to ban the sale of puppy mill puppies from pet and feed stores. Shuck said that puppies sold at the Farmland Pets and Feed store come from a large-scale breeding operation called BJ’s & Guys, in Menlo, Kansas. Shuck said the protests were held to inform the general public about where the puppies came from. “People (who buy the puppies) feel they are rescuing these puppies, when in fact they are creating demand. The females at the mills are often bred until they die,” Shuck wrote in an email to the Reporter.

“People feel they are rescuing these puppies, when in fact they are creating demand. The females at the mills are often bred until they die,” – Terry Shuck, Kitsap Animal Advocates “What Farmland is doing is not illegal, and we would like to make it illegal,” Shuck wrote. Shuck said county commissioners were the ones who could change the law, but that the sale of puppies was not a priority on the commissioners’ agenda. A manager at store who did not wish to be identified said Farmland and the protesters had a difference of opinion. The manager said that puppies were purchased from a group of commercially licensed kennels including BJ’s and Guys and said all the puppies had current vaccinations and current deworming. “We are not against people buying puppies,” Shuck wrote. “They should buy from a reputable breeder – a good rule of thumb is one who has the mother on the premises.”

Chris Tucker / staff photo

Noelle Kim, Chris Kim, Tracy Kim, Ashley Nelson and an unidentified woman, from right, protest the sale of puppies in Silverdale on March 28.

Women of Achievement

2015

YWCA is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women and promoting peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all.

2 5 T H

L A N N U A

R A T I O N C E L E B

Join us in celebrating women in our community who make a difference by Advertising your business in the YWCA Women of Achievement Section.

Chris Tucker / staff photo

Brownsville Elementary Principal Toby Tebo, right, kisses a goat at the school on March 28.

Awards n tio Presenta

O R AT I V E COMMEM D BY ONSORE TION SP

PUBLICA

pril 21st

A

FERE SAP CON ON • KIT 12:0 0 NO , 2 014 • 2 2 L I R P A

TER NCE CEN

Published in Kitsap Week reaching over 62,000 Homes. Call your local marketing representative to reserve your space today.

Sales Deadline: April 13th Publishes: April 17th

10%

of net procee will be donatedds to the YWCA

Central Kitsap Reporter Bainbridge Review Port Orchard Independent 360-308-9161 360-876-4414 206-842-6613 North Kitsap Herald Bremerton Patriot 360-779-4464 360-308-9161

Brownsville school principal kisses goat 21 times for charity BY CHRIS TUCKER CTUCKER@CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Before a crowd of hundreds of children in the Brownsville Elementary gymnasium on March 31, school Principal Toby Tebo kissed a goat 21 times as part of a fundraiser for children in Kenya. “It’s stinky,” he said of kissing the goat, which wore a bow and apparently had its teeth brushed before the smooch.

“I think the goat was a little nervous,” he said. Tebo kissed the goat 21 times because the school raised enough money – $1,061 – enough to pay for 21 $50 goats for the Free the Children international charity. Two other people besides Tebo kissed the goat. Music teacher Jeremy Dupea collected the most money in a fundraising contest and kissed the animal. Associated Student Body president Connor Huey, 12, also kissed the goat.


Friday, April 3, 2015

WWW.BREMERTONPATRIOT.COM | WWW.CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Page A3

Kitsap County files civil suit to enforce shooting range ordinance County says Kitsap Rifle and Revolver Club did not obtain required permit PORT ORCHARD - Kitsap County filed an action March 31 in Kitsap County Superior Court requesting an injunction against Kitsap Rifle and Revolver Club for failing to obtain a required operational range permit. In September 2014, Kitsap County Commissioners passed Ordinance 515-2014, which became effective December 22, 2014, establishing a requirement that outdoor shooting ranges obtain an operating permit. Existing shooting facilities were provided a 90-day window in which to apply for the permit. That window ended March 23, 2015. Poulsbo Sportsman Club met the submittal requirement date. Kitsap Rifle and Revolver Club (KRCC) did not. A letter was sent to KRRC on March 26 providing until Monday, March 30, 2015 to submit the application. KRRC has not

submitted the permit application. Kitsap County continues to receive complaints regarding intensified shooting activities on the KRRC property. “This ordinance is about bullet containment on shooting range faculties and protecting those neighbors around the ranges,” Department of Community Development Director Larry Keeton said. “More importantly, KRCC participated in the ordinance review process and knew the impending date. Instead of complying with the County’s Code, they choose to ignore it. Kitsap County developed these standards to promote safe uses of shooting ranges. We believe that compliance with the ordinance would significantly address issues concerning safety at the site.” Ordinance 515-2014 requires outdoor shooting facilities to apply for an operat-

ing permit to operate a live-fire shooting range, whether it is new or already in existence. The new code provisions require information regarding its activities, safety protocols, and certain physical infrastructure to contain bullets that could leave the property as a result of misfire, accidental discharge or ricochet. While County Commissioners recognize the importance of shooting ranges for practice and educational purposes, safety is paramount. Until KRRC submits its complete application to Kitsap County for an operating permit, the County will take legal action to urge the court to compel the club to comply. For additional information about the Kitsap County Department of Community Development, visit www.kitsapgov. com/dcd.

Naval Avenue teacher finishes top-five nationally BY PETER O’CAIN

“She has created a learning environment that is successoriented with a positive and caring environment”

POCAIN@SOUNDPUBLISHING.COM

SEATTLE — Top five ain’t bad. That’s where Naval Avenue Early Learning Center teacher Debbie Lindgren finished among elementary PE teachers at SHAPE America’s annual conference in Seattle March 17-21. Lindgren was named the Northwest District Elementary PE Teacher of the Year in early March. “I had a great week meeting and collaborating with excellent physical educators from around the nation,” Lindgren said. Lindgren has been at Naval Avenue since 2008. She also coaches girls basketball at

Library hosts action-oriented book discussion group Kitsap Regional Library has just begun a new book discussion series aimed at serving people who want to do more than just read and discuss. This book group is about action. “Books to Action” will meet the fourth Saturday of each month at Kitsap Regional Library in downtown Bremerton. It seeks to connect a group of readers who are interested in giving back to the community by participating in service projects based on the books they read. “We want to combine reading, compassion and community service in this program,”

– John Welsh, Naval principal

Bremerton High School. “She is able to adjust her instruction to where students are and modify it to their particular level,” said Patty Glaser, community relations coordinator. “She connects well with all students and we are lucky she has chosen to stay in Bremerton.”

SHAPE named Betty Ann Fish, from Chestnut Hill Academy in Philadelphia, PE teacher of the year. Lindgren expected another teacher to win. “I thought JD Hughes from Villa Rica, Georgia, who has five books written would most likely win,” Lindgren said. “I have one of his books on the desk in my office.” Lindgren’s success doesn’t come as a surprise to her colleagues as she’s created a culture in her classes that lends itself toward learning. “Ms. Lindgren works well

with a wide range of students’ individual needs and monitors and adjusts her instruction to meet those needs,” said John Welsh, Naval principal, in a press release. “She has created a learning environment that is success-oriented with a positive and caring climate so that each and every student values physical activity.” As one of five national nominees, Lindgren will be invited to present at next year’s conference in Minneapolis and at other workshops throughout the year.

said librarian Michelle Will. On April 25, the group will discuss “Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life,”

by Barbara Kingsolver. Speaker Karole Johnson, executive director of Seeds of Grace, will discuss sustainable and

organic gardening. The group will be tasked with creating a community garden someplace in Bremerton.

PE teacher Debbie Lindgren

Happy Easter!

Don’t forget to get all of your Gardening Supplies! Plants, Gloves, Tools & Much More!

Arriving weekly Chicks, Ducks & Goslings.

FARMLAND PETS, FEED & GARDEN

(360) 692-0415

9000 Silverdale Way NW

Friendly & Knowledgeable Service Serving Kitsap County for over 37 Years

Photo courtesy Washington State Patrol

A crashed truck sits on Erlands Point Road NW on March 27. According to the Washington State Patrol, it went off SR3 and rolled near the overpass.

Oregon man airlifted after truck rolls off SR3 BY CHRIS TUCKER

CTUCKER@CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

CHICO – A 71-year-old Oregon man was airlifted to Harborview Medical Center after his pickup truck went over a cable road barrier on State Route 3, rolled and crashed down an embankment onto Erlands Point Road NW. The crash occurred March 27 around 9:56 a.m. According to the Washington State Patrol, James L. Deardorff, 71, of Roseburg, Oregon, was driving a white 2015 Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck at the time of the crash. The truck was headed south on SR3 just north of Erlands Point Road NW when it exited the roadway to the left near an overpass, went up and over a cable barrier into the median and continued to travel south in the median. The truck then went down an embankment, rolled and came to a stop on Erlands Point Road NW. “It did roll and the guy sustained a serious injury,” said Washington State Patrol Trooper Russ Winger. The roadway was fully blocked for four hours. According to the WSP report, Deardorff was wearing a seatbelt. Neither drugs nor alcohol were a factor in the crash. The cause of the crash is under investigation. There are no charges or citations at this time. The vehicle was totaled and impounded.


OPINION Central Kitsap

Page A4

WWW.CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Friday, April 3, 2015 | Central Kitsap Reporter

State Auditor Kelly should step aside Presumption of innocence and benefit of the doubt are related concepts. The former is a cherished part of our criminal justice system; the latter, a protection of our less formal but still popular court of public opinion. State Auditor Troy Kelley, whose home was raided and Olympia office records seized by the FBI last month, has not been tried or as yet charged with any crime, nor has the FBI provided many details about its investigation. The probe appears to involve allegations of unpaid taxes from an escrow services business and also may involve a former business partner of Kelley’s who was recently employed part-time by the auditor’s office. The presumption of innocence remains for Kelley. But any benefit of the doubt Kelley enjoyed is quickly vanishing as details elsewhere have trickled out about his past financial dealings with the escrow service business he owned prior to his election to the Auditor’s Office in 2012. The Seattle Weekly, a Sound Publishing newspaper, reported Kelley had claimed records sought by a former business partner, Old Republic Title, as part of a lawsuit were lost in a fire that destroyed the Stewart Title Co. building in Everett in 2008. In the lawsuit, Old Republic claimed that Kelley, who was then a state representative from Pierce County, pocketed $1.2 million in fees collected from escrow customers who had paid off their mortgages. Old Republic claimed the fees should have been returned to clients. Kelley said the records from his business, Post Closing Department, could have proved he had done nothing wrong, but were lost in the 2008 fire. But, the Seattle Weekly reported, Kelley’s explanation of what happened to the records is more convoluted. Scott Smith, attorney for Old Republic, said Kelley’s office was adjacent to, and not in, the Stewart Title building. Kelley admitted under oath in a 2010 deposition that his office suffered only smoke damage and that he couldn’t explain why electronic records, copies of which should have been kept outside the office, weren’t available. Kelley, SEE OPINION, A5

REPORTER CENTRAL KITSAP

645 4th St., Suite 201, Bremerton, WA 98337

MEMBER NEWSPAPER

Administration/Circulation

360-308-9161

Classified Ads

360-394-8700

Display Advertising

360-308-9161

Fax

360-308-9363

Newsroom

360-308-9161

Online edition

CentralKitsapReporter.com

ADMINISTRATION REGIONAL PUBLISHER LORI MAXIM lmaxim@soundpublishing.com ADMINISTRATIVE COORDINATOR NICOLE CLAPP nclapp@soundpublishing.com

NEWSROOM EDITOR DANNIE OLIVEAUX doliveaux@soundpublishing.com

CIRCULATION BRIAN JUDGE, regional manager bjudge@soundpublishing.com ROBERT ZOLLNA, local manager rzollna@soundpublishing.com

ADVERTISING REGIONAL ADVERTISING DIRECTOR DONNA ETCHEY detchey@soundpublishing.com

ASSISTANT EDITOR CHRIS TUCKER ctucker@soundpublishing.com

MARKETING REPRESENTATIVES JENNIFER ZUVER jzuver@soundpublishing.com MICHAEL WILRIDGE mwilridge@soundpublishing.com

REPORTER PETER O’CAIN pocain@soundpublishing.com

CREATIVE SERVICES BRYON KEMPF krc@soundpublishing.com

SPORTS CHRIS CHANCELLOR cchancellor@soundpublishing.com

MARKETING ARTISTS KELSEY THOMAS, MARK GILLESPIE, JOHN RODRIGUEZ, VANESSA CALVERLEY

The Central Kitsap Reporter (ISSN No. 438-860) is published every Friday by Sound Publishing Inc. SUBSCRIPTIONS: $25 per year carrier or motor route delivery, $50 per year mail delivery in state, $70 per year mail delivery out of state. Copyright 2015 Sound Publishing, Inc.

Showdown in Seattle over city’s minimum wage law

E

ver since the $15 My Turn wage proposal was narrowly approved by City of SeaTac voters, municipal leaders in neighboring Seattle have pushed to impose the same edict. Washington already has the nation’s highest starting wage of $9.47 an hour and the state legislature is considering hiking it to $12, but Seattle Mayor Ed Murray Don Brunell and some city leaders want to peg it at $15. Starting April 1, large businesses in Seattle – defined as those with more than 500 employees – will be required to raise the minimum wage they pay their employees to $15 an hour over three years. On the other hand, smaller businesses will have seven years to phase in the wage increase. The new law classifies Seattle’s 600 franchisees – who operate 1,700 franchise locations and employ 19,000 workers – as large businesses simply because they operate as part of a franchise network. Franchisees say that is unfair. The crux of the issue is not the wage itself; it is that the city is equating individual franchises with their parent corporations, which are two very different types of businesses. It is Seattle’s precedent-setting action which worries franchise owners. The International Franchise Association, the world’s largest organization representing franchise owners, is seeking an injunction to block the ordinance and is appealing a recent federal court decision that will allow the law to go forward. During their nationwide campaigns, minimum wage activists targeted McDonald’s, positioning its franchises as agents of a global conglomerate. It is true that McDonald’s is the world’s leading foodservice retailer operating in more than 100 countries, with more than 36,000 restaurants serving approximately 69 million people every day. But more than 80% of its restaurants worldwide are

operated by individual small business owners. So, what is a franchise? It’s like leasing a brand name and a business model. After that, you’re on your own. Take McDonald’s franchises, for example. First, to be considered for a franchise, you must have $750,000 available to invest – the money cannot be borrowed. You sign a 20-year contract, make a six-figure down payment and agree to abide by their standards and practices. Then you undergo months of training. For new restaurants, McDonald’s provides a location and a building shell, but you must pay to complete the interior and provide all the equipment and pay all operating expenses, including rent, business and property insurance, utilities, salaries, unemployment insurance, workers’ compensation and taxes. In addition, you must pay the corporation four percent of your sales each month, contribute to national and regional marketing campaigns and purchase your supplies only from approved vendors. So, are individual franchise owners equivalent to their corporate lessors? Think of it this way: If you operated a coffee stand in the lobby of the Trump Tower in New York City, would your business be considered part of Donald Trump’s business empire? Of course not. You would have signed a lease agreeing to pay the required rent and abide by Trump’s rules. In return, you get a prime location with proven name recognition and access to a specific customer base. The same applies to franchises. There are 780,000 franchisees in America that support nearly 8.9 million direct jobs and contribute $890 billion to the U.S. economy. Franchises are part of a small business sector that provides the majority of jobs in America – especially entry-level jobs for new and untrained workers. Like the coffee vendor in the lobby of Trump Tower, they’re not global business magnates, they’re small business owners trying to make a living. Seattle politicians should treat them as such. Don C. Brunell is a business analyst, writer and columnist. He can be contacted at theBrunells@msn.com.

Your opinion counts... We encourage letters from the community. Please do not exceed 300 words and we ask that you include your full name and phone number for verification. Letters may be edited for publication. Fax: (360) 308-9363; email: ctucker@soundpublishing.com.


Friday, April 3, 2015

WWW.BREMERTONPATRIOT.COM | WWW.CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Page A5

Working across the aisle gives bills a better chance BY REP. MICHELLE CALDIER

Before I was elected, I knew the most successful legislation was that which is worked on with people on both sides of the aisle, and vetted with those affected the most. That’s why – in my first three months in office – all of the bills I’ve worked on have received bipartisan support. I sponsored House Bill 1852, aimed at reducing copays for preventative dental services for families in the Health Exchange, with five Democrat co-sponsors and four Republican co-sponsors. Another

bill I sponsored to reduce the high school dropout rate for at-risk youth, House Bill 1855, had four Democrat co-sponsors and four Republican co-sponsors. My other two bills also had bipartisan support. Getting legislators from both sides of the aisle to sign on to your legislation gives the bill a better chance of getting through the grueling legislative process. Of course, not all proposals receive bipartisan support. While about 80 percent of the bills in the Legislature pass with broad support, the remaining 20 percent represent very different ways of looking at an issue and the

LETTER TO THE EDITOR State income tax, other reforms needed Washington State has the most regressive tax system in the U.S. (Christian Science Monitor, March

2, 2015). Washington takes a “greater share of income from low and middle income families than from wealthy families.” Our reliance on sales tax causes this inequity. The lower 99 percent income earners are people who buy

solution. The Legislature is diverse, just like our communities. I’ll bet when you speak with your neighbors, friends or family, you don’t always agree on everything. In fact, on some topics, you may be steadfast in your

beliefs and realize you might need to just agree to disagree and move on. With both the Legislature and your neighbors, it is impossible to agree on everything. In this process, I’ve been able to make friends and frequently

agree on issues, but sometimes differ on the solutions. This diversity of ideas, and how we respect each other for those ideas, is what makes our country great. Voltaire once said, “I do not agree with a thing you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.” In the same spirit, as your state representative, I will always listen to what you have to say and consider your viewpoint. I appreciate all of the feedback and varying views on the issues. Please feel free to contact my office anytime with questions, comments or suggestions.

goods for their families. The lowest 20 percent of income earners are paying 16.8 percent of their income on state taxes. The top 5 percent (those earning over $197,000 annually) are paying between 2.4-4.6 percent of their income in state taxes. Not only are the lower income earners paying a greater percent of their income in taxes, they are earning less. The bot-

tom 99 percent of earners have lost income from 2009-2012, -3.5 percent, while the top 1 percent have increased income 45 percent (go.epi. org/unequalstates). To create a more equitable tax system and steadier revenue for Washington, we need tax reform, which decreases the sales tax, ends B&O (business and occupation) taxes,

increases capital gains taxes, and creates a state income tax. Let’s work together to reform our tax system, improving our educational system without negatively impacting social services, transportation, and the environment. Our children deserve small classes and a rich curriculum and all of Washington would benefit. – Janice McLemore, Silverdale

“The Legislature is diverse, just like our communities. I’ll bet when you speak with your neighbors, friends or family, you don’t always agree on everything.” – Rep. Michelle Caldier

Legacy WA launches online profiles of heroic World War II veterans OLYMPIA – As the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II nears, the Office of Secretary of State is launching a gripping series of online profiles, beginning with the story of a Whatcom County fighter pilot who was captured and narrowly avoided death in a German concentration camp during the war. The profile on Joe Moser, now 93 and living in Ferndale, is one of the amazing stories that the office will share about Washingtonians who served in World War II, said Secretary of State Kim Wyman. “We are racing time,” Wyman said. “Most of the Washingtonians who served in World War II have passed away, so it’s important to capture and share stories of those soldiers still alive so current and future generations have

a better understanding of the sacrifices made by those who fought in this pivotal war.” Wyman said Moser’s remarkable story of survival makes for a readable and moving profile that can be viewed here at http://1.usa.gov/1yd4AtC or on the office’s Legacy Washington webpage at http:// www.sos.wa.gov/legacy/. “Joe Moser’s story is as dramatic, heartbreaking and, in the end, triumphant as any you’ll read or see in a movie,” Wyman said. “The Legacy Washington team is capturing similar stories from the war that unfold on the battlefield and in concentration camps. I encourage everyone, especially relatives of World War II veterans, to read Joe’s incredible profile and upcoming stories in the months ahead.” Moser was shot down over

OPINION

state resources, and publicly criticizes those whose record-keeping practices are found lacking. Such audits often make the point that lax record-keeping obscures the transparency that assures the public that money and resources are being properly managed. Kelley, as the elected steward of the state Auditor’s Office, should at the very least step aside while the investigation continues so that the office is not tarnished by the doubts now following him.

CONTINUED FROM A4

in the deposition, said he had given his office computer to Goodwill, and had deleted emails and cleared records from a website, saying he wasn’t much of a record-keeper. That’s an odd and troubling admission for someone who heads a state agency that holds municipal and county governments and state agencies accountable for their use of

Joe Moser today, left, and during WWII, right. north-central France in 1944, captured by the Germans and sent to Buchenwald concentration camp in Germany, despite his POW status. At Buchenwald, Moser witnessed unthinkable conditions – people reduced to skin and bones after being fed cabbage soup with worms and living in filth. Just days before he and other U.S. airmen were scheduled to be executed, they were sent to a POW camp. Moser and some of the other POWs

Courtesy photos

survived a long death march during the brutally cold winter of 1944-45. In the profile, Moser describes the day of liberation by the Allies from the POW camp on April 29, 1945, near Moosburg, Germany. “I was right close to the gate when a big American tank came and run right over the gate. Come in and they took down the German flag and raised the American flag. You’re a prisoner. Your

life isn’t your own. And all of a sudden, you’re free. The joy is tremendous. It’s something that is hard to describe because we’re a free nation; we can do just about whatever we want. And to have all of that taken away. And to have all of that given back to you. I think we all just cried. …No feeling like it, really.” Moser is scheduled to receive the French Legion of Honor award April 2 at the World Trade Center in Seattle. Wyman said the profiles allow World War II veterans a chance to share stories that haven’t been told. “The time to hear their stories is now. Every three minutes in this country, we lose a World War II veteran. These heroes offer first-hand accounts of the war, a personal perspective to history, that we can’t afford to lose.” Tens of thousands of Washingtonians served in World War II, with about 6,000 missing or killed during the war, said Wyman, whose uncle

served in the Marines during that war, earning the Bronze Star and Purple Heart. “We owe these veterans our utmost respect,” Wyman said. “For years, many of our service members did not speak of the war. In many cases, they were simply humble. But in other cases, they kept silent because people accused them of exaggerating their claims or making up stories.” The profiles are the prelude to a new Legacy Washington exhibit, called “Washington Remembers: Their Sacrifice. Our Freedom,” opening this summer in the front lobby of the Office of Secretary of State at the state Capitol. The exhibit will feature photos and artifacts shared by Washington’s World War II veterans or their families. People are encouraged to send in photos of World War II veterans to be featured in an online gallery called Faces of Heroes. Digitized photos can be submitted using this link: http://1.usa.gov/1xiqZKP.

3.5” x 2.5” | Maximum Font Size: 30 pt

Financial Solutions Don’t forgetwith to make your 2014 IRA contribution. a Smile and a Handshake

Presenting

Serving Kitsap and Olympic Peninsula since 1985

Angela M Sell, AAMS® Financial Advisor .

Angela M Sell, AAMS® Financial Advisor

3276 Plaza Rd NW Suite 112, Silverdale, WA 98383 360-698-7408 Member SIPC www.edwardjones.com

3276 Plaza Rd NW Suite 112 Silverdale, WA 98383 360-698-7408

• Hot tubs / above ground pools • Full in-house service department • No trip charge within Kitsap County • Routine maintenance • In house water analysis • Hot tub covers • Chemicals

Showroom Open Monday - Saturday!

Member SIPC

9165 NW Ridgetop Blvd. • Silverdale • 360-692-6678 • www.foursps.com


Page A6

WWW.BREMERTONPATRIOT.COM | WWW.CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Friday, April 3, 2015

SPORTS OHS baseball team selling Mariner tickets BREMERTON — The Olympic High School baseball team is selling reducedprice tickets to the Mariners vs. the Houston Astros game on May 29, at 7:10 p.m. Seats are available at the 200 ($40) or 300 ($10) levels and all tickets are significantly discounted. OHS baseball will receive proceeds from each ticket sold, which will help the

Trojans get back to Safeco Field for a game next spring. Sponsorships and bulk incentives are available. To learn more or buy tickets, contact head baseball coach Nate Andrews atnatea@cksd.wednet.edu or visit http://olhs.cksd. wednet.edu.

able mention to the Class 1B Associated Press All-State girls basketball team. The teams were selected by sports media from throughout the state. Doty and Cattell helped the Warriors reach the 1B state tournament in March.

Crosspoint duo named honorable mention

March 31 BASEBALL At Olympic 3, North Mason 1 Central Kitsap 17, Lincoln

Desiree Doty and Cailyn Cattell were named honor-

SCOREBOARD

Now Welcoming New Patients

Valhalla D E N TA L

360-697-5818

19365 7th Ave NE, Suite 106 Poulsbo, WA 98370 Dr. Richard Weatherill and the Valhalla Dental Team at their newly owned and beautifully renovated office

• Experienced Staff • Friendly Environment • Digital X-Rays • Most Dental Insurance Accepted

Call us today to schedule your FREE exam, X-rays and oral cancer screening ($200 value)! Remember to mention this ad for your FREE exam and X-rays.

ContactUs@MyValhallaDental.com • www.myvalhalladental.com

2 (5): CK-Nick Roberts 3-3, 3 RBIs; Isaiah McGee 3-4, RBI; Eric Halvorson 2-3, 2 RBIs and Duncan Guerrero 1-2, 2 RBIs. SOFTBALL Olympic 2, at North Mason 0 SOCCER Kington 3, at Olympic 0 Central Kitsap 7, at North Thurston 0: North Kitsap 2, Klahowya 2 At Port Angeles 4, Bremerton 1: B-Tom Zimpel (Spencer Stuart) March 30 BASEBALL At Central Kitsap 11, Lincoln 0 (5): Andrew Thoresen tossed a perfect game with eight strikeouts. CK-Aki Buckson 2-3, 2 doubles, 3 RBIs; Nick Roberts 2-3, RBI; Kendal Yaegle 1-2, 2 RBIs. March 28 BASEBALL At Lake Stevens 3, Central Kitsap 0 BOYS SOCCER At Kingston 5, Bremerton 0

Olympic 0, at Port Townsend 5: O-Makaleb McInnis 2 (Nichol Decker, Scott Tiburcio 2), Decker (McInnis), Jaycen Nutt (Decker), Tuburcio (Robie Rivera) March 27 BASEBALL At Sequim 8, Bremerton 7 Olympic 6, at Kingston 5 Klahowya 5, at Port Angeles 4 SOFTBALL At Sequim 26, Bremerton 1 (5) Olympic 5, at Kingston 4 March 26 BOYS SOCCER At Bremerton 3, Olympic 2: B-Zimpel 2 (Rudy Lopez-Bautista, Dylan Reed; Zachary Siltman (Tim Styrlund); O-Ben Wise (Makaleb McInnis), McInnis (Chris Cote). At Central Kitsap 1, Mount Tahoma 0 Klahowya 2, at South Whidbey 0 SOFTBALL At Central Kitsap 11, Bainbridge 10: CK-Marissa

Now Offering Guaranteed Delivery! Dear Reporter reader, It is with great excitement that we reflect on 31 years of publishing the Central Kitsap Reporter. In the last 31 years, both the area and the Central Kitsap Reporter have come a long way. For the last few years the Central Kitsap Reporter has kept you up to date all week long, via Twitter, Facebook, on mobile apps, and at centralkitsapreporter.com. There is no need to wait for election results, traffic updates, or other breaking news that you need. Get it online all week or in the printed edition every Friday. Your local community news has never been more important - We pride ourselves in bringing you fair, accurate, and accessible news in an effort to bind this community together. During this time, the Central Kitsap Reporter has been delivered free to your home. Please consider paying for a subscription of only $25.00 for 52 weeks, that’s less than 50 cents per issue. By subscribing you will be given additional advantages such as guaranteed delivery. Should something ever go wrong with your delivery we will take care of the issue. If your paper ever shows up wet or damaged - or if it doesn’t show up at all - we will redeliver it for free. Just call us and we will send a driver out to your address with the newspaper. Regards, Lori Maxim Vice President, West Sound; Regional Publisher Bainbridge Island Review, North Kitsap Herald, Kingston Community News, Central Kitsap Reporter, Bremerton Patriot,Port Orchard Independent and Veterans Life

Subscribe Now! 1 year for only $25! Please consider paying for a subscription by sending a check, calling in your payment, or paying online. Your yearly contribution of $25 can be made either online through our secure server at centralkitsapreporter.com/subscribe (we take Visa, MasterCard, American Express, and even PayPal) or via phone at 888-838-3000.

centralkitsapreporter.com/subscribe or 888-838-3000

Adams 3-5, 2 Doubles, 2 RBIs), Zee Young (1-2, 2 RBIs), Cassidy Garchow (2-5, 2 RBIs) March 25 BASEBALL At Central Kitsap 10, Foss 0 (5): Colin Palau (2-3, HR, 4 RBIs), Aki Buckson (3-3, RBI, 4 SB), Miles Whitney (Double, 2 RBIs) Klahowya 11, at Sequim 8 SOFTBALL At Sequim 8, Klahowya 2

SCHEDULE April 6 BASEBALL: Central Kitsap at Shelton, 4 p.m., Klahowya at Chimacum, 4:15 p.m. SOFTBALL: Central Kitsap at Shelton, 4 p.m.; April 7 BASEBALL: Shelton at Central Kitsap, 4 p.m.; North Mason at Klahowya, 4:15 p.m.


Friday, April 3, 2015

WWW.BREMERTONPATRIOT.COM | WWW.CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Page A7

West Hills Honda earns Honda’s President’s Award Award recognizes good work in customer service, sales STAFF REPORT

BREMERTON – West Hills Honda is among the recipients of its prestigious Honda President’s Award for 2014, according to American Honda Motor Co., Inc. More than 1,000 Honda dealerships from across the country strived to earn the President’s Award in 2014, with 125 receiving the honor. The annual award is presented to Honda dealerships for exceptional performance in all facets of their operations - sales, vehicle condition, customer experience, service retention, and brand representation. “Honda has a proud tradition of delivering excellence in everything we do,” said John Mendel, executive vice president of automo-

bile sales for Honda. “The President’s Award is reflective of our long-standing commitment to create exceptional customer experiences. Dealerships that earn this coveted recognition are role models for building positive connections with customers.” “From top to bottom, one department to the next, all our employees are focused on delivering to our customers an honest and simple purchase and ownership experience. We appreciate each of our valued customers and strive to make your car buying process or service experience easy,” said Rob Colon, West Hills Honda general manager. West Hills Honda carries the full line of Honda automobiles.

a MASSAGE Why Massage? Healing does not have to be all work and

no play. Healing actually starts in the relaxation state. This is when the sympathetic, flight and fight, nerves shut down and the parasympathetic, restive state, nerves become activated. In the restive state, one’s mucus membranes become active moving nutrients while the brain shuts down allowing your brain to ‘defrag’ realigning itself with the present. You can then let go of pseudo pain. Thus massage… let our therapists move the nutrient rich and oxygenated blood to those hypertonic/pain filled areas. Muscles and joints can then rebuild. The best part…you didn’t have to do anything but rest and enjoy your massage!

Centering Massage

3100 Bucklin Hill Rd Ste 122 Silverdale, WA 98383 360-692-7800 ‘There is a Difference…’

AUTOMOTIVE A good customer had two complaints. The alarm system had quit working and the heater was making noise! After inspection we found

a bunch of paper, twigs and padding in the heater box around the fan and some wiring that was cut, indicating mouse activity. If you try and clean up a nest in the engine compartment or car before starting repair work on the wiring wear Playtex gloves and a face mask so you don’t get deathly sick, then disinfect. Or just take it in to your favorite shop, and remember there can be multiple problems.

299 National Ave. S. • Bremerton (360) 377-0682 www.bnbautorepair.com

Courtesy photo

Robert Colon, general manager of West Hills Honda, third from left, and Rick Wiler, owner of West Hills Honda, third from right, stand aside the President’s Award presented by the American Honda Motor Co. Also standing with Colon and Wiler, are, left to right, Melissa Piper, Paul Freyermuth, Robert Macias and Mike Gerstler, all representatives from the American Honda Motor Co.

Your questions answered by local professionals DESIGN & MARKETING Why is Branding your Business Important?

Businesses need a cohesive design so they can be recognized and remembered. Branding should be unique and suggest something of the personality of the business. It starts with a logo, business cards, letterhead, brochure and every other crucial marketing piece pertaining to the business. The brand will appear everywhere so it is important to budget and use creative resources and do it right from the start. Branding is a crucial first step for a new business and should be reviewed for existing businesses in need of defining their identity. ALimages offers a branding package starting at $99 for new small businesses. Contact us for more details.

Your Creative Solution! www.alicreative.net 360.589.3703 Like Me on Facebook!

INTERIOR DECORATOR We have a new home- a totally blank slate. Help! Where do I begin? Find something you LOVE! It could be a piece of art, fabric, a

magazine photo or even an article of clothing. Pull your primary and secondary colors from that. Remember the third color should just pop around the room…pillows, accessories, etc. Don’t let an old piece you are hanging onto dictate the color and style of your new room. You will grow to resent it! Completely finish one room before moving on to the next, otherwise you will become fragmented and frustrated. Good luck. - Cate

360.377.5582 3520 Kitsap Way, Bremerton www.arnoldshomefurnishings.com

INSURANCE AGENT How can I protect my home from a fire claim?

While fires can cause significant damage and even death, most are also preventable. Here are some quick and easy tips to keep your family safer at home: 1. Get a smoke detector and keep it working. 2. Be careful in the kitchen. Pay attention to which burner you are turning on. 3. Keep clutter away from wood-stove & clean the chimney. 4. Don’t overload extension cords. 5. Don’t smoke in bed or comfy chair. 6. Supervise burning candles.

Barry Doll

10715 Silverdale Way, Ste 203 Silverdale, WA 98383 | 360-692-7232 BDoll@AmFam.com | www.BarryDoll.com

MORTGAGE OFFICER Are there any programs available for someone that has previously claimed bankruptcy due to a job loss and other circumstances? We do offer a loan program for individuals that have a bankruptcy, forclosure, deed-in lieu or short sale in their past, although we would need more information in order to determin if you qualify. I would be happy to talk with you to see if you may be eligible for this program or another type of program. Call me at 360-908-1112 for more information.

360-908-1112 10049 Kitsap Mall Blvd, # 201 Silverdale, WA 98383 www.newamericanagent.com

If you are interested in participating in your field, or have a question, please contact: Jennifer Zuver | 360-308-9161 x3050 | jzuver@soundpublishing.com


Page A8

WWW.BREMERTONPATRIOT.COM | WWW.CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Friday, April 3, 2015

COMMUNITY BRIEFS Easter egg hunt April 4 BREMERTON —Kitsap Tennis and Athletic Center, 1909 NE John Carlson Rd., will host their Easter egg hunt and open house Sat. April 4 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. The Easter egg hunt is for children ages 3-12. It is open to the public and free of charge. Children ages three and under will hunt 10:15-10:30 a.m., children ages 4-5 will hunt from 11-11:30 a.m. and children ages 7-12 will hunt from 12-12:30 p.m. The Easter egg hunt will take place outside on the KTAC grounds. In the event of rain the event will be moved indoors. In addition to the Easter egg hunt, KTAC will be offering tennis games for children of all ages. The public is welcome to try out all the facilities including the tennis courts, swimming pool, racquetball courts and fitness center at no charge during the open house from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Easter brunch and egg hunt at Gold Mountain Celebrate Easter Sunday with the whole family at Gold Mountain’s Easter brunch and egg hunt, fea-

turing homemade pastries, eggs benedict, salmon with honey-apple glaze, a made-to-order omelet and crepe station and more. The little ones are encouraged to participate in our Easter egg hunts, which take place at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Brunch will begin at 9 a.m. To make a reservation, call 360-4156895. Tickets are $30 for adults, $15 for children and $15 for seniors. Children 5 years old and younger have free entry. Easter brunch will kick off our monthly brunches; for a full brunch menu and additional information, please visit www.goldmountaingolf.com.

“Babes in Toyland” ballet at the Bremerton High School Performing Arts Center on April 18 at 7 p.m. and April 19 at 2 p.m. Reserved seats are $20. General admission $15. Senior citizens, students and children are $10. Tickets available at the Silverdale Chamber of Commerce, Irene’s School of Dance in Silverdale, CJ’s Evergreen General Store in Bremerton. Call 692-4395 for more information.

Bremerton Elks egg hunt

The Evergreen Bonsai Club will host David DeGroot, recently retired as curator of the Pacific Rim Bonsai Collection, at its April 17 meeting. DeGroot will present a program on displaying bonsai, including the use of decorative screens, stands, and companion plants. The meeting will be on Friday, April 17, at 7 p.m. at the Crossroads Neighborhood Church, 7555 Old Military Road NE, in Bremerton. Admission is free and guests are welcome. For further information, please contact Ruth Anderson, 360-626-1264 or rutha33@msn.com.

The Bremerton Elks Lodge, one of the few organizations to still provide a free Easter Egg Hunt, is holding their annual hunt on April 5. The Sheriff’s Office will provide a rousing send-off promptly at 1:30 p.m., and children up to age 10 will have a chance to search for several “Golden Eggs” that can then be traded in for special, age specific, prize baskets that have lovingly been assembled and donated by the Ladies of Elks. The hunting ground is divided into age groups for safety, and parents are highly encouraged to arrive and park by 1 p.m. The barbecue will be fired up, so come early for a very reasonable lunch before the hunt. There is also a good chance that all young-at-heart patrons can have their picture taken with the Easter Bunny. The lodge is located at 4131 Pine Rd. NE in Bremerton. For information on other fun events, please go to bpoe1181.org, and click on the calendar button.

Babes in Toyland ballet April 18-19 Dance Arts Theatre of Silverdale will perform a

FAMILY ~ PANCAKE ~

HOUSE

Bonsai Club hosts former Pacific Rim curator

Silverdale book sale April 11 The Silverdale Friends of the Library will hold their April monthly book sale on Saturday, April 11 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Hess room of the library, located at 3450 NW Carlton St. in old town Silverdale. There will be an excellent selection of books for all ages and interests. The library depend on the community to supply it with used books in good condition to keep our book sales providing such great selections. Books may be dropped off at the library during regular library hours. The popular Monday sales will continue on April 6, 13, 20 and 27, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. All proceeds go to support the many programs the library provides to the community.

State Parks offers two ‘free days’ in April OLYMPIA - The Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission will offer two “free days” in April. Visitors will not need to display a Discover Pass for day-use visits to state parks. The two dates are April 4, a springtime free Saturday, and Wednesday, April 22, Earth Day. Free days are in keeping with legislation that created the Discover Pass, a $30 annual or $10 one-day permit required on recreation lands managed by Washington State Parks, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and the Department of Natural Resources. The Discover Pass legislation provided that State Parks could designate up to 12 “free days” each year when the pass would not be required to visit state parks. Discover Pass is required to access WDFW and DNR Lands on State Parks free days. The remaining 2015 State Parks free days are as follows: May 10, June 6, June 13, Aug. 25, Sept. 26 and Nov. 11.

Martha and Mary Luncheon April 26

COLOR THIS AD

AND BRING INTO YOUR CLOSEST LOCATION FOR A

FREE KIDS MEAL WITH PAID ADULT MEAL. $4.99 TOTAL VALUE. NOT TO BE COMBINED WITH ANY OTHER OFFER.

WEEKLY PRIZES FOR PARTICIPANTS!

REPORTER CENTRAL KITSAP

WE DO NOT EXCEPT COPIES. EXP. APRIL 30TH.

1034 Bethel Ave Port Orchard

(360)895-0545

4115 Wheaton Way E. Bremerton (360)479-0788

PATRIOT BREMERTON

3900 Kitsap Way Bremerton (360)479-2422

Martha and Mary Generations of Care luncheon and auction will be hosted Sunday, April 26 at the Kiana Lodge in Poulsbo. Here’s a small sample of what people can expect to bid on: A getaway in Sunriver, Oregon, for two. A full-year membership to the Resort at Port Ludlow Golf. Seattle arts and sports packages. Kitsap dining and entertainment packages. Fabulous baskets ranging from an aquarium set-up to a “girls-nightin” basket. Two separate flight experiences: take a ride in either a World War II bomber-or a fun and fast Van’s RV-7. Call 360-626-7879 or visit www.marthaandmary. org/events/ for more information.

Meeting to discuss future of Silverdale community center The Future of Silverdale Community Center will be discussed at a Central Kitsap Community Council town hall meeting on Thursday, April 16 from 7-9 p.m. at the Central Kitsap School District JenneWright gymnasium. Structural damage to the community center has resulted in its partial closure. Several of Kitsap’s non-profit and community groups have been displaced and need alernative meeting space. Please come share your vision for a new community center with county commissioner Ed Wolfe. Jenne-Wright is located at 9210 Silverdale Way NW.

Kitsap MS walk April 11 Walk MS 2015 will connect thousands of people

across Washington this spring – and comes to Silverdale on Saturday, April 11. Walk MS: Kitsap County, presented by Haggen Northwest Fresh, begins at 9 a.m. at Klahowya Secondary School in Silverdale. It’s one of hundreds of fundraising walks across the nation that draw 300,000 people to the MS movement. Proceeds from Walk MS support research and local programs and services for people living with multiple sclerosis or who are affected by the disease. To start a team, make a donation, sign up to volunteer or learn more, call the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, Greater Northwest Chapter, at 800-344-4867 and press 2, or visit www.walkMS. org.

Outdoor club meets first Wednesdays BREMERTON – Peninsula Wilderness Club is an informal organization for people interested in the outdoors. Meetings are held on the first Wednesday of every month at 7 p.m. Meetings are held at the VFW Hall at 9981 Central Valley Rd. Go online to www.pwckitsap.org.

Registration open for third annual ‘Fore the Animals Golf Tournament’ SILVERDALE – Now is the time to register for Kitsap Humane Society’s third annual Fore the Animals Golf Tournament. Sign up today at kitsaphs. ejoinme.org/golf2015. KHS plans on making this year’s event on May 15 the most doggone fun ever. If you’re not able to golf, please consider visiting the registration page to give a donation in lieu of your attendance. Money raised by the tournament at Port Orchard’s Trophy Lake Golf and Casting goes directly toward saving animals’ lives. Kitsap Humane Society is a private, nonprofit, charitable organization that has been caring for animals in need since 1908. KHS admits more than 5,000 animals per year and has one of the highest lives saved rates in the US. KHS’ vision is that every adoptable companion animal has a home. For more information, visit kitsap-humane.org.

Learn how to build a lasting business The Kitsap Business Forum will present “Lessons From Those That Last: Innovation and Relevance in an Ever Changing Market” on April 14. Shannon Bruce, with Excell Puget Sound, will lead a panel discussion of Kitsap innovators who will share their challenges and provide valuable lessons that will help businesses remain relevant and thrive in an ever changing market. The panel will consist of Anna Reyes-Potts, Trulife; Bruce MacDonald, Applied Technical Systems; Jill Jean, Kitsap Regional Library; and Larry Nakata, Town & Country Markets. Attendees will walk away with new perspectives, insight on what to “start doing,” “stop doing” and “do more of,” best practices and resources for leadership growth and sustainability, as well as inspiration and courage to move you to action. The forum will be hosted on the third floor of the Kitsap Conference Center, 100 Washington Ave. in Bremerton. Parking is provided in the Anthony’s parking spaces, first floor blue level for this event only. Program runs 7:30-9 a.m. Anyone interested in attending should RSVP to 360-692-6800, or go online to register at http:// KitsapBusinessForum.com.

Kitsap Jayhawkers meet April 4 Kitsap Jayhawkers meet Saturday, April 4, at The Airport Diner, at 11:30 a.m. This is an excellent opportunity for former Kansans to meet and share their past experiences of living in The Sunflower State. New members are always welcomed. Attendees are invited to bring their memories of memorable Easter egg hunts, coloring and decorating Easter eggs, etcetera. Call Doris Rice, 360-792-9151, for more information.

Human Society garage sale set for April 10-11 Kitsap Humane Society will host a garage sale April 10-11. Donations of items in good condition to sell are being accepted. Contact Marg8733@comcast. net or call 360-692-0126 by March 20. All proceeds will be donated to Kitsap Humane Society.


Friday, April 3, 2015

WWW.BREMERTONPATRIOT.COM | WWW.CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Woehrman joins CK School Board BY CHRIS TUCKER CTUCKER@CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

An East Bremerton man who works as an executive in the building automation business has been selected as interim member of the Central Kitsap School Board. Scott Woehrman, 42, of East Bremerton, was selected March 25 from three candidates who were interviewed for the open interim school board position. He began work immediately by sitting on the 7 p.m. board meeting that same day and was sworn in by Superintendent David McVicker. “… And the fun begins,” mused board President Bruce Richards as he shook Woehrman’s hand. Woehrman said his decision to apply for the unpaid position stems back to a Thanksgiving holiday seven years ago when he delivered Thanksgiving meals to families in need. He was struck by how appreciative and humble the recipients of the meals were.

Chris Tucker / staff photo

Scott Woehrman, left, shakes Superintendent David McVicker’s hand after being sworn in to the Central Kitsap School Board March 25. “It really hit me hard,” Woehrman said. He decided he wanted to do more, thus his decision to join the school board.

Woehrman’s wife, Roslyn, works for the school district. The couple has one daughter who attends a CK school. Emily Meeks and John Burch also applied for the position. McVicker said all three candidates were qualified to hold the position. “All three of them could have done a great job,” McVicker said. Woehrman succeeds 15-year school board veteran Chris Stokke, who announced in February he would retire due to health concerns and to assist his parents. A regular election for the board seat Woehrman now holds will be held in November. Stokke was given a plaque to commemorate his years of service. “Thank you all very much. It’s been a good run and I just appreciate all of you,” Stokke said. “And I get to go home,” he joked, referring to his newfound freedom from having to sit at the board meeting, which typically runs for several hours.

LUM AND KELSO CONTINUED FROM A1

at Kariotis Mobile Home Park outside of Bremerton. Family and friends released messages to heaven written on balloons. Jalisa Lum cried in her mother’s arms as she hugged her blue balloon with a message to her son. Lum was in tears throughout the evening, but cried hardest when it came time to release her message to Kaden. His grandmother, Deanna Trammell, told him to visit Russell Wilson’s father. “Tell Wilson’s dad to hold you on his lap,” Trammell wrote. “Tell him grandma said so.” Trammell said Kaden was described as a die-hard Seahawks fan. “He was a Twelve,” said Trammell. “He used to get so excited when grandma would jump up and down.” Pastors from local churches encouraged family and friends to look to God for answers. “I’ve found that the word of God is the only thing that makes sense when nothing makes sense,” said Debra Jamerson, a service pastor at Christian Faith Center. Jonathan Stone, pastor at New Life Church, said tragedies are when communities leave their mark. “I think at the end of the day what makes a community great is its ability to come around each other in brokenness,” Stone said. Donations to the Lum family can be made at http://www. gofundme.com/qabbgg3g.

Peter O’Cain / staff photo

Jalisa Lum, center, releases a balloon to heaven with a message written to her 2-year-old son Kaden, who was killed in his sleep March 28. Family and friends remembered Kaden at Island Lake Park in Poulsbo March 31. It was Kaden’s favorite park. smile on everybody’s faces,” Kelso recalled as said Bree McCorkle, who was loving and fun a coworker of Kelso at PSNS. “She was always somebody CHICO – White candles you felt comfortable talking were lit and tears were shed as to.” dozens of people gathered at The two women were prega Chico church to remember nant at the same time and had shooting victim and mother young children roughly the Heather Kelso. same age, McCorkle said. “She was known as a very McCorkle recalled a day at kind soul and there nothing work when Kelso wore a bulky on earth that she loved more suit that made her look like Chris Tucker / staff photo than Ava Lee, her baby girl,” an astronaut with oversized said Chico Alliance Church Kelso’s green “71” hard hat gloves. Kelso somehow manAssociate Pastor John Gee. and flowers were placed at aged to get a recovery hose “She loved being a new mom the front of the Chico church. stuck to her hood that day, and adored every moment McCorkle recalled, and was with her precious daughter.” person with a caring, quirky – in comic fashion – unable The vigil was hosted March personality. to get it off. Kelso’s coworkers 31 at the church. At the front of the church, had to stop their own work to Kelso, 29, was shot and several colorful flowers and a assist her. The story brought a killed at her home at Kariotis green hard hat with “71” writ- sense of levity to the otherwise Mobile Home Park north of ten on it – for Kelso’s work somber affair. Bremerton on March 28. “All of our hearts ache for unit at Puget Sound Naval Kelso was recalled by Shipyard – lay near the lectern. you guys,” McCorkle said. attendees as being a positive “Heather always put a

Page A9

HOMICIDES CONTINUED FROM A1

er arrived: Jalisa Lum, Lum’s 2-year-old boy, Kaden Lum, Heather Kelso, 29, and a 22-year-old man. “(The) mother and the 2-year-old (the Lums) were residents of that mobile home. The mother was trying to protect the 2-year-old as the 2-year-old was shot and killed,” Smith said. “The mother and child moved into that residence approximately three weeks ago,” Smith said. “The female that was shot and killed (Kelso) was a roommate of the mother and the child.” A third victim, a 22-yearold man, fled to his own home at the park after being shot. The man’s roommate then called 911. KCSO deputies and officers from Bremerton Police Department arrived on scene at 2:24 a.m. The deputies retrieved their emergency first aid gear and provided first aid to the man and assessed him for additional injuries. At the time, the location of the shooter was unknown and thus the scene was considered unsecured or “hot.” As a result, medics were unable to enter to treat the victim. The two deputies stabilized the victim as best they could, placed him into a blanket and carried him to a waiting patrol car which they used to initiate a “tactical rescue” – removing him from the scene and transporting him to a waiting medic unit. The man was later airlifted to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle where detectives later interviewed him. As the deputies treated the first victim, they learned of the other location where additional victims were said to be. Other deputies, along with officers from the Bremerton Police Department, responded to this location where they found Kelso and Kaden Lum. Kelso was declared dead at the scene while the child was transported to Harrison Medical Center where he died. Kelso was an employee of

SOCIAL MEDIA CONTINUED FROM A1

Board member Eric Greene said the district would have to be careful with how it used social media. “It really becomes a problem when you put it (a social media message) out there and then you take it back. It’s usually the stuff you take back that gets people looking,” Greene said. If a message were sent rashly, for example, “You’re amazed that the number of

Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and had resided at the Kariotis Mobile Home Park for the last three years. Deputies and officers worked to secure the scene and called in a K-9 Deputy to search for a suspect. Kelso’s body was removed from the crime scene and an autopsy was scheduled for both shooting victims on March 30. Two other homes in the area were struck by errant gunfire. No injuries were reported from the errant shots. Detectives obtained a search warrant to search the residence where the homicides occurred, and also to search the residence of the man who had been shot. On March 28 officers investigated a man in Port Orchard for a possible connection to the shootings. That man was cooperative, Smith said. Officers interviewed the man and released him. On March 31, detectives served a search warrant at a residence in Port Orchard while investigating the homicides. KCSO has not disclosed the nature of what was located during the service of the warrant. Detectives also impounded a vehicle “of interest” in their investigation. According to the Seattle Times, Kelso had recently filed a restraining order against her former Port Orchard boyfriend. Access to and from the mobile home park had being restricted at first. On March 28, officers had been checking the identity of anyone entering or leaving the mobile home park. Because of the shootings, the emergency department at Harrison Medical Center in Bremerton was on lock-down for about four hours the day of the shooting at the request of law enforcement, Scott Thompson with CHI Franciscan said. The lockdown was lifted around 8 a.m. Anyone with information about this investigation is encouraged to call 9-1-1. The lead investigator for this incident is Detective Jerry Swayze. He can be reached at 360-3374479. people that – in the eight seconds that it was there – saw it and retweeted it to the 14 other people,” he said. “You’ve got to be responsible with whatever media you use,” Richards said. Superintendent David McVicker noted that attention was a scarce resource and that messaging too often would turn people off. “I’m following a couple superintendents now (on Twitter) who I’m going to stop following pretty quick. I’m tired of the re-tweets. It’s just too much,” McVicker said.


Page A10

WWW.BREMERTONPATRIOT.COM | WWW.CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Friday, April 3, 2015

‘U Drive. U Text. U Pay.’ traffic safety campaign beginning in April

Courtesy photo

Sen. Christine Rolfes, left, with Kitsap student and Boys and Girls Club member Tierra Trail.

OLYMPIA – For the second year in a row, more than 100 law enforcement agencies in Washington State will be cracking down on distracted drivers as part of the national distracted driving enforcement campaign. Between April 1 and April 15, high visibility enforcement efforts will target motorists who are observed talking on handheld cell phones and sending text messages. The slogan of the national campaign is “U Drive. U Text. U Pay.” A kick-off event for the campaign will take place in Spokane on April 1. At the event, Jim and Lisa Thompson will unveil a road sign to be erected this spring at the site near Colfax where their son, Sam, died after he crossed the center line while texting and driving. The statewide patrols will be conducted in honor of

Chris Tucker / staff photo

More than 100 law enforcement agencies in Washington State will be cracking down on distracted drivers as part of the national distracted driving enforcement campaign.

Kitsap student named ‘Youth of the Year’ KC launches text-to-911 service OLYMPIA – Kitsap student and Boys and Girls Club member Tierra Trail received a Youth of the Year award on Tuesday at the Governor’s mansion in Olympia. “Tierra is a dedicated, hardworking, family oriented person who takes pride in her academics and positive relationships with family and friends,” said Sen. Christine Rolfes, D-Kitsap County, in her introductory remarks. “I am honored to introduce such a wonderful role model for kids in Kitsap County and congratulate Tierra on this well-deserved award.” The Youth of the Year program includes meeting the governor and elected officials,

trainings for participants, interviewing and judging competition, and enrichment activities for the teens. All Youth of the Year participants receive college scholarships ranging from $500 to $5,000. Trail, a sophomore at Central Kitsap High School, has been a member of the Boys and Girls Club at Naval Base Kitsap for four years. She sings and composes music and plays the clarinet, tenor saxophone and piano. At school she is a leader in Associated Student Body and plays basketball. Trail plans to attend the University of Southern California and pursue a career in music and business.

Librarian recognized for teaching tech to teens Seth Ciotti, teen services librarian for Kitsap Regional Library based at Sylvan Way, has been recognized by the national publication, Library Journal, as one of its industry “Movers & Shakers” for 2015. Ciotti was cited by the Journal for his work as a Digital Developer through his leadership in the Library’s BiblioTEC program. BiblioTEC engages participants — often teenagers and young adults — by educating them on STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) topics. “The goal of the program isn’t to teach technology,” Ciotti says, “it’s to understand how technology can be utilized for someone’s passions and interests.” The initiative was implemented in October 2013 after the library received a Paul G. Allen Family Foundation technology grant to promote technology to youth. Ciotti was hired to create the pro-

Seth Ciotti gram’s 100-hour curriculum — a task he completed in about two months. “Seth took a basic program idea and created something truly innovative that has had a profound impact on the Kitsap community,” said his manager, Leigh Ann Winterowd. The program began as a partnership between Kitsap Regional Library and Coffee Oasis, with students in the Coffee Oasis vocational program for homeless teens being

offered BiblioTEC training as an option. The students met four hours a day, five days a week over a five-week period. The classes covered computer coding, 3-D printing, robotics, and more. The course culminated with a showcase in which students presented independent projects they created during the program. Ciotti subsequently repeated the five-week course in Bremerton and then in Poulsbo and Port Orchard. In addition, he organized more than 150 events and demonstrations at our libraries that attracted more than 3,000 participants. The program has transformed into technology classes offered at the libraries. Ciotti is working to strengthen the classes by bringing in community partners to expand the Library’s STEM programs. Former students continue to serve as instructors and mentors.

Sam. These and all extra patrols are part of Target Zero—striving to end traffic deaths and serious injuries in Washington by 2030. For more infor-

Kitsap 911 (CENCOM) announced March 31 that it has begun accepting text-to-911 service. Verizon Wireless, T-Mobile, AT&T, and Sprint customers in Kitsap County can now send a text message to 911 in an emergency. Text to 911 is a new and critical service. It is intended to benefit people that may not be able to speak due to an emergency such as a home invasion, or abusive partner, as well as individuals that are deaf, hard of hearing, or have speech disabilities. “I’m proud that Kitsap 911 is the first 911 center in the state to accept text messages,” said Director Richard Kirton. “Text-to-911 is an important tool that will save lives, but placing a voice call is still the most efficient way to reach help. Beginning today, if you have an emergency in Kitsap County, call if you can, text if you can’t.” Text-to-911 service is not yet available statewide. If a text is sent from a wireless carrier that does not support text-to-911 or if a text is sent from a city or county that does not support text-to-911, the phone user should receive a message saying that there is no text service to 911 available at this time. A few things about how text-to-911 works

mation, visit www.targetzero. com. Additional information on the Washington Traffic Safety Commission can be found on the website, www. wtsc.wa.gov.

at present: • A text plan with a participating carrier is required to place a text-to-911. • Photos and videos cannot be sent to 911 at this time. • A group text will cause a message to 911 to not go through. Do not send an emergency text to anyone other than 911. • Text-to-911 is not available when roaming. • Interpreters are not available for text at this time, text in English only. • As with all text messages, messages to or from 911 may have a delay, may get out of order, or may not be received at all. • When texting to 911 for an emergency, the first message should be the location of the emergency (including city) and the type of emergency help needed (police, fire, or medical). • Keep text messages brief and concise; using full words. • Stay with the phone and be prepared to answer questions and follow instructions from the 911 call taker. • Be aware of auto correct especially when providing a location. • If using text-to-911 in order to not be heard, don’t forget to silence the cell phone ringer or alert sounds.

“Because of his work, seriously struggling young people are completing their GEDs, enrolling in community college, getting jobs, cleaning up problems with the law, and rebuilding their faith in themselves and their community,” – Audey Barbakoff, library manager “Because of his work, seriously struggling young people are completing their GEDs, enrolling in community college, getting jobs, cleaning up problems with the law, and rebuilding their

faith in themselves and their community,” said Audrey Barbakoff, the library’s manager of adult services. Barbakoff, who was named a Library Journal Mover & Shaker in 2013, nominated Ciotti for

the honor this year. Three of the program’s graduates were hired to work at the library as interns. Another is considering engineering classes.


Friday, April 3, 2015 Friday, April 3,2015

WWW.BREMERTONPATRIOT.COM| |WWW.CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM WWW.CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM WWWBREMERTONPATRIOT.COM

When the pursuit is the reward I was not a straight-A student in high school. Maybe that’s why I can tell you this story. Society only seems to accept success stories from people who have failed first. Except, I never truly failed. I just didn’t try that hard to succeed. I can’t say I improved much in college. This disappointed me, too. I finally got serious during my last three semesters, but my average—and sometimes below-average— performance all the years before haunted me. I always knew, I could have done much better. In 2010, I had the opportunity to try again. I didn’t

Navy Wise

Sarah Smiley need to go to graduate school, because my profession doesn’t require it, and I had already been writing professionally for more than a decade, but like a runner trying to improve her time, I was compelled to prove something to myself. I entered

Legal Notices IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON FOR KITSAP COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF: ROBERT NEIL HEISTAND, Deceased. NO. 15-4-00219-7 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The Personal Representative(s) named below has been appointed as Personal Representative(s) of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Personal Representative(s) or Personal Representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the Court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of : (1) Thirty days after the Personal Representative(s) served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020 (1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented with this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: March 20, 2015 Personal Representative(s): Mark K. Heistand Bryan T. Heistand Attorney for the Personal Representative(s)/Estate: KEVIN P. MORAN -

WSBA#8516 BENNETT MORAN & GIANNESCHI, INC. P.S. Address for Mailing or Service: 9057 WASHINGTON AVE., N.W., SILVERDALE, WA. 98383 Telephone: (360) 698-3000 Presented by: BENNETT MORAN & GIANNESCHI, INC., P.S. By: KEVIN P. MORAN WSBA #8516 Attorneys for Estate Date of first publication: 03/20/15 Date of last publication: 04/03/15 (CKR621305) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON FOR KITSAP COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF: MARY ESSIE TURNER, Deceased. NO. 15-4-00216-2 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The Personal Representative(s) named below has been appointed as Personal Representative(s) of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Personal Representative(s) or Personal Representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the Court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of : (1) Thirty days after the Personal Representative(s) served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020 (1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of

graduate school at the University of Maine and taught classes to help with tuition. It wasn’t easy because I had three small kids at home, but every time I felt burned out, a familiar vision came to me: those straight-A students in high school going across the graduation stage wearing their special sashes and ropes. I wanted to be them. I thought I should have been them. I knew I could have been them. But I never tried my hardest. I had walked the marathon instead of running it. My goal throughout graduate school was to finish with a 4.0 grade point average. I

often worked 12-hour days just to keep the dream alive. All along, I pictured myself at graduation with those important sashes and ropes. And then I did it. I finished with a 4.0. If you are tempted to say I shouldn’t be telling people that, ask yourself why. Why can’t people be proud of something they worked so hard for? I beamed as I went into the campus bookstore to pick up my graduation robe. A student behind the counter rang up my purchase. It was just an ordinary day for her, but for me, this was the finish line. I was about to run through the red ribbon. I was also

PageA11 A11 Page

about 17 years older than the cashier, so it was exceptionally awkward when I said in the hushed voice of someone who is dying to tell a secret, “This is kind of embarrassing, and I don’t mean to toot my own horn, but I kind of finished with a 4.0, so I think maybe I get a sash and rope?� The look on the student’s face made me instantly realize that no one her age says, “toot my own horn.� She stared at me for a few moments and then said, “Oh, they don’t do that for graduate students.� In my mind, records screeched to a halt. Time froze. Car tires skidded. Windows shattered. “What?� “I’m sorry,� she said, “but congratulations anyway.� And she handed me my receipt.

“But that’s the whole reason I did this,� I said. The 20-year-old next in line gently edged past me and said, “Sorry, ma’am.� I wanted the previous three years of my life back. A few years later, I told someone that story and they said, “I bet you were invited to join the honor society. If you had accepted you would have gotten a sash and rope.� In 2012, I was grading student papers up until one hour before graduation. So it’s entirely possible that I did not see said invitation, but it felt like maybe I had left the fair before my number was See full called in a raffle. story on the

website

For Kitsap Countywide Legal listings, please turn to Real Estate Now/Kitsap Classifieds first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented with this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: March 20, 2015 Personal Representative(s): Vicki J. Turner Sherry L. Hunter Attorney for the Personal Representative(s)/Estate: KEVIN P. MORAN WSBA#8516 BENNETT MORAN & GIANNESCHI, INC. P.S. Address for Mailing or Service: 9057 WASHINGTON AVE., N.W., SILVERDALE, WA. 98383 Telephone: (360) 698-3000 Presented by: BENNETT MORAN & GIANNESCHI, INC., P.S. By: KEVIN P. MORAN WSBA #8516 Attorneys for Estate Date of first publication: 03/20/15 Date of last publication: 04/03/15 (CKR621299) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF KITSAP In the Consolidated Estate of: DENNIS A. DIBLEY and JACQUELYN I. DIBLEY, Deceased. No. 15 4 00203 1 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS (RCW 11.40.030) The Personal Representative named below has been appointed as Personal Representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the deceased must, before the time the claim would be barred by any

otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving or mailing to the Personal Representative or the Personal Representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty (30) days after the Personal Representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020 (3); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the deceased’s probate and nonprobate assets. DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: MARCH, 20, 2015 /s/David S. Dibley DAVID S. DIBLEY Personal Representative SHERRARD McGONAGLE TIZZANO, P.S. /s/Richard C. Tizzano, By: Richard C. Tizzano, WSBA#22296 Attorneys for Personal Representative Address for Mailing or Service: 19717 Front Street NE PO Box 400 Poulsbo, WA 98370 Date of first publication: 03/20/15 Date of last publication: 04/03/15 (CKR620506) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR KITSAP COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF RAYMOND THEODORE JESSEN, Jr., Deceased.

NO. 15-4-00164-6 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS, RCW 11.40.030. The personal representative named below has been appointed as personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s attorney, MICHAEL E. STOWELL, WSBA#21685 at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020 (1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date of first publication: March 27, 2015. Personal Representative: MICHAEL E. STOWELL, PO Box 3663, Silverdale, WA 98383. Attorney for Estate: MICHAEL E. STOWELL, Attorney at Law, PO Box 3663, 9301 NW Linder Way, Silverdale, WA 98383. Phone: (360)692-8963. Date of first publication: 03/27/15 Date of Last Publication: 04/10/15 (CKR621739)

SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF KITSAP ONEWEST BANK, FSB, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF MARGARET E. MCKINLEY; ESTATE OF MARGARET E. MCKINLEY; LLOYD MCKINLEY AKA LOYD MCKINLEY; MARY E. MCKINLEY; HELEN DEAN AKA HELEN MCKINLEY HELEN DEAN; PAUL E. MCKINLEY; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; STATE OF WASHINGTON; OCCUPANTS OF THE PREMISES, Defendants. No. 13-2-02744-7 SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION TO THE DEFENDANTS Unknown Heirs and Devisees of Margaret E. McKinley; Mary E. McKinley; and any persons or parties claiming to have any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real property described in the complaint: You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty (60) days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to wit, within sixty (60) days after March 27, 2015, and defend the real property foreclosure action in Kitsap County Superior Court, and answer the complaint of OneWest Bank, FSB, (“Plaintiff�). You are asked to serve a copy of your answer or responsive pleading upon the undersigned attorneys for Plaintiff at its office stated below. In case of your failure to do so, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. The purpose of this law-

suit is to obtain a judgment, and if not immediately paid, to be satisfied through the foreclosure of real property located in Kitsap County, Washington, and legally described as follows: THAT PORTION OF THE WEST HALF OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER, SECTION 35, TOWNSHIP 25 NORTH, RANGE 1 EAST, W.M., IN KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: COMMENCING AT THE SOUTH QUARTER CORNER OF SAID SECTION 35; THENCE SOUTH 88°43’50â€? EAST ALONG THE SOUTH LINE OF SAID SECTION 35, A DISTANCE OF 162.43 FEET; THENCE NORTH 1°12’10â€? EAST 30.00 FEET TO THE NORTH MARGIN OF RIDDELL ROAD, THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE CONTINUE NORTH 1°12’10â€? EAST 110.00 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 88°43’50â€? EAST 108.00 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 1°12’10â€? WEST 110.00 FEET TO THE NORTH MARGIN OF RIDDELL ROAD; THENCE NORTH 88°43’50â€? WEST ALONG SAID MARGIN 108.00 FEET TO THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING; ALSO THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED TRACT: BEGINNING AT THE SOUTH QUARTER CORNER OF SAID SECTION 35; THENCE NORTH 1°13’19â€? EAST ALONG THE CENTERLINE OF SAID SECTION 35, 30 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 88°43’50â€? EAST 162.43 FEET; THENCE NORTH 1°12’10â€? EAST 110 FEET TO THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE NORTHEASTERLY IN A STRAIGHT LINE TO THE MOST SOUTHERLY CORNER OF LOT 22 IN THE RECORDED PLAT OF RIDGEMONT; THENCE SOUTH 61°54’56â€? EAST 70.63

FEET TO A POINT WHICH IS SOUTH 88°43’50â€? EAST 108 FEET FROM THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE NORTH 88°43’50â€? WEST 108 FEET TO THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING; SITUATE IN KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON. Commonly known as: 856 Northeast Riddell Road, Bremerton, WA 98310 DATED this 23rd day of March, 2015. RCO LEGAL, P.S. By/s/Laura Coughlin Laura Coughlin, WSBA #46124 Attorney for Plaintiff 13555 SE 36th Street, Ste 300 Bellevue, WA 98006 Date of first publication: 03/27/15 Date of last publication: 05/01/15 (CKR622789) !DVERTISEĂĽYOURĂĽ UPCOMINGĂĽGARAGEĂĽSALEĂĽ INĂĽYOURĂĽLOCALĂĽCOMMUNITYĂĽ NEWSPAPERĂĽANDĂĽONLINEĂĽ TOĂĽREACHĂĽTHOUSANDSĂĽOFĂĽ HOUSEHOLDSĂĽINĂĽYOURĂĽAREA ĂĽ 'OĂĽONLINEĂĽTO www.SoundClassifieds.com #ALL ĂĽ &AX ĂĽ

Expand your market, advertise in the Classifieds today

SOUNDCLASSIFIEDS.COM 1.800.388.2527

Classifieds@soundpublishing.com


Page A12

WWW.BREMERTONPATRIOT.COM | WWW.CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Friday, April 3, 2015

w i n der m er e .com

OPEN HOUSE Courage Heights invites you to come visit OPEN SAT 1-5. Come visit Courage Heights on Mile Hill Drive to North on Olney Ave. to Right on SE Orlando St. Enter plat to your left. These 3 & 4 bedroom/ 2.5 bath homes range in price from $234,950 to $274,900. Barry Jones or Andrew Welch 360-876-9600

701 NE Sommerseth Street, Poulsbo $415,000 OPEN SAT 12-3. This well kept one owner view home in the heart of Poulsbo has 3 bdrm/1.75 bath, newer energy efficient vinyl windows, refinished oak hardwood fls, large sunny lot, spacious paved parking. Views of Liberty Bay & Olympic Mtns. #724329 Steve Smaaladen 360-710-8800

37400 Buck Road NE, Driftwood Key $239,900 OPEN SUN 1-3. Fantastic Driftwood Key 1444 sf rambler! This 3 bdrm/2 bth home is perfect move-in condition. New carpet, roof, & gutters in 2011. Partial view. Driftwood Key amenities include marina, Boat Launch, Pool, and Beach Access. Just a delightful community! #684991 Chris Moyer 360-509-1221

15980 Lindsey Lane NE, Poulsbo $430,000 OPEN SAT 1-3. Custom built home in the Nesika Bay neighborhood of Lemolo. Features Liberty Bay& Olympic Mtn views. Brazilian Cherry HW floors, soaring ceilings, expansive view decks, nearly main floor master (4 steps), & elec FA heat w/HP, fresh paint in and out, finished bonus rm, spacious den/office, beautiful landscaping, & community beach & tennis court. Easy Seattle commute. #753263 Hosted by Moira McDonough 360-779-5205

4233 Swift Ave SW Port Orchard $284,950 OPEN SAT 1-3. This one owner home has 4 bed 2.5 bath just shy of 2400 SqFt has it all, huge rooms throughout. Kitchen with Island, Open Concept, All Stainless Steel Appliances, Walk in Pantry, Family Room, Hook-up for gas range, AC, Fully Fenced. #741330 Jennifer Connelly-Delay 360-876-9600 20703 Puget Street NE, Indianola $320,000 OPEN SAT 1-4. Charming 1994 3 bdrm, Full & 3/4 bath, 1298 sqft home on .33 Acre Featuring: living room, cozy wood stove, dining room, Hardwood & Tile Floors, Updated Kitchen solid surface counters & Alder Cabinets. Appliances Stay: Range, Ref, DW, Micro, W&D Wood Siding, vinyl double pane windows, New Roof and 2 Car Detached Garage with a large Studio/Office/Craft Room etc above the garage. This gorgeous home is sitting on .33 Park Like Setting w/fenced back yard, garden area and it is close to the beach! #757272 Jeanette Paulus 360-286-4321 19856 Ash Crest Loop NE, Poulsbo $400,000 OPEN SAT 11-2. Lrg Poulsbo Place 3 bdrm hm close to downtown shops & restaurants. Hm features 9ft ceilings, open concept entertaining kit & living room, 2 car gar w/hardwood floors, covered front & back porch & more. Yard is professionally lndscpd w/ sprinkler system & maintained by HOA. #762745 Summer Davy 360-535-3625 Steve Derrig 360-710-8086

BREMERTON Bremerton #741638 $94,900 Short Sale listing price is lender approved! Corner unit of well maintained grouping of homes; south facing end of triplex style home. Spacious feeling for the size. 3 bdrms & extra storage. Bkyd opens to community courtyard w/ play structure. Must be owner occupied. Why rent when you can own? Dino Davis 360-850-8566 East Bremerton #700312 $195,000 Short Sale! 4 bedroom, 2+ bath with huge detached garage/ shop. Great price… Don’t miss it! Kathy Olsen 360-434-1291 Marie Hooker 360-440-8550 Bremerton #730976 $489,900 Stunning 3 bdrm craftsman style hm w/panoramic, full on view of Phinney Bay! Breathtaking! Private & secluded. Built in 2006-like new! Unparalleled craftsmanship throughout! Exceptional kit w/granite counters, breakfast bar & stainless appliances. Adjacent the family room w/cozy gas frpl w/ granite surround. Molly Ells 360-620-2690 Reymont #474436 $498,800 Custom, quality built, dream home w/great views of Puget Sound/Dyes Inlet & Olympic Mtns. Mstr on main, vaulted ceilings, 2 frplcs -& much more available for as Presale to select colors & make it yours! Surrounded w/over 9 acres of green belts. Community bch rights, close to Bremerton Ferry & Harrison Hospital. Irene & Chris Wurden 360-731-8844

1090 Holm Court NE, Poulsbo $469,000 OPEN SAT 1-3. Rare opportunity to own a charming Poulsbo 3 bdrm/2 bth home w/an outstanding view of Liberty Bay & the marina. This home exudes European charm, light & bright, with a sensible floor plan. The dining area & living room feature high ceilings & are the perfect place to relax & enjoy the scenery. Almost every room has a view. A short stroll to town for coffee, shopping & dinner! #732138 Joni Kimmel & Bridget Young 360-509-6988 22841 Singingwood Place NE Kingston $768,000 OPEN SUN 1-4. Classic one level Cape Cod style beauty on the 14th fairway of White Horse Golf Course. Warm livability w/timeless sophistication. Lofty ceilings and generous windows provide light and beautiful finishes. Formal & informal living areas wrap a stylish two island kitchen w/tiered patio to dine alfresco. Lavish master suite. Ensuite guest bedrooms plus media room. 5 min to town and ferry! #755811 Barb Huget & Terry Klein 360-620-6445 10290 NE Rose Point Way, Kingston $599,500 OPEN SAT 1-4. NEW ON THE MARKET. A perfect waterfront package in Eglon! Wide open views of Puget Sound & Cascade Mtns. Access to an amazing beach for boating, crabbing & play. Immaculate home boasting a great room design with 3 BD, 2.5 BA & loft office. Main floor master suite, striking river rock gas fireplace, expansive ironwood deck, heat pump, lovely landscape & fully fenced property. Splendid waterfront living! #758709 Cathy Morris 360-271-8448

COMMERCI A L Silverdale #CBA556989 2 story office building with great visibility & location in the heart of Silverdale commercial district. Elevator, landscaped courtyard, and plenty of parking. Stuart Nethery 360-850-7443 Joe Michelsen 360-509-4009

wATER fRONT Kingston #627604 $549,000 Fabulous waterfront! Panoramic 180 degree unobstructed view of Puget Sound, shipping lanes, Cascade Mtns, Mt. Baker, Point-no-point, Whidbey Island & Edmonds. Only 5 minutes from Kingston ferry. Level lot, all utilities in & underground. Private no bank sandy beach with tidelands included. Catherine Arlen 360-340-8186 Hansville #747904 $675,000 100’ Low bank waterfront hm w/Olympic Mtn views on 2.19AC. 2 bd/1.75 bth rambler with 2018 Sf. Spacious kitchen w/island, hardwood floors, wood blinds. 4 car detached garage. Walk the beach and enjoy the NW Wildlife. Pat Miller 360-509-2385 Kingston #753281 $849,000 Here comes the sun! Fabulous 5944 SF retreat w/views of Mt. Baker, Whidbey Is, shipping lanes & the Cascades. 120’ of gorgeous waterfront. Master on the main w/an expansive bath & jetted tub surrounded w/stained glass, open concept, vaulted ceilings, gourmet kitchen. Doug Hallock 360-271-1315

KINGSTON

Windermere Real Estate/West Sound, Inc.

(360) 297-2661 • WindermereKingston.com

POULSBO

Windermere Real Estate/West Sound, Inc.

(360) 779-5205 • WindermerePoulsbo.com

NORTH K ITSA P

SOUTH K ITSA P

Hansville #663367 $110,000 First time on the market, this 2 bdrm/1 bath cabin, could be your get-a-way. Enjoy the Shorewoods Club house and pool with access to the best fishing and crabbing on the Hood Canal. Scott Anderson 360-536-2048

Port Orchard #761451 $21,000 Just an adorable home. Comfortable and clean. Very well maintained. Delightful landscaping would be fantastic for the Garden enthusiast. The seller put much care in making this outdoor area fun and inviting. Tastefully done Raised beds surround most of the property with a custom built raised planter box “Train” to enjoy summer bulbs and flowers. Lilac, cherry tree, strawberries,&raspberries. Covered deck. 2 parking sp. plus work shop and garden shed. Nicely fenced. Room for small boat/rv. Judy Hartness 360-620-2395

Kingston #755231 $225,000 Unique property. The main structure boasts 2108 sf & the adjacent portable building offers an additional 952sf for office? daycare? studio? shop? Skylights & west-facing windows flood the main rooms with natural light, and the space could be reclaimed as a private residence. 2.4 acre parcel features a fenced back yard & tons of parking. Financing requires Buyer to upgrade 1/2 baths to 3/4. Alma Hammon 360-509-5218 Poulsbo #624807 $334,400 Horse lovers! 3+ acres of sunny, level land w/ 2448 sf home & multiple outbuildings. Home has remodeled kitchen w/SS appliances. Quick, take a look before it’s gone. Sheenah Hellmers & Terry Burns 360-440-7506 Poulsbo# 457618 $389,500 Live, Work & Play downtown!! Street level retail space w/ lovely townhouse above! Options are limitless! Cherry hrdwd flrs, 2 mstr bdrms, attached garage, outside deck, gas frplc & lots of storage. The retail space is 786 sf in an excellent location overlooking Oak Tree Plaza. All just blocks to many fine restaurants, shops, marina, village parks! Jay Robertson 360-620-5403 Poulsbo #759406 $425,000 Custom 1682 sf rambler nestled on .63 acres in the coveted Lemolo community. Cozy great rm w/ propane frplc, river rock chimney, slab granite countertops, radiant floor heat, & on-demand water heater. One-level, wide hallways, ADA friendly. Beautiful park like grounds. Sit on your front porch & watch the glistening waters of Liberty Bay through the cedar trees. Easy commute to downtown Seattle. Catherine Jones 360-434-5598 Kingston #760620 $445,900 Uncompromised quality & condition coupled w/see forever marine & mtn. views. Custom construction, light filled, home has endless amenities & upgrades: pine floors, river rock FP, cedar shingle siding, walk-in pantry, & heat pump. Master Suite occupies entire top floor; sweeping views & private deck. 384 SF finished above garage. Beach access steps away completes the package! Christine Brevick 360-509-0132 Poulsbo #742202 $499,500 Wide open spaces with natural light and mountain-view flooding in through the architectural windows. A nice mixture of formal and casual rooms to enjoy. Extra large, 2 car garage with gorgeous ADU upstairs. The large open kitchen with granite counters and commercial range flows to the large family room. Enjoy the mountain-view from the kitchen and nook while cooking and dining. Marie Hooker 360-440-8550

M A SON COUNT y Seabeck #762218 $219,777 2.34 acres of privacy & serene setting. Splendid remodeled rambler with vaulted ceilings..rustic yet country class, while glazed with brilliant windows bathing its inhabitants in all the right light & territorial glory. Brand new roof & septic drain field. Fresh paint & new flooring. James Bergstrom 360-876-9600

CENTR A L K ITSA P Silverdale #760122 $335,000 Tastefully updated daylight rambler on over an acre in perfect location to enjoy all of Kitsap County. Kit has new appliances, hickory cabinets & solid surface countertops. Hrdwd & tile flring help keep maintenance to a minimum. Oversized back deck is accessible from kit nook or mstr bdrm. Mstr bth is like new w/updated custom tile work. The daylight basement has woodstove in fam rm & two bonus rooms for crafting & hobbies. Just a perfect location & home. Jason Galbreath 360-551-5392

Port Orchard #758860 $214,777 Looking for a riveting rambler centered in great Port Orchard. Extremely fluid Floor plan which opens right up starting with a kitchen with great cabinet space to an open dining room and large greatroom w/stone fireplace. 3 good sized bedrooms, newer roof. James Bergstrom 360-876-9600 McCormick Woods #761950 $255,000 Wonderful 1,830 sq.ft., 3 bed 2.5 bth hm built in 2010. Kitchen w/decorative backsplash. Generous mstr bed w/ ensuite bth & huge walk-in closet. Additional 2 large bedrooms and small loft area. Fully fenced backyard with patio. Close to community park and walking trails. Christine Johnson 360-981-3058 Port Orchard #680808 $264,900 This home offers 3 large bedrooms, Laundry, extra bonus area (office/workout room/t.v. room). In addition, a tankless water heater, instant hot water, fenced in back yard, large deck, hot tub, and warm custom wall colors. Kim Bartell & Donna Cryder 360-876-9600 Port Orchard #759498 $269,900 Outstanding 4 Bedroom, 2.5 bath two story in Port Orchard’s newest plat, Courage Heights. A large master bedroom full bath, large walk-in closet, gourmet kitchen with granite counter tops, stainless appliances and hardwood floors. Barry Jones & Andrew Welch 360-876-9600 Port Orchard #761256 $274,900 This outstanding 3 bedroom, 2.5 bathroom two story/ basement in Port Orchard’s newest plat, Courage Heights. A large master bedroom, full bath, large walk-in closet, gourmet kitchen with granite counter tops, stainless appliances and hardwood floors. Barry Jones & Andrew Welch 360-876-9600

NBK trains in Sinclair Inlet

BREMERTON – Naval Base Kitsap (NBK) held successful training exercises in Sinclair Inlet between Bremerton and Port Orchard on Friday, March 27. “Friday’s exercise gave our security personnel the opportunity to hone their skills in a more realistic training environment,” said Capt. Tom Zwolfer, commanding officer, Naval Base Kitsap. “We appreciate the community’s support while we were conducting the exercise.” Residents around Sinclair Inlet Friday morning may have heard simulated gunfire that was used to amplify the real-world training experience. This type of training will continue to be a staple in honing the tactical skills of NBK’s security forces. NBK’s Naval Security Forces are comprised of active duty masters at arms, Department of Navy police officers, and contracted security forces. A variety of training scenarios are used in numerous locations to ensure security forces are reacting quickly and effectively to potential threats.

New sex offender registered

Port Orchard #757433 $279,900 This outstanding 4 Bedrooms, 3.5 Bathroom two story. A large master bedrooms, full bath with tile counter, large walk-in closet, gourmet kitchen with granite counter tops, stainless appliances and hardwood floors. Barry Jones & Andrew Welch 360-876-9600 Olalla #724002 $329,000 Don’t miss this outstanding Home on acreage. Potential mini farm, Equestrian, property has two pastures out buildings and a 900 sq ft shop. The large country kitchen is so inviting one might not even use the formal living room. Terry Knowlton 360-876-9600

L A Nd & LOTS Kingston #744071 $40,000 Now is the time to start building your dream home. This is a nice, fairly level, .53 acre corner lot located 5 miles south of Kingston. Community beach, pier and park. Dave Muller 360-620-4299 Hansville #760293 $86,700 THE LAST OF THE GOOD ONES! Lovely view home site in Driftwood Key w/ panoramic views of the Hood Canal & Olympic Mtn range. Lot has a prepaid water hookup & enjoys the amenities of Community Beach Access, Boat Launch, Marina, Swimming pool, & Community Park. Steve Smaaladen 360-710-8800

PORT ORCHARD

Windermere Real Estate/Port Orchard, Inc.

(360) 876-9600 • PortOrchardRealEstate.com

SILVERDALE

Windermere Real Estate/West Sound, Inc.

(360) 692-6102 • WindermereSilverdale.com

Cody J. Blakley BREMERTON — The Bremerton Police Department released information regarding a recent registered sex offender in Kitsap County. Cody J. Blakley, 28, is registered on the 100 block of Acorn Street in Bremerton. He is described as 5-feet 10-inches, 200-pounds with brown hair and blue eyes. In 2012, Blakley pled guilty in Cowlitz County to rape of a child in the third degree. Blakley is not wanted by police.


KITSAPweek A p r i l 3 - 9, 2 015

Lots of savings in Kitsap County’s largest Classified section. With legal notices

An inspired effort LIFE AND CULTURE

Pages 19-24

Left, Katie Gerstenberger of Poulsbo died in 2007 of adrenocortical carcinoma. The Katie Gerstenberger Endowment for Cancer Research is helping to fund research into immunotherapy. Right, Hannah Hunt died in 2010 from medulloblastoma, a brain cancer. Hannah’s Hopeful Hearts helps fund research into new surgical techniques that remove cancer without damaging healthy tissue. Photos: Gerstenberger and Hunt families

Two local girls spurred efforts to fund cancer research, and those efforts are saving lives

By RICHARD WALKER Kitsap Week

P

OULSBO — Katie Gerstenberger and Hannah Hunt each had cancer — Katie, a rare form; Hannah, a common and aggressive one — and they weren’t going to give in without a fight. They underwent treatment and surgeries. They recovered and relapsed. They had dreams for the future — Katie wanted to be an actor or a writer, Hannah wanted to be a teacher — but those dreams

changed. Because of what they endured and what they saw others enduring at Children’s Hospital, both wanted to help cure cancer. And when their diagnoses were terminal, they still didn’t give up the fight; each laid the foundation for the battle to continue, for the research to be done, so that other lives may be lived. Katie and Hannah each died at age 12. But the efforts they inspired live on, having raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for research at Seattle

Children’s Hospital. And that research is making a difference. Dr. Michael Jensen has developed an immunotherapy that uses the patient’s own T cells — white blood cells in the immune system that fight infection — to seek out and destroy cancer cells in the body. According to Katie’s mom Karen, this treatment “has saved 11 children who had no more hope.” And Dr. Jim Olson developed Tumor Paint, derived from scorpion venom, which “lights up” cancerous cells, enabling surgeons to differentiate diseased

from healthy tissue. The result is a more precise and complete surgical removal of cancerous tissue, while sparing surrounding normal tissue. Hannah’s mom, Reba Ferguson, said, “It’s going to be different for the next generation.” The troops have breached cancer’s fortress walls. You can be a soldier in Katie and Hannah’s army by attending an event presented by Hannah’s Hopeful Hearts, 7 p.m. April 10, at Grace Church on Bainbridge See REsEARCH, Page 2

65,000 circulation every Friday in the Bainbridge Island Review | Bremerton Patriot | Central Kitsap Reporter | North Kitsap Herald | Port Orchard Independent


Page 2

kitsapweek

Friday, April 3, 2015

Research

Continued from page 1

FINAL MONTH | NOW - MAY 2ND Hysteria | Saturday, April 4th A tribute to Def Leppard

Malfunkshun with Mos Generator | Fri, April 10th

The Seattle sound that started it all

Journey Revisited | Saturday, April 11th The Most Authentic Journey Experience

Wine Tasting at The Beach | Sat, April 11th

4:00 PM - 6:00 PM | $20 includes ticket to Journey Revisited

Chippendales | Wednesday, April 15th THE ULTIMATE GIRLS NIGHT OUT!

Women of Comedy | Friday, April 17th Show at 9:00 PM Featuring Cathy Ladman & Laura Hayden

Tickets $10 advance | $15 day of show | 21 and over Doors 7:00 PM | Shows 8:00 PM

| Full entertainment schedule online

Close to Home... Far From Ordinary.® Kingston, WA • www.the-point-casino.com • 1.866.547.6468 Tickets available now at these locations: In the gift shop | On our website For more information Call 866.547.6468 | Ages 21 and over The Point Casino is proudly owned and operated by The Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe. See the Wildcard Players Club for complete details. You must be a member of The Point Casino’s Wildcard Players Club to participate in some programs. Some restrictions may apply. Point Casino promotions, offers, coupons and/or specials may not be combined without marketing management approval. Management reserves all rights to alter or cancel without prior notice. You must be at least 21 years old to participate in gaming activities, to attend entertainment events and to enter lounge/bar areas. Knowing your limit is your best bet—get help at (800) 547-6133.

TPC-5356-4 Kitsap_week.indd 1

3/30/15 1:25 PM

Island. The evening will feature hors d’oeuvres, dessert, beer and wine, and a concert by St. Paul de Vence. The highlight of the evening: Presentations by Dr. Olson, hematology-oncology physician at Seattle Children’s and director of Project Violet at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center; and Dr. Jensen, director of the Ben Towne Center for Childhood Cancer Research at Seattle Children’s and a force behind the Strong Against Cancer Initiative. All proceeds from each $40 ticket — $75 per couple — will help support Olson and Jensen’s work. Tickets are available at www.hannahshopeful hearts.brownpapertickets. com. The event costs are being underwritten by Windermere Real Estate/ Bainbridge Island, where Hannah’s father has been a broker for 36 years. The Katie Gerstenberger Endowment for Cancer Research at Seattle Children’s Hospital was established at Katie’s direction and helps fund Jensen’s research. Hannah’s Hopeful Hearts helps fund Olson’s research. Katie died in August 2007 from adrenocortical carcinoma, described as an aggressive cancer originating in the outer layer, or steroid-producing tissue, of the adrenal gland. Hannah died from medulloblastoma, a brain cancer, in August 2010, two days before the start of her seventh-grade year at Woodward Middle School. Since their passings, Katie’s endowment has grown to more than $295,000, the income from

which supports research at the Ben Towne Center at Seattle Children’s, and Hannah’s Hopeful Hearts has contributed an undetermined amount for research, raising more than $100,000 at one event, Ferguson said. For the April 10 event, donors have pledged matching gifts of $65,000. Katie and Hannah were born three years apart, grew up in different communities and did not know each other, but their stories are similar. Katie grew up in Poulsbo, the daughter of Gregg and Karen Gerstenberger. Until her diagnosis, Katie had “an incredibly healthy childhood,” Karen said. “She was interested in acting. She liked reading stories. She wanted to become a writer. She wanted to have a family. She was very funny and strong willed. She took drama and piano. She loved her friends. She loved the beach. She was very imaginative and very feminine.” Katie was also strong and incredibly brave. “She went through 10 months of treatment, underwent an 18-hour surgery and had a huge recovery from that, then relapsed,” Karen said. When her diagnosis became terminal, Katie wrote a will. She bequeathed 50 percent of her money to Goodwill, and 50 percent to her brother and parents. She gifted her books to the public library. Following their daughter’s lead — “I want to cure tumors like mine,” she said — her family asked for donations to Children’s Hospital in lieu of flowers. “For a 12-year-old girl to face death like that,” Karen said, still astonished by her daughter’s bravery. “Even at the end,

she did what she could do to effect change.” Karen and Katie’s journey together through treatment inspired Karen’s 278-page book, “Because of Katie,” published in 2008. Paula D’Arcy, author of “Gift of the Red Bird” and “When People Grieve,” called the book “a beautiful, forceful story.” Hannah grew up on Bainbridge Island, the daughter of Bill Hunt and Reba Ferguson. “She was really upbeat and positive — a funny, friendly girl,” Ferguson said. “Many called her their best friend, because she was a friend to so many. She loved her friends, her family, her pets. She was really into school, which made her ordeal so tough. She was in trials for three years and missed all of fourth grade. Surgery and chemo and radiation each took her down a few notches, gradually robbing her of her cognitive capacities.” Through it all, Hannah never gave up, taking up yoga and bolstering her immune system with vitamins and supplements. She never complained. And in March 2010, she attended the first Hannah’s Hopeful Hearts event at Grace Church, the event that raised six figures to support Dr. Olson’s research. Hannah had become a force in the effort to cure cancer. Hannah died five months after the 2010 fundraiser. The April 10 event will be a poignant one for Olson — his first return to Grace Church and Bainbridge Island. And so, the efforts spurred by Katie and Hannah continue, beckoning others to join the battle. “She changed from wanting to be a teacher to wanting to be a doctor who cured cancer,” Ferguson said of Hannah. “She would want us to keep fighting.” ONLINE: See videos about the Olson and Jensen’s research at www. vimeo.com/72117265 and www.vimeo. com/29799436. For more information about the Katie Gerstenberger Endowment, go to www. katiegerstenbergerendow ment.blogspot.com. For more information about Hannah’s Hopeful Hearts, go to www.hannahshope fulhearts.wordpress.com.


Friday, April 3, 2015

aroundkitsap

kitsapweek

Page 3

Articles from neighboring Kitsap communities. For more news, read these newspapers online. BAinBridge islAnd review Islanders want to form electric utility: Imagine paying much less for your power bill, for cleaner energy. That’s the hope and dream of a group called Island Power, created by neighbors who are interested in creating a non-profit electric utility for Bainbridge. “It will be a big deal to the island if we go forward with it,” said Steve Johnson, cochair of Island Power. If residents concur, Island Power hopes to buy out Puget Sound Energy equipment and provide lower rates, creation of local jobs and reduction of carbon emissions along with community ownership, control and economic benefits. The annual power bill of the island hovers around $14 million, Johnson estimated. With a public utility in place, that cost would be much, much lower, he and others with Island Power believe. It also would mean cleaner energy as the island’s current electricity comes from the Montana-based Colstrip plant, which is the second-largest coal-fired generating facility west of

the Mississippi River. “I was thinking it would be great if Bainbridge Island can take a stand against global warming,” said Jane Lindley, an Island Power co-chair. “We have a lot of people who care about the environment on this island. I think people will embrace the notion that we can, as an island, be a model of sustainability for other cities,” Lindley said. For more information on the group’s initiative, visit www.island-power.org. — BainbridgeReview.com

Bremerton PAtriot Little diner wins big: The walls inside the Sweet and Smokey Diner became a bit more cluttered this week. Their barbecue pit master won four awards at the Northwest Cured Meat Championships in Seaside, Oregon March 19-21. Those awards are framed and mounted inside the deli area. Nathan Sultemeier, 57, won for boneless ham (second place), whole muscle specialty (second place), cased fresh sausage (third place) and bulk fresh sausage (third place).

Above from left, Emily Rogers, Derek King and Meg Brown display oysters they found on Poulsbo’s shoreline. Rogers is a senior and Brown is a junior at Eagle Harbor High School on Bainbridge Island. Richard D. Oxley

Not bad considering he only spent a week preparing. “I was happy to get a couple reserve grand champions and two championships,” Sultemeier said. There were about 150 entries at the championships, including Sultemeier’s former employer, Olson’s Meats and Smokehouse in Enumclaw. Olson’s is widely known in Washington and finished as the overall winner. During his five years with Olson’s, they won 27 awards using his recipes. “It’s bittersweet because I loved working there,” Sultemeier said. “But (they) took credit for winning the awards.” Sweet and Smokey opened August 2014 on Fourth Street and Park Avenue. They’re open Tuesday through Thursday, 6 a.m. to 8 p.m., Fridays, 6 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. and Saturdays, 7 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. — BremertonPatriot.com

CentrAl KitsAP rePorter Harrison contracts for Silverdale site: Harrison Medical Center, a part of CHI Franciscan Health, has selected Balfour Beatty Construction’s Washington State Division to provide preconstruction and construction services in support of the acute care hospital expansion in Silverdale. Balfour Beatty Construction is a national construction firm with a long-standing history in Seattle through its legacy company, Howard S. Wright. Last fall, Harrison announced NBBJ of Seattle as the project’s architect. Groundbreaking for the new Silverdale facility is expected to begin later this year, which marks the first phase of Harrison Medical Center’s Vision 2020 expansion project. Balfour Beatty Construction will serve as the primary contractor for the new hospital and plans to engage local subcontractors

north KitsAP herAld Poulsbo’s oysters spread around the Sound: The Puget Sound Restoration Fund has collected oysters from Poulsbo’s Liberty Bay to bring restore the species’ popuation in Puget Sound. The organization recently sent a team to the Poulsbo shoreline to collect approximately 1,000 oysters that will be taken to a shellfish hatchery in Manchester. After producing sufficient quantities of young oysters, they will be brought back to their home in Liberty Bay. The produced oysters will be placed on tidelands throughout central Puget Sound in 2016 with the aim of increasing the region’s native oyster population. On March 23, Derek King, program technician with the Puget Sound Restoration

Fund spent the afternoon collecting oysters with two students from Eagle Harbor High School on Bainbridge Island: junior Meg Brown and senior Emily Rogers. The oysters they were collecting were Olympia oysters, the region’s native variety that has suffered an extreme loss of population and habitat throughout Puget Sound. “We’re at about 4 percent of historic numbers,” King said. “A big problem is that people look out (at the water) and say, ‘Oh, it’s functioning because it looks pretty. I don’t see oil and it’s not on fire; it must be fine,’” King said. “When really, there are some major things happening, like key native species that serve this ecosystem are missing.” “Oysters are filter feeders. Each one of these oysters can filter up to 40 or more gallons of water a day,” King said. “When you are talking See ARoundKitsAp, Page 4

Choices that fit your business

531255598

Commercial Lending

and tradespeople on the project wherever possible. — CentralKitsapReporter. com

Welcome Adam! Adam Finfer

Commercial Relationship Manager, VP 360.308.2353 adam.finfer@ourfirstfed.com

Visit Adam at our Silverdale Branch at 3035 Bucklin Hill Rd

Commercial Equipment • Commercial Lines of Credit • Commercial Real Estate Local Lenders • Local Decisions • Local Focus

Learn More > ourfirstfed.com 800.800.1577

Member FDIC


Page 4

kitsapweek

AroundKitsap Continued from page 3

about a bay that used to have filter feeding animals, and now doesn’t, you then start to hear about nutrient pollution, which is excess nitrogen and phosphorus entering the system from our waste, our pets’ waste, our agriculture’s waste.” That nutrient pollution can fuel other problems such as excess algae growth. — NorthKitsapHerald.com

Friday, April 3, 2015 Port orChArd indePendent Kitsap tourism outlook is bright: Patricia Graf-Hoke, executive director of Visit Kitsap Peninsula, said tourism is burgeoning in Kitsap on March 12 at the Silverdale Beach Hotel. “It’s estimated that the tourism industry in Kitsap County is $500-$700 million dollars,” she said. “It’s responsible for about 6,700 jobs and it is a growth industry.” Leisure travel and lodging has increased in Kitsap, as

FAMILY ~ PANCAKE ~

has competition with other Puget Sound areas for tourist dollars. Graf-Hoke said the most successful branding message is the concept of “Kitsap Peninsula” as a whole. She pointed to a recent edition of China Airlines’ inflight magazine, which featured an article titled “Relaxing retreat: Kitsap Peninsula, Washington State” as an example. The Kitsap-wide branding message was important because smaller, unincorporated areas such as Colby

and Manchester could ride the “Kitsap Peninsula” unified branding message coattails rather than having to try and send out a message on their own. She also referred to a recent study titled “Earth Economics.” In it, “Kitsap was ranked No. 4 out of 39 counties for employment related to the outdoor recreation. They estimated $700 million of revenue generated. We were ninth out of 39 counties for revenues generated related to expenditures for outdoor

recreation. So we are right on target with our liquid assets, our water trails and all of our other outdoor adventure marketing,” she said. Tourism also accounted for an increase in tourism-related construction projects, she said, including Point Casino in Kingston’s plans to build a hotel to be able to meet demand. “They turned away 18,000 room nights last year because they didn’t have capacity,” Graf-Hoke said. “Tourism is a huge growth opportunity for Kitsap Coun-

ty and generates about $37 million just in taxes that the [county] commissioners get to use for projects.” Graf-Hoke said the goal was to keep tourists on the peninsula for longer periods of time. “What’s good for environment is good for the economy,” Graf-Hoke said. Graf-Hoke said the county’s large areas of publicly accessible shoreline also was attractive to tourists. — PortOrchardIndepen dent.com

GREATER KITSAP

HOUSE DINING & ENTERTAINMENT $ 00 2 OFF

Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Served All Day

Contact Your Favorite Location For

EASTER SPECIALS! 1034 Bethel Ave Port Orchard

ANY GUEST CHECK OF $15.00 OR MORE 1 coupon per table not valid with any other offer. Exp. 4/10/15

4115 Wheaton Way E. Bremerton

(360)895-0545

(360)479-0788

3900 Kitsap Way Bremerton (360)479-2422

Voted BEST STEAKHOUSE in Kitsap County!

5 OFF a 30 purchase

$

VIP CARD PROGRAM

$

Exp. 4/30/15. Not valid with any other offer

Voted Best Family Dining and Best Hamburger

5

$

OFF Any $20 bill.

(Cannot be combined with any other offer.)

Purchase Price: Only $15.00, ask your server or bartender for details! NEVER EXPIRES!

15% DISCOUNT OFF OF EVERYTHING! (except alcohol). This includes Specials, Happy Hour Appetizers, Etc.

4111 Wheaton Way Bremerton • (360) 627-7515

9989 Silverdale Way NW, Silverdale (360) 692-5888 www.fujiyamawa.com

Exp 4/30/2015

HAPPY HOUR EVERYDAY 3:30PM-6:30PM

360-373-3093

2901 Perry Ave., Bremerton | www.mccloudsgrillhouse.com

Invite over 97,000 readers to your restaurant, special one-time or on-going events when you advertise in the weekly Dining & Entertainment guide.

4-3-15

Reserve your space now! Bainbridge Review 206-842-6613

North Kitsap Herald 360-779-4464

Central Kitsap Reporter 360-308-9161

Bremerton Patriot 360-308-9161

Port Orchard Independent 360-876-4414


Friday, April 3, 2015

kitsapweek

Page 5

kitsapcalendar Calendar submissions The Kitsap Week calendar is a free listing of events in Kitsap County. To submit an event, email the name of the involved organization, the event’s date, purpose, cost (if applicable) and contact information to roxley@northkitsapherald.com.

BeneFits & events norTh kiTsap high school class of 1965 reunion : The NKHS Class of ’65 is planning its 50th class reunion for Aug. 7, 5-10 p.m. at Kiana Lodge in Poulsbo. Reservations are $65. Send check to Barbara “Lewis” Umstadd, 2442 Market St., No. 263, Seattle, WA 98107. Info: www.krc.org. wesT sound free clinics in april: Four clinics throughout the Kitsap Peninsula. The Poulsbo/North Kitsap clinic is at Gateway Fellowship, 18901 - 8th Ave. NE, April 3, 5:30-8 p.m. The West Bremerton clinic is held at St. Vincent de Paul, 1117 N Callow Ave., April 13, 4:30-7:30 p.m. on 4/13 and April 23, 1-4 p.m. The East Bremerton clinic is at Hillcrest Assembly, 6750 Washington Hwy 303, April 28, 1-4 p.m. Clinics provide primary care, some free prescriptions, lab draws, images done when needed, and specialist referrals. sons of norway easTer egg hunT: April 4, noon to 1 p.m. at the Poulsbo waterfront. easTer egg hunT: April 4, noon at Forest Ridge Park, Bremerton. Hosted by the Bremerton Elks and the American Legion. Easter Bunny will be present for kids. fleeT reserve associaTion egg hunT: April 4, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at 11281 Old Frontier Road, Silverdale. For ages 1-12. Includes hot dogs, chips and soda for a donation. Free. hop drop egg hunT: April 5, noon to 1 p.m. at North Kitsap High School. A helicopter dropping eggs for a massive hunt. Info: 360-633-6050. www.newlife.tv/hopdrop. walk ms kiTsap: Kitsap’s Walk MS 2015 is April 11 in Silverdale. Start a team or find more information at www.walkms.org, or call 800-344-4867. spring planT and Book sale: April 17, 1-5 p.m. and April 18, noon to 3 p.m. at the downtown Bremerton Library, 612 Fifth St., Bremerton. Annual sale supporting library programs. Info: 360377-3955, www.krl.org. free documenT shredding and e-cycling: April 25, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 26569 Lindvog Road, Kingston; 18570 Highway 305, Poulsbo; and 9939 Mickelberry Road, Silverdale. Free document shredding, e-cycling of desktops, laptops, monitors, printers and TVs. Also accepting gently used clothing and small household items. Hot dogs will be available.

kingsTon garden cluB planT sale: May 2, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., at the Kingston Community Center. Starting from $1, unique plants from shrubs and trees to ground covers, perennials, and edibles. Info: www.kingstongardenclub. com, 360-710-6403, megilman@ centurytel.net. eglon spring sale: May 2, 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. at the Historic Eglon Schoolhouse, 33777 Eglon Road, Kingston. Baked goods, gifts, perennials, annuals, and more. kiTsap sTories from 1889 eXhiBiT: At the Kitsap Historical Society & Museum, 280 Fourth St., Bremerton. An exhibit featuring stories of Kitsap’s people and places in 1889, commemorating the year Washington achieved statehood. BainBridge hisTorical museum’s free firsT Thursday: Admission to the prize-winning Bainbridge Island Historical Museum is free on the first Thursday of each month. Open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 215 Ericksen Ave. Featuring “Whales in Our Midst,” chronicling orca whales in Puget Sound; “The Overland Westerners,” an epic 20,000-mile trip by horseback 100 years ago; and “A Portrait of Manzanar,” by world famous photographer Ansel Adams. Info: www.bainbridgehistory.org. Bingo: Sundays, early bird at 5 p.m., and Wednesdays, early bird at 6 p.m., at the Bremerton Elks Lodge on Pine Road. Open to the public. Concession stand and bar open. Info: 360-4791181. Bpa juggling: First Sundays, 7-8:30 p.m., Bainbridge Performing Arts, 200 Madison Ave. For experienced jugglers, beginning jugglers, and closet jugglers. Free. Info: 206-842-8569, www. bainbridgeperformingarts.org, email tchallinor@bainbridgeperformingarts.org. free meal: Saturdays, 3-4 p.m. at the Christian Life Center cafeteria, 1780 Lincoln Ave., Port Orchard. kiTsap cares: Everyday in 2015, Kitsap residents can go online to learn more about charities and being charitable in Kitsap. Find out more online at www.face book.com/kitsapcaresab outcharity365. Info: kitsapcares realestate@gmail.com.

naval undersea museum sTore seeks volunTeers:

The museum store at the Naval Undersea Museum in Keyport is recruiting weekday volunteers. Shifts are 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 1-4 p.m. Schedules are flexible each month. Base access not necessary. Store proceeds benefit the Naval Undersea Museum

Foundation. Info: 360-697-1537. Tours of The island school: Tour The Island School on Bainbridge Island weekdays 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. For grades K-5. Call ahead, 206-842-0400. Info: www.TheIs landSchool.org.

ClAsses & leCtUres who is shakespeare: April 4, 2 p.m. at the Silverdale Library. April 16, 3-4:30 p.m. at the Port Orchard Library. April 22, 7 p.m. at the Poulsbo Library. There have been doubts about the true identity of the writer who penned the masterpieces of the Elizabethan stage. Join Tom Challinor, Director of The Shakespeare Society at Bainbridge Performing Arts, for a mostly objective look at the controversy associated with the Bard of Stratford-on-Avon and who some of the alternative candidates might be. masTer gardener foundaTion seminar: April 8, 1-3 p.m. at the Norm Dick’s Government Center, 345 6th Avenue, Bremerton. Colleen Miko presents “Perennials with Purpose “ and “Jumpstart your Landscaping.” Free. Public welcome. Info: www. kitsapgardens.org. The genealogy of The consTiTuTion: April 8, 7 p.m. at the Silverdale Beach Hotel, Silverdale. Author and constitutional expert KrisAnne Hall presents “The Genealogy of the Constitution.”$10 donation. Sponsored by the Kitsap Patriots Tea Party. Info: kitsappatriots.wordpress. com/category/events. Ballroom dance classes: Five classes beginning April 15, 7-8:30 p.m. Learn basic and intermediate steps in the Waltz. $75 per couple, $40 per single. Also, special senior rates. Info: 360-662-1638, 360-271-2770. asTronomy Talks: Third Friday of each month, 5 p.m., 6 p.m., 7 p.m. at the Pacific Planetarium, 817 Pacific Ave., Bremerton. $5 at the door, or through www. brownpapertickets.com. Info: www.pacificplanetarium.com. skywalks: First Fridays of each month at the Pacific Planetarium, 817 Pacific Ave., Bremerton. $3 at the door, or at www. brownpapertickets.com. A 30-minute walk under the clear night skies of the Pacific Northwest. Info: www.pacificplanetarium.com. sunday planeTarium shows: Sundays, noon, 1 p.m., 2 p.m. and 3 p.m., at the Pacific Planetarium, 817 Pacific Ave., Bremerton. $5 at the door, or at www.brownpapertickets.com. A family friendly, live planetarium show with exhibits. Every show is different, in a simulated universe. Info: www.pacificplanetarium.com. sQuare dance lessons: Paws and Taws Square Dance Club hosts lessons on Mondays,

Alan Newberg’s Latin-themed paintings are on display at Casa Luna in Poulsbo through April. Contributed 7-9 p.m. at Kitsap Square Dance Center, 6800 Belfair Valley Road, Bremerton. $3 adult, $1.50 youth, first night free. Singles, couples, and families welcome. Info: 360-930-5277 or 360-3732567 or www.pawsandtaws.net.

meetings, sUPPort groUPs olympic asTronomical socieTy: April 6, 7:30-9:30 p.m. at Olympic College, Room Art 103, Bremerton. Presenting “The Constellations of Spring,”“Quantum Mechanics and the Higgs Boson” and a video “Binary Stars and Stellar Masses.”Guests welcome. Info: 360-265-5418. BainBridge island repuBlican women meeTing: April 8, 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the Masonic Lodge, 1299 Grow Ave., Bainbridge Island. Lunch is $17. RSVP by April 6. Keynote speaker is Darrick Smalley, special agent for the department of homeland security. Info: 206-278-2774. kiTsap rose socieTy: April 13, 6:30 p.m. at the Fire Station, 7600 Old Military Road, East Bremerton. A discussion on horticulture this time of year and improving soil organically.

evergreen Bonsai cluB: April 17, 7 p.m. at Crossroads Neighborhood Church, 7555 Old Military Road, Bremerton. David Degroot, retired curator of the Pacific Rim Bonsai Collection discusses how to display a bonsai. Free. Info: 360-626-1264. BeThel grange: April 27, 6:30 p.m. at the Bethel Grange, 5998 Bethel Road SE, Port Orchard. Jennifer from South Kitsap Help Line will speak about their needs and give an update on the organization’s operations. 12-sTep BiBlical-Based recovery group: Wednesdays, 7-8:30 p.m., Cornerstone Christian Fellowship, 901 N. Wycoff, Bremerton. “Honu Life in Christ”: a support group for addictions/ compulsions, alcohol, drugs and general life issues recovery. Info: David, 360-509-4932. alcoholics anonymous: Daily, 5-6 p.m. at 1223 Finn Hill Road, Poulsbo. alzheimer’s supporT groups: Third Tuesdays, 10:30 a.m. at the Silverdale Lutheran Church, 11701 Ridgepoint Drive, Silverdale. And every fourth Wednesday, 4205 Wheaton Way, Bremerton. A free support group for unpaid care partners, family members and friends of individuals with memory loss. Info: 206-402-9857.

Reach 2.7 Million Readers Coastal: Eastern: Metro:

alzheimer’s supporT group: Second Wednesday of the month, 1:30-3 p.m. at Group Health Medical Center, 1400 Pottery Ave., Port Orchard. Get information and support for those who care for others with memory loss. Info: 206-4029857. aBuse recovery minisTry & services: Free faith-based domestic abuse victim recovery classes for women. These weekly classes are designed to help women heal from domestic abuse. Participants may begin attending at any time. Info: 866-262-9284 for confidential time and place. american legion veTerans assisTance office: Open every Thursday (except holidays), 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., 19068 Jensen Way, Suite 3A, Poulsbo. Free services to assist veterans and widows with VA claims. Info: 360-779-5456. american legion john d. “Bud” hawk posT 109: Meeting every third Monday of the month, 7 p.m. at All Star Lanes, 10710 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. Open to veterans of all branches who meet American Legion eligibility requirements. Info: www. facebook.com/AmericanLegionPost109SilverdaleWa. aT ease ToasTmasTers: WednesSee CALEndAR, Page 6

We’ve Got You Covered Go Statewide or Target a Region

597,646 readers 601,631 readers 1.3 million readers

Includes 96 Newspapers & 24 Shoppers Call this Newspaper for Details

A Division of Sound Publishing

Average cost less than

14

$

per paper

Bainbridge 206.842.6613 Port Orchard 360.876.4414 Central Kitsap Poulsbo 360.779.4464 Bremerton 360.782.1581 360.308.9161


Page 6

kitsapweek

Calendar

Continued from page 5 days, 7-8 p.m., Subway meeting room, 3850 Kitsap Way, Bremerton. Learn valuable public speaking, evaluation and leadership skills in a friendly, supportive atmosphere. Info: Dave Harris, 360-478-7089 or harriscd.wa@ comcast.net. BainBridge island ToasTmasTers: Meets twice monthly on the second and fourth Wednesdays, 7:15-8:30 p.m. in the Winslow Arms Apartments Clubhouse, 220 Parfitt Way, Bainbridge Island. An afternoon club meets on first and third Thursdays, 11:50 a.m. to 1 p.m. Open to all interested in developing their speaking skills in a fun supportive environment. Info: bainbridgeisland.toastmastersclubs.org, www.uspeakeasy. com. BremerTon norThern model railroad cluB: First Mondays, 7-8 p.m., United Way Building, 647 4th St., Bremerton. Guests welcome. Info: Reed Cranmore, bremerton-northern@comcast. net. Bridge group: Tuesdays, 8 a.m., Stafford Suites, 1761 Pottery Ave., Port Orchard. Free to play, $4 for lunch. Info: Denise Hoyt, dhoyt@staffordcare.com, 360874-1212. caregivers supporT group: Tuesdays, 2 p.m., Rolling Bay Presbyterian Church, 11042 Sunrise Drive NE, Bainbridge Island. Sponsored by Interfaith Volunteer Caregivers. Info: Karen, karen.carson@comcast.net, 206842-3539. caT fiX day: Second and last Tuesdays, 7-9 a.m., Kitsap Humane Society, 9167 Dickey Road NW, Silverdale. Low-cost spay/ neuter day for felines of low-income residents. Limited to first 50 walk-ins. Info: 360-692-6977, ext. 1135; www.kitsap-humane. org/cat-fix-day. caTaldo lodge (sons of iTaly): Third Wednesday, 5:30 p.m., VFW Hall, 190 Dora Ave., Bremerton. Dinner at 6:30 p.m. and meeting at 7:30 p.m. Free. Open to the public. Info: JoAnn Zarieki, 360692-6178. cenTral/souTh kiTsap women and cancer supporT group: Second and fourth Thursday, 10:30 a.m. to noon, Radiation Oncology Library, Harrison Medical Center, 2520 Cherry Ave., Bremerton. Facilitators: Sue-Marie Casagrande, oncology social worker; and Bonnie McVee, life coach and cancer survivor. Info: 360-744-4990, www.harrisonmedical.org.

Friday, April 3, 2015 compuTer Training: Wednesdays, noon to 4 p.m., Bainbridge Library, 1270 Madison Ave. Sign up for an hour with a computer trainer and get your questions answered. Info: 206-842-4162. depression & Bipolar supporT group: Tuesdays, 6-7:30 p.m., Saint Paul’s Episcopal Church, 700 Callahan Drive, Bremerton. Open to those living with depression and/or bipolar disorder, and loved ones and supporters of people living with mood disorders. Info: Richard, 360-3778509. edward jones coffee cluB: Fourth Wednesday, 8:15 a.m., Edward Jones, 2416 NW Myhre Road, Suite 102, Silverdale. Current market and economy updates. To reserve a seat, call Beth Halvorson, 360-692-1216. food addicTs in recovery anonymous: Wednesdays, 7-8:30 p.m., Manette Community Church, 1137 Hayward Ave., Bremerton. Membership is open to anyone who wants help with their eating habits. Info: www. foodaddicts.org, FAKitsap@ gmail.com. general federaTion of women’s cluB: Third Thursday of each month, 7 p.m. at 1100 Wheaton Way, Bremerton. Info: 360-830-4523, gfwcpenisula@ hotmail.com. grief supporT group: Second and fourth Thursdays, 5 p.m., Rolling Bay Presbyterian Church, 11042 Sunrise Drive NE, Bainbridge Island. Sponsored by Interfaith Volunteer Caregivers. Info: Robin Gaphni, rgaphni@ seanet.com, 206-962-0257. keyporT coffee hour: Wednesdays, 9-10 a.m., Keyport Mercantile, 15499 Washington Ave. NE. Get to know your neighbors, with coffee and tea compliments of the Merc. Info: keyportschules@wavecable.com. kiTsap al-anon: Al-Anon meeting for anyone troubled by another person’s drinking. Sundays: Manchester Library, 8 a.m.; Winslow Arms Apartments, Bainbridge Island, 10 a.m. Mondays: Our Savior’s Lutheran Church, Bremerton, noon; Harper Church, Port Orchard, 10 a.m.; Saint Barnabas Church, Bainbridge Island, 7:30 p.m.; Belfair House Of Hope, 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays: Silverdale Lutheran Church, noon; First Lutheran Church, Port Orchard, 7:30 p.m.; Park Vista Apartments, Port Orchard, 5:30 p.m.; First Lutheran Church, Poulsbo, 7 p.m. Wednesdays: Belfair Haven Of Hope, 10:30 a.m.; First Lutheran Church, Poulsbo, noon; West Sound Treatment Center, Port Orchard, 5:30 p.m. Thursdays: Port Gamble S’Klallam Wellness

Center, Kingston, noon; Holy Trinity Church, Bremerton, noon; First Christian Church, Bremerton, 5:30 p.m.; First Lutheran Church, Poulsbo, 7 p.m.; First Lutheran Church, Port Orchard, 7:30 p.m. Fridays: Bethany Lutheran Church, Bainbridge Island, noon; First Lutheran Church, Port Orchard, 7:30 p.m. Info: www.kitsap-al-anon.org. kiTsap counTy rose socieTy: Second Mondays, 7 p.m., Bremerton Fire Station 41, 7600 Old Military Road. Free, visitors welcome. Info: Ray 360-8300669. kiTsap counTy amaTeur radio cluB BreakfasT: First Saturdays of the month, 9-11 a.m. at A&C Diner, 3561 Wheaton Way, Bremerton. $5-10 per person. Info: www. kcarc.org. kcs macgroup meeTing: Wednesdays, 2:30-5 p.m. at 9729 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. In the poplar room. Apple Macintosh help. Get questions answered. Info: kitsapcomputingseniors. org. kiTsap mac users group: Third Thursday of each month. 10:30 a.m. to noon at All Star Lanes, 10710 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. $20 yearly dues per family. All welcome. Presentations and discussions of interest

to Mac users. Info: www.kitsapmug.com, kmug2@comcast.net. kniTTing group: Wednesdays, 3 p.m., Liberty Bay Books, 18881 Front St. NE, Poulsbo. All skills welcome. Info: Suzanne Droppert, 360-779-5909, libertybaybooks@embarqmail.com.

meals on wheels seeks volunTeers: Meals on Wheels

Kitsap is seeking volunteers for its home delivery program and its community dining program. Volunteers work in downtown Bremerton, Silverdale and Bainbridge Island. Info: 360-3778511, 888-877-8511. memory care supporT group: Third Wednesday of each month, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., and 6:308 p.m. at The Willows, 3201 Pine Road, Bremerton. Lunch and dinner provided. For those who care for loved ones with Alzheimer’s or other forms of dementia. Info: 360-373-0553, janetp@ cascadeliving.com. moThers group: Most first and third Thursday mornings, 9:3011 a.m. during the school year at Grace Episcopal Church on Bainbridge Island. For mothers of all beliefs and backgrounds, with children of all ages. Life Coach Bev Gaines leads engaging discussions on how to nurture self-awareness, reflection and

growth. Tuition includes an onsite childcare program for infants and young children. Info: www. momsmorningretreat.com. nami supporT group: National Alliance for Mental Illness meets on the second Monday of the month from 7-8:30 p.m. and on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month from 1:30-3 p.m. at The Doctors Clinic on Hildebrand Lane, Bainbridge Island. Info: Jane at 206-898-6092. navy wives cluB of america: Meets the first Saturday each month at 10 a.m. in the Jackson Park Community Center on Olding Road, Bremerton. Open to all Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard spouses wishing to support military and community projects. Info: 360-779-6191, jjprice@ embarqmail.com. norTh kiTsap parenT supporT group: Do you want to be part of a support group for families of gifted children? Call 360-6382919 or email northkitsapgifted@gmail.com. olympic koi and waTer garden cluB: Looking for new members. Meetings are once a month at various locations centered around Poulsbo and Port Orchard. Info: Helen Morgan, 360779-1475, email hrmorgan314@ gmail.com.

Tues-Sat 9:30am-6pm • Closed Sun & Mon 360.297.1347 • 10978 Hwy 104 • Kingston www.almostcandid.net

See CALEndAR, Page 7

KITSAP WEEK CROSSWORD

Crosswords

ANSWERS

Across 1. A lot

featuring artwork by Max Hayslette

orca cluB meeTing: Second Wednesdays of each month. 7 p.m. Venue subject to change. Discuss club business, promote the flying of radio controlled aircraft. Public welcome. Info: Ken Maguire, kenmaguire36@ hotmail.com, 360-779-5137. overeaTers anonymous: Meets Saturdays at 9:15 a.m. at Eagle Harbor Community Church, Bainbridge Island and Wednesdays at 5 p.m. at Winslow Arms Retirement Home community room, Bainbridge Island. Info: 206-780-0121. porT gamBle hisTorical museum lecTure series: Second Monday, 5-8 p.m. Info: www. portgamble.com. porT orchard lions cluB: First and third Thursday of each month, 7 p.m., Subway restaurant, 435 SW Sedgwick Road, Suite 105. Open to all. Community service opportunities. Info: 360-731-5877. porT orchard ToasTmasTers cluB: First and third Tuesdays, 6:30 p.m., Park Vista, 2944 SE Lund Ave., Port Orchard. Members learn to improve their speaking and leadership skills. Visitors welcome. Info: Bill Slach, 360-895-8519.

23. Chocolate trees

8. Elders’ teachings

25. Successful runners, for short

9. Bad look

26. Type of beds with curtains and canopy (hyphenated)

10. Affect (2 wds)

30. Halo, e.g.

12. Controls, symbolically

31. Chill

13. Burglar

32. Bean counter, for short

21. “___ bad!”

35. Clash 36. Domestic animal skin disease

22. ___ line (major axis of an elliptical orbit)

38. At liberty

23. Two-door

39. ___ el Amarna, Egypt

24. Acoustic

40. Bite

26. Certain protest

41. Back

27. Argentine dance

42. Certainly

28. Baby carrier?

46. Have a sudden inspiration?

29. Morgue, for one

49. Leisurely walks

32. Belief

50. Irish version of burgoo (2 wds)

33. Rings

54. Aquatic plant

34. Ethereal

55. Palm berry

36. “Gee whiz!”

56. Blotto

37. “Go on ...”

60. Chowder morsel

38. Voluntary

61. Detective’s need 62. Quench

40. S. Am. Indian of Brazil and Paraguay

63. “For Your ___ Only,” Bond film

43. Advantages

64. Coastal raptor

44. Dracula, at times

65. ___ Island National Monument

45. ___ fly 46. Channel cut by heavy rainwater

6. Hot spot 10. ___ Cooper, Am. actor

11. Fourth month

Down

47. Pond buildup 48. Putdowns

14. An inverted circumflex diacritic mark

1. “___ Loves You,” Beatles song

50. Defensive spray

15. ___ vera

2. Jail, slangily

51. Battering wind

16. Fencing sword

3. Trick taker, often

52. Maple genus

17. Foe

4. Member of Obama’s party

53. Indian bread

18. Pink, as a steak

5. Airline porter

57. Amigo

19. H.S. class

6. Ride, so to speak

58. Schuss, e.g.

20. Measure of antiknock properties of gasoline (2 wds)

7. Brio

59. “Absolutely!”


Calendar

4712. reiki circle: Second and fourth Tuesdays, 6-9 p.m., a private home on Bainbridge Island. Free. New members welcome. New to Reiki? No problem. Attunements and classes available. Info: 206-384-7081. roTary cluB of easT BremerTon: Wednesdays, 7:15 a.m., McCloud’s Grill House, 2901 Perry Ave., No. 13, Bremerton. Info: Patty Murphy, 360-479-6500. roTary cluB of silverdale: Thursdays, 12:15 p.m., Silverdale Beach Hotel. Info: Ed Hamilton, 360-308-9845. silverdale sunrise lions cluB: meets every Tuesday at 7 a.m. at All Star Lanes in Silverdale. Club meets on the first Monday of each month at 6 p.m. at same location. supporT group for women wiTh cancer: Second and fourth Tuesdays, noon to 1:30 p.m., Rolling Bay Presbyterian Church, 11042 Sunrise Drive NE, Bainbridge Island. Info: Karen, karen. carson@comcast.net. TaTTers group: The Tangled Threads Tatting Group meets on the second Wednesday of each month, 5-7 p.m. at the Willows Retirement Apartments, 3201 Pine Road, Bremerton. Beginners welcome. Free. Info: 360-6986768. women’s supporT group: Second and fourth Tuesdays, 6-7:30 p.m., Suquamish. Safe, supportive confidential group that deals with healing from domestic abuse in all forms. Info: bink@ywcakitsap.org, 206-7802931.

4 8

9 7

2 3

5

2

7

8

9

4

1 5

7

1

8

3

6

1

9

5

8

6

3

2

6

3

4 5

9

7

7

8

9

1

3

4

9

7

6

6

8

2 5

4

8 5

5 6

9

4

2

7

9

1

6

4

3 5 8

4

2 7

9

1

4

3

6

6

7

7

2

2

5

8

8

3

3

7

1

2

1

9

4

2

6

9

4

7

4

2

1

5

8

3

4

7 6

5

1

6

8

8

3

2

9

5

3

9

1

Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each The object is todifficulty place the numbers 1 tosame 9 in the emptyonly squares Puzzle 1 (Hard, rating 0.75) column and each 3x3 box contains the number once.so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. 4

1

3

6

2

9

8

5

7

6

3

8

2

9

1

5

4

7

Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. Puzzle 14 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.39) 4

9

7

3

7

9

2 8

5 4

4

2

6

5

1

8 2

3

1

9

6

8

91

3

9

4

3 2

7

9 6

1 4 2

5

4

8 5 2 6

3 7

2

5 6

7 3

4 9 1

8

6

8 3 1

9 7

5 4 2

4

7

1

2

5 6 4 8

1

9 3

2

9

5 2 3 7

8 6

Puzzle 19 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.39)

1

7

4

5

2

8 7 6

9

9

84

8

3 1

2 5

9

2 5 3

8 1 7

6 4

8

7

6

9

3

6

5

1

2

3

2 3 4

8

1 4 5 9

7 2

6

2

8

3

4 9 7

8 1 5

6

7 5

2 3

4 1 9

5

9

4 8 1 7

6

5

9

5

6

36

4

2 3

2

6

8

1 3

5

8 7

Puzzle 16 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.44)

1

2 3

5

8

6

8

3

6

7

4

5

2

5

9

3 1

8

7

9

4

1

2

6

8

4

2

5

3 9

1

7 6

3 1

7

4 2

6 8

9

5

9

7

6

5 8

7

1

2

8

1

4 3

6

2

9

6

4

2

3

4

5

1

5

9

8

3

6

7

5

3

4

8

9

1

7

2

Puzzle 20 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.35)

3

6

1

2

9

8

5

6 4

7 9

2

9

4

1

6 9

7

4

9

7

8

4

3

5

7

2 3

8

4 2

1 6

5

8

5

1

2

9

4 9

2

6 7

8 1

3

6

4 7

5

3

1

6

7

6

3 1

4 8 2

3

2

4

9

5

7

7

2

5

9

5

8

8

2

9

4

5

1

Puzz

4

7

5

6

2

9

8

3

1

4

5

2

3

9

4

7

7

8

6

1

3

2

3

8

4

3

Puzz

5

6

1

Puzzle 17 (Medium, difficulty rating 0.51)

ANSWERS ANSWERS

9

8

1

48

96

3

2

1

7

7

1

92

1

5

6

5

2

3

4

Puzzle 23 (Hard, difficulty rating 0.71)

7

77

7

8

3

8

2

9

4

7

3

9

9

7

1

5

4

1

3

6

9

25

59

Puzzle 22 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.44)

1

9

9

4

6

38

3

7

48

1

3

7

5

6

6

8

9

7

5

2

8

7 4 9 by8 http://www.opensky.ca/~jdhil 1 2 6 3 5 6 Generated

5

K itsap Week ITSAP EEKSudoku UDOKU 1

2

1

K W S Sudoku

6

posTparTum supporT group: First and third Tuesdays of the month, 6:30 p.m. at the Chiropractic Lifestyle Center, 991 NE Riddell Road, Bremerton. Kitsap HOPE Circle, open to pregnant and postpartum moms. Non-judgmental, advice-free support and encouragement for adjusting to baby. Info: www. kistaphopecircle.org. poulsBo garden cluB: Meets the second Saturday of the month, 9:30 a.m. to noon. Usually at the Poulsbo Library but sometimes at other venues for garden tours and special events. Members participate in community beautification efforts, including the annual fall tulip planting in Poulsbo and help to maintain the library grounds. Info: www.poulsbogardenclub. org, or the Poulsbo Garden Club Facebook page, poulsbogardenclub@gmail.com. poulsBo noon lions meeTing: Thursdays, noon, First Lutheran Church, 18920 4th Ave., Poulsbo. pulse recovery group: Thursdays, 6-7 p.m. at Cafe Noir, 3261 Mount Vintage Way, Silverdale. Men’s 12-step biblical-based recovery group. Info: 360-6973777, office@cornerstonealliance.org. pulse faiTh discussions: Thursdays 7-8 p.m. at Cafe Noir, 3261 Mount Vintage Way, Silverdale. Weekly discussions about faith and culture. Info: 360-697-3777, office@cornerstonealliance.org. Quaker silenT worship: 1011 a.m., Sundays at Seabold Hall, 14450 Komedal Road, Bainbridge Island. Agate Passage Friends Meeting. Info: 877-235-

3

Continued from page 6

Easy,diffi difficulty rating0.39 0.622 Easy, culty rating

7

9

1

6

Puzz

Generated by http://www.opensky.ca/~jdhildeb/software/sudokugen/ on Thu Jun 25 18:51:23 2009 GMT. Enjoy!

2

7

6

3 2 8

5 4 9 3

6

7

4

5

9

8

9

6 2

5

3

9 4

4

7

4 7

5

7 5 4

1

6 7

8

3 1

2 1

3

3

6

9 8 2

1 8

5

9 6

509-476-3602

1

Sponsored by

8

1

1 6

2 3

9 3 1

8

8 4

9 2

2 7 6

5

5

9 8 6

4

1

5 7

7 2

3 4

Puzzle 13 (Medium, difficulty rating 0.51)

29 95 11 36 84 95 52 79 48 61 13 27

5 6 2 9 4 3 8 1 4 1 6 7 83 27 59 47 38 66 74 52 83

77 32 6 3 8 4 5 8 23 67 4 1 5 8 1 2 16 84 3 5 9 1 2 3 99 78 5 2 3 6 4 5

1 3 4 7 6 1 8 2 5 9 7 2 5 2 9 4 32 46 7 8 1 5 84 55 2 9 7 3 48 91 1 6 6 9

84

67

79 46

37 25

64 91 91 12 8

7

6 9

3

5

Puzzle 14 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.39) Puzzle 1 (Hard, difficulty rating 0.75)

Generated by http://www.opensky.ca/~jdhildeb/software/sudokugen Generated by http://www.opensky.ca/~jdhildeb/software/sudokugen

Fitness & sPorts BainBridge archery: The Bainbridge Island Sportsmen’s Club Archery Range is open to the public every Wednesday, 4-6 p.m., and Sunday, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Bring the family along to try this exciting sport in a safe environment. Rental equipment available, range fee applies. Experienced range officer on site to help. kiTsap ulTimaTe frisBee: Weekly pick-up game Saturdays, 10 a.m. to noon. Email jon.c.culver@gmail.com or see the pickup section on www.discnw.org.

Qi gong aT fishline: Tuesdays,

12:30-1 p.m. at North Kitsap Fishline, 787 NW Liberty Lane, Poulsbo. Relax body and mind with Qi Gong. Often using silk-reeling exercises, five-element movements, and channel/ organ balancing. Info: www. nourishinglifeacupuncture.com, www.nkfishline.org.

Kids & FAmilY lego cluB: 4:30-5:30 p.m. at the Port Orchard Library. Dig into our massive Lego collection to make original Lego creations with a show and tell afterward. Members are also welcome to bring creations from home to show and tell. For children in K to 6th grades. geek mama’s nighT ouT: April 18, 6-7:30 p.m. at Hyla Middle School, Bainbridge Island. Navigate the ups and downs of parenthood with science. Moms and dads are invited to join author Lynn Brunelle for an evening with experiments from her book “Mama Gone Geek.” Event includes wine and cheese. A free, adult-only event. RSVP: 206-855-4650, www.kidimu.org. kids for kidimu walk: May 2, 9-11:30 a.m. in Winslow on Bainbridge Island. Registration is now open for kids, and kids at heart, for a walkathon to benefit Kids Discovery Museum. Families will enjoy a warm-up with Island Fitness, stroll through Winslow sporting their KiDiMu T-shirts and rock out with The Not-Its! at the finish line. $10 per person or $30 per family. Get a free concert, T-shirt and all-day pass to the Museum. Proceeds will support KiDiMu’s educational mission. Info/registration: www. kidimu.org. science saTurdays aT The naval undersea museum: First Saturdays of the month, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Naval Undersea Museum, Keyport. Take a closer look at all things science with handson activities and demonstrations that change from month to month. Info: www.nvalunderseasmuseum.org. discovery fridays: 10:3011:30 a.m. at KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane NE, Bainbridge Island. Curious explorers of all ages are welcome for science-themed, hands-on activities. This STEMbased program takes on a different subject each week. Free

with admission or membership. Info: www.kidimu.org or 206855-4650. kids yoga: Mondays and Wednesdays, 10:45-11:30 a.m., Kitsap Hot Yoga, 20726 Highway 305, Suite. 3C, Poulsbo. For ages 10 to 15. Teaching beginning flow classes for all levels. Drop in or sign up in advance for classes. $68 for the four-week session, or $10 per class. Kids’ yoga classes are not heated. Info: kitsaphotyoga.com. BainBridge liBrary sTory Times: Toddler age Mondays, 10:30 a.m. Baby age Tuesdays, preschool age Wednesdays. Free. 1270 Madison Ave. N, Bainbridge Island. Info: 206-842-4162, www. krl.org. kiTsap local markeT: Fridays, 1-6 p.m., Kitsap Mall, near Kohls and Hale’s Ales. Free face painting, children’s crafts. Info: www. Neighborlygreetings.com. kidimu acTiviTies: 301 Ravine Lane NE, Bainbridge Island. Free First Thursdays, hands-on exhibits and monthly programs, visit the website for schedule details. Info: 206-855-4650, www.kidimu.org. maTh wednesday: 10:3011:30 a.m. at KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane NE, Bainbridge Island. Young explorers are invited for math-themed experiments and activities. Free with admission or membership. Info: www.kidimu. org or 206-855-4650. messy monday: Come to KiDiMu for special art projects on Mondays. Drop in from 10:30-11:30 a.m. Messy experimentation and sensory exploration are not only allowed but also encouraged. Free with admission or membership. Info: 206-855-4650 or www.kidimu.org. sensory sunday: Fourth Sunday, 10-11:30 a.m., Kids Discovery Museum, 301 Ravine Lane, Bainbridge Island. Families affected by autism or a similar sensory processing challenge are invited to explore KiDiMu, with therapist support. Preregister at 206-8554650. Cost: $3 non-members, $2 members. Info: 206-855-4650, www.kidimu.org. sToryTime for liTTle ones: Tuesdays, 10:30 a.m., Manchester Library, 8067 E. Main St., Port Orchard. Share stories, rhymes, songs and fun. Stay for music and crafts. Info: 360-871-3921, www.krl.org. sToryTime Thursday: 10:30 a.m. at KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane NE, Bainbridge Island. Practice literacy skills and have fun. Info: www.kidimu.org or 206-855-4650.

teen Teen spring Break lock-in: April 3, 7-11 p.m. at the Port Orchard Library, 87 Sidney Ave., Port Orchard. With Jurassic World hitting theaters this June why not catch up with our very own screening of the original. DJ Derek will be spinning on the dance floor. Dinosaur themed library games will be in the works along with copious amounts of pizza. Teen diy crafTs: April 6, 6-7 p.m. at the Port Orchard

Friday, April 3, 2015

kitsapweek

Library. Each month the library will be hosting an informative crafting workshop with local teens presenting their creative skills. anime cluB: April 6, 2-4 p.m. at the Bainbridge Public Library. Geek out with other anime and manga-obsessed teens. Eat yummy Asian snacks, use the drawing materials and create Japanese-inspired crafts while we watch anime. Grades 7-12.

2-4:30 p.m. at the Banbridge Library. Watch “The Hobbit: The Battle of Five Armies.” For grades 7-12. Teen advisory Board: April 20, 6-7 p.m. at the Port Orchard Library. Plan programs for kids and teens, talk about the awesome stuff you’ve been checking out, and meet friends from all over south Kitsap. Teen wriTer/arTisT: April 20, 7-8 p.m. at the Port Orchard Library. Have you been interested in flexing your creative skills while collaborating with local teens on exciting projects? Every month we will be working on a new and challenging masterpiece.

Tween crafT parTy: April 6, 4-5 p.m. at the Port Orchard Library. Every first Monday we will be working on a challenging craft project that will have the opportunity to go on display at your local library. Grades 4-7. diy Teen crafTs: April 6, 6-7 p.m. at the Port Orchard LIbrary. Each month the library will be hosting an informative crafting workshop with local teens presenting their creative skills. Teen wriTers group: April 9, 3:30-5 p.m. at the Bainbridge Library. Author and writing teacher Margaret Nevinski and Rebecca Lacko from the Field’s End writing organization will share their expertise. You’ll learn new strategies for putting ideas into words and get your writing questions answered. Tween sTem wiTh minecrafT: April 13 and April 27, 4-5 p.m. at the Port Orchard Library. Come geek out with our exciting Minecraft community. No passwords or accounts required, computers will be provided. Teen arTisT circle: April 13, 2-4 p.m. at the Bainbridge Public Library. Create artwork and craft projects. This informal group is for those who consider themselves artists and those who just like exploring their creative side. Teen gamer: April 13, 6-8 p.m. at the Port Orchard Library. Get old school with Settlers of Catan and new school with Tokaido and Ticket to Ride. We’ll also have room for D&D for those devout gamers. Tween sTem wiTh chess and makers space: April 20, 4-5 p.m. at the Port Orchard Library. Interested in learning the game of chess? All levels welcome. Come to the library to play pickup games, go tourney style or just hang with like-minded chess folk. If you’re feeling more constructive, we’ll also have our exciting new sets of Littlebits, Makey Makey, Snap Circuits and Deluxe Roominates for those creative engineers at heart. Grades 4-7. Teen movie “The hoBBiT: The BaTTle of five armies”: April 20,

Page 7

Teen advenTure Time: April 27, 6-8 p.m. at the Port Orchard Library. Let’s celebrate early spring with some ultimate Frisbee, kickball and sand sculptures. We’ll be meeting in the library then heading outdoors for some fun in the sun. Tween crafT parTy: Every first Monday of the month, 4-5 p.m. at the Port Orchard Library, 87 Sidney Ave., Port Orchard. The library hosts crafts projects for grades 4-7.

seniors kiTsap compuTing seniors: Meets every third Monday of each month (except July and August) at the Silverdale Community Center, 9729 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. A free program with speaker followed by a light potluck lunch. All ages welcome. Info: www.kitsapcomputingseniors.org.

FArm events And mArKets BainBridge farmers markeT: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays from April 11 through Nov. 14, at the Town Square at City Hall, 280 Madison Ave. Farmers, readyto-eat food, crafters, local food processors and live music. Info: www.bainbridgefarmersmarket. com. BremerTon farmers markeT: 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Thursdays at Evergreen park, 1400 Park Ave., and 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Sundays at the ferry terminal, Washington Avenue and First Street. The market will run from May 7 through Oct. 15, and will include live music and education and outreach opportunities. Info: www.bremertonmarket.wordSee CALEndAR, Page 8

People helping pets...pets helping people. Amelia is a 3yr old medium haired dilute tortoiseshell female

who came to us via one of our Ocean Shores adoption partners after being abandoned in their shelter lobby. She is a sweet somewhat shy girl. She likes attention on her own terms. She will come to you to get belly rubs and pets. She doesn’t like to be picked up but will sit by you on the couch or bed. Amelia will be at the Poulsbo Petco hoping to meet the special person she will call hers. 1-888-558-PAWS • www.pawsbink.org

3 8

2

3

9

4

6

5

1

7

8

Puzz


Page 8

kitsapweek

Calendar

Continued from page 7 press.com. kingsTon farmers markeT: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., May through October at 25931 Central Ave. near the ferry terminal. For more information, email info@kingstonfarmersmarket.com or visit the Facebook page. Info: www. kingstonfarmersmarket.com porT orchard farmers markeT: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturdays, April through October on the waterfront at Marina Park. Farmers, artists, crafters and more. Info: www.pofarmersmarket.org. poulsBo farmers markeT: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays, April 4 to Dec. 10, on the corner of 7th Avenue and Iverson Street. The market is a community gathering space, tourist destination, live music venue and local food hub. Info: www.poulsbofarmersmarket.org. silverdale farmers markeT: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tuesdays, April 28 through September in the Old Navy/Best Buy parking lot. Produce, flowers, ready-to-eat food, crafts and more. Info: On Facebook, or www.silverdalefarmersmarket.com suQuamish farmers markeT: For information, visit www. suquamishfarmersmarket.org or email info@suquamishfarmersmarket.org.

Arts BainBridge sTudio Tours accepTing applicaTions for arTisTs: The 2015 Summer and Winter Studio Tours on Bainbridge Island are accepting applications for participating artists. The tours are scheduled for Aug. 7-9, and Dec. 4-6, and take place at artists’ studios on the island. The tour is juried. Deadline for Summer Tour applications is April 15, for the Winter Tour July 31. Artists can apply for both events. Applications/info: www. bistudiotour.com, 206-842-0504, info@bistudiotour.com. Book arTisTs aT BainBridge arTs & crafTs: April 3-26 at Bainbridge Arts & Crafts, 151 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island. Featuring 34 book artists. painTings and pasTels aT Toro lounge: Through April at Toro Lounge, 315 Pacific Ave., Bremerton. Featuring the paintings and pastel drawings of Mary McInnis. ken van der does aT collecTive visions: April 1-26, at Collective Visions Gallery, Bremerton. Fea-

Friday, April 3, 2015 turing “Treasured Pieces,” paintings by Ken Van Der Does. painTings and waTercolors aT isella salon: Through April at Isella Salon Spa, 530 4th St., Bremerton. Featuring the paintings and watercolors of Leigh Knowles Metteer. jewelry and painTings aT verksTed: Through April at Verksted Gallery,18937 Front St., Poulsbo. Featuring the work of jewelry artist Richard Ashton and the paintings of Susan Norman. laTin painTings aT casa luna: Through April at Casa Luna Mexican Restaurant, 18830 Front St., Poulsbo. Latin themed paintings by Alan Newberg are on display. chocmo presenTs gwen guidici: Through April at Chocmo, Poulsbo. Gwen Guidici’s “Maples” exhibit features abstract and impressionistic drawings of maple trees in winter. Artist reception March 18, 6:30 p.m. Info: www. gwenguidici.com. fronT sTreeT presenTs jane schupay: Through April 6, at the Front Street Gallery, 18881 Front St., Poulsbo. Featuring the clay sculptures of Jane Schupay. verksTed gallery call To arTisTs: The Verksted Gallery, a 28-year-old cooperative art gallery in Poulsbo, is accepting applications from artists. Artwork must be handcrafted by the artist and be of a quality suitable for a fine arts co-op gallery. Artists work two days a month at the gallery and pay a monthly rent. Committee work and active participation in the gallery is also required. Stop by the gallery and pick up a new artist application form. Do not bring in your art. Info/applications: www.verkstedgallery.com. susan dinTeman aT viridian gallery: Tuesday to Saturday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Viridian Gallery, 1800 Mile Hill Drive, Port Orchard. Info: 360-871-7900.

literArY poeTry aT Bloedel reserve: Through April at the Bloedel Reserve, Bainbridge Island. To celebrate National Poetry Month, Bloedel is combining poetry with nature in an exhibit spread throughout its gardens. Selected works spanning a widerange of styles are installed on panels mounted along the trails. Info: www.bloedelreserve.org wriTers workshop “wriTing To leT your life speak”: April 1, 8 and 15, 7-9 p.m. at the Poulsbo Library. A six-session workshop adapted by Sue Sutherland-Hanson from “Writing the Story of Your Life,” by Dan Wakefield.

DANCE ARTS THEATRE

“Babes in Toyland”

“Enchanted Fairies of the Forest” “Fairy Doll” “Tarantella” Saturday, April 18th at 7:00 p.m. Sunday, April 19th at 2:00 p.m.

BREMERTON HIGH SCHOOL PERFORMING ARTS CENTER Tickets: Reserved $20 General Adult $15 General Child (18 & Under)/Seniors $10 For Tickets and Information call: 360-692-4395 For more information call: 360-692-4395

jazz canvas wiTh jason marsalis: April 19, 6-8 p.m. at the Manor House at Pleasant Beach, Bainbridge Island. $40. Jason Marsalis — youngest brother of Winton, Branford and Delfeayo — performs with the renowned Native Jazz Quartet. Northwest artist, Toma Villa, will paint a work of art in response to the music. Info: www.jazzcanvas.org, 206-866-6499. Tim BreTsch performs harp: April 24, 6-7:30 p.m. at Silverdale Antiques, 9490 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. Tim Bretsch performs harp guitar. Info: 360-692-2462. uncle Bonsai: April 25, 8 p.m. at Bainbridge Performing Arts, Bainbridge Island. A folk-pop trio performing one-night only. $20. Info/tickets: www. bainbridgeperformingarts.org, 206-842-8569.

A works of 34 book artists are on display at Bainbridge Arts & Crafts through April.

Contributed

Using drawing, writing, and sharing, participants will recall and examine life-experiences in relation to what forms their faith. Recommended donation: $35 per class — $165 prepaid for series or $195 at the door. Hosted by North Kitsap Unitarian Universalist Church. Register/ Info: www.nkuu.org, 360-3943945, info@nkuu.org. Book sale: April 2, 1-4 p.m. and April 11, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Bainbridge Public Library. Info: www.bifriends.org. poulsBohemian poeTry: April 4, 7 p.m. at the Poulsbohemian Coffeehouse, 19003 Front St., Poulsbo. Brief open mic with featured poets. Coffee, drinks and pastries for sale. Info: 206842-4855. ferry Tales Book group: April 9, 3:50 p.m. sailing from Bainbridge to Seattle, 4:40 p.m. sailing from Seattle to Bainbridge. A book group on the ferry. Discuss the monthly title, “Devil’s Highway” by Luis Alberto Urrea on the 4:40 p.m. sailing. Or discuss what you are reading on the 3:50 p.m. sailing. conservaTionisT auThor Thor hanson: April 12, 3 p.m. at Eagle Harbor Book Co., Bainbridge Island. Hanson will discuss his new book “The Triumph of Seeds: How Grains, Nuts, Kernels, Pulses & Pips Conquered the Plant Kingdom and Shaped Human History.” poeTry reading wiTh kaThleen flenniken: April 12, 4:30 p.m. at the Bloedel Reserve, Bainbridge Island. Kathleen Flenniken was Washington State Poet Laureate from 2012-2014 and is the author of Plume. She will read some of her selected works in the former Bloedel Residence. Tickets: $8/members, $10/ non-members. “weed The people” auThor Bruce BarcoTT: April 16, 7:30 p.m. at Treehouse Cafe, Bainbridge Island. Author and journalist Bruce Barcott launches his new book “Weed the People: The Future of Legal Marijuana in America.” He will discuss the ramifications of legalizing marijuana, science, insights and legal prizes. Ages 21 and older.

Theodore roeThke TriBuTe nighT: April 25, 5-7 p.m. at the Bloedel Reserve, Bainbridge Island. Awarded the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1954, and twice winner of the National Book Award for Poetry, Roethke is considered one of the 20th Century’s most influential poets and was a close friend of the Bloedel family. Enjoy a night of Roethke’s poetry and hear from some of his biggest fans. Tickets: $12/members, $15/ non-members. independenT BooksTore day: May 2 at Kitsap’s independent bookstores such as Liberty Bay Books and Eagle Harbor Book Co. Come in for entertainment, author visits, and specially created literary items. Call bookstores for more information. arT Book drive: Bainbridge Arts and Crafts seeks books to help build up the Bainbridge Library’s collection of art, architecture and design. Drop books off at Bainbridge Arts and Crafts, 151 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island, during business hours. Book sale in BremerTon: Every Tuesday and Thursday, noon to 4 p.m. at the Downtown Bremerton Library, 612 Fifth St., Bremerton. Money from sales helps support library community programs. Donations of books are accepted at the library during regular hours of operation. Info: 360-377-3955, www.krl.org. BremerTon friends of The liBrary meeTings: Every third Tuesday at the Downtown Bremerton Library, 612 Fifth St., Bremerton. Friends of the Library welcomes new members. The organization works to raise money in an effort to support library programs for adults and children. Refreshments provided. Books and Beer: Every second Monday, 6:30 p.m. at Valholl Brewing, Poulsbo. Pizza provided from That’s A Some Italian. Discuss the current book, or learn about the next one. silverdale wriTers’ roundTaBle: Every Saturday, 9:30 a.m., Cafe Noir, 3261 NW Mount Vintage Way, No. 101, Silverdale. Looking for writers. Free. Info: Bob, 360-830-4968.

mUsiC & dAnCe join BainBridge chorale: April 6, 5:30 p.m. Auditions by appointment. Bainbridge Chorale invited singers high school aged and up to join. Info: www. bainbrigechorale.org, info@ bainbridgechorale.org. andre ferianTe and The Bohemian enTourage “sTring sTories”: April 10, 7:30 p.m. at Bainbridge Performing Arts. A fusion of classical, flamenco and jazz on guitar, banjo, ukulele and harp guitar. One night only. $12 adults, $10 children. Info: 206842-8569, www.bainbridgeperformingarts.org. jusT dance: April 11, 7:30 p.m. at Island Center Hall, 8395 Fletcher Bay Road NE, Bainbridge Island. Dance to a DJ mixing East Coast and West Coast Swing, country Swing, Night Club 2-step and more. Workshop before main dance at 8:15 p.m. Casual dress. Please wear shoes that are kind to a wood floor. Singles and couples, adults and teens welcome. $10 at the door. www.educatedfeet.net/dances.htm. firsT sunday concerT presenTs guiTarisT michael parTingTon: April 12, 4 p.m. at the Waterfront Park Community Center, Bainbridge Island. Classical guitarist Michael Partington performs works by Guiliani, Carulli, Sor, Piazzolla, Mertz and Johanson. Info/tickets: www.brownpapertickets.com, www.firstsundayconcerts.org. poulsBo communiTy orchesTra concerT: April 13, 7:30 p.m. at North Point Church, 1779 Hostmark St., Poulsbo. A concert with the Poulsbo Community Orchestra. Donations accepted. BainBridge orchesTra presenTs “shakespeare commenT and Tragedy”: April 18 at 7:30 p.m., April 19 at 3 p.m. The Bainbridge orchestra teams up with the BPA Shakespeare Society to feature music and drama drawn from Shakespeare. $19 adults, $16 seniors, military, students, teachers. Info: 206842-8569, www.bainbridgeperformingarts.org.

theAter The edge improv: April 4, 7:30 p.m. at Bainbridge Performing Arts. The Edge provides laughter with on-the-spot comedy and Kitsap’s longest-running improv troupe. $16 for adults, and $12 for seniors, students, youth, military, and teachers. Info/tickets: www.bainbridgeperformingarts.org, 206-8428569. “neXT To normal”: Through April 12 at the Jewel Box Theatre, Poulsbo. Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. on March 15, 22, 29 and April 12. A Tony-award winning musical that deals with mental illness, yet with music and dialogue filled with humor. murder mysTery dinner TheaTer: April 13, 6 p.m. at the Port Orchard Public Market. A murder mystery performance with a three-course dinner. RSVP by April 8. $40 per person. Info: www.wwca.us. island TheaTre presenTs “humBle Boy”: April 17-18, 7:30 p.m. and April at 3 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. at Rolling Bay Hall, 10598 NE Valley Road, Bainbridge Island. An off-beat comedy borrowing heavily from “Hamlet.” Free. Suggested donation is $10. Info: www.IslandTheatre.org, 206842-0985. BaBes in Toyland BalleT: April 18, 7 p.m. and April 19, 2 p.m. at the Bremerton High School performing Arts Center. Presented by the Dance Arts Theatre of Silverdale. Tickets are $10-20. Info/tickets: www. brownpapertickets.com, 360692-4395.

Film free range films: A series of thought provoking, progressive films. April 3, 7 p.m.: “Return of the River” at Suquamish UCC. May 3, 3 p.m.: “The Wisdom to Survive” at Ground Zero Center. Ground Zero Center is located at 16159 Clear Creek Road, Poulsbo. Suquamish UCC is located at 18732 Division Ave., Suquamish. Info: freerangefilmskitsap@ gmail.com, www.facebook.com/ freerangefilms.


Friday, April 3, 2015

kitsapweek

Page 9

kitsapnightlife SpRing BReAk season of indoor Beach fun and music: At The Point Casino Event Center, 7989 Salish Lane, Kingston. A total of 110 tons of sand is brought indoors to create a beach side experience. A line-up of tribute bands rock the season. $10 in advance, $15 day of show. All shows age 21 and older. April 4 with Hysteria, a tribute to Def Leppard. April 4 with Journey Revisited, a tribute to Journey. April 18 with Whiskey River, a tribute to Lynyrd Skynyrd. April 24 with Anthem, a tribute to Rush. April 25 with Abba Fab, a tribute to Abba. May 1 with Garth Guy, a Garth Brooks Tribute. May 2 with Petty Breakers, a tribute to Tom Petty.

Red StAR event

fire and ice: April 3, 9 p.m. at the Bremerton Eagles, 205 6th St., Bremerton. Red Star plans pop up gay club events throughout Kitsap. DJ Tony Burns will be spinning sounds to keep you on the dance floor.

Common AnCeStoR

live music aT ozzie’s place: April 4, 8 p.m. at Ozzie’s Place at All Star Lanes, 10710 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. Original and popular world beats, reggae,

funk and rock. No cover. Info: Playallstar.com.

liteRARy puB tRiviA

Books on Tap porT orchard: April 7, 7-8:30 p.m. at Whiskey Gulch, 2065 Bay St., Port Orchard. Dazzle your friends with your encyclopedic knowledge of book and movie trivia. Newcomers welcome. Stop by the Port Orchard Library for a book and movie list before the game. Read more, watch more, win more.

ChAmpAgne SundAy

SuB SeRiouS live music aT ozzie’s place: April 11, 8 p.m. at Ozzie’s Place at All Star Lanes, 10710 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. Live classic rock. No cover. Info: Playallstar.com.

lAnA’S gARAge live music aT ozzie’s place: April 11, 8 p.m. at Ozzie’s Place at All Star Lanes, 10710 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. Lana’s Garage performs live alternative rock. No cover. Info: Playallstar.com.

CoCo montoyA

seaBold second saTurday: April 11, 7:30 p.m. at Seabold Community Hall, 14451 Komedal Road, Bainbridge Island. Open mic followed by a performance by Champagne Sunday. Pay or pay $5. Children free. Info: www. champagnesunday.com, 206855-9373.

Blues guiTarisT and vocalisT aT lynwood TheaTre: April 20, 7:30 p.m. at the Lynwood Theatre, 4569 Lynwood Center Road NE, Bainbridge Island. Legendary Blues Guitarist and Vocalist Coco Montoya performs live. Tickets at www.brownpapertickets.com. General admission is $43.

seaTTle men’s chorus aT The admiral: April 11, 7 p.m. at The Admiral Theatre, 515 Pacific Ave. Bremerton. The Seattle Men’s Chorus Legacy performs “Tyler’s Suite,” and “I Am Harvey Milk.” A benefit for Kitsap Pride. Tickets: $5-29. Info/tickets: www.admiraltheatre.org.

live music aT ozzie’s place: April 25, 8 p.m. at Ozzie’s Place at All Star Lanes, 10710 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. Jazz and salsa music. No cover. Info: Playallstar. com.

men’S ChoRuS

tyCho BRAh

Journey Revisited performs a tribute to Journey at The Point Casino April 11.

BelleS RoCk a monTh wiTh women who rock: At The Point Casino, 7989 Salish Lane, Kingston. May 9: Zepparella, performing Led Zeppelin hits. May 16: Iron Maidens, playing an Iron Maiden set. May 29: Belles Bent For Leather, performing a tribute to Judas Priest. May 30: Helles Belles, rocking AC/DC tunes.

ongoing ACouStiC jAm acousTic jam aT slippery pig: Tuesdays, 6-9 p.m. at the Slippery Pig Brewery, 18801 Front St., Poulsbo. For all ages, all instruments, and all levels. Unusual instruments and styles are encouraged. A digital keyboard is available for piano players.

Contributed photo

BluegRASS jAm in SilveRdAle me and The Boys: First Wednesday of each month, 7 p.m. at Seabeck Pizza, 9919 Trident Lane NW, Silverdale. Bring an axe and pic. All levels welcome.

BlueS jAmS slippery pig Blues and Beers: Thursdays, 7-10 p.m. at the SlipSee niGHtLiFE, Page 10

NOW OPEN Exquisitely Crafted Sushi and Traditional Japanese Dishes

APRIL 11TH & 12TH

Spring Sensations Events Mar20-21 ..... Vox Dox Film Festival Apr 1 ............. Brewmaster Dinner Apr 3 & 10 .... Spring Paring Wine Dinners Apr 11-12 ...... Taste Leavenworth Apr 11 ........... Fresh Pantry Book Signing Apr 17 .......... 4-Course Winemaker’s Dinner

d, p

Apr 17-18 ..... Leavenworth Ale-Fest

tion

Apr 19 .......... Earth Day Community Fair

mo-

Apr 24 .......... 7-Course Winemaker’s Dinner Apr 25 .......... Breakfast and the Met Live Apr 30 .......... FED UP Film Screening

Hours: Tues - Sat 11-2 pm and 5-9 pm • Sunday 3-9 pm Happy Hour Sun-Thurs 8pm - Close 10516 Silverdale Way NW Suite 120 • Silverdale, WA

leavenworth.org | 509.548.5807


Page 10

kitsapweek

Friday, April 3, 2015

Bloedel Reserve hosts poetry exhibit through April

W

ith vibrant blossoms and budding trees, springtime at Bloedel Reserve is like walking through a kaleidoscope of colors and textures. Adding to the visual beauty this year is a month-long exhibit of 21 site -specific poems that will allow visitors to pause, enjoy the words and soak up the beauty of the surroundings. The poetic exhibit runs throughout the month of April and is included with general admission to Bloedel. The poetry panels have been installed along the trails in conjunction with April’s National Poetry Month. Selected works spanning a wide range

nightlife

Continued from page 9 pery Pig Brewery, 18801 Front Street NE, Poulsbo.

BlueS And BRewS Blues and Brews open mic: Tuesdays, 7-10 p.m. at Bella Luna Pizza, 18408 Angeline Ave., Suquamish. Open mic blues and rock music. Info: 360-598-5398.

of styles were nominated by poetry lovers in the community and curated by University of Washington professor/ poet Linda Bierds and Bainbridge Island author/poet David Guterson. “The nominators represent a broad range of poetry lovers and practitioners, from children who are just beginning to discover its gifts, to those who have read and written it for years,” Linda Bierds said. “That, to me, is a highlight of this project.” Poetry at Bloedel has long been a part of the scenic garden’s history. The Bloedel grandchildren often recited poetry to Mr. and Mrs. Bloedel by the fireside. And Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and close family friend Theodore Roethke spent weekends at the Bloedels’ guesthouse. Lines from Emily Bronte’s poem “Sympathy” are engraved at the Bloedels’ grave site near the reflection pool.

BReweRy Book gRoup

CeltiC jAm

Books and Beer: Every second Monday, 6:30 p.m. at Valholl Brewing, Poulsbo. Pizza provided from That’s A Some Italian. Discuss the current book, or learn about the next one.

BReweRy jAm

music To our Beers jam: Wednesdays, 7-9 p.m., Bainbridge Island Brewery, 9415 Coppertop Loop NE. Open jam night hosted by Ethan J. Perry & His Remedy Band.

celTic jam aT Tizley’s euro puB: Third Sunday of the

month, 2-5 p.m., at Tizley’s Europub, 18928 Front St., Poulsbo.

dj And kARAoke

dj and karaoke in manchesTer: Fridays, 9 p.m. at the Manchester Pub, 2350 Colchester Drive E, Port Orchard. Dancing with a DJ, and karaoke tunes.

“Nature has long been a rich font of mystery and meaning for people the world over, and poets go to it as if by instinct,” said David Guterson. Indeed, poets, both established and emerging, often frequent Bloedel to find such inspiration. “The Poetry at Bloedel event allows visitors to experience the gardens in a new way,” said executive director Ed Moydell. “I’m thrilled with the poetry selections. They help frame the landscapes in a different light and bring another dimension to Bloedel Reserve.” Visit www.bloedel reserve.org to learn more.

dj At the point dj duff aT The poinT casino: Late nights on Fridays, after live music, in the Boom Room at The Point Casino, 7989 NE Salish Lane, Kingston.

iRiSh muSiC slippery pig weekly irish music: Wednesdays, 7-9 p.m. at the Slippery Pig Brewery, 18801 Front Street NE, Poulsbo. A circle of musicians play Irish music.

jonBoy tRiviA Trivia aT arena sporTs Bar: Tuesdays, 6-8:30 p.m. at Arena Sports Bar and Grille, 4111 Wheaton Way, Bremerton. Free to play. Hosted by trivia jockey JonBoy. Prizes from local businesses each week.

Women of Achievement

Women of Achievement Luncheon Tuesday, April 21 12pm-1:30pm

kARAoke foR All AgeS slippery pig karaoke: Fridays, 7-10 p.m. at the Slippery Pig Brewery, 18801 Front Street NE, Poulsbo.

kARAoke with eon karaoke aT isla BoniTa: Fridays, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. 316 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island. Hosted by Eon Smith with a voice as charming as her smile. Sing to your heart’s desire all night long at the most happening Friday night spot on Winslow Way.

Kitsap Conference Center

Tickets: $65

Honoring...

State Representative Michelle Caldier

opening reception of poetry at Bloedel: Saturday, April 4, 5-7 p.m. Celebrate the exhibit with a toast and readings by Linda Bierds and David Guterson. Walk the trails, read the selected poetry and enjoy bites and drinks in the former Bloedel residence. To request an invitation, please email: ejennings@bloedelreserve.org. Reading by Bloedel poet in Residence: Sunday, April 12, 4:30 p.m. Kathleen Flenniken, Washington State Poet Laureate 2012-14 and author of “Plume,” will read some of her poetry in the former Bloedel Residence. Tickets at Brown Paper Tickets. $8 formembers, $10 nonmembers. theodore Roethke tribute night: Saturday, April 25, 5 p.m. Awarded the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1954, and twice winner of the National Book Award for Poetry, Roethke is considered one of the 20th Century’s most influential poets. Enjoy a night of Roethke’s poetry and hear from some of his biggest fans. Tickets at Brown Paper Tickets. $12/members, $15 nonmembers.

kARAoke in mAnette karaoke aT The maneTTe saloon: Thursdays at the Manette Saloon, 2113 East 11th St., Bremerton. Hosted by Amy O.

lAtin jAzz simco newTon Turner Trio: Second and Fourth Fridays of the month at the Suzanne Maurice Wine Bar at the Pleasant Beach Marketplace, Bainbridge Island.

open miC downpouR downpour Brewing open mic: Thursdays, 5-8 p.m. at Downpour Brewing, 10991 Highway 104, Kingston. Patrons can bring any food or non-alcoholic drink they like. All ages welcome.

open miC mAnette open mic aT The maneTTe saloon: Wednesdays at the Manette Saloon, 2113 E. 11th St., Bremerton. Hosted by Jack Parker.

puB tRiviA Trivia Time live: Pub trivia at multiple venues across Kitsap. sundays: Hare & Hounds, Poulsbo, 7 p.m. and at Downpour Brewing, Kingston, 6 p.m. tuesdays: Main Street Ale House, Kingston, 7 p.m. and The

Alehouse on Winslow, 7 p.m. Wednesdays: Silverdale Beach Hotel, Silverdale, 7 p.m. and at the Clearwater Casino, Suquamish, 8 p.m. thursdays: Puerto Vallarta, Kingston, 7:30 p.m. — Bainbridge Island Brewing, Bainbridge Island, 7 p.m. — MoonDogs Too, Port Orchard, 7 p.m. saturdays: Island Grill, Bainbridge Island, 8 p.m. Info: www.triviatimelive.com.

tReehouSe jAzz

redshifT: The last Sunday of

the month at The Treehouse Cafe, 4569 Lynwood Center Road, Bainbridge Island. An evening of original music, jazz standards and unexpected arrangements. Guest performances each month.

tizley’S BluegRASS me and The Boys: First Fridays of the month, 8 p.m. at Tizley’s Europub, 18928 Front St., Poulsbo. Performing two sets of new and used bluegrass.

wAlkeR And fRiendS gary walker and friends music: Every Saturday, 5-7 p.m. at Suzanne Maurice Wine Bay at Pleasant Beach Marketplace, Bainbridge Island. Acoustic rock songs from the ’70s to the present. Free.

BRemeRton’S fiRSt fRidAy Rosie Ludlow

The Honorable Leila Mills

The Honorable Kate Carruthers

Special poetry events at the Bloedel Reserve throughout April

Tyna Ontko

Judy Eagleson

Alexus Richardson

Kate Espy

Betty Skinner Blanche Wynne

360-479-0522 | www.ywcakitsap.org

firsT friday arT walk: Each first Friday, 5-8 p.m. along 4th Street and Pacific Avenue in Downtown Bremerton. Shops and galleries open late to feature local art and music.

winSlow’S fiRSt fRidAy firsT friday arT walk: The first Friday of each month, 6-8 p.m. along Winslow Way on Bainbridge Island. A variety of shops and galleries open late, many with refreshments and snacks, to feature local art.


Friday, April 3, 2015 kitsapweek page 11 $ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ (With or Without Title) some restrictions apply $ $ Belfair $ $ $ $ $ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $

Dick VLIST

CASH FOR CARS

MOTORS, INC.

2007 Lexus IS 250

AWD, Navigation,Leather, Moonroof, 56K Miles, Factory Chromes, Heated & Cooled Seats, Full Power

click:

1-866-428-0696

call toll free: 1-800.388.2527 Real Estate for Sale Island County

Announcements BREMERTON

HEY MOMS! YOU’VE GOT TO SEE THIS!!

&INDĂĽITĂĽFASTĂĽANDĂĽEASY www.SoundClassifieds.com

Real Estate for Sale Kitsap County

1300 SF, 3 BR P.O. HOME

Lovely corner lot on Butler Ave. $155,000.

360-440-6637.

2 BR, 1 BA MOBILE. Well maintained handicap accessible home. Nice family, pet friendly community. All appliances stay. Fully fenced, low maintenance yard. FSBO; motivated seller $13,000. Lot rent includes basic cable $483. Call 360-633-7013. www.SoundClassifieds.com find what you need 24 hours a day

Real Estate for Sale Lots/Acreage

20 Surveyed Acres overlooking the snowpacked Cascade mountains. Close to Tonasket, WA Great Homesite. $19,900 $99 Down $217 Month

Frontier 509-468-0483

frontiernorthwest.com

Advertise your service 800-388-2527 Real Estate for Sale Other Areas

TEXAS Land Sale- Near El Paso. $0 Down. 20 Acres- $128/mo. -$16,900. Money Back Guarantee. Beautiful Mountain Views. No Qualifying- Owner Financing. 800-343-9444 Get the ball rolling... Call 800-388-2527 today.

Apartments for Rent Kitsap County BAINBRIDGE ISLAND

Island Terrace Apartments

1 BRs starting at $697 2 BRs starting at $818 Income Limits Apply

821 NE High School Rd Bainbridge Is, 98110

206-842-1280 TDD: 711 BAINBRIDGE ISLAND

Virginia Villa Apartments

$635/month, utils included. Income limits apply. Must be 62+ or disabled. 200 High School Rd NE 206-842-5482

financing General Financial

FREE GOLD IRA KIT. With the demise of the dollar now is the time to invest in gold.  AAA Rated!  For free consultation: 1-866-683-5664 FREE Medicare Quotes! Get Covered and Save! Explore Top Medicare Supplement Insurance P l a n s F o r Fr e e ! I t ’s Open Enrollment, So Call Now! 877-243-4705 G E T C A S H N OW fo r your Annuity or Structured Settlement. Top Dollars Paid. Fast, No Hassle Ser vice!  877693-0934 (M-F 9:35am7pm ET)

Fri-Sun April 17th-19th Public Welcome 9am Kitsap Fairgounds

“Just Between Friends�; Expect everything a child could need or want! Accomplish all your summer time needs here! JBF sale is the nation’s largest children’s/maternity consignment sales event! Too awesome to miss! Clothes & shoes; newbornteens, maternity, toys, outdoor equip., nursing items, games, baby equip., strollers, car seats, DVD’s+more

WWW.JBFSALE.COM SELECT BREMERTON

robertanelson@jbfsale.com

PROMOTE YOUR REGIONAL EVENT for only pennies. Reach 2.7 million readers in newspapers statewide for $275 classified or $1,350 display ad. Call this newspaper or (360) 515-0974 Sell your structured set- for details. tlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. Lost You don’t have to wait for your future payments $50 RETURN REWARD any longer! Call 1-800- LOST MILITARY RING 283-3601 on 11/17/14, between

P RO B L E M S w i t h t h e I R S o r S t a t e Ta xe s ? TDD: 711 Settle for a fraction of w h a t yo u owe ! Fr e e 3ELLĂĽITĂĽFORĂĽFREEĂĽINĂĽTHEĂĽ&,%! face to face consultaTHEFLEA SOUNDPUBLISHING COM tions with offices in your area. Call 855-970-2032

HRB – Housing Non-Profit

Need Assistance Finding Affordable Housing in Kitsap Cty? Free Info & Referrals w/ HomeShare/HomeFinder Program

Call Penny Lamping

(206) 842-1909

Apartments for Rent Mason County

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! W I N o r Pay N o t h i n g ! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at 1-800706-8742 to start your application today!

Saratoga Springs Apts 1100 N. 12th Street Rents start at $590/mo including Water, Sewer, Garbage & Electric.

A No Smoking Community Elderly and/or Disabled

Income Limits Apply

This Institution is an Equal Opportunity Provider and Employer

ClassiďŹ eds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527

announcements Announcements

WA Misc. Rentals Want to Rent

Rental home wanted: Military family seeking a 3-4 bedroom, or larger, updated or fairly new home in Kingston or Nor th Kitsap school district with larger lot for approx $2000/mo or less. Need a 24 month lease and single pet allowed. Lease beginning mid to late May. Call 360-969-4384 anytime.

ADOPT: L ov i n g a t - h o m e m o m and awesome dad promise your baby the best in life. Expenses paid. Laurie & Lawrence 888-624-7771

Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in over 7 million households in North America’s best suburbs! Place your classified ad in over 570 suburban newspapers just like this www.SoundClassifieds.com one. Call Classified AveWe’ll leave the site on for you. nue at 888-486-2466

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

as her separate estate; UNKNOWN HEIRS of RAGNA M. CLAUSEN; and also all other persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien, or interest in the real estate described in the complaint herein, Defendants. NO. 15-2-00467-2 SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION THE STATE OF WASHINGTON TO THE A B OV E N A M E D D E FENDANTS: YO U A R E H E R E B Y SUMMONED to appear within sixty(60) days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to wit, within sixty (60) days after the 20th day of March, 2015, and defend the above-entitled action in the aboveentitled cour t, and answer the complaint of the above named plaintiffs, LEIF A. BENTSEN and ELIZABETH M. HUDDLE, Tr ustees of the Leif A. Bentsen and Elizabeth M. Huddle Trust UA dated May 29, 1997, and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorneys for plaintiffs, at their office below stated; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the Complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. The

object of the action is to quiet title to real property situated in Kitsap C o u n t y, Wa s h i n g t o n , commonly described as 1 5 7 7 7 V i r g i n i a Po i n t Road, Poulsbo, being Assessor’s Parcel Nos. 352601-2-007-2003 and 352601-2-008-2002, and legally described in the Complaint. DATED: March 13, 2015 SANCHEZ, MITCHELL, EASTMAN & CURE, PSC By: Kevin W. Cure, WSBA#34409, K a t i e m a r i e P. W i n g , WSBA#44299 Attorney for Plaintiffs 4110 Kitsap Way, Suite 200 Bremerton, WA 98312 (360) 479-3000 Date of first publication: 03/20/15 Date of last publication: 04/24/15 (KCD621191)

OF JOYCE L. DAVISON, DECEASED; 1610 PARK CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, A NON-PROFIT UNINCORPORATED A S S O C I AT I O N A K A 1 6 1 0 PA R K C O N D O MINIUM ASSOCIATION OF APARTMENT OWNERS, A WASHINGTON NON-PROFIT UNINCORP O R AT E D A S S O C I A TION; ) BANK OF AMERICA, N.A.; JOHN AND JANE DOES, I T H R O U G H V, O C C U PANTS OF THE SUBJECT REAL PROPERTY, AND ALL OTHER PERSONS OR PARTIES UNKNOWN, CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, INTEREST, LIEN OR ESTATE IN THE PROPERTY HEREIN DESCRIBED. Defendants. NO. 13-2-01114-1 SHERIFF’S PUBLIC NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY TO: JOYCE L. DAVISON, Judgment Debtor(s) The Superior Court of Kitsap County has directed the undersigned Sheriff of Kitsap County to sell the property described below to satisfy a judgment in the above-entitled action. Legal Description:

APARTMENT D-1, BUILDING 2, 1610 PARK, A CONDOMINIUM RECORDED IN VOLUME 4 OF CONDOMINIUMS, PAGES 170 THROUGH 173, INCLUSIVE, ACCORDING TO T H E D E C L A R AT I O N THEREOF, RECORDED UNDER KITSAP COUNTY RECORDING NO. 8704150142 AND ANY AMENDMENTS THERETO; TOGETHER WITH THE TIDELANDS FRONTING OR ABUTTING THEREON; SITUATE IN THE CITY OF BREMERTON, COUNTY OF KITSAP, STATE OF WASHINGTON. Post Office Address: 1610 Park Avenue #D-1, Bremerton, WA 98337; Assessor’s Property Tax Parcel or Account Numb e r : 8068-004-001-0003. The sale of the above described property is to take place: Time: 9:00 am Date: Friday, May 1, 2015 Place: Main Entrance,

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR KITSAP COUNTY HOMESTREET BANK, Plaintiff, v. ESTATE OF JOYCE L. DAVISON, DECEASED; JOEL C. DAVISON; ERIN T. SANDERS; HOLLY E. LOEWEN; UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES

Continued on next page.....

Bremer ton & Por t Orchard areas. Gold in color; extremly sentimental. Please call if found or seen 912-432-1160. KEYS, March 13th at the Po r t O r c h a r d Fr e d Myers. Reward. (360)876-8570

SHELTON

(360)427-7033 or TDD 711

www.dickvlistmotors.com 876-4428 • 1-888-600-4428

email: ENCUUKĆ‚ GFU"UQWPFRWDNKUJKPI EQO

Mannette

WSU IS OFFERING 9.5AC VACANT LAND for sale in Oak Harbor, Whidbey Island, WA. Located at 93 Green Valley Rd, commonly known as Oak Harbor Rodeo Grounds. Minimum bid $130,000 is requested. For additional info & bidding instructions please contact WSU Real Estate Office 509-335-4021.

22,995

ONLY $ 514 BAY STREET, PORT ORCHARD

UQWPFENCUUKĆ‚ GFU EQO

Real Estate for Rent Kitsap County

2 BD, 2 BA duplex, View and walk to Navy yard. $1,200, 1st, last + deposit (360)373-1279

VOTED BEST USED AUTO DEALER IN SOUTH KITSAP ‘12,‘13 & ‘14

MISSING COLLIE: Rusty, 10-yr old longhaired sable male collie. Missing since 1/7/2015 a.m. from Bluff Lane near Beck, BI. Has epilepsy, arthritis, requires medications to contain s e i z u r e s . R E WA R D ! Please call 206-8420292, 206-419-6853 with any information.

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND

NORTH KITSAP

300 High School Road NE #300 $221,000 SAT 1-4

22841 Singingwood Place NE, Kingston $768,000 SUN 1-4

New Listing! 3rd floor corner unit at convenient Island Crossings with southfacing deck, 2 bedrooms, new flooring, new window treatments, and decorator paint colors. Minutes to Ferry & shopping. 2 parking spaces. MLS #763556. Jan Johnson, 206/371-8792, janj@windermere.com. Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc.

Single-level Cape Cod-style home overlooks the 14th fairway. A perfect flow of space includes formal & casual living areas. Fine finishes, outstanding cook’s kitchen, sumptuous master suite. Expansive patio, landscaped grounds. MLS #755811. Terry Klein, 206/949-3360, TerryKlein.withwre.com. Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc. Barb Huget, 360/620-6445, bhuget@windermere.com. Windermere Real Estate/West Sound, Inc.

Legal Notices

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF KITSAP LEIF A. BENTSEN and ELIZABETH M. HUDDLE, Trustees of the Leif A. Bentsen and Elizabeth M. Huddle Trust UA dated May 29, 1997, Plaintiffs, vs. RAGNA M. CLAUSEN,

Call one of your Sound Publishing newspapers to submit your Open House Listing: BAINBRIDGE REVIEW 206 842-6613 • NORTH KITSAP HERALD 360 779-4464 CENTRAL KITSAP REPORTER 360 308-9161 • BREMERTON PATRIOT 360 308-9161 PORT ORCHARD INDEPENDENT 360 876-4414 • KITSAP CLASSIFIEDS 1-800-388-2527


page 12 kitsapweek Friday, April 3, 2015 Continued from previous page..... Legal Notices

NORTH KITSAP

CENTRAL KITSAP

BREMERTON

KINGSTON $164,500 Affordable home in beach community on double-sized 1.06ac lot-gorgeous cedar trees. Arched windows/cathedral ceiling, large kitchen. Minutes to Kingston ferry. Jan Zufelt 360-297-0325 View at www.johnlscott.com/10212

BREMERTON $63,000 Just over 1 acre of land on Mission Lake Shore Dr. Unobstructed water view of Mission Lake, some mountain view too! Build to suit or bring manufactured home!! Dianne Dibley 360-731-0138 View at www.johnlscott.com/14166

NEW ON THE MARKET $160,000 Charming craftsman home w/2 outbuildings w/new roofs & solid foundations. This downtown home is close to the Seattle Ferry, PSNS & Everygreen Waterfront Park Raven Rayne 360-405-6264 View at www.johnlscott.com/17383

NEW ON MARKET POULSBO $155,000 Newly updated double-wide in central location. Newer roof,wall board,paint,kitchen cabinets.Woodstove for cozy warmth. 2 decks.Lrg corner lot.Plenty of storage. Cherie Fahlsing/Terry Feather 360-779-7555 View at www.johnlscott.com/27064

CENTRAL KITSAP $159,950 Well maintained 2 story home. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, 1 car garage, new carpets, new interior paint, new vinyl in entry & kitchen. Deck. Tommy Jones 360-731-9685 View at www.johnlscott.com/93520

BREMERTON $160,000 This 2 bd/1ba home is ready for you; from the time you pull up & walk through the with picket fence to the oversized 2-car & shop/ det.gar. Needs a little TLC Shawn Hartley 360-377-0046 View at www.johnlscott.com/70547

NEW ON MARKET KINGSTON $199,000 2.39 acres w/views of the Olympic mountains & only 1.5 miles to town & ferry. Unfinished shop/possible ADU? 4 bedroom septic. Pat Osler 360-779-8543 View at www.johnlscott.com/92418 POULSBO $208,999 Wonderful home with an open floor plan that features: 1238 sqft, 2 bedrooms & a large rec room. Nice deck & a private backyard that backs up to a greenbelt. Donny Reece 360-509-5249 View at www.johnlscott.com/88523 OPEN SAT 2-4 KINGSTON $284,900 26030 Barber Cut-Off Rd NE. Private & charming home w/premium upgrades throughout. Main floor master, a loft area, extra heated bonus room off huge garage. Jeri Coleman 360-621-7131 View at www.johnlscott.com/81871 POULSBO $379,500 Meticulous home w/views of the Olympic Mountains & Hood Canal! Features: open floor plan w/1865 sqft, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths & family room. Great location! Jim Lake 360-337-9817 View at www.johnlscott.com/93176 POULSBO $495,000 Woods & Meadows,Div 3,Chaffey built 3bdrm/2.5ba hm featuring 3266sf w/2 offices,great rm,formal living & dining rms. Oak flrs.Located on a private cul-de-sac. Cherie Fahlsing 360-440-3419 View at www.johnlscott.com/28274 NEW ON MARKET POULSBO $629,950 175’ of no bank waterfront on Liberty Bay! Beautiful home w/3 bdrms, hardwood flrs & a 980 sqft finished guest studio. Large deck, fire pit & beach amenities. Jane Woodward 360-779-8520 View at www.johnlscott.com/80363

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND MADRONE VILLAGE $339,900 The main floor offers 2 bedrooms and 1.5 baths, plus the home includes upstairs loft/ office and a private garage. Ideal! Eileen Black 206-696-1540 View at www.johnlscott.com/94389 OPEN SAT. 12-3PM $400,000 Peace and quiet on a little piece of Island paradise. Soaring ceilings with a wall of windows in the living room give the feel of wide open space. Jamie Jensen 360-620-9351 View at www.johnlscott.com/61224 VIEW OF THE OLYMPICS $569,000 West facing views of the water & the Olympic Mountains with stunning sunsets on your expansive entertaining deck. Liza Cohen 206-595-2299. View at www.johnlscott.com/67663

CENTRAL KITSAP $235,000 Like new! Summerwind twnhme. Master suite on main level. 2-car garage! Newer Hardi-Plank, roof, appliances, water heater & windows. A/C too@ Jean Bradford 360-620-4774 View at www.johnlscott.com/80982

MISSION LAKE $359,900 Paved private drive, 2992 sq ft home located on 5+ acres. Offers a 1610 Sq Ft shop, covered parking for 5, patio w/fire pit, tile room & more. Tony Cole 360-649-1549 View at www.johnlscott.com/41507

NEW RAMBLER PRESALE $315,000 Alderwood 1730SF Model Nat gas furnace, gas FP w/tile surround, vaulted ceilings, Hardi siding, stone accent on porch posts.19 lots, Poseidon Ct off Pugh Rd. Silverdale Office 360-692-9777 View at www.johnlscott.com/76102

COMMERCIAL $459,900 Highly visible 10,000 sq. ft of commercial space with 100 feet of frontage! Formerly Roy’s Appliance so it would do well for a similar business. Call for info. Rick Ellis 360871-1600 View at www.johnlscott.com/29372

OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY 1-4 $339,500 5032 NW Francis Dr DD: Silverdale Way, take Anderson Hill Rd (W), Turn Lft on Provost, Rt on 82nd, Rt on NW Francis Dr. Joe Simon 360-265-2259 View at www.johnlscott.com/NWM762025

BREMERTON $1,000,000 Turn key Business opportunity, Owner operator cleared over 100K in 2013 and stayed in the most expensive unit.11 Completely renovated, furnished apartments. Bob Harkness 360-516-9217 View at www.johnlscott.com/84318

CENTRAL KITSAP $350,000 Sunny & bright one story home w/room for all your toys! Incredible property and open floor plan that features a large kitchen w/ butcher block island, 2.28 acres John David 360-509-0691 View at www.johnlscott.com/33771

LAND & LOTS

CENTRAL KITSAP $439,000 Beautiful Stafford home in the sought after nbrhd of Whisper Ridge offers over 2,800 sq ft of living space. Kitchen has granite counters & extended pantry. Sarah Canfield 360-473-6670 View at www.johnlscott.com/62204

SOUTH KITSAP

BREMERTON $26,500 There was a home on this lot prior to a fire therefore electrical, sewer & water are on site. Also a portion of the foundation, quiet low traffic street! Beth Allen 360-895-5226 View at www.johnlscott.com/47627 BREMERTON $99,900 Ready to build that dream home? View lot in Dockside, all utilities in street. Private nbrhd lakefront park w/dock and gazebo too! Karen Ebersole 360-633-5068 View at www.johnlscott.com/73235 NORTH KITSAP $109,900 Looking for a central location Fabulous location here between Silverdale & Poulsbo. Plenty of room to roam on your 2.17 acres! Septic installed & drilled well! Dave & Cindy McKay (360) 620-5451 or 620-6490 View at www.johnlscott.com/42977

PORT ORCHARD - NEW! $139,000 This home is located on a large, secluded & wooded 1.47 acre! 3BR + den, 2 full baths, wood stove, round pen for horses, lean-to barn, parking for 2 cars!! Eric Von Marbod 360-710-2010 PRICE REDUCED KINGSTON $129,500 View at www.johnlscott.com/33774 Minutes to Kingston, 2 spots would make a PORT ORCHARD $650,000 beautiful home site. Both access roads paved. This home is on of a kind! 5543 sq. ft., Heavily treed. Close to schools, trails, boating, 3BR/4.25BA, entry, formal dining,mother shopping, ferry. Jan Zufelt 360-297-0325 in law qtrs.in basement, music room, hot View at www.johnlscott.com/95255 tub room & fantastic views!! Rick Ellis BREMERTON $199,900 360-871-1600 Beautiful 1.33 acre wooded parcel zoned View at www.johnlscott.com/80444 Mixed Use. Right off the Wheaton Way business area but on a dead end street. Sewer assessment is paid. Check it out!! Patricia McGuire 360-895-5212 PIERCE COUNTY View at www.johnlscott.com/48354 LAKEBAY - REDUCED! $155,000 Looks & feels like new construction! New POULSBO $575,000 carpet, fresh paint, new doors & vinyl 106 feet of waterfront building lot parcel with windows! Palmer Lake Estates w/2 parks, community well installed and views of Liberty a dock. 3BR/2BA & 2 car garage! Deborah Bay and Poulsbo. Also included a 88 feet Lozares 360-340-3359 shared dock. Teri Hewson 360-779-8539 View at www.johnlscott.com/15429 View at www.johnlscott.com/92004

JOHN L. SCOTT KITSAP COUNTY OFFICE LOCATIONS Bainbridge Island | Jamie Jensen, Managing Broker ............... (206) 842-5636 Kingston | Frank Wilson, Managing Broker ....................................... (360) 297-7500 Poulsbo | Frank Wilson, Managing Broker ........................................ (360) 779-7555 Port Orchard | Jacqui Curtiss, Managing Broker .......................... (360) 876-7600 Silverdale | Lee Avery, Managing Broker .................................. (360) 692-9777 Bremerton | Lee Avery, Managing Broker ................................. (360) 377-0046 John L. Scott Real Estate has 122 offices, some offices are independently owned and operated.

Kitsap County Courthouse 614 Division Street, Port Orchard, WA The judgment debtor can avoid the sale by paying the judgment amount of $90,243.93, together with interest, costs and fees, before the sale date. For the exact amount, contact the Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office at the address stated below: GARY SIMPSON, SHERIFF By: David White Chief of Investigations and Support Services Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office 614 Division Street Port Orchard, WA 98366-4688 Phone: 360-337-7104 Attorney for Plaintiff: Bishop, Marshall & Weibel, P.S. Justin, T. Jastrzebski, Attorney 720 Olive Way, Suite 1201 S e a t t l e , W A 98101-1801 206-622-5306 Date of first publication: 03/13/15 Date of last publication: 04/03/15 (KCD619718) NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE I. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Trustee will on the 10th day of April, 2015 at the hour of 10:00 a.m., at Kitsap County Courthouse, 614 Division Street, Port Orchard, State of Washington, sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable at the time of sale, the following described real property situated in the County of Kitsap, State of Washington, to wit: LOT 15, BLOCK 12, LEIBLY & BLUMER’S REA LT Y C O M P A N Y, QUARTER ACRE TRACTS NO. 11 AND 12, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT RECORDED IN VOLUME 3 OF P L AT S , P A G E 1 1 7 , RECORDS OF KITSAP C O U N T Y, WA S H I N G TON, EXCEPT THE NORTH 20 FEET THEREOF. Assessor’s Tax Parcel ID #4567-012-015-0005 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated February 14, 2011, recorded on February 16, 2011, under Kitsap County Auditor’s File No. 201102160100, records of Kitsap County, Washington, from Shelley Wittig, as Grantor, to Land Title Company of Kitsap County, as Trustee, to secure an obligation in favor of John Mishko and Abby Mishko, as Beneficiary. II. No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

in any Court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. III. The defaults for which this foreclosure is made are as follows: 1. Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: Payments Due May 1, 2014 to December 1, 2014 $6,536.00 Interest through December 22, 2014 @ 18% $15,697.69 Late Charges from May 6, 2014 in the amount of $40.85 per month $326.80 $22,560.49 2.The Grantor’s failure to pay, prior to delinquency, the real estate taxes for the following years and amounts: 2013 $2,252.18 plus interest & penalties 2014 $2,141.96 plus interest & penalties TOTALS $4,394.14 plus interest and penalties. IV The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: Principal $134,019.83, 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 expense 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 the 10th day of April, 2015. The defaults referred to in Paragraph III must be cured by the 30th day of March, 2015 to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if, at any time before the 30th day of March, 2015, the defaults as set forth in Paragraph III are cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated any time after the 30th day of March, 2015, and before the sale by the Borrower, Grantor, any Guarantor, or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance by paying the entire principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust, plus costs, fees, 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 were transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor, at the following addresses: Shelley Wittig 7264 E. Manchester Court Port Orchard, WA

98366 Occupants 7264 E. Manchester Court Port Orchard, WA 98366 by both first class and certified mail on the 19th day of November, 2014, proof of which is in possession of the Trustee; and the Borrower and Grantor were personally served on the 21st day of November, 2014 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, a n d t h e Tr u s t e e h a s possession of proof of such service or posting. VII. T h e Tr u s t e e , w h o s e 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 PURSUANT TO FA I R D E B T C O L L E C TION PRACTICES ACT This notice is an attempt to collect a debt, and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. XI. OTHER NOTICES **THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME. You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date on this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONTA C T A H O U S I N G COUNSELOR OR AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situation and refer you to mediation if you are eligible and it may help you save your home. See below for safe sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in determining your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may contact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline recommended by the Housing Finance Commission: Toll-free: 1-877-894-

HOME (1-877-8944663) United States Department of Housing and Urban Development: Toll-free: 1-800-5694287 Local counseling agencies in Washington: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webListAction= search&searchstate= WA&filterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorneys: Toll-free: 1-800-6064819 http://nwjustice.org/ what-clear DATED this 23rd day of December, 2014. /s/David P. Horton DAVID P. HORTON, Trustee WSBA #27123 3212 NW Byron Street, Suite 104 Silverdale, WA 98383 (360) 692-9444 STATE OF WASHINGTON ) : ss. COUNTY OF KITSAP ) I hereby certify that I know or have satisfactory evidence that DAVID P. HORTON is the person who appeared before me, and said person acknowledged that he signed this instrument and acknowledged it to be his free and voluntary act for the uses and purposes mentioned in this instrument. GIVEN under my hand and official seal this 23rd day of December, 2014. /s/Debra R. Smith Debra R. Smith NOTARY PUBLIC in and for the State of Washington, residing at: Port Orchard My Commission Expires: 8-16-18 Date of first publication: 03/13/15 Date of last publication: 04/03/15 (KCD609899)) TO: ESTATE OF JOYCE L. DAVISON (DECEASED), JUDGMENT DEBTOR(S) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR KITSAP COUNTY HOMESTREET BANK, Plaintiff, v. ESTATE OF JOYCE L. DAVISON, DECEASED; JOEL C. DAVISON; ERIN T. SANDERS; HOLLY E. LOEWEN; UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF JOYCE L. DAVISON, DECEASED; 1610 PARK CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, A NON-PROFIT UNINCORPORATED A S S O C I AT I O N A K A 1 6 1 0 PA R K C O N D O MINIUM ASSOCIATION OF APARTMENT OWNERS, A WASHINGTON NON-PROFIT UNINCORP O R AT E D A S S O C I A TION; BANK OF AMERICA, N.A.; JOHN AND continued on page 14


Friday, April 3, 2015 kitsapweek page 13

QUALITY BUILDINGS AT AFFORDABLE PRICES! 24x24x8 Two Car Garage

24x36x10 Garage/Hobby Shop

24x36x9 Garage / Hobby Shop

24x40x15 RV Garage

$12,997+tax

$17,880+tax

$17,342+tax

$22,641+tax

28x36x10 Hobby Shop

28x36x14 Two Car Garage/Shop

30x36x18 & 9 2-Story, 3-Stall Garage

30x38x10 Garage & Hobby Shop w/Covered Storage

$20,521+tax

$21,989+tax

$35,526+tax

$20,720+tax

32x48x10 Four Car Garage

30x48x15 Big Boy Toy Garage

36x36x16 & 9 Two Car & RV Garage

30x50x18 & 9 Two Story Garage & RV

Thorndike © 2000

$29,489+tax

$29,999+tax

$29,939+tax

$44,674+tax

36x36x14 Two Car Garage Shop & RV

30x50 2 Story RV Garage w/ Covered Deck

36x48 2 Story Three Car Garage

36x36x18 &12 Monitor Barn

49,754+tax $26,652+tax 29,991+tax 57,550+tax SERVING KITSAP, MASON, JEFFERSON, CLALLAM Co’s. All Prices Include Plans, Labor, Materials and Concrete Floors

S B S

SOUN D BUILDING SY STEM S

Post Frame Building Professionals

Unsurpassed in Customer 1(888)948-7467 Satisfaction or (360)437-1219 35 Years of Professional Experience! Call Us Before You Buy

Fax (360)437-1218

www.soundbuildingsystemsinc.com

PRICES MAY VARY ACCORDING TO DISTANCE & CITY OR COUNTY CODES & RESTRICTIONS. Contractor’s License #SOUNDBS027NM


page 14 kitsapweek Friday, April 3, 2015

KITSAP SERVICES

Professional Services Farm/Garden Service

BEEKEEPERS STEDMAN BEE SUPPLIES

Accepting orders now for Bee Packages Arriving Early April 2015. Call now to Reserve Your Bees!

360-692-9453

Professional Services Health Services

PERSONAL BEST HYPNOSIS Diana Labrum, Cht. To Provide Help With: * Weight Management * Smoking Cessation * Fears and Phobias * Motivation Visit www.PersonalBestHypnosis.com or call me at 360-876-5880. Professional Services Legal Services

Home Services Property Maintenance

DIVORCE $155. $175 with children. No court appearances. Complete p r e p a ra t i o n . I n c l u d e s custody, support, proper ty division and bills. B B B m e m b e r. (503) 772-5295. www.paralegalalter natives.com legalalt@msn.com

All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Waterproofing, Finishing, Structural Repairs, Humidity and Mold Control. F R E E E S T I M AT E S ! Call 1-800-998-5574

Professional Services Professional

~ Lonestar Painting & Construction LLC Painting, Remodeling, Siding, Etc. Accepting All Major Credit Cards. Free Estimate; Call Now 360-895-5405 LONESTC880LH.Bonded.Insured

Home Services Hauling & Cleanup

Have a service to offer? Contact Jennie today: 866-296-0380 jmorello@soundpublishing.com

Home Services Landscape Services

YOU TRIED CALLING THE REST, NOW CALL THE BEST!

Evergreen Landscaping Lawn Install, Repair & Maint. Flagstone, Patios, Walkways. Dump Truck Services.

Call Enrique for your free estimate now 360-633-5575 or 360-297-3355. chavez702014@gmail.com LICENSE # EVERGLS899JG.

GREEN STATE LANDSCAPING SERVICES Mow. Weed. Prune.

Luis 360-689-4398 Liscensed 603 387 219

Home Services Lawn/Garden Service

ALL YARD CARE SERVICE General Yard Service, Haul, Edge, Trim, Lawn & Grounds Maintenance, Weed Control, Plant, Beauty Bark, Power Washing and Much More. Please call for a free estimate

360-689-6327

Antonio’s Lawn Service Quality yard and lawn maintenance needs. Call an experienced local professional now. *Mow *Cleanup *Prune *Weeding *Haul *Etc

RELAX, WHILE I DO ALL THE YARD WORK! Weed. Prune. Mow. Bark. Haul. Roofs. Gutters. Local. Licensed.

Cruz’s Lawn Care 360-990-6602

360-377-7990 888-993-4285 RJP HOME & YARD SERVICE

$15/HOUR. CLEAN YARD. Weed. Cleanup. 360-471-8532 Serving Kitsap. 4 hr minimum.

Safe Removal Available HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS ~ LEAKING ROOFS CAN BREAK IT!

Lic# RJPHOHY879QN

Advertising doesn’t have to break the bank. The Classifieds has great deals on everything you need.

www.scottshomeandroof.com scottsroof@outlook.com SCOTTHR933QG.Bonded.Insured

Home Services Pole Builder/Storage

BUILT TOUGH!

Home Services Landscape Services

10% Off All Buildings!*

Double Carport $1095

MINI-EXCAVATOR! Rolando Landscaping & Contractor All General Services Design Landscaping, Rock Walls, Crush Rock, Mow, Land Clearing, Sprinkler Systems, Sod, Seed, Thatching, Bark, Prune, Hedges, Tree Trimming, Haul, Junk Removal, Pressure Wash, Clean Roof & Gutters. Excellent work!

Rolando 360-801-2707 10 Years Experience. Residential & Commercial. Insured. Lic.#ROLANL*855BT

www.SoundClassifieds.com

LEANING, ROTTED, DANGERSOUS TREES? 360.297.7524

360-990-5560 www.rjphome.com Reach the readers the dailies miss. Call 800-388-2527 today to place your ad in the Classifieds.

Whether you’re buying or selling, the Classifieds has it all. From automobiles and employment to real estate and household goods, you’ll find everything you need 24 hours a day at

Home Services Painting

* Junk/Brush Removal * Moving * Painting * Yard Maintenance * Small Tree Removal * Window Washng * Gutter Cleaning * Pressure Washing * Moss Cleaning & Treatment * Deck Repair * Fence Repair

Free Delivery and Installation Made in America www.allsteelnw.com sales@allsteelnw.com

360-277-0200 * Offer expires April 15th

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

continued from page 12

dant Joyce L. Davison, and against the real property, in the amount of $112,671.91, together with interest at 5.875% per annum from the 16th day of January, 2015; which said judgment is entered in Execution Docket of the Superior Court as Judgment Number 15-9-00199-7 and which there is now due and owing $112,671.91, not including post judgment interest; and whereas the said judgment is a foreclosure with a twelve (12) months redemption period, against the Defendant herein of a deed of trust on the following described property, situated in Kitsap County, State of Washington, to wit: APARTMENT D-1, BUILDING 2, 1610 PARK, A CONDOMINIUM RECORDED IN VOLUME 4 OF CONDOMINIUMS, PAGES 170 THROUGH 173, INCLUSIVE, ACCORDING TO

T H E D E C L A R AT I O N THEREOF, RECORDED UNDER KITSAP COUNTY RECORDING NO. 8704150142 AND ANY AMENDMENTS THERETO; TOGETHER WITH THE TIDELANDS FRONTING OR ABUTTING THEREON; SITUATE IN THE CITY OF BREMERTON, COUNTY OF KITSAP, STATE OF WASHINGTON. A P N : 8068-004-001-00-03 and commonly known as 1610 Park Avenue #D-1, Bremerton, WA 98337. THEREFORE, in the name of the State of Washington, you are hereby commanded to proceed to seize and sell forthwith, and without appraisement, the above-described property, in the manner provided by law; or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy the judgment, interest and costs, and any advances that plaintiff may be required after the entry of judgment to make for the payment of taxes, assessments, other items constituting liens on the property, insurance, and/or repairs for the protection or preservation of the property; and if you fail to find said property and if the judgment herein provides for deficiency and the proceeds of such sale be insufficient to satisfy said judgment, costs and any accrued and increased costs, you are directed to take

the money or any balance thereof remaining unpaid, out of any property of Defendant Joyce L. Davison, not exempt from execution. HEREIN FAIL NOT, but make return hereof within sixty days, showing how you have executed the same. Witness, the Honorable KEVIN D. HULL Judge of the Superior Court and the seal of said Court, affixed this 10th day of February, 2015, at Port Orchard, Washington. DAVID W. PETERSON Superior Court Clerk By: JERRIE DAVIES Deputy Clerk I S T I P U L AT E T O A 30-DAY OR LESS EXTENSION OF THIS ORDER FOR PURPOSES OF SALE PURSUANT TO RCW 6.21.050. BISHOP, MARSHALL & WEIBEL, P.S. JUSTIN JASTRZEBSKI William L. Bishop, Jr., WSBA #2412 David A Weibel, WSBA #24031 Justin T. Jastrzebski, WSBA #46680 Attorneys for Plaintiff THE SALE DATE HAS BEEN SET FOR FRIDAY, MAY 01, 2015 AT 9:00 A.M., AT THE MAIN ENTRANCE, KITSAP COUNTY COURTHOUSE, PORT ORCHARD, WASHINGTON. Y O U M AY H AV E A RIGHT TO EXEMPT PROPERTY FROM THE S A L E U N D E R S TATUTES OF THIS STATE, INCLUDING SECTIONS 6.13.010, 6.13.030, 6.13.040, 6.15.010 AND 6.15.060 OF THE REVISED CODE OF WASHINGTON, IN THE MANNER DESCRIBED IN THOSE STATUTES. GARY SIMPSON, SHERIFF By: David White, Chief of Investigations and Support Services Date of first publication: 03/13/15 Date of last publication: 04/17/15 (KCD619725)

JANE DOES, I T H R O U G H V, O C C U PANTS OF THE SUBJECT REAL PROPERTY, AND ALL OTHER PERSONS OR PARTIES UNKNOWN, CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, INTEREST, LIEN OR ESTATE IN THE PROPERTY HEREIN DESCRIBED. Defendants. Case No. 13-2-01114-1 ORDER OF SALE ( C l e r k ’s A c t i o n R e quired) AN ORDER OF SALE HAS BEEN ISSUED IN THE ABOVE CAPTIONED CASE, DIRECTED TO THE SHERIFF OF KITS A P C O U N T Y, C O M MANDING THE SHERIFF AS FOLLOWS, WHEREAS, THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, to the Sheriff of Kitsap County: WHEREAS, in the above-entitled Court, on the 16th day of January, 2015, Plaintiff, Homestreet Bank, recovered a judgment against Defen-

WE BUY DIRECT FROM THE MILL AND WE PASS THE SAVINGS ON TO YOU!

1X8 CEDAR BEVEL SIDING 39¢ PER LINEAL FOOT

1x6”x6’ Cedar Fence Boards $1.25 EA. CEDAR PRODUCTS COMPANY Fencing • Decking • Siding • Dimensional lumber

360-223-7408

WE TAKE IT ALL!

Legal Notices

Specializing in cedar lumber at affordable pricing

FREE ESTIMATE

GOT CLUTTER?

Junk, Appliances, Yard Debris, etc. Serving Kitsap Co. Since 1997

Reach thousands of subscribers by advertising your landscaping business in the Classifieds. Call 800-388-2527 to place your Service Directory Ad today.

Legal Notices

360-377-9943 • CEDARPRODUCTSCO.COM Current Employment Opportunities at www.soundpublishing.com We are community & daily newspapers in these Western Washington Locations: • King County • Kitsap County • Clallam County • Jefferson County • Okanogan County • Pierce County • Island County • San Juan County • Snohomish County • Whatcom County • Grays Harbor County Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. We offer a great work environment with opportunity for advancement along with a competitive benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401k.

Accepting resumes at: hr@soundpublishing.com or by mail to: HR, Sound Publishing, Inc. 11323 Commando Rd. W Suite 1 Everett, WA 98204 Please state which position and geographic area you are applying for.

Sales Positions • Multi Media Advertising Sales Consultants - Everett - Renton

Reporters & Editorial • Staff Writer - Seattle • Reporters - Montesano

Production/Labor • General Worker - Press - Everett

Circulation • Circulation Manager - Snoqualmie

For a list of our most current job openings and to learn more about us visit our website:

www.soundpublishing.com

Employment Professional

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Bainbridge Arts & Crafts seeks full-time Executive Director to manage dayto-day operations, exhibitions, programs, and fund development for Bainbridge Island’s oldest nonprofit art gallery. Email cover letter, resume, and references to jobs@bacart.org by April 10. Details at bacart.org/about-us/jobs No phone calls, please.

&INDåIT å"UYåIT å3ELLåIT www.SoundClassifieds.com

Employment General

Carriers The North Kitsap Herald & Bainbridge Island Review has openings for Carrier Routes. No collecting, no selling. Thursday nights/Friday mornings. If interested call Brandon Giddens, 360-779-4464


Friday, April 3, 2015 kitsapweek page 15 Employment General

Final Days!!

Carriers The North Kitsap Herald & Bainbridge Island Review have openings for Carrier Routes. No collecting, no selling. Thursay nights/Friday mornings. If interested call Brandon Giddens, 360-779-4464 INCOME OPPORTUNITY!

Call Today!

The Bainbridge Island Review newspaper seeking quality motor route carriers. Thursday night delivery. No collections. Must be at least 18 years of age. Reliable people with reliable vehicle please call Brandon Giddens, 360-779-4464

Financing Available!

For a $300 Off coupon ... Visit us at Facebook/PermaBilt MODIFIED GRID BARN 30’ x 30’ x 10’

2 CAR GARAGE SHOP with HOBBY SHOP 24’ x 36’ x 9’

Seasonal Maintenance Worker

Open until filled. www.bainbridgewa.gov Business Opportunities

AVON- Ear n extra income with a new career! Sell from home, work,, online. $15 startup. For infor mation call: 888423-1792 (M-F 9-7 & Sat 9-1 Central)

10’ x 10’ metal framed split sliding door with cam-latch closers, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door with self-closing hinges and stainless steel lockset, 2’ poly eavelight, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

4” concrete with fibermesh reinforcement and zip-strip crack-control, (2) 10’ x 8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door with self-closing hinges and stainless steel lockset, 3’ x 3’ double glazed vinyl window with screen, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

18,009

$

16,447

$

236mo.

$

18,698

$

DELUXE DORMERED 2 CAR GARAGE 24’ x 28’ x 16’

Schools & Training

AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here – Get hands on training as FAA certified Technician fixing jets. Financial aid if qualified. Call for free information Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1877-818-0783 www.FixJets.com You can be career-ready in as little as 3 months for a rewarding new career in the growing healthcare, technology, or administration industries. The U.S. Department of Labor expects millions of new jobs in these fields! Get started today: CareerStep.com/startnow. Auctions/ Estate Sales

BREMERTON Public Auction/ Landlord Lien Foreclosure Sale 4/14/15 at 10:00 AM.

1986 ANMAN 36 X 28 manufactured home VIN: 0RFL2AF354805083 and a 2007 MAZDA B23 P.U. VIN: 4F4YR12D77PM00791 Steele Creek Community #14, 9093 Steele Creek Loop NE PH: 360.692.9803

OLALLA Public Auction/ Landlord Lien Foreclosure Sale 4/10/15 at 9:00 AM.

1972 NASH 69/14 mobile home, Olympic View Mobile Manor #48, 15503 Cedar Park Rd SE PH: 253-985-5559

34,048

31,237

$

244mo.

$

• 18 Sidewall and Trim Colors With Limited Lifetime Warranty (Denim Series excluded) • Engineered For 85 MPH Wind Exposure B and 25# Snow Load* • 2” Fiberglass Vapor Barrier Roof Insulation • Free In-Home Consultation • Guaranteed Craftsmanship • Plans • Engineering • Permit Service • Erection

4” concrete with fibermesh reinforcement and zip-strip crack-control, (2) 12’ x 7’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door with self-closing hinges and stainless steel lockset, (2) 5’ x 2’ double glazed cross hatch vinyl windows with screens, 12’ x 28’ 50# loft, 4’ 50# staircase, (2) 6’ pitched dormers with (2) 5’ x 2’ sliding double glazed cross hatch vinyl windows with screens, 18” eave and gable overhangs, bird blocking both gables, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent. $

16,998

$

*If your jurisdiction requires higher wind exposures or snow loads, building prices will be affected.

Hundreds of Designs Available!

448mo.

$

GARAGE with PORTICO 20’ x 24’ x 9’

15,552

$

17,029

$

223mo.

$

DELUXE 3 CAR GARAGE 24’ x 36’ x 9’

Concrete Included!

4” concrete with fibermesh reinforcement and zip-strip crack-control, (3) 10’ x 8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door with self-closing hinges and stainless steel lockset, 18” eave and gable overhangs, 2’ poly eavelight along one eave, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

20,348

$

18,583

$

267mo.

$

DAYLIGHT GARAGE 24’ x 36’ x 10’

BARN and SHOP 24’ x 24’ x 10’

Concrete Included!

Concrete Included!

4” concrete with fibermesh reinforcement and zip-strip crack-control, 9’ x 9’ raised panel steel overhead door, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door with self-closing hinges and stainless steel lockset, (2) 3’ x 4’ and (4) 3’ x 2’ double glazed vinyl windows with screens, 10’ x 4’ Portico, 18” eave and gable overhangs, (2) 12”x 12” gable vents, 3/12 roof pitch. $

17,597

15,997

$

230mo.

$

RV GARAGE and SHOP 24’ x 24’ x 9’ and 12’ x 36’ x 14’

12’ x 9’ metal framed split sliding door with cross hatching and cam-latch closers, 4’ x 8’ split opening unpainted wood Dutch door, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door with self-closing hinges and stainless steel lockset (not shown), 2’ poly eavelight, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent. $

12,054

10,958

$

157mo.

$

4” concrete with fibermesh reinforcement and zip-strip crack-control, (2) 10’ x 9’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door with self-closing hinges and stainless steel lockset, 18” eave and gable overhangs, 2’ poly eavelight along one eave, (2) 12” x 12” gable vents (not shown).

21,461

$

19,599

$

281mo.

$

L-SHAPED 2 CAR GARAGE and SHOP 20’ x 40’ x 8’ with 20’ x 20’ x 8’

2 BAY STORAGE BUILDING 24’ x 24’ x 8’

Concrete Included!

Concrete Included!

4” concrete with fibermesh reinforcement and zip-strip crack-control, 10’ x 12’ and (2) 2” fiberglass vapor barrier roof insulation; plans, engineering, permit service and 10’ x 8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door with self-closing erection; 8 sidewall and trim colors with 25 year warranty. hinges and stainless steel lockset, (2) 10’ continuous flow ridge vents (not shown).

22,664

$

Concrete Included!

4” concrete with fibermesh reinforcement and zip-strip crack-control, 10’ x 11’ raised panel steel overhead door, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door with self-closing hinges and stainless steel lockset, (2) 12”x12” gable vents (not shown).

ALL BUILDINGS INCLUDE:

Concrete Included!

Employment Publications

HOW TO EARN $1,000 + DAILY! Get Paid up to 72 Times Daily! No Selling! Free Money Making Website!! www.EasyMoneyFormula.com

RV CARPORT and GARAGE 24’ x 28’ x 12’

Concrete Included!

Please see the City’s website for more information.

Buildings Built: 19,683 Square Feet: 20,978,993 As of 2/14/2015

20,698

$

297mo. $8,798 PermaBilt.com

$

7,998

$

4” concrete with fibermesh reinforcement and zip-strip crack-control, (2) 8’ x 7’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door with self-closing hinges and stainless steel lockset, 18” eave and gable overhangs, (2) 10’ continuous flow ridge vents (not shown).

115mo. $27,734 Facebook.com/PermaBilt $

25,328

$

363mo.

$

800-824-9552

1258045

Washington #TOWNCPF099LT

Financing based on 12% interest, all payments based on 10 years (unless otherwise noted), O.A.C.. Actual rate may vary. Prices do not include permit costs or sales tax & are based on a flat, level, accessible building site w/less than 1’ of fill, w/85 MPH Wind Exposure “B”, 25# snow load, for non commercial usage & do not include prior sales & may be affected by county codes and/or travel considerations. Drawings for illustration purposes only. Ad prices expire 4/12/15.

Measuring up to your expectations one ad at a time.

Whether you’re buying or selling, Sound Classifieds has it all. From automobiles and employment to real estate and household goods, you’ll find everything you need in the Sound Classifieds. Put Sound Classifieds to work for you, and inch even closer to your goals.

SOUND classifieds

visit Soundclassifieds.com • call toll free 1-800-388-2527 • email classifieds@soundpublishing.com


page 16 kitsapweek Friday, April 3, 2015 Cemetery Plots

Flea Market

Mail Order

Miscellaneous

Dogs

$900ea. 2 S X S PLOTS Beautiful Maple Leaf Cemeter y. Located along the road, short distance South of the cannons. Friendly, helpful staff! N i c e g r o u n d s . G r ave plots are # 10 and # 11. Call 425-745-2419. Oak Harbor.

7 TEMPERED GLASS panels (5) 34x76; (1) 26x74.; (1) 28x76. $5/ each or $25/ all 360-627-8690

Medical Guardian - Toprated medical alarm and 24/7 medical alert monitoring. For a limited time, get free equipment, no activation fees, no commitment, a 2nd waterproof alert button for free and more - only $29.95 per month. 800-617-2809

P r o t e c t Yo u r H o m e ADT Authorized Dealer: B u r g l a r y, F i r e , a n d Emergency Aler ts 24 hours a day, 7 days a week! CALL TODAY, INS TA L L E D T O M O R ROW! 888-858-9457 (MF 9am-9pm ET)

NEED A PUPPY? WANT CHOICES?

Electronics

DISH TV Retailer. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 800278-1401 Get CABLE TV, INTERNET & PHONE with FREE HD Equipment and install for under $3 a day! Call Now! 855-7528550 Get The Big Deal from DirecTV! Act Now$ 1 9 . 9 9 / m o. Fr e e 3 Months of HBO, starz, S H OW T I M E & C I N E MAX. FREE GENIE HD/DVR Upgrade! 2014 NFL Sunday Ticket Included with Select Packages. New Customers Only. IV Support Holdings LLC- An authorized DirecTV Dealer. Some exclusions apply - Call for details 1-800-8974169 Flea Market

10’ Olympic Boat. Seats 3, $150. Located in Port Orchard, Kitsap county. 360-871-0190. $135 SADDLE; English. Nice leather. Poulsbo. 360-779-2912. $25 ECHO BRUSH CUTTER. Older chainsaw $10. Skil model 77 wo r m d r i ve s aw $ 5 5 . Oak rocking chair, good s h a p e $ 3 0 . Po u l s b o. 360-779-2912 2 crab pots, brand new with line and bait boxes, $25 ecah 360-871-0190. 2 old toilets, $15 & $25. 360-871-3149.

BABY CRIB. (360)779-7935

$25

B I S S E L L Po w e r g l i d e deluxe vacuum with lift off technology. Brand new, still in box, $150. 253-857-0539. V I AG R A a n d C I A L I S USERS! 50 Pills SPELawn mower, $50. 360CIAL - $99.00. FREE 698-1547. Kitsap. Shipping! 100% guaranL O U V E R E D D O O R S teed. CALL NOW! 855(accordian style). 2 sets 409-4132 of double lovered doors $5 & $15. 3 bedroom VIAGRA - Pfizer brand! doors $10 each. 360- Lowest Price from USA Pharmacies. No doctor 871-3149. visit needed! Discreet NEW 9’ FLIP LINE $43 H o m e D e l i ve r y. C a l l obo. Abe 360-731-2291 855-684-5241 or 360-801-7873. PORTABLE ELECTRIC HEATER; Stanley utility Pro-Ceramic with pivotal power, 120V 1500 watt, excellent shape, almost new, $40. STEP LADDER/ all aluminum, 6’, excellent shape. $ 4 0 / o b o. S t e e l b e d frame. Fits to queen or full. Sealed in new packa g i n g $ 3 5 / o b o. C a l l 253-857-0539. TABLE & CHAIRS. 50’s set with 34X40 Formica top table and 4 original v i n y l c o ve r e d c h a i r s (need repair) $50/all. 360-627-8690 Mail Order

Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90% on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-418-8975, for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping.

Miscellaneous

Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your stairs! **Limited t i m e - $ 2 5 0 O f f Yo u r Stairlift Purchase!** B u y D i r e c t & S AV E . Please call 1-800-3044489 for FREE DVD and brochure. KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harr is Bed Bug killer C o m p l e t e Tr e a t m e n t Program/Kit. Harris Mattress Covers add Extra Protection! Available: ACE Hardware. Buy Online: homedepot.com

Goslings, Chicks & Ducks arrive this Friday! Check website for current scheduled delivery

SPYTFYRE POCKET STOVE $25. PERFECT for back-packing, camping, hiking, power outage s a n d yo u r B. O. B. Catch yours today at “Poulsbo Antique Mall” at 18955 Anderson Pkwy NE Poulsbo 98370 Tools

SEARS CRAFTSMAN Industrial Router Table w i t h a S a w. M o d e l 171.25490. Never used. Manual included. $320 obo. 360-871-3149.

Photos at: FARMLANDPETS.COM *Current vaccination *Current Deworming *Microchipped *VET EXAMINED

Farmland Pets & Feed 9000 Silverdale Way 360-692-0415

Farm Animals & Livestock

Automobiles Others

FREE SMALL FLOCK OF CHICKENS; Silkie Bantam breed. Gorgeous rooster plus 8 laying hens. Call Katrina 360-275-9128.

AU TO I N S U R A N C E S TA R T I N G AT $ 2 5 / MONTH! Call 877-9299397

BREMERTON

AKC English Mastiff/ Great Pyrenees puppies. Perfect for families, security and as gentle as can be! AKC Mastiff Dad & Mom is a beautiful Great Pyrenese. All red or brown colored pups w/ some black markings. Pick you puppy, before their gone. 3 weeks old and ready to go in a couple of weeks. Four males & two females. $500. Call Francis now 360-535-9404 Kingston.

GARAGE SALE Just for Pets!!! Animal Rescue Fa m i l i e s i s h av i n g a fundraising garage sale on Friday and Saturday, April 10th and 11th from 8am to 3pm at 8141 Old Militar y Road in East B r e m e r t o n . We h a ve h u n d r e d s o f n ew p e t items with bargain price s ! T h e f u n d s ra i s e d from the sale will go entirely toward our low cost s p ay / n e u t e r eve n t i n May. Marine Miscellaneous

www.SoundClassifieds.com

Float & Dock Construction & Repair

AKC Standard Poodle Puppies. Parents genetically tested, good l i n e s, gr e a t t e m p e ra ment. 2 year health guaranteed & up to date on shots. www.ourpoeticpoodles.com or call 509-582-6027

www.SoundClassifieds.com

Dogs

AKC English Lab Pups $550, $650 & $700. Chocolate & Black Lab with blocky heads. Great hunters or companions. Playful, loyal & healthy. Family raised & well socialized, OFA’s lineage, first shots, de-wormed and vet checked. Parents on site. 425-4222428. A few rare mismarked Labradors

WWW.WESTHILLSAUTOPLEX.COM

Quality Metal RV Cover

360-621-3113

* Marine Related Permitting * Residential Docks & Marine Maintenance * Float Leveling & Pile Protection * Boathouse Construction & Repair * Buoys & Swim Floats FloatServices@gmail.com

Licensed, Bonded & Insured Lic#: FLOATSN908B5

Marine Power

SPRING HAS SPRUNG; Golden Doodle pups available. $1000. Sire; a Blonde Standard med u i m Po o d l e . D a m e ; small Golden Retriever. Non shedding. Not just a pet, but one of the family! Wonderful with children. Parents & grand parents on site. Wormed & shots. Highly intelli- 18’ 2005 BAYLINER 185 gent. Call Chr is 360- $8500. Low hr engine. 652-7148. Powered by a Mercruiser 135 HP, 3.OL Carbureted Alpha Model. Ready for open water and in excellent condit i o n . Yo u h ave g o t t o check it out. Single Axle Karan Trailer included. Call Dale 360­2 21­6 022 Langley.

West Hills Auto Plex

Where The Smart Shoppers Buy

Automobiles GMC

1987 GMC Caballero PROJECT CAR $1350 Restoration is star ted with over $2,000 in new p a r t s. C i r c u m s t a n c e s forces sale. Needs to be towed. Call Gar y 360682-5271 or 360-6321937. Oak Harbor.

: Question

?? ? ??

THE LARGEST INVENTORY OF NEW AND PRE-OWNED VEHICLES ON THE KITSAP PENINSULA!

ALL THE BELLS & WHISTLES; 41.5’ 2005 Mandalay Motorcoach! 4 opposing slide-outs, side aisle, self-contained bath Features White Leather U p h o l s t e r y, Pe r g o & Car pet floors, Cor ian Counters, Cherrywood Cabinetry, & king sized bed. Ver y comfor table and roomy. Driving this Coach is a DREAM; Freightliner Chassis, Caterpiller C7 Engine, Allison 6 speed transmission. $74,500. Federal Way. Call Joe 253-7378440 jigcharlie @mail.com RV Spaces/Storage

Float Services NW

FloatServicesNW.com

OUR BEAUTIFUL AKC English Cream Golden Retriever puppies will be ready to go to their new homes soon. They have been raised around young children and are well socialized. Both parents have excellent health and OFA health clearances. $1850 each. For more pictures and infor mation about the puppies and our home/kennel please visit us at: www.mountainspr ingskennel.com or call Verity at 360-5209196

Motorhomes

Garage/Moving Sales Kitsap County

Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds.

Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds.

K I L L ROAC H E S ! B u y Harr is Roach Tablets. Eliminate Bugs-Guaranteed. No Mess, Odorless, Long Lasting. Available at Ace Hardware & The Home Depot

KILL SCORPIONS! Buy Harris Scorpion Spray. Indoor/Outdoor, Odorless, Non-Staining. Effective results begin after spray dries. Got Knee Pain? Back Ava i l a bl e : T h e H o m e Pain? Shoulder Pain? Depot, Homedepot.com, G e t a p a i n - r e l i ev i n g ACE Hardware brace -little or NO cost t o yo u . M e d i c a r e Pa - 2EACHåTHOUSANDSåOFå tients Call Health Hotline READERSåWITHåONEåCALLå Now! 1- 800-900-5406 å

G. Shepherd Cocker Doxie • JRT S.C. Wheaten Havanese

Dogs

Answer:

10% Off All Buildings *

12x26x12 - $1885 Free Delivery and Installation Made in America www.allsteelnw.com sales@allsteelnw.com

360-277-0200

* Offer expires April 15th

Vehicles Wanted

CASH FOR CARS! Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Tr u c k T O D AY. F r e e Towing! Instant Offer: 1-888-545-8647

 Place any private party ad for 2 weeks or more and add a photo or bling at no additional charge. Photos are black & white in print and full color online. Call 800-388-2527 to speak with a customer service representative or go to www.nw-ads.com for more information.

What is only a few inches tall and can move almost anything?

?

??

?

An ad in Sound Classifieds!

We make it easy to Buy & Sell!

Whatever you need to part with–your car, your truck, your boat, your house–the Sound Classifieds can help you do it. Call or go online today to place your ad.

SOUND classifieds

In Print & Online!

visit Soundclassifieds.com • call toll free 1-800-388-2527 email classifieds@soundpublishing.com


Friday, April 3, 2015

kitsapweek

Page 17

one year down and many more to go

Poulsbo Community Orchestra continues to grow

P

The Poulsbo Community Orchestra celebrates its first anniversary in April. It continues to grow as it enters its second year. Contributed Recreation department. As the orchestra continues to grow in 2015, more opportunities for musicians young and not-as-young continue to flourish. New brass, woodwind, percussion and string players are always welcome. The orchestra especially encourages

violin, bassoon and flute musicians to check out the orchestra. Auditions are not required. Registration fees charged by Parks and Recreation have been reduced for 2015 by over 50 percent, due in part to generous donations from the community, directly benefiting the orchestra.

Discover more about the Poulsbo Community Orchestra at PoulsboCommunity Orchestra.org and on Facebook, or email PoulsboCommunity Orchrestra@gmail.com, or call 360-930-8654.

ONE NIGHT OF QUEEN

Thursday, April 9, 2015 | 7:30 pm $44, $39 & $34, $15 youth/student Performed by Gary Mullen & The Works, One Night of Queen is a spectacular live concert, recreating the look, sound, pomp, and showmanship of arguably the greatest rock band of all time.

THE WONDER BREAD YEARS

Thursday, April 16, 2015 $34, $29 & $24, $15 youth/student A fresh & funny salute to Americana, The Wonder Bread Years, starring Pat Hazell (Seinfeld), is a fastpaced, hilarious production that gracefully walks the line between standup and theater.

SING-A-LONG GREASE

Friday, April 24, 2015 $20, $15 & $15 | Buy 4+ & save $5 each! Ever wanted to know what it’s like to be a T-bird or a Pink Lady but never quite felt cool enough to pull it off? Well, now is your chance to don those pink jackets and grease up those quiffs.

ec4arts.org | 425.275.9595 410FOURTHAVENUENORTH EDMONDSWA98020

1257676

oulsbo’s community orchestra is celebrating its first anniversary this month as it prepares to engage a second year of rehearsals and performances. Last year, approximately three dozen volunteer musicians met weekly, rehearsing at Poulsbo’s West Sound Academy. Their numbers grew as the orchestra continued through 2014, performing in Poulsbo and North Kitsap. It has drawn musicians from all of Kitsap — from Kingston to Port Orchard — including high schoolers, military families, retirees and more. To date, three concerts have been performed at Poulsbo City Hall and Vinland Lutheran Church. A fourth classical music program will be presented at 7:30 p.m., April 13, at North Point Community Church located at 1779 Northeast Hostmark St., Poulsbo. The orchestra is preparing its Viking Brass and Viking Strings ensembles to perform for the upcoming Viking Fest and at Poulsbo’s Waterfront Pavilion, and possibly other venues. Full orchestra concerts are planned for June 28, and again on Dec. 6, at North Point Community Church. Serving as its volunteer conductor, Bruce Mansfield, director of Navy Band Northwest, enthusiastically leads each two-hour rehearsal. He is assisted by another Navy Band member and French horn musician, Blake Yarbrough, the orchestra’s director of music. Executive Director and founder, Steve Swann, is assisted by the newly formed advisory committee and orchestra corporate officers. The orchestra is a Washington nonprofit corporation with Federal 501(c)(3) charity status. Administrative support duties, which include collection of registration fees, printing and promotion, are provided by the City of Poulsbo Parks and


Page 18

kitsapweek

Friday, April 3, 2015

Best of 2015 Great nW Wine Competition A red wine did not take best in show for the first time in 3 years

A

pink wine made with Washington Pinot Noir earned the nod for best wine of the third annual Great Northwest Wine Competition. The judging, staged at the historic Columbia Gorge Hotel in Hood River, Ore., drew 1,204 entries, making it the largest judging of Pacific Northwest wines ever conducted. Vino La Monarcha, a label for Palencia Winery in Walla Walla, took the top prize. It was the first time in the competition’s three years that a red wine didn’t win best of show. However, it was the third time that a Walla Walla winery brought home the top trophy. The Great Northwest Wine Competition took place March 25-26 and brought together top wine professionals from Washington, Oregon, British Columbia, Idaho and California. All of the wines were tasted blind, meaning the judges did not know whose wines they were tasting or what the prices were, though they did know each wine’s variety or style. During the next three weeks, we will take a look at some of the competition’s best wines. Today, we review the five top category winners. Ask for them at your favorite wine

NW WINES By ANDY PERDUE and ERIC DEGERMAN

merchant or contact the wineries directly.

Best rosé and best of show

Vino La Monarcha 2014 Pinot Noir Rosé, Ancient Lakes of Columbia Valley, $15: Victor Palencia grew up working in the mint fields and vineyards of Washington’s Yakima Valley. Today, he crafts more than 1 million cases annually as director of winemaking at J&S Crushing on the Wahluke Slope. Palencia and Vino La Monarcha labels are his own side project at the Walla Walla Regional Airport. Aromas of strawberry, apricot and tangerine immediately pour out of the glass. On the palate, this is a bright, bone-dry pink wine with flavors of strawberry-rhubarb pie, dark raspberry and cherry, all giving way to a stunning finish. (12.6 percent alc.)

Best red

Obelisco Estate 2012 Electrum Cabernet Sauvignon, Red Mountain, $70: Vigneron Doug Long has crafted this reserve-level Cab from his estate vineyard on vaunted Red Mountain, and it is a beauty that earned best red wine of the 2015 Great Northwest Wine Competition. This offers aromas of intense black fruit, modest oak and succulent spices, followed by flavors of dark plum, black olive, black tea and

Above, Vino La Monarcha’s 2014 Pinot Noir Rosé won best of show at the third annual Great Northwest Wine Competition. Below, the third annual Great Northwest Wine Competition took place March 25-26 at the historic Columbia Gorge Hotel in Hood River, Ore. Andy Perdue dark chocolate. How Long managed to tame Red Mountain’s sturdy tannins is a marvel. (15.4 percent alc.)

Best white

Gehringer Brothers Estate Winery 2014 Dry Rock Sauvignon Blanc, Okanagan Valley, $16: That brothers Walter and Gordon Gehringer excel with white wines is no surprise, considering their training in West Germany in the 1970s. This gorgeous Sauvignon Blanc shows classic aromas of gooseberry, lime and muskmelon, followed by flavors of lime, sweet herbs and gooseberry pie, all backed by spine-tingling acidity. (13.57 percent alc.)

Best sparkling Michelle Sparkling NV Brut Rosé, Columbia Valley, $14: Rick Casqueiro, the Pacific Northwest’s top bubble maker for nearly 20 years, retired this spring, but he left us this departing gift. This pink sparkling wine made from rare Washington Pinot Noir grapes opens with alluring aromas of dried strawberry, apricot and pineapple upside-down cake. On the palate, the bubbles bring brightness and clarity to the flavors of raspberry, cherry and a touch of citrus. (11.5 percent alc.)

Best dessert Mt. Hood Winery 2012 Glacier, Columbia Gorge, $24: Columbia Gorge native Rich Cushman continues to make some of the best wines in the Pacific Northwest for the Bickford family, a

HERE COMES THE SUN! Fabulous 5,944sf retreat with views of Mt. Baker, Whidbey Is, shipping lanes and the Cascades perched on 120’ of gorgeous waterfront. Interior features include master on the main floor with an expansive bath and jetted tub surrounded in stained glass with ornate old world styling. Open-concept great room with vaulted ceilings, gourmet kitchen with large serving bar, formal dining and morning rooms. Lower level boasts guest quarters, family, entertainment, exercise and large hobby rooms.

31430 Sunrise Beach Dr NE, Kingston, WA 98346 MLS #:753281 $849,000

DOUG HALLOCK

360-271-1315 See all my listings at www.sellkingston.com

multi-generation farming family in the bucolic Hood River Valley of Oregon. Riesling is among the core varieties grown on the estate, and the German grape is ideal for dessert wines. Gorgeous aromas and flavors of pear, peach and apricot are held up by vibrant acidity, expertly balancing the honeyed flavors and residual sugar of 12 percent. Pairing ideas include apple pie and soft cheeses. (10.8 percent alc.) Eric Degerman and Andy Perdue run Great Northwest Wine, a news and information company. Learn more about wine at www.greatnorthwestwine. com.


Friday, April 3, 2015

kitsapweek

Page 19

POETS’ CORNER the Sunflower

LOCAL POETRY

Along a strong wall grows a line of sunflowers, each year they come along – a little small at first, a little shy in need of love and perhaps some propping up. But from the start, they know to turn their faces to the sun, to follow its course across the sky in the morning, facing east and as the day draws, facing west; in time, each one fills out and forms a splendid sphere, a circle of one thousand seeds apiece that draws the lively birds, and feeds the young ones as they skip past in their play. The sunflower knows its job, and does it well, amidst the robin and the hawk, the grasshopper and ant, the dewdrops, and the rain the loving children and the big blue sky that reaches on for miles. By Cindy McDole Vandersluis, Bainbridge Island

Keith Sweat

Billy Gardell

April 11, 8:30pm

April 18, 8:30pm

I-5 Showroom $30, $45, $60, $65

I-5 Showroom $25, $35, $55, $60

The Poets’ Corner features work from local poets who appear at the Poulsbohemian poetry readings, held on first Saturdays of the month at the Poulsbohemian Coffeehouse, 19003 Front St., Poulsbo.

THE BOOKEND

LITERARY NEWS FROM AROUND KITSAP

Best-selling books in March Eagle Harbor Book Company

T

op 10 best-selling adult and kids titles in March at Eagle Harbor Book Company, an independent book store in Winslow on Bainbridge Island. Adults 1. “The Nightingale,” by Kristin Hannah* 2. “Home Front,” by Kristin Hannah* 3. “Gemini,” by Carol Cassella* 4. “Boys in the Boat,” by Daniel James Brown* 5. “Remember I Can’t Remember: Shifting Your Paradigm Reapproaching Dementia/Alzheimer’s,” by Eric and Heather Andersen* 6. “Everything I Need to Know I Learned from a Little Golden Book,” by Diane Muldrow 7. “Astoria: Astor and Jefferson’s Lost Pacific Empire,” by Peter Stark* 8. “The Life Changing Magic of Tidying Up,” by Marie Kondo 9. “Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania,” by Erik Larson* 10. “Almost Nearly Perfect People: Behind the Myth of the Scandinavian Utopia,” by Michael Booth Eagle Harbor Book Company is located at 157 Winslow Way East, Bainbridge Island. Find them online at www.eaglehar borbooks.com or on Facebook.

Kitsap-based author Kristin Hannah’s novel, “The Nightingale,” was the top seller at Eagle Harbor Book Co. in March. Contributed

Children 1. “Sasquatch Escape (Imaginary Veterinary #1),” by Suzanne Selfors* 2. “The Order of the Unicorn (Imaginary Veterinary #4),” by Suzanne Selfors* 3. “The Rain Dragon Rescue (Imaginary Veterinary #3),” by Suzanne Selfors* 4. “The Lonely Lake Monster (Imaginary Veterinary #2),” by Suzanne Selfors* 5. “Once Upon a Memory,” by Nina Laden* 6. “Roberto the Insect Architect,” by Nina Laden* 7. “When Pigasso Met Mootise,” by Nina Laden* 8. “Daddy Wrong Legs,” by Nina Laden* 9. “The Blues of Flats Brown,” by Nina Laden* 10. “I Am A Bunny,” by Richard Scarry *Northwest author

CageSport MMA SFL 40 Spike & the Impalers

April 25, 7pm

May 16, 8:30pm

I-5 Showroom $35, $55, $100

I-5 Showroom $15, $25, $40, $45

1-888-831-7655 • www.emeraldqueen.com EQC I-5 (I-5 Exit 135): 2024 E. 29th St., Tacoma, WA 98404 EQC Hotel & Casino (I-5 Exit 137): 5700 Pac. Hwy E., Fife, WA 98424 You must be 21 to enter the casino. Management reserves the right to change any event or promotion. Tickets available at the EQC Box Offices. EQC is not responsible for any third party ticket sales.


Page 20

kitsapweek

Friday, April 3, 2015


Congratulations

Named one of the top 10 community colleges in the United States by the Aspen Institute

Olympic College enriches our diverse communities through quality education and support so students achieve their educational goals.


O lympic c Ollege - ASPEN PRIZE Top 10

Page 2

Harrison Medical Center

Congratulations to Olympic College Harrison Medical Center, part of CHI Franciscan Health, congratulates Olympic College on being named a finalist for the 2015 Aspen Prize for Community College Excellence, placing Olympic College in the top ten in the nation. We applaud your commitment to student success. Learn more about Harrison Medical Center at HiBestCare.org

Job/File name: Onsies_FY15_20318_Ad-Harrison_9.83x6.5_032515_F1, Publication: Kitsap News Cluster: Bainbridge Island Review, Bremerton Patriot, Central Kitsap Reporter, North Kitsap Herald, Pt. Orchard Independent, Insertion Date: 4/27/15, Trim: 9.83x6.5, Ink Color: 4C, Author: Rios

Congratulations Olympic College from the Bremer Trust for being selected as one of the top 10 finalists for the 2015 Aspen Prize for Community College Excellence. OC is such as important part of this community, we are proud of you! Bremer Trust Trustees Michael Connolly John Mitchell Barbara Stephenson

John Bremer & Ed Bremer Consolidated Trust C/O Bradley Scott 400 Warren Ave No, Bremerton, WA 98337


In the Top 10 O lympic c Ollege - ASPEN PRIZE Top 10

Olympic College is rated one of the best community colleges in the United States By MICHELLE BEAHM Sound Publishing

P

OULSBO — Olympic College didn’t win the money, but it won bragging rights. Every other year, the Aspen Institute picks 150 community colleges in the nation to consider for its prestigious Aspen Prize for Community College Excellence. The 2015 award is only its third, but twice OC has been asked to apply for the honor. This year, OC was chosen as one of the top 10 community colleges in the nation when it comes to student success. The Aspen Institute, after narrowing down the choices to the top 10, then chose a grand prize winner (Santa Fe College in Gainesville, Florida) and three runners-up. Santa Fe College received $800,000. The runners-up — Lake Area Technical Institute in Watertown, South Dakota; West Kentucky Community and Technical College in Paducah, Kentucky; and KennedyKing College in Chicago, Illinois — each received $100,000. The finalists: Brazosport College in Lake Jackson, Texas; El Paso Community College in El Paso, Texas; Eugenio María de Hostos Community College in Bronx, New York; Indian River State College in Fort Pierce, Florida; Olympic College; and Renton Technical College in Renton. While OC wasn’t the winner or a runner-up, being in the top 10 in the

entire nation is still a huge achievement for the community college, which is based in Bremerton with additional campuses in Poulsbo and Shelton. “I think it’s recognition of the hard work that many people at the college have been engaged in, worked around helping students progress, helping to retain our students and helping them complete their educational goal,” said Mary Garguile, OC’s vice president of instruction. The Aspen Institute is an educational and policy studies organization based in Washington, D.C. According to its website, its mission is to “foster leadership based on enduring values and provide a nonpartisan venue for dealing with critical issues.” The institute’s 74-member board of trustees includes former U.S. secretaries of state Madeline Albright and Condoleeza Rice, former Disney Corp. chairman Michael Eisner, former nine-term member of Congress Jane Harman, former CNN CEO Walter Isaacson, and cellist Yo-Yo Ma. Selection of the Aspen award winner, runners-up

and finalists is no small process. Leading researchers and community college practitioners examine data and advise the Aspen Institute on measures by which community college performance and improvement in performance can be measured fairly and accurately. Former community college presidents and faculty, along with researchers and policy experts, review applications and data for each eligible community college and select a set of finalists. Teams of experienced researchers and practitioners conduct twoday site visits to each of the 10 finalists. Then, a jury of former elected officials and other prominent business, labor, education and civil rights leaders review the final data and select a winner and three runners-up. The 10-member jury was co-chaired by former Indiana governor Mitchell E. Daniels Jr., and former member of Congress George Miller of California. Honorees were selected based on student learning, certificate and degree completion, employment and earnings, and “high levels of access and success for minority and low-income students.” “It’s really in line with our mission to serve all students,” OC president David Mitchell said. “We were just thrilled when we heard about it. We didn’t win, but being in the top 10 puts you in the top 1 percent in the nation.” Garguile said being recognized as one of the leading schools in the

areas of student success does not mean the school is satisfied. “We know that there’s more that we can do, and certainly with more resources and more hard work and more thinking and strategizing,” she said. “We’re going to just keep pressing on and working to do the best we can. There [are] some things we can learn from these other colleges.” According to an OC press release, OC has a 57 percent student retention rate — 5 percent higher than the national average of students remaining at a school for a second year. And OC’s close ties with its communities are “reflected in dozens of programs in skilled trades, from which 90 percent of students complete and 100 percent are placed in jobs.” Also, OC’s close partnerships with Western Washington and Washington State universities, as well as a collaborative engineering program on the Bremerton campus, provides students with clear pathways to earning a bachelor’s degree. “Olympic College is a great school and we’re very fortunate to have it in our community,” Garguile said, “and have the wonderful faculty and administrators and staff. It’s a great benefit for our community that we have the college here.” She added, “We have to applaud the students. They’re certainly the ones doing the hard work.”

Olympic College and Old Dominion University. 2004: Olympic College Poulsbo campus opens. 2008: Bachelor of science degree in nursing is offered. 2010: Partnership

between Olympic College and Washington State University established. 2013: Partnership between Olympic College and Western Washington University established. 2014: Bachelor of

Message from President David C. Mitchell

I

am proud to announce that Olympic College was named as one of ten finalists for the Aspen Prize for Community College Excellence, the nation’s preeminent recognition of high achievement and performance in America’s community colleges. The prize, awarded every two years, recognizes outstanding institutions selected from an original pool of more than 1,000 community colleges. With a singular focus on student success, the prize assesses community colleges’ achievements in four areas: student learning, certificate and degree completion, high rates of employment and earnings for graduates, and high levels of access and success for minority and low-income students. Olympic College was selected as a finalist because: “Olympic College does an exceptional job meeting the growing demand for higher education in its community and among its students, over two-thirds of whom are the first in their families to attend college,” said Josh Wyner, executive director of the Aspen Institute’s College Excellence Program in Washington, D.C. “With graduation rates on the rise and programs aligned to workforce needs, Olympic is showing how concerted, college-wide efforts can deliver what students need most.” Olympic College stands out as one of the nation’s top community colleges for many reasons, including: ■ Steadily improving retention of some of the least academically prepared students (retention rate 57 percent, compared to 52 percent nationally). ■ Close ties with local industry, reflected in dozens of programs in skilled trades, from which 90 percent of students complete and 100 percent are placed in jobs. ■ Strong, well-established pathways to a bachelor’s degree, including a collaborative engineering program at Olympic College in Bremerton. Olympic College is very proud of this recognition of our collective efforts to make our community college one of the best in the nation. Learn more about the Aspen Prize for Community College Excellence at: www.aspeninstitute.org/ college-excellence. — David C. Mitchell, president, Olympic College

Sound Publishing will use a portion of proceeds from this special section to establish a scholarship at Olympic College

OLYMPIC COLLEGE: A TIMELINE 1946: Olympic College opens. 1954: Apprentice program established. 1995: Olympic College Shelton campus opens. 1998: Direct transfer agreement between

Page 3

applied science in information systems offered. 2015: Bachelor of applied science in organizational leadership and technical management offered. — Olympic College

Publisher: Lori Maxim Editor: Richard Walker Advertising Director: Donna Etchey Creative Services Manager: Bryon Kempf Cover Design: John Rodriguez


O lympic c Ollege - ASPEN PRIZE Top 10

Page 4

Olympic College’s Bremerton campus is located at 1600 Chester Ave. OC also has a presence on Naval Base Kitsap Bangor and Bremerton. Olympic College

Olympic College’s Poulsbo campus is located at 1000 Olympic College Way. The Poulsbo campus is also a satellite campus of Western Washington University. Olympic College

Olympic College’s Shelton campus is located at 937 W. Alpine Way. The campus is also the site of a trades center. Olympic College

OC now offers three undergraduate degrees Associate’s degrees, certificates in 56 fields of study Olympic College is a public two-year community college that educates more than 13,000 students a year. Founded in 1946, the college now has three campuses — in Bremerton, Poulsbo and Shelton — and serves a population of 280,000 residents living in Kitsap and Mason counties. The college’s service area contains two major Navy instal-

lations: Naval Base Kitsap and Naval Hospital Bremerton.

college’s first honorary degree.

Olympic College opened its doors as Olympic Junior College on Sept. 5, 1946. It had 575 students (423 men and 152 women) and the tuition was $35 per quarter, or students had the option to pay for three quarters in advance for $75. Olympic College has attracted dignitaries and well-known performers during its history. Harry S Truman, the 33rd president of the United States, visited Bremerton and Olympic Junior College in 1948 and received the

Olympic College serves an area of more than 1,617 square miles. Here’s a look at the college’s three campuses: ■ Olympic College Bremerton is centrally located in Bremerton, 1600 Chester Ave., on a 33-acre campus. Olympic College also has a presence on Naval Base Kitsap Bangor and Bremerton. ■ Olympic College Poulsbo is located on a 20-acre campus in north Kitsap County, 15.9 miles from the main campus.

FOUNDING

CAMPUS AND CLASS LOCATIONS

OLYMPIC COLLEGE: PARTNERS In addition to the twoand four-year degree programs offered by Olympic College, the following partnerships provide peninsula residents with a larger gateway to higher education. ■ Western on the Peninsulas is a satellite of Western Washington University at Olympic College Poulsbo. Western on the Peninsulas offers community programs and undergraduate degrees in the following fields: Business administration Environmental science

Environmental policy Elementary education Human resources Contact: Kathy Johnson, 360-394-2733, kathy.john son@wwu.edu. ■ Washington State University: WSU offers a bachelor of science in mechanical engineering at Olympic College Bremerton. Program coordinator: Dr. Marvin Pitts, professor, WSUME at OC Bremerton, Science & Technology Building, Room 110. Call 360-475-7543, email pitts@ wsu.edu.

“On behalf of the Bremerton School District, congratulations on becoming one of the Top Ten Community Colleges in the Nation. Now the rest of the world knows how fabulous you are!”

Dr. Aaron Leavell, Superintendent Bremerton School District

www.bremertonschools.org

The Poulsbo campus is also a satellite campus of Western Washington University. The Poulsbo campus is an educational gateway for students from Bainbridge Island and the north Kitsap Peninsula. A variety of credit and non-credit courses are available. The land for the Poulsbo campus was donated by the Olhava family in 1993. ■ Olympic College Shelton is located on a 27-acre campus in Mason County, 38.4 miles from the main campus. The Shelton campus is also the site of a trades center. Features include com-

puter labs, a media center, student services, study and social areas, and the Johnson Library. The land for the Shelton campus was donated by Simpson Timber in 1990.

DEGREES AND CERTIFICATES

Olympic College offers two-year degrees and certificates in 56 fields of study, as well as three undergraduate degrees: ■ Bachelor of applied science in information systems. ■ Bachelor of science in nursing. ■ Bachelor of applied science in organizational leadership and technical

management. In addition, OC offers courses so residents can update their job skills, get job training, or enjoy personal enrichment. Students achieve many of their personal and professional goals by attending Olympic College. In recent years, the college has undergone many changes, including construction of a Humanities and Student Services building on the Bremerton campus and expansion of services at the Poulsbo and Shelton campuses. — Source: Olympic College

OLYMPIC COLLEGE: STUDENTS STUDENT PROFILE (2013-14) Fall 2013 headcount: 8,087 Fall 2013 FTE: 5,794 Female: 54% Male: 46% Students of color: 32% Students with disabilities: 8% Full-time (12 or more credits): 48% Part-time: 52% Under 20: 25% 20-29: 41% 30-39: 18%

40+: Median age:

16% 25

STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT B.S. in nursing: 28 AA/arts and science: 704 Associate in technical arts: 485 Associate in science: 46 Certificates: 1,549 GED certificates: 52 Adult high school diplomas: 110 President’s Scholars: 1,934 Dean’s Scholars: 3,129

Congratulations Olympic College from Bremerton Rotary

OC Foundation scholarships:

108

OTHER Academic transfer and support : 49% Fulfill freshman- and sophomore-year requirements for a bachelor’s degree, and provide support for vocational education in areas such as mathematics, English, and science. Workforce education: 36% Prepare students for entry-level jobs and provide

retraining and improve work skills for the current work force. Pre-college: 11% Courses that prepare students for college-level classes. Basic skills: 4% Enables students to achieve an eighth-grade education, complete high school, and overcome deficiencies that may prevent achievement in college-level studies. — Source: Olympic College

Congratulation! Honored to be a part of the Alumni Family Tracy S. Flood, Attorney at Law Olympic College Alumus – “The function of education is to teach one to think intensively and to think critically. Intelligence plus character- that is the goal of true education.”

Martin Luther King , Jr. Thank you Olympic College for your leadership, dedication, hard work and continued growth with career–oriented programs!


O lympic c Ollege - ASPEN PRIZE Top 10

Page 5

“I have just had an honor conferred upon me right here. The Olympic Junior College has made me an Honorary Associate in Arts. You know, my daughter graduated from George Washington University a year or two ago to receive a degree, and they gave me one too. She worked four years to get hers, and I got mine right then and there, without any effort!” — President Harry S Truman, June 10, 1948, downtown Bremerton

History made: The first honorary degree and birth of a famous phrase Olympic College’s most what was then Olympic Junior College, where he famous alum? The 33rd was presented with an president of the United honorary associate of arts States. degree — the first honorPresident Harry S ary degree presentTruman paid ed by the college. a two-day visit Truman then to Washington spoke in downtown state June 9-10, Bremerton, where 1948. another historic On June 9, he moment took place. visited Spokane, HistoryLink.org’s Grand Coulee report on the presiDam, and dent’s day omits his Wenatchee. His President Harry honorary degree, train arrived in S Truman but he mentioned Olympia at 2:10 the honor in his a.m. June 10. remarks downtown (the The president got some quote is above). sleep in the governor’s Here’s HistoryLink.org’s mansion. account of the events of After breakfast with the June 10, 1948. governor, Truman visited

Truman woke up early for a pre-breakfast stroll. Accompanied by one Secret Service agent, the president walked through the gardens at the governor’s mansion and the Capitol grounds. Police kept onlookers a block away. After breakfast with the governor, the party left for Bremerton by automobile for an outdoor talk in front of the Elks Club. They arrived just after 11 a.m., and Truman began speaking at 11:40. He told of his cross-state trip the day before and the beautiful sights he saw. He talked

Elliot Gregg President/CEO

Congratulations Olympic College on your selection as a one of ten finalists for the Aspen Prize for Community College Excellence. Your designation is a well-deserved recognition of the quality education you provide the people who live and work in our local communities.

See TRUMAN, Page 7

CONGRATULATIONS TO OLYMPIC COLLEGE FOR BEING VOTED ONE OF THE “TOP 10” SCHOOLS IN THE NATION.

Congratulations Olympic College!

On your recent Aspen Award and becoming one of the top 10 schools in the nation!

(360) 779-4799 22177VikingAve.Way NW Poulsbo

AAA Washington Top Shop Award 10 consecutive years Voted Best Autobody in 2013 & 2014 Best of North Kitsap

Locally Owned Veteran Auto Body Shop!

NorthKitsapAutoRebuild.com

Port Madison Enterprises

An agency of the Suquamish Tribe PROPERTY

MANAGEMENT 15347 Suquamish Way NE, Suquamish, Washington 98392 | 360.598.8700


O lympic c Ollege - ASPEN PRIZE Top 10

Page 6

CONGRATULATIONS OLYMPIC COLLEGE FINALIST IN THE ASPEN TOP 10 Sound Publishing delivers community.

Sound Publishing Olympic College Alumni

Sound Publishing, Inc. is the largest community news organization in Washington State. Our newspapers and websites deliver relevant, local news that directly affect the lives of those who raise families and work in the communities we serve.

Michelle Beahm

Brandon Giddens

Vanessa Calverley

Billi Jean Gurnsey

Shawn Elliot

Jennie Morello

Donna Etchey

Dave Murray

Proud to be a part of the OC community

Rita Evans

John Rodriguez

REPORTER PATRIOT INDEPENDENT CENTRAL KITSAP

www.bainbridgereview.com

www.northkitsapherald.com

www.centralkitsapreporter.com

BREMERTON

www.bremertonpatriot.com

PORT ORCHARD

www.portorchardindependent.com

Congratulations to Olympic College

Recognized as among the Top 10 Community Colleges in the US by the Aspen Institute KEDA values OC as a key partner in economic development! ECONOMIC D E V E LO P M E N T ALLIANCE


Truman

Continued from page 5 about the Columbia River and its awesome power. And then he lit into the 80th Congress. “You know, this Congress is interested in the welfare of the better classes. They are not interested in the welfare of the common, everyday man. They said if we lifted price controls, and things of that sort, business would take care of prices. Well, business has taken care of prices, for the welfare and the benefit of the fellows at the top. The poor man is having to pay out all his money for rent and for clothing and for food at prices that are certainly outrageous.” At this point, a voice boomed from the audi-

Caringfor Genrations

ence. What was said is still under debate. The newspapers stated that a man yelled, “Lay it on, Harry!”

“Congratulations to Olympic College” Kathy Davis-Hayfield

Advisory Board Member

BOAT SHED

101 Shore Drive, Bremerton, WA 98310 (360) 377-2600

www.theboatshedrestaurant.com

Caring forons, Congratulati Generations OC!

O lympic c Ollege - ASPEN PRIZE Top 10

Presidential notes claim that the voice said, “Pour it on, Harry!” But there are those in Bremerton who insist that what was

A plaque in Bremerton notes the first occurrence of the phrase that would become forever tied to President Truman: “Give ’em hell, Harry!”

Olympic College Foundation will award $300,000 in scholarships for 2015-16

Chris Tucker / Sound Publishing

BREMERTON — The Olympic College Foundation will provide more than $300,000 in scholarships to students attending Olympic College during the 2015-16 academic year. Eligibility requirements for scholarships vary and are not solely based on academic achievement. The foundation has a wide range of scholarship criteria based on program of study, career goals, community service, leadership and/or interests. The Olympic College Foundation works with private donors to provide

said was “Give ‘em Hell, Harry!,” to which Truman responded, “I’m going to! I’m going to!” A plaque in Bremerton notes that this was the first occurrence of the phrase that would become forever tied to President Harry S. Truman … After a tour of the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard at Bremerton, the president and his family boarded the governor’s yacht Olympus and headed for Seattle.

Congratulations to everyone at Olympic College for obtaining the Aspen Award – one of 10 out of 1000 Community Colleges in the US. I was so proud to be on the Foundation Board for 9 years – I grew to love Olympic College and admire all of those who attended and worked there.

College We are proud to be your partner in higher education

Bremerton is home to Olympic College and we congratulate President Mitchell, his leadership staff and all professors that have enabled this academic jewel to be in the top ten of the Aspen Award nationwide. Our students at risk, military families and first generation college students continue to be a top priority for the college’s standard of excellence. In 2017 the City of Bremerton supports and encourages Olympic College to again apply for this coveted Aspen Award.

Mayor Patty Lent City of Bremerton

wwu.edu/Peninsulas

South Kitsap Schools We proudly support Olympic College!

Congratulations on being named one of the Top 10 Schools in the Nation! Thank you for all you do for the students of our community!

360.874.7000 www.skitsap.wednet.edu

Named one of the top 10 Community Colleges in the Nation by the Aspen Institute

CONGRATULATIONS

scholarship support for students attending Olympic College. To be considered for any of the more than 125 scholarships, applicants must fill out a scholarship application, which can be found online at www. TheWashBoard.org. Students should make sure the online application is filled out and completed by the scholarship deadline. Deadlines vary from midMarch to mid-April. For more information, go to www.TheWashBoard. org or www.olympic.edu and click on “Paying for College.”

Fondly, Marilee Hansen

www.MarthaandMary.org • 360.779.7500

Olympic

Page 7

Congratulations From Kitsap County Board of Commissioners

One of the Nations top Community Colleges Top 10 finalist in Aspen Prize for Excellence


O lympic c Ollege - ASPEN PRIZE Top 10

Page 8

is proud to honor Olympic College for their placement in the prestigious 2015 Aspen Institute Award as one of the “Top 10” Community Colleges in the nation.

kpshealthplans.com

15-KPS-1443

CONGRATULATIONS OLYMPIC COLLEGE! We look forward to hiring your best and brightest!

Designing and developing innovative software in Kitsap County for over 30 years.

w w w. at sid .c om


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.