everett daily herald, june 18, 2014

34
By Diana Hefley Herald Writer EVERETT — Lucy was on the job only a few days before she was led into a roomful of grief. Snohomish County deputy prosecutors and victim advo- cates were meeting with the family of a woman who’d been killed. Lucy, a petite Labrador and Golden Retriever mix, roamed among 20 or so people. Over the next two hours she often returned to the same woman — the victim’s mother. “Instinctively, she knew,” said the dog’s handler, Kathy Murray. Lucy is a compassionate visi- tor. She will sit next to a scared child for hours, soaking up the tears. She cuddles and presses her nose into shaky hands. She leans into the hurt. Lucy is the county’s newest courthouse dog. She joins Harper, another dainty Lab, who spends most of her work day at Dawson Place, the county’s child advocacy center. Dawson Place serves more than 1,000 abused children every year. e center provides medical care and counseling for young crime victims and their families. It also houses detectives and prosecutors who investigate crimes against children. Harper’s handler, Gina Cos- lett, is a child interview specialist at Dawson Place. She’s tasked with asking children about crimes they’ve witnessed or have had committed against them. Coslett often brings Harper, and now Lucy, to interviews. e highly trained dogs can break the ice when children are the buzz INSIDE 6 9 42963 33333 Summer-ish 64/51, C6 Business . . . .A11 Classified . . . . B1 Comics . . . . . .D4 Crossword . . .D4 Dear Abby. . . .D5 Good Life . . . .D1 Horoscope . . . B7 Northwest. . . . A5 Obituaries . . . . A7 Opinion. . . . .A13 Sports . . . . . . . C1 TV . . . . . . . . . .D6 DAILY VOL. 114, NO. 135 © 2014 THE DAILY HERALD CO. 50% OFF Go to HeraldNetDailyDeal.com to purchase today’s deal from Snohomish Sips Give anchovies a chance Darrington High team gets star treatment from Hawks Page C1 Used right, they’ll win you over — really, D1 Phoning it in Explains why Jeff Bezos is wearing a black turtleneck: Amazon is expected to launch its own smartphone today. e phone will work primarily as a portal for shopping, including a 3-D camera that will allow users to photograph items at other stores, then buy them on Amazon (Page A11). Aſter purchasing an item, the phone will recommend: “Customers who used Sears to try on a swimsuit before buying it from Amazon, also took advantage of Target, Wal-Mart and Nordstrom.” Not what we meant by “intel inside”: A German security firm says it has discovered malicious intelli- gence soſtware preloaded on cheap smartphones made in China that could allow hack- ers to easily steal data or turn on the phones’ cameras and microphones (Page A11). Amazon immediately filed a lawsuit claiming pat- ent infringement. Don’t know much about history: On this day in 1964, President Johnson and Japan’s prime minister spoke by phone, the first call over the trans-Pacific cable (To- day in History, Page A2). Sadly, without video- phone technology, Johnson was unable to show the Jap- anese official the scar from his gall bladder surgery. —Jon Bauer, Herald Staff WEDNESDAY, 06.18.2014 EVERETT, WASHINGTON WWW.HERALDNET.COM 75¢ (HIGHER IN OUTLYING AREAS) Compassionate canines By Jerry Cornfield Herald Writer OLYMPIA — Money Washing- ton collects as taxes and fees is increasing, but perhaps not fast enough to stave off spending cuts for state agencies next year. A new forecast issued Tues- day predicts the state will take in $157 million more in revenue in the next fiscal year than had been assumed three months ago. And it predicts the slowly growing economy will generate $238 million more for the next two-year budget than had been previously estimated. But even with those millions of additional dollars, Gov. Jay Inslee’s budget director said it won’t enable the state to cover the cost of existing public services and comply with a state Supreme Court order to meet the state’s constitutional obligation to fund public schools. “It’s a helpful step but it’s a pretty small step when you are looking at maybe a $2 billion budget problem to solve,” budget director David Schumacher said after a meeting of the Revenue and Forecast Council, at which the latest forecast was presented. Last week Schumacher directed leaders of state agen- cies to identify ways to pare 15 State revenue increasing, but not enough to cover costs By Dan Catchpole Herald Writer EVERETT — As opponents try to foil Paine Field passenger air service in court, a private invest- ment firm is trying to make it a reality. New York-based Propeller Investments has asked Snohom- ish County, which owns and operates the airport, to start dis- cussions leading to construction of a terminal and parking facility at Paine Field. e private equity firm doesn’t have a formal proposal, but on Tuesday, its CEO and founder Brett Smith spoke about a pos- sible arrangement in which it would shoulder the risk — leasing land from the airport, financing terminal construction and find- ing tenant airlines. “We’re very flexible,” though, Smith said. e company is “will- ing to work within the confines that work for the county.” In a short letter dated Monday, he asked county officials to start talks within 30 days. Passenger air service at Paine Field will encourage economic development and give travel- ers here a more convenient and cheaper alternative to Seattle- Tacoma International Airport and Bellingham International Airport, he said. Propeller Investments envi- sions four or five commercial flights a day to regional destina- tions, such as Spokane, Portland, San Francisco and Los Angeles or Long Beach, he said. Paine Field handles about 300 flights a day, ranging from small single-engine airplanes to big Boeing jetliners rolling out of the Everett assembly plant, which abuts the airport. at is about Paine Field terminal proposed A New York-based firm wants to build a passenger-terminal and parking lot at the airport. Therapy dogs offer comfort to children, crime victims DAN BATES / THE HERALD Gabrielle Sterbank, 9, plays momentarily with new courthouse therapy dog Lucy, a two-and-a-half-year-old yellow Lab, as handlers Kathy Murray (left) and Gina Coslett watch. Gabrielle, who is not a client, was in the office visiting her mom, a civil deputy prosecutor with Snohomish County. DAN BATES / THE HERALD Sterbank hugs Lucy, who is joining the other yellow Lab, Harper. See DOGS, Page A7 See PAINE, Page A7 See REVENUE, Page A4

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June 18, 2014 edition of the Everett Daily Herald

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Page 1: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

By Diana HefleyHerald Writer

EVERETT — Lucy was on the job only a few days before she was led into a roomful of grief.

Snohomish County deputy prosecutors and victim advo-cates were meeting with the family of a woman who’d been killed.

Lucy, a petite Labrador and Golden Retriever mix, roamed among 20 or so people. Over the next two hours she often returned to the same woman — the victim’s mother.

“Instinctively, she knew,” said the dog’s handler, Kathy Murray.

Lucy is a compassionate visi-tor. She will sit next to a scared child for hours, soaking up the tears. She cuddles and presses

her nose into shaky hands. She leans into the hurt.

Lucy is the county’s

newest courthouse dog. She joins Harper, another dainty Lab, who spends most of her

work day at Dawson Place, the county’s child advocacy center.

Dawson Place serves more than 1,000 abused children every year. � e center provides medical care and counseling for young crime victims and their families. It also houses detectives and prosecutors who investigate crimes against children.

Harper’s handler, Gina Cos-lett, is a child interview specialist at Dawson Place. She’s tasked with asking children about crimes they’ve witnessed or have had committed against them. Coslett often brings Harper, and now Lucy, to interviews.

� e highly trained dogs can break the ice when children are

the

buzz

INSIDE 6 942963 33333

Summer-ish64/51, C6

Business . . . .A11Classi� ed . . . .B1

Comics . . . . . .D4Crossword . . .D4

Dear Abby. . . .D5 Good Life . . . .D1

Horoscope . . .B7 Northwest. . . .A5

Obituaries. . . .A7Opinion. . . . .A13

Sports . . . . . . .C1 TV . . . . . . . . . .D6

DAILY

VOL. 114, NO. 135 © 2014 THE DAILY HERALD CO.

50%OFF

Go to HeraldNetDailyDeal.com

to purchase today’s deal from

Snohomish Sips

Give anchovies a chance Darrington High team gets star treatment from HawksPage C1

Used right, they’ll win you over — really, D1

Phoning it in

Explains why Je� Bezos is wearing a black turtleneck: Amazon is expected to launch its own smartphone today. � e phone will work primarily as a portal for shopping, including a 3-D camera that will allow users to photograph items at other stores, then buy them on

Amazon (Page A11).A� er purchasing an item,

the phone will recommend: “Customers who used Sears to try on a swimsuit before buying it from Amazon, also took advantage of Target, Wal-Mart and Nordstrom.”

Not what we meant by “intel inside”: A German security � rm says it has

discovered malicious intelli-gence so� ware preloaded on cheap smartphones made in China that could allow hack-ers to easily steal data or turn on the phones’ cameras and microphones (Page A11).

Amazon immediately � led a lawsuit claiming pat-ent infringement.

Don’t know much about

history: On this day in 1964, President Johnson and Japan’s prime minister spoke by phone, the � rst call over the trans-Paci� c cable (To-day in History, Page A2).

Sadly, without video-phone technology, Johnson was unable to show the Jap-anese o� cial the scar from his gall bladder surgery.

—Jon Bauer, Herald Sta�

Give anchovies a chanceD1

WEDNESDAY, 06.18.2014 ● EVERETT, WASHINGTON ● WWW.HERALDNET.COM ● 75¢ (HIGHER IN OUTLYING AREAS)

Compassionate canines

By Jerry CornfieldHerald Writer

OLYMPIA — Money Washing-ton collects as taxes and fees is increasing, but perhaps not fast enough to stave o� spending cuts for state agencies next year.

A new forecast issued Tues-day predicts the state will take in $157 million more in revenue in the next � scal year than had been assumed three months ago.

And it predicts the slowly growing economy will generate $238 million more for the next

two-year budget than had been previously estimated.

But even with those millions of additional dollars, Gov. Jay Inslee’s budget director said it won’t enable the state to cover the cost of existing public services and comply with a state Supreme

Court order to meet the state’s constitutional obligation to fund public schools.

“It’s a helpful step but it’s a pretty small step when you are looking at maybe a $2 billion budget problem to solve,” budget director David Schumacher said

after a meeting of the Revenue and Forecast Council, at which the latest forecast was presented.

Last week Schumacher directed leaders of state agen-cies to identify ways to pare 15

State revenue increasing, but not enough to cover costs

By Dan CatchpoleHerald Writer

EVERETT — As opponents try to foil Paine Field passenger air service in court, a private invest-ment � rm is trying to make it a reality.

New York-based Propeller Investments has asked Snohom-ish County, which owns and operates the airport, to start dis-cussions leading to construction of a terminal and parking facility at Paine Field.

� e private equity � rm doesn’t have a formal proposal, but on Tuesday, its CEO and founder Brett Smith spoke about a pos-sible arrangement in which it would shoulder the risk — leasing land from the airport, � nancing terminal construction and � nd-ing tenant airlines.

“We’re very � exible,” though, Smith said. � e company is “will-ing to work within the con� nes that work for the county.”

In a short letter dated Monday, he asked county o� cials to start talks within 30 days.

Passenger air service at Paine Field will encourage economic development and give travel-ers here a more convenient and cheaper alternative to Seattle-Tacoma International Airport and Bellingham International Airport, he said.

Propeller Investments envi-sions four or � ve commercial � ights a day to regional destina-tions, such as Spokane, Portland, San Francisco and Los Angeles or Long Beach, he said.

Paine Field handles about 300 � ights a day, ranging from small single-engine airplanes to big Boeing jetliners rolling out of the Everett assembly plant, which abuts the airport. � at is about

Paine Field terminal proposedA New York-based � rm wants to build a passenger-terminal and parking lot at the airport.

Therapy dogs offer comfort to children, crime victims

DAN BATES / THE HERALDGabrielle Sterbank, 9, plays momentarily with new courthouse therapy dog Lucy, a two-and-a-half-year-old yellow Lab, as handlers Kathy Murray (left) and Gina Coslett watch. Gabrielle, who is not a client, was in the of� ce visiting her mom, a civil deputy prosecutor with Snohomish County.

DAN BATES / THE HERALDSterbank hugs Lucy, who is joining the other yellow Lab, Harper.

See DOGS, Page A7 See PAINE, Page A7

See REVENUE, Page A4

Page 2: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

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A2 Wednesday, 06.18.2014 The Daily Herald

Today is Wednesday, June 18, the 169th day of 2014.

Today’s highlight:On June 18, 1964,

President Lyndon B. Johnson and Japanese Prime Minister Hay-ato Ikeda spoke to each other by telephone as they inaugurated the first trans-Pacific cable

completed by AT&T between Japan and Hawaii, and linked to existing cables between Hawaii and California.

On this date:In 1983, astronaut

Sally K. Ride, 32, became America’s first woman in space aboard the space shuttle Challenger.

Associated Press

TODAY IN HISTORY

50 years ago (1964)Duane Martina, of

Marysville, had built a 280-cubic-inch class “runner” hydroplane. He was on Lake Stevens in anticipation of compet-ing in races in Eastern Washington and British Columbia this summer.

Mike Donovan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Emory Don-ovan of Monroe, recently was graduated from Monroe High School with a record of 13 years of perfect attendance, high school principal Robert Cole said today. Others with near per-fect attendance were Jerry Lorenz, Fred Bosch,

Jeanne Zarana and Gayle Countryman.

25 years ago (1989)Snohomish County was

changing from rural to urban, facing traffic con-gestion on a number of arterials. About 450,000 people lived in the county and another 150,000 were expected by the end of the century. Driv-ing times were increasing dramatically. Among the solutions considered were buses, express-only lanes, carpools and light rail.

By Jack O’Donnell from Herald archives at the Everett Public Library.

SEEMS LIKE YESTERDAY

LOTTO: Monday’s drawing was for $4.7 million. Mon-day’s numbers: 9-18-19-22-30-44. The next drawing is today for $4.8 million.DAILY GAME: Tuesday’s numbers: 5-4-6.KENO: Tuesday’s numbers: 2-3-9-10-14-28-38-39-41-54-58-61-62-65-67-70-76-77-78-79.HIT 5: Monday’s drawing was for $360,000. Monday’s numbers: 5-23-31-32-35. The next drawing is today for $390,000.MATCH 4: Tuesday’s numbers: 4-18-20-23.POWERBALL: Saturday’s drawing was for $40 million. Saturday’s numbers: 9-33-42-45-54, Powerball 30. The next drawing is today for $50 million.MEGA MILLIONS: Tuesday’s drawing was for $15 mil-lion. Tuesday’s numbers: 10-14-24-47-60, Megaball 3. The next drawing is Friday.

LOTTERY

By Brett ZongkerAssociated Press

WASHINGTON — Sci-entists and art experts have found a hidden paint-ing beneath one of Pablo Picasso’s first master-pieces, “The Blue Room,” using advances in infrared imagery to reveal a bow-tied man, face resting on his hand. Now the ques-tion that conservators at The Phillips Collection in Washington hope to answer is: Who is he?

It’s a mystery that’s fuel-ing new research about the 1901 painting created early in Picasso’s career in Paris at the start of his distinctive blue period of melancholy subjects.

Curators and conserva-tors revealed their findings for the first time to The Associated Press last week. Over the past five years, experts from The Phil-lips Collection, National Gallery of Art, Cornell University and Delaware’s Winterthur Museum have developed a clearer image of the mystery picture. It’s a portrait of an unknown man painted by one of the 20th century’s great artists.

“It’s really one of those moments that really makes what you do special,” said Patricia Favero, the con-servator at The Phillips Collection who pieced together the best infrared image yet of the man’s face. “The second reaction was, ‘well, who is it?’ We’re still working on answering that question.”

In 2008, improved infrared imagery revealed for the first time a man’s bearded face resting on his hand with three rings on his fingers. He’s dressed in a jacket and bow tie. A technical analysis con-firmed the hidden portrait is a work Picasso likely painted just before “The Blue Room,” curators

said. Conservators long suspected there might be something under the sur-face of “The Blue Room,” which has been part of The Phillips Collection in Washington since 1927. Brushstrokes on the piece clearly don’t match the composition that depicts a woman bathing in Picas-so’s studio. A conservator noted the odd brushstrokes in a 1954 letter, but it

wasn’t until the 1990s that an X-ray of the painting first revealed a fuzzy image under the picture. It wasn’t clear, though, that it was a portrait.

“When he had an idea, you know, he just had to get it down and realize it,” curator Susan Behrends Frank told the AP, reveal-ing Picasso had hurriedly painted over another com-plete picture. “He could

not afford to acquire new canvasses every time he had an idea that he wanted to pursue. He worked sometimes on cardboard because canvass was so much more expensive.”

Scholars are research-ing who this man might be and why Picasso painted him. They have ruled out the possibility that it was a self-portrait. One pos-sible figure is the Paris art dealer Ambrose Villard who hosted Picasso’s first show in 1901. But there’s no documentation and no clues left on the canvas, so the research continues.

Favero has been collabo-rating with other experts to scan the painting with multi-spectral imaging technology and X-ray fluorescence intensity mapping to try to iden-tify and map the colors of the hidden painting. They would like to recreate a digital image approximat-ing the colors Picasso used.

Curators are planning the first exhibit focused on “The Blue Room” as a seminal work in Picasso’s career for 2017. It will examine the revelation of the man’s portrait beneath the painting, as well as other Picasso works and his engagement with other artists.

For now, “The Blue Room” is part of a tour to South Korea through early 2015 as the research continues.

Hidden pictures have been found under other important Picasso paint-ings. A technical analysis of “La Vie” at the Cleveland Museum of Art revealed Picasso significantly reworked the painting’s composition. And con-servators found a portrait of a mustachioed man beneath Picasso’s painting “Woman Ironing” at the Guggenheim Museum in Manhattan.

Picasso painting covers another

THE PHILLIPS COLLECTION Picasso’s “The Blue Room,” painted in 1901. Scientists and art experts have found a hidden painting (below) beneath this painting, a portrait of a bow-tied man with his face resting on his hand, three rings on his fingers.

Page 3: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

the University of Hawaii, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in meteorology.

“I didn’t really want to get a real job,” Galle said.

So he started competing about four years ago. He soon went pro. Now he’s sponsored as a member of the Performance Designs Factory team. The

parachute manufacturer pro-vides equipment that costs more than $8,000 for team members.

“It’s made up of extremely experienced, extremely skilled parachute pilots from all over the world,” Galle said.

He practices skydiving five to six times a day. Galle now boasts more than 6,500 jumps.

“A lot of those are what we in the industry call work jumps,” he said, referring to training jumps with students or performing for video.

When he’s not jumping for work, he’s training for compe-tition. His thrill-seeking sport

CONTACT USHome delivery: Call 425-339-3200. News tips: Call 425-339-3451 or email newstips@ heraldnet.com.Share photos: Submit shots to our reader galleries at www.heraldnet.com/yourphotos.fr

ont p

orch

Local NewsA3 | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM/LOCAL | WEDNESDAY, 06.18.2014

Goodwill expansion

Goodwill Industries’ Job Train-ing and Education Center is holding an open house and ribbon cutting to celebrate expansion.

A $30,000-a-year donation funded the opening of a new and larger South Everett job training center, and a third classroom will allow enrollment in GED

and other classes to increase to 180 students per session from 120.

The open house will be from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. on Thursday at the Everett Job Training and Education Center, 210 SW Everett Mall Parkway, Suite D, in Everett. Free classes, support and job placement services will be avail-able. For more information or to RSVP to the open house, call

206-726-5857.

Broadway bridge closed to heavy vehicles: Weight restric-tions on Everett’s Broadway bridge has been extended to all lanes of travel effective Thurs-day, the city says. Previously, the weight limits were limited to the right lanes of the bridge. Now all lanes of travel on Broadway between Hewitt Avenue and

California Street will be restricted, depending on the type of vehicle.

The allowable weight limit will remain at 7 tons for single-unit trucks and buses, 9 tons for semi-trucks and 11 tons for tandem-trailer trucks. Typi-cally, cars, minivans and pickup trucks are under the 7-ton weight limit. Parking on the structure will remain closed to all traffic.

By Scott NorthHerald Writer

EVERETT — A Woodinville man with a history of assault-ing people is now facing a felony animal cruelty charge for alleg-edly throwing large stones at a

pair of horses.The yearling colts sustained

multiple injuries in the Oct. 16 incident. One of the horses had a gash to its face that required nine stitches, according to Sno-homish County Superior Court documents.

Michael Aaron Brown com-mitted first-degree animal cruelty when he got the horses in a stall and began attacking them, deputy prosecutor Cheryl John-son wrote.

The case was investigated by animal control officers working for the county auditor. In an affi-davit filed along with the charge, they alleged Brown, 46, “lured” the colts into a stall on property

in the 23600 block of 75th Ave-nue SE.

A witness reported hearing a commotion.

Brown “was heard yelling at the horses, stating that they needed to learn a lesson. (He) was seen throwing the large rocks at the horses and the horses were frantically trying to

Cruelty charges in horse attack

By Amy NileHerald Writer

SULTAN — He jumps out of a plane some 1,500 times a year. And he’s not just free-falling to the ground.

Gage Galle is a canopy pilot. The Sultan native flies high-performance parachutes in competition for speed, distance and accuracy in an adrenaline-fueled sport.

Galle, 28, earned a spot on the U.S. Parachute Team last month at the National Skydiving Cham-pionships for canopy piloting in Zephyrhills, Florida.

“It’s actually very difficult, as ridiculous as it sounds,” Galle said. “The U.S. is very competitive.”

Galle beat out some 80 challengers for his spot on the elite U.S. team. Now, he’s set to compete against top international challengers at the World Champi-onships in November.

In canopy piloting, often called swooping, experienced skydiv-ers generate speeds of around 90 miles per hour and glide very close to the ground, usually glide above a shallow pond, as far as 100 meters or more. Canopy pilots aim to touch down at precise spots on a course to earn points.

“You can go super far, super fast,” Galle said. “That’s why I like it.”

Galle said he set his distance record at 140 meters. That’s not far from the world record of 165 meters.

Galle works and trains at Sky-dive Hawaii. He lives in Waialua, just north of Honolulu on the island of Oahu.

Galle took his first jump at Sky-dive Snohomish when he was 21. Some 25 jumps later, he earned a licence to go solo. For about $1,000, he bought a parachute.

“My first parachute was very cheap and used and crappy,” he said.

He left the Northwest to attend

A sport for thrill-seekers

JULIE MUHLSTEIN

By Jerry CornfieldHerald Writer

OLYMPIA — Transporta-tion Secretary Lynn Peterson announced Tuesday that she will restart the search for a new leader of the state ferry sys-tem after one of two finalists withdrew.

Peterson said Interim

Assistant Secretary George Capacci notified her over the weekend that he was pulling out of consideration.

That left former Pierce County Executive John Ladenburg as the remaining candidate, and Peter-son elected to not hire him.

“While John Ladenburg has extensive experience as an elected official managing large

government agencies, I have decided to begin a new recruit-ment process,” she wrote in an email to ferry workers.

Peterson said she based her decision partly on what she heard from employees and community members about what they felt the ferry system needed in a new leader.

Ladenburg, who ran

unsuccessfully for state attor-ney general in 2008 and state Supreme Court in 2012, has the skills to deal with the politics of the legislative process but less experience on the technical side of ferry operation.

Capacci, who joined Washing-ton State Ferries in 2009, served as the deputy chief in charge of operations and construction

until becoming interim assistant secretary when David Moseley retired from the job earlier this year.

He will continue serving as interim ferries chief until a permanent manager is hired, Peterson said.

Jerry Cornfield: 360-352-8623; [email protected].

State ferries chief finalist withdraws; search begins anew

PHOTO COURTESY OF RANDY SWALLOWSGage Galle of Sultan competes at the recent Parachute Association National Skydiving Championships of Canopy Piloting, where he earned a spot on the U.S. Parachute Team.

Michael Aaron Brown, 46, allegedly threw rocks at two colts, which were injured.

See CRUELTY, Page A5

Sultan native lands a spot on competitive U.S. Parachute Team

See PARACHUTE, Page A5

In 2007, Gary Hatle and Lee Wyman were among the first Snohomish County couples to

register with the state as domes-tic partners. Five years later, a Washington law gave them the green light to marry.

On Dec. 11, 2012, five days after the state’s same-sex mar-riage law took effect, they were married at Everett’s Trinity Lutheran Church.

The Everett couple have no major decisions to make this month. That can’t be said of many others in Washington who are registered as domestic partners.

Under the law approved by voters, domestic partnerships will automatically convert to marriages on June 30 — unless the partnership is dissolved, is in the process of being dissolved, or at least one partner is 62 or older.

“It was pretty widely discussed, and it was on the ballot. But it will still catch some people off guard,” said David Ammons, communications director for the Washington Secretary of State’s Office.

The Secretary of State’s Corpo-rations Division keeps a registry of domestic partnerships. With the deadline looming, the state updates the numbers of active and terminated partnerships throughout each day. By Tues-day afternoon, there were 6,654 active domestic partnership registrations, and 1,237 had been terminated.

Because Hatle is over 62 — he’ll turn 70 next month — he and Wyman could have main-tained their partnership if they hadn’t married. The law included the provision for seniors, regard-less of gender, because of their risk of losing pension and Social Security benefits if they married.

After June 30, there will be no legal domestic partnership for younger couples — regardless of gender. The intent of the law was marriage equality. “We’re not going to have a special thing off to one side,” Ammons said.

Although Hatle and Wyman obtained a legal marriage license in Snohomish County and were wed in church, their names remain on the registry of

Partners become spouses June 30

See MUHLSTEIN, Page A5

Gage Galle

Page 4: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

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A4 Wednesday, 06.18.2014 The Daily Herald

By Eric StevickHerald Writer

MALTBY — The two people killed in Mon-day’s head-on crash on Highway 522 have been identified as a Redmond couple in their 70s.

Joan S. Kinger, 76, died at the scene. She was a passenger in a 2007 Ford Fusion. The driver, Stanley Kinger, 79, was transported to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle where he also died.

The other driver, 24, was listed in serious condition

in intensive care at Har-borview on Tuesday. His passenger, a 1-year-old girl, was listed in criti-cal condition in intensive care. Both were listed as living in Monroe, accord-ing to a Washington State Patrol accident memo.

The two-car collision occurred around 3:20 p.m. Monday east of Fales Road. A stretch of the highway was closed for about three hours while officers investigated.

The crash involved the Ford Fusion and a Mit-subishi Eclipse.

Troopers believe that the driver of the Mitsubi-shi was heading east and crossed over onto the westbound shoulder. The Mitsubishi hit a traffic barrel that was in some grass beyond the shoulder. The driver overcorrected before crashing head-on into the other car.

Drugs and alcohol are not believed to be fac-tors in the crash, the State Patrol memo said.

They also have ruled out the driver being distracted by texting or cellphone use.

It is too early to know

what caused the car to cross over.

“We still need to talk to him,” trooper Keith Leary said. “It’s still an unknown. It’s still under investigation.”

Traffic barrels are used to shut down lanes. No construction was going on in the immediate area. The only construction happen-ing was at the Snohomish River Bridge project well east of where the crash happened, Leary said.

Eric Stevick: 425-339-3446; [email protected]

Highway 522 crash victims identified

By Nicholas K. GeraniosAssociated Press

SPOKANE, Wash. — Numerous speakers told a state Senate committee Tuesday that they oppose the rapid increase in rail-cars carrying crude oil from the Bakken fields of North Dakota and Montana through the state.

The Senate Energy, Environment and Telecom-munications Committee met in Spokane, a major railroad hub for the north-ern United States, to take testimony on a bill that seeks to improve the safety of those oil shipments.

But nearly all the mem-bers of the public who spoke attacked the mea-sure as too friendly to the oil and railroad industries.

Numerous people referred to last year’s explo-sion of a rail car in Quebec, Canada, that killed 47 peo-ple, and worried that could happen in Washington.

“I personally don’t believe we should send these ‘bomb cars’ through our community of almost half a million people,” said Mike Petersen of The Lands Council, a Spokane envi-ronmental group.

An explosion like the Quebec blast would be catastrophic in downtown Spokane, where elevated railroad tracks run near or adjacent to office tow-ers, hotels and hospitals, speakers said.

But officials of the BNSF Railway noted there hasn’t been a rail accident involv-ing hazardous materials in the Spokane region in decades, and said rail traf-fic is getting safer.

Patrick Brady of BNSF said the railroad has had one flammable release this year in 900,000 shipments of hazardous material.

“It’s pretty rare for them to occur,” he said.

The oil boom in North Dakota and Montana has created a sharp increase in rail shipments to West Coast refineries and ports. There were no crude oil shipments by rail through the state in 2011, but that increased to 17 million barrels in 2013 and is pro-jected to reach 55 million barrels this year.

That has raised concerns in communities across the state about a derailment and explosion in a popu-lated area.

A bill to regulate crude oil shipments failed in the

Legislature last year, but Senate Bill 6582 will be introduced in the next ses-sion. The measure calls for the state Department of Ecology to study the safety of the shipments. It also seeks to train emergency responders, and create caches of emergency gear in rail communities. It would be funded by an extension to rail of a 5-cents-per-bar-rel tax that currently applies only to oil shipments by sea.

“We want to prevent something catastrophic, and to be prepared if some-thing happens,” said state Sen. Mike Baumgartner, R-Spokane, a sponsor of the bill.

Baumgartner noted the state’s ability to regulate the shipments is limited because interstate com-merce is a federal issue.

Critics of the bill included Katie Evans, of the local chapter of the Sierra Club, who said it spends too much money on accident response and not enough on accident prevention.

“We want a moratorium on any increase in crude oil shipments,” she said.

Bonnie Mager of Cheney worried that if an oil tanker exploded near her home, “we’d be incinerated.”

Other speakers com-plained that BNSF should be forced to use only the most up-to-date rail cars for the shipments, and should be required to alert local leaders when ship-ments are coming through their towns.

Kari Cutting of the North Dakota Petroleum Coun-cil told lawmakers that rail tankers are safe to contain the Bakken crude, which is not more volatile than other crude oil. But she acknowledged there was no way to ensure that an accident did not punch a hole in a tanker car.

“You can’t reach zero percent probability,” she said.

She said about 40 per-cent of the oil shipped by rail is transported in older cars that are not as safe as newer models.

Johan Hellman of BNSF said about 5 percent of the railroad’s cargo was crude oil.

State residents rail against oil shipments

percent from their budgets. Some of those ideas might find their way into the 2015-17 budget proposal Inslee is to deliver to lawmakers in December.

“This is not a drill to impose across-the-board cuts,” Schumacher said. “This is a drill to give the governor options. We’re not expecting to do 15 percent in each and every agency.”

Washington is midway through the 2013-15 bud-get cycle, and in January the governor and lawmak-ers will focus on approving a 2015-17 budget.

State economist Steve Lerch said Tuesday that the state expects to take in $33.8 billion in this budget, up $157 million from his last report in February. And he said the state will col-lect $36.6 billion during the 2015-17 biennium. Those figures represent what the state collects and spends through a general fund and associated accounts, not federal dollars that pass through.

If September and November forecasts for

Revenue: Possible cuts to prisonsFrom Page A1

Associated Press

SEATTLE — A man shot by Washington State Patrol troopers on I-5 in Seattle has died at a hospital.

A nursing super-visor at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle

said the man died Mon-day night shortly after his arrival. He has not been identified.

The southbound lanes of the freeway reopened about midnight after a five-hour closure at the Ship Canal Bridge

where the man stopped his truck, set it on fire and spray-painted a large green circle on the freeway.

Seattle police said when troopers arrived the man displayed a knife. A trooper used a Taser, but

the man still advanced with his knife so two troop-ers shot him.

The incident backed up traffic for miles. Troopers turned some cars around and diverted others. Some bus passengers got out and walked.

Man shot by troopers on I-5 dies at hospital

COLIN MULVANY / THE SPOKESMAN-REVIEW

During a public hearing concerning the safety of the transportation of bulk crude oil by railroad, State Rep. Marcus Riccelli, D-Spokane, listens to public testimony from Katie Evans on Tuesday, in the Council Chambers of Spokane City Hall.

revenue continue to rise, cuts might not be needed in the governor’s proposal.

But that’s a tall order given that the state needs to spend $1 billion to $2 billion to make a dent in education funding obli-gations per the so-called McCleary decision by the Supreme Court, Schum-acher said.

And, he said, there are obligations for such things as employee pen-sions and health care for low-income residents, as well as pressure to provide teachers and state work-ers with a cost-of-living increase.

The June 13 direc-tive stirred concern in some quarters of state government.

Corrections Secretary Bernie Warner shared the news with employees that it amounts to shav-ing $250 million in agency spending. It drew a sharp response from the largest union representing cor-rectional employees.

“Cuts of this magnitude would likely mean more prison closures and the early release of prison-ers into our community,” Tracey A. Thompson, secretary-treasurer of Teamsters Local 117, said in a statement “Public safety and the safety of correctional staff would be put at risk. We ought to allocate more resources to protect and retain prison staff, not make their jobs more difficult.”

Rep. Ross Hunter, D-Medina, the chief House budget writer and chairman of the Revenue Forecast Council, said that where prisons are concerned, such a deep cut can’t be done without shuttering facilities and releasing inmates.

“You can’t cut 15 percent out of (the) cor-rections budget and maintain anything close to a safe workplace, either safe for the inmates or safe for the staff,” he said. “To achieve that level of

savings in corrections, you have to let a lot of peo-ple out. You have to shut down probably an entire facility, a large facility, to save that kind of money.”

Stephen Gehrke, a spokesman for the agency, said options will be prepared, though it’s too soon to know exactly what they might look like.

“Any cuts are inherently difficult, particularly given that the agency just went through a difficult round,” he wrote in an email. “Right now it’s important to keep in mind this is a contingency exercise and is just getting under way.”

Marty Brown, execu-tive director of the state Board of Community and Technical Colleges, said it would be “catastrophic” to the system of two-year higher education institutions.

A 15 percent reduction is about $92 million and would require a 24 per-cent tuition increase as an offset, he said.

But Brown, a former state budget director, said Schumacher is taking the right approach given the pressure to come up with money for the McCleary decision.

“I thought it was a pru-dent thing for them to do,” he said. “It’s a planning tool. It’s not a budget.”

Jerry Cornfield: 360-352-8623; [email protected].

You have to shut down probably an entire facility, a large facility, to save that kind of money.

— Rep. Ross Hunter, D- Medinachief House budget writer

Page 5: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

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By Jeff BarnardAssociated Press

GRANTS PASS, Ore. — Conservation groups and salmon advocates have challenged the Obama administration’s latest plan for making Columbia Basin dams safe for salmon.

The challenge was filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Portland against the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administra-tion’s Fisheries Service, which oversees salmon protection, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and U.S. Bureau of Recla-mation, which operate the dams. It was the seventh challenge since the law-suit was originally filed in 2001.

Joseph Bogaard of Save Our Wild Salmon said the plan is “virtually indistin-guishable” from the one overturned by a federal court three years ago.

A federal judge rejected

that plan because it relied too heavily on habitat-res-toration plans that were not specific.

Bogaard said efforts to develop a better plan through collaboration, rather than litigation, were rebuffed.

NOAA Fisheries said in a statement that the agency has made “clear and demonstrable progress

in rebuilding salmon and steelhead runs through-out the Columbia Basin,” and it expects progress to continue.

“We are not surprised, but we are disappointed at the prospect of yet another cycle of litigation, which only distracts from imple-menting projects on the ground,” spokeswoman Connie Barkley said in an

email. “We will continue to work collaboratively with our many regional partners to ensure the pro-tection and restoration of these important fish and their habitats now and well into the future, and we encourage all to join in that effort.”

The Corps of Engineers and Bureau of Reclama-tion had no immediate

comment about the new legal challenge.

The plan, required by the U.S. Endangered Species Act and known as a biologi-cal opinion, is the fifth filed by the government since Columbia Basin salmon went on the endangered species list in the 1990s. It balances the protection of endangered salmon against the operation of the hydroelectric dams, which provide much of the power used in the North-west. It acknowledges that the dams imperil endan-gered salmon, but it offers actions to make up for the losses. Four previous plans have all been rejected by a federal judge.

While the return of adult salmon to the Columbia has surged in recent years, the great majority were bred in hatcheries, and thus are not covered by the Endangered Species Act. Some runs of wild fish have continued to struggle.

A decade ago, a federal judge ordered the gov-ernment to increase the amount of water spilled over the dams, which increases the numbers of young fish that survive their migration to the ocean but reduces the amount of hydroelectric power the dams produce. The gov-ernment has since resisted pressure from salmon advocates to increase spill even more, saying it wasn’t needed.

“A 17-year scientific study demonstrates that spill is our most effec-tive immediate measure to increase salmon sur-vival across their life cycle,” Liz Hamilton, executive director of the Northwest Sportfishing Industry Asso-ciation, said in a statement. “The salmon are talking, and it’s hard to fathom why (NOAA Fisheries), the science agency charged with restoring them, isn’t listening.”

Latest federal plan for Columbia salmon challenged

ASSOCIATED PRESSDalles Dam along the Columbia River, in The Dalles, Ore., is seen in this 2011 photo. Conservation groups and salmon advocates have challenged the Obama administration’s latest plan for making Columbia Basin dams safe for salmon.

escape,” court papers said.The witness yelled at

Brown to stop, report-edly distracting him long enough for the horses to run away. While he shouted threats, the wit-ness ran to a phone and called 911.

Brown, who has a his-tory of living with mental illness, was arrested by sheriff’s deputies and taken to a crisis center in

King County.The defendant has

prior convictions for felony assaults on peo-ple, including a June 2011 attack on a woman at a Seattle residen-tial treatment home. He was sentenced to three months in jail after push-ing her down some stairs, according to court papers.

Scott North: 425-339-3431, [email protected]

Cruelty: Prior assault convictionsFrom Page A3

domestic partnerships. Hatle said he thought county records would make it to the state. When he and Wyman got their marriage license in 2012, they checked a box indicating their domestic partnership would end.

Like all other registered domestic partners in Washington, they recently received mail about the law, about dissolving a partnership, and how to get an updated marriage certifi-cate. Hatle didn’t bother to respond because he’s already married.

That’s not a problem for the Everett couple, said Pam Floyd, director of the Corporations Division for the Secretary of State. “A domestic part-nership is null and void when they marry,” she said. County marriage license information eventually shows up in the state’s vital records, she said.

Under the domestic partnership law, Floyd said, a dissolution must go through the courts and includes a 90-day waiting period, just like a divorce. If a dissolution is pending, it won’t be converted to a marriage June 30.

The Department of Health is handling conversions using the Secretary of State’s data, Floyd said. Couples who will become newly married June 30 can request, for $20, a new Washington State Mar-riage Certificate.

Hatle may be surprised that his legal date of marriage isn’t the day he and Wyman were wed in church. For couples who registered as domestic partners in Washington, Floyd said, the legal marriage date will be when they registered — for Hatle and Wyman, that’s July 23, 2007. The marriage certificate will

also include a place for the date and location of the ceremony.

Kokie Adams, a trust and estates lawyer with the Purcell & Adams law firm in Lynnwood, said the legal date of a marriage matters greatly if a couple decides to divorce. Issues could arise involving children, prop-erty, and even wages and retirement funds, she said. “Some same-sex couples may not be of that mindset yet — this is real,” Adams said.

Hatle said he and Wyman knew the legalities when they registered as domestic partners. He recalls say-ing to Wyman — half kidding, but half serious — “Do we still want to go through with this? It’s not one of those things you can just walk out of anymore.”

In the eyes of the state, they will soon be married seven years. In their hearts, it’s been a dozen years.

“That’s how long ago we made a commitment to each other,” Hatle said.

Julie Muhlstein: 425-339-3460; [email protected].

Learn moreMany Washington state regis-tered domestic partnerships will automatically be converted to mar-riages June 30. Find out more at:www.sos.wa.gov/corps/domes-ticpartnerships/Information on marriage certifi-cates for converted partnerships available at:www.doh.wa.gov/Portals/1/Documents/Pubs/422-107-Certifi-cateMarriageForm.pdf

HERALD FILE PHOTOGary Hatle (right) and his partner, Lee Wyman, register an official domestic partnership in Olympia in 2007.

Muhlstein: Partnership dissolutionFrom Page A3

has taken him to faraway places including Russia, the Czech Republic and Italy.

Galle’s family cheers him on from Washington. His father, Matthew Galle, lives in Sultan. His mother, Deb Galle, is in Puyallup.

Galle is set to travel to Dubai for a skydiving event later this year.

He said he doesn’t ever worry about his safety.

“You get more nervous from competing,” he said. “I want to win.”

Amy Nile: 425-339-3192; [email protected].

Parachute: No safety concernsFrom Page A3

Page 6: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

A6 Wednesday, 06.18.2014 The Daily Herald

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It was the year of Richie and Fonzie on “Happy Days,” Barbra Streisand’s first number-one hit and Dorothy Hamill’s

championship performance at the U.S. Figure Skating Championship. Richard Nixon was president and a new Benchley novel featured a rogue shark that fit the descriptor of black and white and read all over.

It was 1974 and a young couple had their future hinged on the success of their new office supply business in Everett.

Chuck and Doreen Lauby knew that starting Office Interiors, Inc. would be tricky, especially when it came to juggling family life alongside their startup aspira-tions, but Chuck had sold office products for a few years and the couple was ready to set out on their own.

So they coordinated with the elemen-tary school bus driver to drop off their daughter, Alisa, at their store after school. They set up a play area for four-year-old Darren who, after literally growing up in the business, is now a co-owner and instrumental in overseeing and choreo-graphing furniture placement and instal-lation. And a few years after the business was up and running, daughter Sarah inherited the play area while dad trav-elled from Everett to Lynnwood visiting clients and mom took care of the accounts payable.

Along the way, the mister and the misses met up with a proverbial “man in a white hat” named Tom Rainville.

“Tom was the president of Bank of Ev-erett at the time,” Chuck Lauby explained. “He told me, ‘Chuck, you bring me the supplies I want on time and I’ll pay you each week as you start out.’”

That he did. Forty years later, Lauby expresses ku-

dos to Rainville for “standing behind me, providing support as a mentor and being a good customer.”

Today, Office Interiors, Inc. offers over 35,000 items to client companies, both large and small.

Office furniture is a mainstay product and Office Interiors, Inc. has designers to plan out your space to be functional, ergonomically friendly and aesthetically pleasing.

“We take all sorts of classes and online tutorials to learn what customers are de-manding these days,” Lauby said.

Part of that education helps the team

provide furniture and accessories to alle-viate and help prevent back pain, leg pain and carpal tunnel.

“Anything to make an office environ-ment more customized to the productivity of its workers, that’s what we do,” he said.

This year, the store continues to evolve. “Our buying group, TriMega, has chal-lenged us to grow and given us good direc-tion on what we should be looking at for our future product field,” Lauby said, not-ing his company now carries an extensive line of breakroom supplies – everything from microwave ovens to Keurig K-Cups –

and the latest compostable service ware, including utensils made from cornstarch.

Healthcare supplies are top sellers and the Laubys have been rewarded with com-ments that the brand of rubber and latex gloves they carry last three to four times longer than other brands and cost about 20 percent less.

Also on hand are 300-per-pass, cross-cut shredders, multi-media necessities, uninterruptible power supply (UPS) sys-tems, ink and toner, A/V equipment and janitorial products.

Lauby purchases products directly from manufacturers for the same price or a lower price than his company’s biggest competition, so he’s able to offer fair, com-petitive pricing.

On Wednesday, June 18, the Laubys will host their own trade show, open to the public, in celebration of their com-pany’s 40th anniversary. Several vendors will be represented, including Avery, 3M, General Binding Corporation and RFM Seating. New products, free sam-ples, refreshments and door prizes will be featured from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the Blue Heron room within Port of Everett’s Conference Center, 1205 Craftsman Way in Everett.

Lauby notes his thanks to his family, clients, S.P. Richards Company, TriMega and staff members Nadlae, Dan, Bette, Karon, Steve, John, who have been with the company for more than 20 years, and Kelly who has 11 years of service. All are part of the company’s success and its ideal of community living, community buying and community friendship.

Office Interiors, Inc., is located at 2002 Madison St. in Everett, and can be reached by calling (425) 355-3500. You can also visit their website at www.officeinteriorsinc.com.

Chuck and Doreen Lauby, co-owners of Office Interiors, Inc., invite you to visit their store. There you will find office supplies, office furniture and design, healthcare and medical sup-plies, breakroom and janitorial suppllies and more. They also offer green products and rebates.

Office Interiors is your one-stop for office supplies

Page 7: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

The Daily Herald Wednesday, 06.18.2014 A7

asked to talk about sexual and physical abuse. They can close drawers and turn off lights. They hold their own leashes. They can offer the comfort that the child interview specialists must withhold to remain neutral.

Additionally, Snohom-ish County judges have allowed the dogs, hidden from jurors, to sit with chil-dren as they testify in court. Some families also ask for the dogs to be with them as they watch the trials of people accused of killing their loved ones. Lucy also has been spending time at Denney Juvenile Justice Center, including Friday afternoons with teens involved with the county’s therapeutic drug court.

Lucy, 2 ½, came aboard after the county’s first court-house dog retired last year. When he came to the office in 2006, Stilson was only the second service dog in the nation used by prosecutors.

The prosecutor’s office began looking for the right candidate when Stilson’s handler announced that she’d be leaving.

Murray, a legal assistant in the civil division, was interested.

She and her family raised and showed Staf-fordshire Bull Terriers for about 16 years. Once her two children were out of

the house and their last dog passed away, she and her husband decided they weren’t going to have any more dogs.

She changed her mind when the opportunity came up to help crime victims. She also felt good about having a dog that she wouldn’t have to leave alone at home all day.

Snohomish County Pros-ecuting Attorney Mark Roe selected Murray to apply for the program. She can do a lot of her job on a lap-top and work wherever the dog may be needed. It took about a year for Murray to be matched with Lucy.

The pooch started work-ing in February. She’s been training for the gig since she was a puppy.

Harper and Lucy were provided by Canine Com-panions for Independence, a private non-profit group that breeds and trains dogs mainly for people with disabilities.

Volunteer puppy train-ers receive the dogs when the animals are a couple of months old. For about a year the volunteers teach the dogs basic obedience and expose them to social settings, such as malls and restaurants. Then the dogs are sent to a facility for extensive, professional training. The dogs usually are about 2 when they are matched with a handler.

Murray spent a week

in Santa Rosa, California, to learn how to work with the dogs. She also learned that the dogs need special-ized care, including daily grooming and strict diets.

“A lot revolves around her bathroom schedule,” Murray said.

The dogs can’t whine if they’re in the court-room, Coslett said. They’re expected to be clean, quiet and well-behaved. The handlers don’t want to do anything to put the

program in jeopardy.“They take good care of

others so we have to take good care of them,” Coslett said.

Coslett and Murray took the dogs out to Cascade Valley Hospital in Arling-ton about a week after the deadly landslide in Oso. Staff there had treated some of the victims. It was the first time the dogs had been in a hospital. They went to work.

Nurses cuddled the dogs,

sometimes in tears. The dogs visited with the sick, including an injured girl who’d had an accident at home. Both dogs curled up with the girl on her hospital bed.

The women also took the dogs to visit the west side command center. There they nuzzled volunteers, some of whom hadn’t seen their own dogs in days.

Harper and Lucy have become best buddies. They both love having their teeth

brushed and playing tug-of-war with toys. Harper perks up whenever Coslett says it’s time to see “Lucy Lou.”

“It was like they were separated at birth,” Murray said.

She and Coslett try to bring the dogs together at least once a day dur-ing the work week. The animals’ blue work vests come off, signaling them that it’s time to play or relax. Earlier this week, the two dogs raced back and forth in Murray’s office. Her colleagues worked on, accustomed to canine play time. Her coworkers carry the dogs’ special treats and don’t seem to mind when Harper insists on closing an open desk drawer.

The dogs curled up next to each other on a couch, two furry bookends.

Coslett is grateful to have a second dog at work again. There were times when she was doing five interviews a day. That was a lot of work for Harper to do alone. The stress can weigh on a dog, Coslett said.

“They love to work but it does take a toll on them,” she said. “They need down time.”

Lucy is proving to be a good fit for her job at the courthouse.

“She’s like an old pro,” Coslett said.

Diana Hefley: 425-339-3463; [email protected].

one-third of the airport’s flight capacity, said Dave Waggoner, the Paine Field director.

Smith said, “The airport fits our business model of developing regional, niche airports.”

Founded in 2008, Pro-peller Investments is developing an alternative to Atlanta’s commercial airport, one of the busiest in the world. Its executives and advisors have exten-sive experience in running, overseeing and working with airports and airlines, according to its website.

The market could prob-ably support two terminals with regional flights, he said. But “you’re never going to see flights to New York or Tokyo.”

Opponents don’t want to see any passenger flights at Paine Field and were headed to federal court Wednesday to challenge a Federal Aviation Admin-istration conclusion that noise, traffic and pollution from commercial flights would not hurt nearby communities.

Mukilteo is leading the challenge in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, along with the city of Edmonds and an activ-ist group of residents, Save Our Communities.

If they succeed, the FAA would have to do further analysis, likely delaying attempts to bring passen-ger flights to Paine Field.

It could take several months for the three-judge panel to issue a decision.

In the meantime, Mukilteo Mayor Jennifer Gregerson said, “Propo-nents of air service should understand that it is impor-tant to let our case take its course.”

Proponents include Ever-ett Mayor Ray Stephanson, who issued a statement supporting Propeller Invest-ments on Tuesday.

“After years of debate, it’s time to take advantage of this opportunity and move forward with a plan that helps our economy, builds on our aviation foundation and provides easier access

to air travel,” he said in the statement.

Snohomish County will contact Propeller Invest-ments to discuss the proposal, said Rebecca Hover, a spokeswoman for the county executive’s office.

Whether or not to part-ner with the company would likely be a decision for the Snohomish County Council.

Talks about a passenger terminal last year between the county and Allegiant Air reached an impasse. The county proposed to build a publicly owned ter-minal for about $3 million and recoup construction costs from parking and concession revenue. The airline wanted to build, operate and own a terminal on lease-free land.

The Las Vegas-based airline remains interested in Paine Field and other sites as well, said Jes-sica Wheeler, a company spokeswoman.

Allegiant and Alaska Airlines are the only two carriers that have expressed interest in serv-ing Paine Field in recent years. Alaska had said it would be interested only if another airline established service first.

Today, “there are a num-ber of airlines interested” in Paine Field, Smith said.

But he couldn’t publicly name any, he said. “They’d kill me if I put their names out there.”

Dan Catchpole: 425-339-3454; [email protected]; Twitter: @dcatchpole.

Dogs: Canines start their training when they’re puppiesFrom Page A1

Paine: Focus on regional flightsFrom Page A1

DAN BATES / THE HERALDCourthouse therapy dogs, Harper (left) and Lucy hang out with their handlers, Gina Coslett, (left) and Kathy Murray on Monday.

The airport fits our business model of developing regional, niche airports.”

— Brett SmithPropeller Investments CEO

Donna Mae Thom Murphy

D o n n a M u r p h y , 7 8 o f Granite Falls, Wash. passed away on June 14, 2014 with h e r h u s b a n d , D o n a n d s i s te r, Ro s e m a r y by h e r side. She was born September 26, 1935 in Iowa City, Iowa to Meta and Delbert Thom, one of seven children. Loving wife to Don Murphy for 49 ½ years; mother to Theresa Mathis, Theodore Murphy, T imothy Murphy, Terry Murphy and Tameria Patzer; grandmother to 20 and great grandmother to 25. Donna also leaves three sisters. She was preceded in death b y o n e s i s t e r a n d t w o brothers. She was an X -Ray Tech and an av id genealog is t . She taught genealogy in the E v e r e t t C o m m u n i t y a n d School Systems at Edmonds Community College. V i s i t a t i o n w i l l b e f ro m 11:30 a.m. – 12:45 p.m. Saturday, June 21, 2014 followed by Funeral Service at 1:00 p.m. at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints – 18218 100th St NE , Gran i te Fa l l s , Wash. 98252. C o m m i t t a l s e r v i c e w i l l f o l l o w a t E v e r g r e e n Cemetery, Everett, Wash. Arrangements by Evergreen F u n e r a l H o m e a n d Cemetery.

Jean GieniaNestlerode

Jean Gienia Nest lerode, 88, o f Mi l l Creek , Wash. passed away Saturday, June 14, 2014. A Vis i tat ion wi l l be held Wednesdy, June 18, 2014 9 a.m.--5 p.m. at Solie Fu- neral Home; Mass wi l l be held Friday, June 20, 2014, 11:00 a.m.at St. Mary Mag- dalene Parish (8517 7th Ave SE, Everett, Wash. 98208). The Graveside will be held at San Fernando Mission Cemeter y in Mission Hi l l , California on Tuesday, June 24, 2014.

Irene Constance Ryals

Born October 23, 1922, Irene went to be with the Lord on June 6, 2014. She was the 6th of seven daugh- ters born to Odin and Esther Olson. I rene was an A i r Fo rce wife, stay at home mom who s p r e a d h e r w i n g s a n d learned to drive at age 50. She loved her Friday morning t r ips to Fred Meyers and h a v i n g c o f f e e w i t h h e r friends. Irene will be missed b y h e r m a ny f r i e n d s a t Broadway Plaza. She was in- volved in several activities such as pinochle and bingo. Preceded in death by her husband, Archie, parents and six sisters. Irene is survived by daugh- ter, Linda L. (Tom) Jones, s o n s : R i c h a rd J . ( N e l i a ) Ryals, , Larry B. (Jeanette) Ryals. Also seven grandkids and one great-granddaugh- ter. Many nieces and neph- ews wi l l miss this gentle, k ind, lov ing and car ing Christian lady. There will be a celebration of life on Sunday, June 22, 2014 at 2:00 p.m. at Broad- way Plaza in the View.

Frain Byron HaugIn Loving Memory

Fr a i n B y ro n H a u g d i e d peaceful ly at his home in Tacoma, Wash. on Saturday, June 14, 2014 surrounded by his family. Fra in born on June 19, 1927 in Grafton, N.D. to the parents of Olaf and Bertha H a u g . H e m o v e d t o Bel l ingham, Wash. at the age of nine. Frain graduated f r o m B e l l i n g h a m H i g h School. He enrolled in the U S A F i n 1 9 4 6 a n d w a s stat ioned from Flor ida to Alaska during the Korean War and was discharged in 1952. Frain earned a bachelor’s degree of education from WWU. He taught at Shoultes a n d Tu l a l i p e l e m e n t a r y schools for 28 years. Frain m a r r i e d M a r t h a To d d i n 1972 and moved to Camano Island where they raised four children. Frain is survived by his wife of 42 years; son, Jeremy (Shel ly ) Haug of Tacoma, J u s t i n ( C a r i ) H a u g o f Tonasket, Wash., Joel Haug o f C o l v i l l e , Wa s h . ; a n d daughter, Tara (Ron) Kuzina o f W a s i l l a , A l a s k a ; h i s grandchildren, Emma, Riley, A m a y a , E t h a n , S y d n e y , Elijah, Parker and Daron; his siblings, Duane Haug, Carol Dayton, Maurice (Joanna) Haug and Doug (Vera) Haug all of Bellingham, Wash. Fra in en joyed t rave l ing , g a rd e n i n g , p h o to g r a p hy, classical music and loved s p e n d i n g t i m e w i t h h i s family. A memorial wi l l be held Fr iday, June 20 , 2014 from 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. at the Camano Center 141 N. East Camano Drive followed by a viewing at Edwards Memorial at 3005 Bridgeport Way in University Place from 5-9 p.m. A graveside service wil l be held Monday, June 23 , 2014 a t Greenacres Cemetery in Bellingham from 12-1 p.m. T o s h a r e y o u r remembrance, please visitwww.edwardsmemorial.com

Joseph B. Anderson J o s e p h B . A n d e r s o n passed away peacefully at Ca re Sk i l l s Adu l t Fami l y Home in Lynnwood, Wash on May 25, 2014. He was born on July 24, 1940 in Everett, Wash. Joe attended school and lived most of his life in Monroe, Wash. An avid nature lover and outdoorsman, Joe primarily worked in the logging and construction industries. He d e s i g n e d a n d b u i l t l o g homes. He worked in the woods, did dir t work, and built foundations for mobile homes. In his younger days he also worked at various da i r y fa rms . He was co - fo u n d e r o f M o n ro e M a t M o n s t e r s , a w r e s t l i n g organizat ion for k ids . He served in the military during the Vietnam War. J o e h a d s i x c h i l d r e n , Cheryl , Dan, Randy, Mike, J o e a n d S h a w n ; 1 1 g r a n d c h i l d r e n , A n n a , Ta u s h a , J e f f r e y , A l e x , Steven, Jake, Ryan, Brittany, Ivan, Shawn and Lucy. He loved animals, enjoyed r i d i n g m o t o r c y c l e s , c a r r a c i n g a n d t r a v e l i n g - espec ia l l y to Latv ia . Joe inspired many of us by his posit ive att i tude, zest for l ife, great sense of humor a n d w i l l i n g n e s s to h e l p others. Joe will be deeply missed b y L i e n e , h i s c h i l d r e n , g r a n d c h i l d r e n g r e a t - g randchi ldren, and many relatives and friends. A spec ia l thank you to Joanna Soresco, owner of Ca re Sk i l l s Adu l t Fami l y Home, for her lov ing and compassionate care of Joe for the last 2 1/2 years. She is an amazing caregiver. A celebration of Joe’s life w i l l be held on June 28, 2014, starting at 12 noon, at 17920 183rd Avenue SE, Monroe, WA 98272. In lieu of flowers, please m a ke a d o n a t i o n to t h e Alzheimer’s Foundation of America (AFA).

Heather Betker Heather Betker passed a w a y J u n e 3 , 2 0 1 4 i n Bellingham. A celebration of life will be held this summer at a time to be determined.

OBITUARIES AND MEMORIALS OBITUARIES AND MEMORIALS

Obituaries continued on Page A8

Page 8: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

A8 Wednesday, 06.18.2014 The Daily Herald

Josephine Jeffers Saunders

J o s e p h i n e , a g e 9 4 , peacefully passed away in the early morning of June 7, 2 014 a t Lu t h e r P a r k i n Sandpoint, Idaho. Jo, as she preferred, was born in Ephrata, Wash., July 25, 1919 to Clyde Garfield J e f f e r s a n d R u t h ( N y e ) Jeffers. She graduated from Ephrata High school and a t t e n d e d b o t h W e s t e r n Washington College and the Un ivers i ty o f Washington where she earned a degree in elementary education. Jo taugh t k inderga r ten d u r i n g t h e wa r ye a r s i n Everett, Wash. One of the boys in her k indergar ten class invited Jo to his home for a family dinner. Another guest that evening was a f a m i l y f r i e n d , S t e p h e n Saunders. A short time later Steve and Jo were married in Januar y 1949 by Jo ’s father, Clyde, who was the C h i e f J u s t i c e o f t h e Washington State Supreme Court. Jo enjoyed working at the hospital gift shop, serving in t h e F i r s t P r e s b y t e r i a n Church’s woman’s group, leading a Blue Bird group, taking bicycl ing tr ips with friends and family-and most of all being a great partner to Steve. She had a subtle but sharp sense of humor, a great sense of style, a love o f a d ve n t u r e , a g i f t fo r hosting others and an ability t o p a i n t - w h i c h s h e developed later in life. J o i s s u r v i v e d b y h e r husband of 66 years, Steve; her daughter, Mary Snedden (D r. John ) o f Sandpo in t , Iaho; and six grandchildren: S t e p h e n S n e d d e n o f S a n d p o i n t , A n n a S m i t h (Peter ) of Coeur d ’A lene, Sarah Anaya (Dr. Samuel) of Austin, Texas, Erika Sargent (Ryan) of Oceanside, Calif., M a r i s s a S c h u h ( Troy ) o f S t a n w o o d , W a s h . a n d M i c h a e l S a u n d e r s o f Montana. Numerous beloved nieces, nephews and their children also survived Jo. Jo was preceded in death b y a s o n , M i c h a e l J . Saunders; two sisters, Jean Baxter and Betty Pickard; a n d t w o b r o t h e r s , D i c k Jeffers and Don Jeffers. There will be a memorial service in Everett at a later date.

Joyce Remington1930 - June 4, 2014

Joyce Remington left many friends sad at her passing. Joyce was born in 1930 in Minneapolis, Minn. She and her family moved to Pierce County, Wash. where she a t te n d e d h i g h s c h o o l i n P u y a l l u p . J oyc e m a r r i e d Gene Remington in 1964 and they moved to Camano Island in 1966, where Gene was stationed with Fisheries Patrol. J o y c e w a s a n a v i d crocheter, she made dozens of intricate afgans, stocking caps, shawls, slippers and too many other i tems to mention. At one time, she r a n a y a r n s h o p i n Stanwood, along with her l o n g t i m e f r i e n d , J o y c e Hurlbert, who made and sold c a n d l e s . T h e s h o p w a s c a l l e d “ J o y c e ’ s Ya r n & Candles.” Another favorite pastime was bottle digging. S h e u n e a r t h e d s e v e r a l hundred collectibles, which she showed and won some prizes for, having some very hard-to-find whiskey bottles and medicine containers. Joyce loved sel l ing things a n d s h e s o l d C h r i s t m a s t rees a t her proper ty on Cross Island Road. Another talent was planting shrubs a n d t r e e s , w h i c h a r e i n evidence as you drive by her home. It’s hard to see the house for a l l the fo l iage. Joyce loved to travel, and, as luck would have it, one of her best friends, Lynda Dreher, had a travel agency and the two of them t r ave l e d to m a ny exo t i c p laces . O ther t r ips were enjoyed with her husband in their motorhome. They also used other means of travel, such as motorcycles, boats, t ra ins, horseback and on foot. Joyce was a jogger and walker, entering local 10K races. She was a dedicated walker and Joyce and Gene covered many desert miles as they enjoyed wintering in Arizona the last 23 years. Joyce was involved in the local Red Hatters and very m u c h e n j oye d t h e g o o d t imes and t r ips w i th her buddies. She i s su r v i ved by he r sister, Marilyn; niece, Annie; stepson, Pat; sister-in-law, Rosemar y Sedergr in ; and her two daughters; sister-in- l aw, L o i s E r a t h a n d h e r chi ldren; and daughter- in- l a w , R o b i n M a g o r t y o f Burien. There will be a celebration of her life Sunday, July 13, 2 014 a t C a m a n o I s l a n d S e n i o r C e n t e r , 6 0 6 A r row h e a d R d . , C a m a n o Island at 3 p.m. (Directions to the Camano Island Senior Center: Come to Camano Is land to the second t raf f ic l ight , turn right, go about 100 yards, then turn right again, take the first right to Elementary School Drive Way, take first left into the Senior Center.)

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Maxine A. Kelley M a x i n e A . K e l l e y , 9 6 , passed away peacefully on June 10, 2014 in Bothell , Wash. M a x i n e w i l l b e remembered for her easy laugh and beautiful smile. She l oved to dance and celebrate hol idays, t ravel and visit with friends, but w a s h a p p i e s t w h e n surrounded by family. She was preceded in death by her husband of 70 years, George. She is survived by her son, Gar y (Sher y l ) Kel ley ; and daughter, Patricia Champlin; s i x g r a n d c h i l d r e n a n d fourteen great-grandchildren, a n d m a n y n i e c e s a n d nephews. Her memorial will be held at 2:00 p.m. on June 18, 2014 at Evergreen-Washelli Funeral Home, Bothell. I n l i e u o f f l owe r s , t h e family suggests making a donation in her name to the charity of your choice.

Alvin Paul Koetitz, Jr.

February 1, 1934 - June 14, 2014

Alvin “Sonny” Paul Koetitz, Jr, 80, of Stanwood, Wash., passed away on June 14, 2014. Alvin was the eldest of four children to Alvin Paul Koetitz, Sr and Thelma Mon- tana Lindstrand. He was born on February 1, 1934 in Circle, Mont. He grew up and graduated from high school in Ronan, Mont., where he met the love of his life, Beverly Jones. She sent him a secret Valentine when he was i l l and it was love ever after. Following high school, Alvin en l i s ted in the US Navy. Prior to his depar ture, he p romised h is sweethear t that they would get married when he returned home on leave. Within one week upon his return, they were married on December 8, 1954 at the LDS ward chapel in St Igna- tius, Mont. After a short hon- eymoon, they moved cross- country to his first assign- ment at the Patuxent River Naval Station in Maryland where he served as an AD2 aircraf t mechanic. He was then honorably discharged to the US Navy Reserve in A u g u s t o f 1 9 5 6 h a v i n g earned the Good Conduct and National Defense Med- als. Over the years, Alvin con- t inued h is ser v ice in the Coast Guard, Air Force, and Army Reserves retiring as a Technical Sergeant after 20 years of honorable service. As a civilian, he earned an Associate’s degree in Data Processing at the University o f Washington whi le em- ployed with Boeing in Seat- tle, served as an accountant with G&D Logging Company in Darrington, and worked with Kimberly Clark in Ever- ett. Together, Alvin and Beverly worked hard and shared a deep, unwavering faith in our Savior and an eternal love for each other for 60 years. On July 3, 1964, Alvin and Beverly were sealed to each other and their children for time and all eternity in the Idaho Fa l l s LDS Temple . They were inseparable! After a few years of moving be- tween Oklahoma, Montana, and Washington, they set- tled in the Warm Beach area n e a r S t a n w o o d , W a s h . , where they raised their three children and established a homestead of over 40 years. A l v i n w a s a d e d i c a te d member of The Church of Je- s u s C h r i s t o f L a t te r - d ay Saints who lived his beliefs, followed the rules, kept his covenants, and served with honor and dedication. He held various church callings inc lud ing Sunday Schoo l P res ident , F inance Ward Clerk, pianist (he especially enjoyed playing for the Pri- mary children), and serving in various LDS temples. Fol- lowing retirement, he and Beverly served a ful l - t ime miss ion a t the A r l ing ton Stake Family History Center in Smokey Point, Wash. Alvin was a devoted hus- band, father, grandfather, and great-grandfather. He loved h is fami ly, en joyed spending time with family, attending reunions and spe- cial family events, hot rods and antique cars, the out- doors , an imals , hunt ing , boat ing, f ish ing, and the ocean. He was a skilled me- chanic, a “sharp-shooter”, and a “fix-it-all” handyman. Though he was soft spoken, he had a fun sense of hu- mor that made us all chuck- le. A l v i n w a s p r e c e d e d i n death by his parents, his son, (Randall Lee Koetitz); and brother, (Arvid Koetitz). He is survived by his wife, Beverly Jones Koetitz, Chil- dren: Jonathan (Tami) Koe- titz (Kadis) and Laurel (Mark) M a d s e n ; g r a n d c h i l d r e n : Jared (Ruthann) Koetitz (Ka- dis), Justin Koetitz, Tarissa (Dave) Gwilliam, Tasha (Nefi) Urena, Lacey (Michael) Al- len, Kimball (David) Romney, Isaac (Maria) Madsen, Ryan Madsen, Tyler Madsen, and Kyle Madsen; great-grand-

children: Leo, Gavin, Christi- na, David, Rayna, Noah, Koi, Jordan, Sky ler, Ade la ide , Hyrum, Gabriel, Sawyer, and sibl ings: Carolyn (Temple) Beavers and Gene (Judy) Koetitz. Services will be held Fri- day, June 20, 2014 with a viewing from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and the funeral service starting at 1:00 p.m. at the Stanwood Ward LDS chapel, 795 Ell Rd, Camano Island, Wash. Arrangements under the di- rection of Gilbertson Funeral Home, Stanwood. A graveside service with military honors will follow at the Anderson Cemetery in Stanwood, Wash. In lieu of flowers, please m a k e d o n a t i o n s t o t h e Wounded Warrior Project at woundedwarriorproject.org.

David William Grayson

Remembering an outstand- ing Policeman, Husband, Fa- ther and Grandfather. David was born in Shaunavon, Sask., Canada of American parents John E. Grayson and Maibelle Genevieve Olson, both of Lankin, N.D. Children born were Joe, Phyllis, and David. The fami l y moved f rom Canada to Glasgow, Mont. and John Grayson got work on construction of the Fort Peck dam. The family rented a 2-room log cabin in New Deal, Mont. and felt lucky to have it. Most workers were housed in temporary hous- ing. When the Dam finished, the family moved to Tacoma and Dave’s dad got work at For t Lewis as a instructor teaching soldiers how to re- pa i r and mainta in heavy equipment. Tragedy struck t h e f a m i l y w h e n D ave ’ s mother died suddenly of a hemorrhage in 1946. Dave was only 16 yrs old. Joe joined the Navy and Phyllis, Dave and father tried as best they could to main- tain the home. David remem- bers his father cooking a salmon every Saturday ac- c o m p a n i e d by s p l i t p e a soup. Pea soup which he shunned eating for the rest o f h i s l i fe . H i s dad was called by the Government to go to Alaska to do the same job, Phyllis and David moved back to Glasgow and lived with Grandma Grayson. Phyl- l is eventually married and moved with her husband to Texas. David lived with Grandma un t i l he g raduated f rom G l a s g ow H i g h S c h o o l i n 1948. He had many jobs to help Grandma pay for their l iv ing expenses. He del iv - ered newspapers, was a golf caddy, and a delivery boy for Buttrey’s grocery, a Wonder Bread delivery filling stock in area stores. And as a movie pro jector operator in the town’s theater. He sold tick- e t s , u s h e r e d , a n d ev e n popped the corn, anything to help himself and Grandma survive in a world that was not easy to l ive in at the time. Joe came home on Navy leave, David made the deci- sion to join the Army. Joe helped him pack and get ready to board the early train the next morning, they took David out for a drink, and few more , and they had hangovers the next morning. A huge crowd was at the sta- tion, and David said “gee, do you think they’re all here to see me off”?. Just then a huge grey elephant came along side the tracks and people started yelling “here c o m e s t h e c i r c u s , h e r e comes the circus”! It made a s a d fa r ewe l l e n d i n a laughing f i t as they sa id goodbye. It was years until they saw each other again. David’s father moved back to the states and took a job at Hanford, Wash. When Da- v i d w a s h o n o r a b l y d i s - charged from the Army, he decided to go to the U of W. He reconnected with his fa- ther who got him a laborer’s job at Hanford, and David made and saved his tuition and enrolled. Being an Army vet, he got living quarters in one of the several barracks that were on campus. But now he had to get money for books and board. He took any job he could find. At a lo- cal café he noticed their me- nus were all hand-written, he asked the owner if he could type their daily menus in ex- change for evening meals. He pin-set at the campus

bowling alley. Hard work as every thing was set by hand. Dave got a job at Grandma’s Cookies on Lake Union load- i ng and un load ing 100# sacks of flour, so heavy for a skinny l45 pound kid that he suffered back trouble for months . If it weren’t for his aunt Grace Van Hee in West Seattle, who invited him to Sunday dinners, he would go hungry. She treated him like a son and was proud of him. He earned his B.A. in Busi- ness Adm. in 1957 and tried accounting, but did not find it rewarding. He saw an op- portunity to do something in public service, and joined the Seattle Police Dept. in 1957, starting out as a roo- kie in the Central district. He loved his job as a Pol ice- man. He found i t excit ing and meaningful. He and his par tner, Robbie Robinson, won many letters of com- mendation from citizens of the Central District. David earned his Master of Public Administration in 1974 from University of Puget Sound. His work history is on face- book. Search David W Gray- son, it will show his progres- sion from rookie, to his ap- p o i n t m e n t a s A s s i s t a n t Chief by Chief Patrick Fitzsi- mons, who saw the value of education in his men. David’s philosophy about work was always be on time, take advantage of opportu- nities to get further training. He loved the Law, and al l kinds of politics. He had a sharp, analytical mind. He looked forward to getting up and going to work each day. He took only one sick day in 32 years on the job. In his last several years he en- joyed meeting his buddies at RAP and having lunch and talking of old times, many men being in his Police roo- k i e c l a s s 5 8 ye a r s a g o . When he could no longer drive, his son Steve would drive him to RAP or some of his friends would come and get him. David retired after 32 years at SPD, and we moved to Stanwood, built a home, but did not “retire”. He continued as a director of Seattle Metropolitan Cred- it Union, and was appointed as a civi l service commis- sioner for Police and Fire- man of Snohomish County, a volunteer job that he held for many years. Dav id met and marr ied Charlene through the match- making efforts of fellow Pa- trolman Bill and his wife Gin- ny Lance, a marriage lasting 53 years until David‘s pass- ing. David is survived by his w i fe , C h a r l e n e ; a n d t wo sons, David D.; grandchil- dren, David N. (wife, Santa- na) and Joscelyne aka Josie) and his youngest son, Ste- ven J. (wife, Cindy); also by his beloved 26 lb Chihua- hua, Cocoa; many n ieces and nephews, by brother, Joe, who reside in Seattle and nieces and nephews of sister Phyllis who reside in Texas. Sadly, sister Phyllis passed away May 07, 2014, e i g h t d ay s b e fo r e D av i d passed. To Eva, Anthony and Aurora of Providence Hosp. who so lovingly attended to David, and to Eva and her husband a Snohomish County Deputy who sat with David on his fi- nal day before David’s family g o t to t h e h o s p i t a l t h a t morning, Your caring means so much to us. David will be laid to rest in Acacia Memorial 14951 Bo- thell way in Bothell, Wash. On June 20, 2014 at 2:00 p.m. If you wish to send memo- rials, David’s favorite char- ities are Paralyzed Veterans of America and Seattle’s Un- ion Gospel Mission.

OBITUARIES AND MEMORIALS OBITUARIES AND MEMORIALS

Jurina Bruns Westphal

Jur ina Bruns Westpha l , 103 of Mar ysv i l le , Wash. p a s s e d a w a y J u n e 1 4 , 2014. S h e w a s b o r n A p r i l 2 , 1911 in Ross, N.D. She was proud to say she reached h e r 10 0 t h b i r t h d ay a n d exceeded it by three years. She lived through the Great Depression and tornados w h i c h g a v e h e r l o t s o f stories to tell. She was the fifth of thirteen children and had a lot of responsibility for raising eleven brothers and one sister. S h e m a r r i e d L e s t e r Westphal in 1937 in Minot, N . D . T h e y m o v e d t o Mar ysv i l le in 1947. They were married for 51 years before Lester passed away i n 1983 . She worked a t Montes C loth ing Store in Everett for many years. She s e r ve d 5 0 ye a r s o n t h e election board, was a l i fe t ime member of Order of Eastern Star; a member of Bethlehem Lutheran Church i n M a r y s v i l l e ; wa s a 4 H l e a d e r ; a n d l ove d d o i n g family genealogy research before computers. She i s su r v i ved by he r d a u g h t e r s , J e r i ( L a r r y ) Knowles, Bonita (Mike) Triff; f i ve g r a n d c h i l d r e n ; fo u r great-grandchildren; and one great-great-grandson; and many other family members. M e m o r i a l s m a y b e t o Bethlehem Lutheran Church, 7 2 1 5 5 1 s t A v e N E . , Marysville, Wash. 98270. The family wants to thank H o s p i c e o f S n o h o m i s h C o u n t y f o r a l l t h e i r a s s i s t a n c e a n d c a r e o f Jurina. A celebration of Jurina’s life will be held Friday, June 20, 2014 at 3:30 p.m. at the Beth lehem Lu theran C h u r c h . B u r i a l a t t h e Marysville Cemetery. Arrangements entrusted to Schaefer-Shipman Funeral Home, Marysville.

Marjorie Shively Mar jor ie Shive ly, 97, of Everett, died June 11, 2014. Marjorie Shively was born February 5, 1917 at Colman, S.D. She was a graduate of South Dakota State College. She taught In ternat iona l Morse code at schools in Russell and Clarkfield, Minn. where she met her future husband, Glen. They were m a r r i e d i n 1 9 4 5 . A f t e r moving to Everett in 1954 she taught at Everett and Cascade High Schools. Glen preceded her in death in 1989. She leaves three children, Gary (Annette) of Bothel l , Lynn (Jeannie) of Bellevue a n d G l e n d a ( B r o o k s ) Atchison of Snohomish, 10 g r a n d c h i l d r e n a n d e i g h t great grandchildren. A memorial service will be held on Saturday, June 21, 2014 at 11:00 a.m. at Our Savior’s Luthern Church 215 Mukilteo Blvd, Everett. Our special thanks to her a d u l t f a m i l y h o m e caretakers and Providence Hospice. Donations in lieu of flowers to Providence Hospice.

Obituaries continued from Page A7

Page 9: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

The Daily Herald Wednesday, 06.18.2014 A9

James Michael Caesar

James Michae l Caesar, 68, of Mil l Creek, born in Tampa, Florida, to Bud and Davida Caesar, passed away peacefully in his sleep near Waimea, Kauai. He dedicated his life to his f a m i l y a n d f r i e n d s a n d relished every moment he spent with them. He was an extremely active and fit man who enjoyed marathoning, backpack ing in the h igh C a s c a d e s , b i k i n g , w o o d w o r k i n g , h i s 1 9 6 7 Austin Healey and collecting and sampling fine wine. He loved jazz, classical music and opera, as well as rock and rol l . Recently he had begun to study Italian and art history. J i m i s s u r v i ve d by h i s beloved wife and best friend, Betsy; his three children and their spouses, Mona Caesar J o h n s o n ( B r y a n ) , J a m e s Michael Caesar, Jr. (Cheryl) and Matthew Joseph Caesar (Zoe) ; and grandchi ldren, L a u r e n a n d C a m e r o n J o h n s o n , C h a r l e s a n d Nicholas Caesar and Ronan a n d S o p h i a C a e s a r . I n addition to his parents, he is a l s o s u r v i v e d b y h i s c h e r i s h e d a u n t , V i r g i n i a Groh; and his brothers, Dan a n d D o u g C a e s a r ; a n d sister, Anita Kaplan. He ret i red f rom the US Army as a Lt Colonel . He served two tours in Viet Nam and was recognized for his s e r v i c e w i t h n u m e r o u s decorations, including the Si lver Star, Dist inguished Flying Cross and Bronze Star ( Va l o r ) m e d a l s a n d t h e C r o s s o f G a l l a n t r y . H e e a r n e d t h e C o m b a t Infantryman’s Badge and the Senior Army Aviation Badge. His name is inscribed on the m e m o r i a l w a l l a t T h e Smithsonian Museum for his cont r ibu t ions to mi l i ta r y aviation. Following his army retirement, he had a second career as a senior manager with Boeing. Burial will be at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia on June 23, 2014. The family will be hosting a c e l e b r a t i o n o f h i s l i f e September 14, 2014 at the Mi l l C reek Count r y C lub . Visit J im’s memorial blog: alohacougar36.blogspot.com for more information, also p l e a s e p o s t m e m o r i e s , photos there. In recognition of his love of the wilderness, the Caesar family requests f r i ends and fami l y p lan t trees in his memory.

JeanneFrances Kurtz Rice

Gilgan

Jeanne Gilgan, 93, of Ever- e t t , Wa s h d i e d M ay 2 3 , 2014. She was born Apri l 12, 1921 to Stanley Kurtz and Frances Baker Kurtz in Hazelton, N.D. Jeanne attended Hazelton High and graduated from Bismark School of Nursing as an R.N. She spent most of her career as a registered nurse working in hospitals and nursing homes. During WWII Jeanne taught in a one room schoolhouse. She had eight students for the school year. She met and married Earl Mor ton Rice in Sandusky, Ohio and later Max Gilgan in Reno, Nevada. Jeanne was a long t ime member of the Eastern Star in both Kansas and Wash- ington. She loved to read and garden, and do crafts of all kinds including crochet- ing, counted cross st i tch, sewing, and qui l t ing. She also painted and made doll houses, miniatures and ce- ramics . Jeanne especial ly liked to watch the birds.

“Her hands were never idle” Jeanne was preceded in death by both her husbands, Earl Rice and Max Gilgan; and her two brothers, Wayne and Howard Kurtz. She is survived by her chil- dren: Byron (Peggy) of Brew- ster, Wash., Barry of Sno- homish, Wash, Robin Rice Smith (Ron) of Ocean Park, Wash. , Gordon (C indy) of Muki l teo, Wash. ; brother, Phillip Kurtz of Steele, N.D. and sister Ellen Fransen of Hazelton.; seven grandchil- dren and seven and one - half great-grandchildren; and n u m e ro u s n i e c e s a n d nephews. A memorial service will be held on Sunday, June 22, 2014 at 2 p.m. at Purdy & Walters at Floral Hills. In lieu of flowers, please m a ke a d o n a t i o n to t h e charity of your own choosing.

Rosanna Marie O’Neill

Ro s a n n a M a r i e O ’ N e i l l passed away suddenly at home on June 13, 2014 at the age of 55. Rosanna was born January 21, 1959 in Heidelberg, Ger- many, wh i le her parents were stationed at Karlsruhe. She was raised in the Lake- wood/Steilacoom area and graduated from Lakes High School in 1977. Rosanna graduated from Western Washington Univer- sity in 1981 with a Bache- lor’s degree in Speech Pa- thology and Audiology. She then went onto graduate from the University of Wash- ington with a Master’s de- gree in the same field. Fol- l o w i n g g r a d u a t i o n s h e worked as a speech patholo- gist for a year in Burns Lake, Brit ish Columbia, then re- tu rned to Wash ing ton to work as a speech patholo- g is t at Mar y Br idge Chi l - dren’s Center in Tacoma and Federal Way, Wash. She received her Master’s degree in Business Adminis- tration from Pacific Lutheran University and proceeded to make a career change, be- coming a pharmaceut ical sales rep for Parke Davis. After several years, Rosanna changed careers again, this t ime becoming a f inancial advisor at Merrill Lynch, then Dean Wit ter, and Morgan Stanley in Tacoma. Rosanna was employed by Morgan Stanley at their Olympia of- fice at the time of her death. Rosanna was preceded in d e a t h by h e r f a t h e r, Clement. She is survived by her sig- n i f icant other, Col in Win- dows; her mother, Christine and stepfather, Harvey Con- rad of Tacoma; brothers, Michael (Debbie) of River- side, Calif., and Steven of Seattle, Wash.; sister, Mary o f L a ke S teve n s , Wa s h ; step-sister, Susan (Grant) Zenkner of Puyallup, Wash.; step-brother, Bill Conrad of Tacoma; niece, Erin; step- nephews, Zeb and Alber t; step-nieces, Anna, Lindsay, Alysse, and Jill; as well as several step-grandchildren. Serv ices wi l l be held at 10:30 a.m. on Sunday, June 22, 2014 at St. Joseph - St. J o h n E p i s c o p a l C h u r c h , 11111 Military Rd SW, Lake- w o o d , W a s h . 9 8 4 9 8 . Rosanna will be laid to rest at New Tacoma Cemetery in University Place. In l ieu of f lowers, dona- t ions may be made to the Universi ty of Washington, Mary Bridge, or the Boys and Girls Clubs. V i s i t t h e g u e s t b o o k a t www.newtacoma.com.

Margot Martin Webb

Margot Webb of Quincy, Wash., passed away on May 25, 2014. She was born on D e c e m b e r 2 6 , 1 9 3 6 i n Detroit, Mich. to James and Patricia Martin. She was preceded in death by her husband, Don; and brother, Alexander (Sandy) Martin. She is survived by her four c h i l d r e n , s o n s , J a m e s (Cher yl ) of Ar l ington, and Thomas (Denise) of Lake Stevens; daughters, Lynette Couls of Marysville, Nancy Caton of East Wenatchee; 10 grandchildren, six great g r a n d c h i l d r e n , a n d n u m e r o u s n i e c e s a n d nephews. A f t e r g r a d u a t i n g f r o m Bel l f lower High School in Los Angeles, Calif., Margot met and married the love of h e r l i f e , D o n a n d s o o n started a family. They moved to Washington and settled in s o u t h E ve r e t t w i t h fo u r children. Margot worked as a checker at Safeway and later for Boeing. After retiring Don and Margot traveled in t h e i r m o t o r h o m e a n d settled in Crescent Bar until Don passed in 2006. She l ove d b e i n g a ro u n d h e r family and her dog Daisy. Margot a lways welcomed anyone who would stop by with a smile. A service wil l be held at Beaver Creek Cemetery in Twisp, Wash., on July 12, 2014 at 12:00 p.m. J o i n u s a f te r wa rd s fo r cookies and refreshments at the Twisp Senior Center.

Martha F. Keefe A celebration of life will be held June 22, 2014 from Noon to 4 p.m. at Everett Eagles, 1216 Broadway Ave, Everett, Wash. Come join us for food and memories.

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James W. Oak

J a m e s W . O a k 91 , o f Marysvi l le, Wash., passed away June 14, 2014. He was born on December 26, 1922 in Munising, Mich. A private family graveside will be held at Cypress Lawn Memoria l Park on Fr iday, June 20, 2014. A memorial service will be held Friday, July 25, 2014 1:00 p.m. at P u rd y a n d Wa l te r s w i t h Cassidy, 1702 Pacific Ave., Everett.

Albert Stutzke A l b e r t L o u i s “ S m o key ” S tu t zke passed away on June 10, 2014 in Bellevue, Washington at 89 years old. Al was born to Alber t Sr. and Mary Stutzke on April 28, 1925 in Chicago, I l l i - nois. He was a child protégé playing violin at an early age. His moniker was “Fiddling Al your musical pal”. He was inducted into the N a v y i n J u l y 1 9 4 3 a n d served during WWII on the USS General M.L. Hersey. Af ter being honorably dis- charged from the Navy as a pharmacist mate, he attend- ed Cornish Institute of the Ar ts in Seattle, Wash. and had a long musical career, playing 22 different instru- ments. He was known for his fiddle tricks including imi- tating bag pipes, bird calls and harmonica. He played with lightning speed which sometimes made the rosin on his bow smoke which is how he got his nick name, Smokey Stutz. He played in many Seattle area stage shows with such legends including George Jones, Bob Wi l ls , Waylon Jennings S l ims Whi tman, Mar ty Robb ins and even Gene Autr y. He played in many Seattle area country western bands most notably with the POWS, the Pioneers of Western Swing. He was inducted into the Western Swing Society’s Hall of fame in 1998. I t was hard won honor for him of which he was very proud. Al was also a member of the Musicians Association of Seattle Local 76-493 A . F. of M. and a prior member of Teamsters local Union #117. Alber t is survived by his daughters , Laureen Kaye W h i t e a n d A n i t a C l a r e Stutzke; and many grandchil- dren and great grandchi l - dren. He was preceded in death by h i s daughte r, Sharon Louise Becker, his first wife, Eleanor Ruth Stetler and his second w i fe , Franc is Stutzke. A funeral service wil l be held on June 19, 2014 at 1:00 p.m. at Harper-Ridge- view Funeral Chapel located at 105 W. 4th St. Port An- geles, Wash. In lieu of flowers, please send any remembrances to t h e N o r t h w e s t W e s t e r n Swing Music Society, PO Box 14003 Mil l Creek. Wash., 98082

In Loving MemoryTommy Evans

We have so many wonder- ful memories, but we wish we still had you. We love and miss you so much.

Your Family

Mary Ellen Egge Brothers

Mary Ellen Egge Brothers passed away peacefully at home June 5, 2014. She was born to John D. Seager and Ruth Car lson Seager on April 27, 1921, in a maternity home located on V i r g i n i a . S h e a t t e n d e d Wa s h i n g to n E l e m e n t a r y, North Junior Middle School and graduated from Everett High School class of 1939. Mar y E l l en s ta r ted he r career with Everett Trust and S a v i n g s B a n k i n 1 9 4 2 work ing in many var ious pos i t i ons . I n 1971 Mar y Ellen became one of the first women to manage an al l - w o m a n b a n k b r a n c h i n E v e r e t t a n d S n o h o m i s h County. During her 70 years of banking she had various positions. During her first 50 years she only missed two days of work. She finished her career at Columbia Bank at the age of 93 and is well known as the Cookie lady, in which she truly enjoyed. M a r y E l l e n w a s v e r y involved in her community. S h e w a s a m e m b e r o f Soroptismist Intl., Chamber o f C o m m e r c e , B e t h a n y Home, Everett Senior Center Advisory Board, United Way and Zonta. Mary El len attended the F i rst Covenant Church of Everett since she was four years old. Many times she r e m e m b e r e d h e r b e r e t sa i l ing down the a is le to everyone’s distraction. She married Lloyd Egge on August 1, 1952 and was married for 50 years. After Lloyd’s passing in November she married Jerry Brothers on August 7, 2004. She was preceded in death b y h e r b r o t h e r s , B y r o n Seager, Jack Seager; and s i s t e r - i n - l a w , G r e t c h e n Seager. Mary Ellen loved to travel. She and Lloyd took many t r i p s t o P e o r i a f o r t h e Mariners Spr ing Training, and several other states. Their travels included visiting many European countries, A s i a , Au s t r a l i a a n d N ew Zealand in which she loved. S h e i s s u r v i v e d b y numerous nieces, nephews, cous i ns a nd m a ny ma ny friends. Mary Ellen loved her friends and cherished each and every one. She LOVED life, her motto for life is to have fun. A memorial for Mary Ellen wi l l be held on Saturday, June 21, 2014 at 2:00 p.m. at F i rst Covenant Church 4502 Rucker Ave. I n l i e u o f f l o w e r s , memorials can be made to H o s p i c e o f S n o h o m i s h County or the First Covenant Church of Everett.

Jeanne James J e a n n e J a m e s , 6 6 o f Tulalip, Wash., passed away June 15, 2014. V i s i t a t i o n w i l l b e h e l d Wednesday, June 18, 2014 at 3:00 p.m. at Schaefer- Shipman with an Interfaith service following at 6 p.m. at t h e Tu l a l i p Tr i b a l G y m . Service on Thursday, June 19, 2014 at 10 a.m. at the Tu l a l i p G y m w i t h b u r i a l following at Mission Beach Cemetery.

David A. Gordon David Andrew Gordon, 45, passed away suddenly on Sunday, June 8, 2014, he was born in Everett on Feb- ruary 18, 1969. Dave was a very kind, com- passionate, big hearted per- son and loved his children, fa m i l y, a n d f r i e n d s ve r y much. He loved to sail on Puget Sound and loved Seat- t le. Telephony was his ca- reer, starting at GTE/Verizon when he was 19, and held many pos i t i ons over the years. Dave was still working for Frontier Communications when he passed for a total of 26 years. David is survived by his lov- ing children, Courtney Gor- don, and Samuel Gordon, also father, Stuar t Andrew G o r d o n ( Ly n n ) , m o t h e r, Christie Bailey (Curt); grand- mother, Edith Palo; brothers and sisters, Chad Gordon ( To s h a ) , A n d r e a W a u d (Chris), Sara Gordon, Brett Bailey (Karli) and Jennifer Bailey-Files (Joe); and many nieces and nephews that he dearly loved. Also his uncle Ross (Mary) Gordon, aunts, Margaret Tveraa, Theresa Stribling (Sandy), Linda Palo Waggoner (Mark); along with many loving cousins. Dav id was p receded in death by his grandparents, Clarence and Doreen Gor- don , W i l l i am (B i l l ) Pa lo , Dave’s Grammie Kate Hartz, his uncle, Scott Palo; broth- er, Justin Bailey, and step mother, Jane Gordon. Services in celebration of Dave’s l i fe wi l l be at the 9 2 n d S t r e e t C h u r c h o f Christ, 4226 92nd St NE, Marysville 98270 at 11:00 on Saturday June 21, 2014. Attendees are encouraged to s h a r e t h e i r s to r i e s a n d memories of Dave during the service. Coffee and cookies will be served following the service at the church.

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Page 10: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

Nation & WorldA10 | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM | WEDNESDAY, 06.18.2014

ACROSS THE U.S.

AROUND THE WORLD

By Donna Cassata and Bradley Klapper

Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The prospect of the U.S. military returning to the fight in Iraq has turned congressional hawks into doves.

Lawmakers who eagerly voted to authorize military force 12 years ago to oust Sad-dam Hussein and destroy weapons of mass destruction that were never found now har-bor doubts that air strikes will turn back insurgents threat-ening Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s government.

Fears of Mideast quagmire and weariness after a decade of conflict in Iraq and Afghani-stan loom large for even those who talk tough on national security. More than 6,000 Americans died in those wars, which cost a trillion dollars.

There is little unanimity in Congress on what the United

States should do despite some Republican voices — most notably Sen. John McCain — loudly calling for air strikes and stepped-up military action. The sectarian violence between the pro-government Shiites and Sunnis adds to con-gressional uncertainty.

Obama will discuss the situ-ation in Iraq with House and Senate leaders of both parties at the White House today. State Department and Pentagon officials will hold closed-doors briefings with lawmakers over the next couple of days.

“Where will it lead and will that be the beginning or the end?” Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., said, when asked about air strikes. “We don’t know that. This underlying conflict has been going on 1,500 years between the Shias and the Sunnis and their allies. And I think whatever we do, it’s not going to go away.”

Shelby was one of the 77

Senate Republicans and Democrats who voted to give President George W. Bush the authority to wage war. Casting the strong bipartisan vote on Oct. 11, 2002, were Democratic Sens. Joe Biden of Delaware, Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York and Harry Reid of Nevada.

“After a decade of war, we’ve all had enough,” said Reid, the Senate majority leader.

“It was one of the worst votes I ever cast,” added Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, another who voted yes. Asked about what the vote means as the U.S. pon-ders intervention anew, Harkin said: “It is weighing heavily on my mind.”

Senators from both parties appeared almost unanimous in their view that al-Maliki should leave power, even as many called for assistance to his government in battling the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant insurgency.

ISIL has conquered several

cities in Syria and Iraq. The administration is sending almost 300 American forces in and around Iraq to help secure U.S. assets.

“I support almost anything that would curtail” ISIL, said Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah. “That’s a very dangerous situation.”

McCain said not many forces would be needed for an effec-tive operation in Iraq.

“That would be a handful of probably special forces, for-ward air controller people,” he said, expressing frustration that the administration hasn’t done more.

The Senate’s top Republican, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, said Obama must offer a strat-egy and act quickly to provide the Iraqi government with assistance before “every gain made by the U.S. and allied troops is lost.”

He didn’t outline a specific course of action.

Prospect of Iraq fight turns hawks into doves

By Hamza HendawiAssociated Press

BAGHDAD — Nearly four dozen Sunni detainees were gunned down at a jail north of Baghdad, a car bomb struck a Shiite neighborhood of the capital and four young Sunnis were found slain, as ominous signs emerged Tuesday that open warfare between the two main Muslim sects has returned to Iraq.

The killings, following the capture by Sunni insurgents of a large swath of the country stretching to Syria, were the first hints of the beginnings of a return to sectarian bloodletting that nearly tore the country apart in 2006 and 2007.

During the United States’ eight-year presence in Iraq, American forces acted as a buf-fer between the two Islamic sects, albeit with limited suc-cess. The U.S. military is now being pulled back in — with a far more limited mission and far fewer troops, as President Barack Obama nears a decision on an array of options for com-bating the Islamic militants.

In the latest sect-on-sect violence, at least 44 Sunni detainees were slaughtered by gun shots to the head and chest by pro-government Shiite mili-tiamen after Sunni insurgents tried to storm the jail near Baqouba, northeast of Bagh-dad, police said.

The Iraqi military put the death toll at 52, and insisted the Sunni inmates were killed by mortar shells in the attack late Monday on the facility.

In Baghdad, the

bullet-riddled bodies of four men, presumably Sunnis, were found Tuesday in the Shiite neighborhood of Ben-ouk, according to police and morgue officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not autho-rized to talk with the media.

Also Tuesday, a car bomb in Baghdad’s Shiite Sadr City district killed 12 people and wounded 30 in a crowded outdoor market, police and hospital officials said. No one claimed responsibility for the bombing, but attacks targeting Shiite districts are routinely the work of Sunni militants.

Obama has said he would not commit the U.S. to mili-tary action in Iraq unless the

government in Baghdad moves to “set aside sectarian differ-ences, to promote stability, and account for the legitimate interests of all of Iraq’s commu-nities.” In the absence of that type of political effort, Obama has said any American military action would not succeed.

Late Tuesday, Iraq’s Shi-ite, Sunni and Kurdish leaders issued a joint statement stress-ing the importance of setting “national priorities” that adhere to democratic mecha-nisms in resolving divisions and condemning sectarian rhetoric.

A U.N. commission, mean-while, warned Tuesday that “a regional war in the Middle East draws ever closer” as Sunni

insurgents advance across Iraq. It said Iraq’s turmoil will have “violent repercussions,” most dangerously the rise of sectarian violence as “a direct consequence of the domi-nance of extremist groups.”

In a move certain to exac-erbate regional Shiite-Sunni tensions, the Iraqi govern-ment made a scathing attack on Saudi Arabia, accusing the Arab world’s Sunni power-house of meddling in its affairs and acquiescing to terrorism.

The harsh words came in response to a Saudi Cabinet statement blaming what it called “the sec-tarian and exclusionist policies in Iraq in recent years” for the latest violence.

Reprisal killings emerge in Iraq

By Lolita C. Baldor and Nancy Benac

Associated Press

WASHINGTON— U.S. spe-cial forces seized a “key leader” of the deadly Benghazi, Libya, attack and he is on his way to face trial in the U.S. for the fiery assault that killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans, the Obama admin-istration said Tuesday. It was the first breakthrough in the sudden overseas violence in 2012 that has become a fester-ing political sore at home.

President Barack Obama said the capture Sunday of Ahmed Abu Khattala sends a clear message to the world that “when Americans are attacked, no matter how long it takes, we will find those responsible and we will bring them to justice.”

Administration officials said Tuesday that U.S. mili-tary special forces nabbed Abu Khattala.

U.S. officials said Abu Khat-tala was being held on the Navy amphibious transport dock ship USS New York, which was in the Mediterranean Sea. The officials spoke only on condi-tion of anonymity because they

weren’t authorized to discuss Abu Khattala’s whereabouts.

The Libyan was the com-mander of a militant group called the Abu Obaida bin Jar-rah Brigade and is accused of being a senior leader of the Benghazi branch of Ansar al-Shariah in Libya, which the U.S. has designated a terror group.

On Capitol Hill, Republicans urged the administration to get as much intelligence out of Abu Khattala as possible before anyone reads him his rights to remain silent, supplies him with a lawyer and prepares him for trial in a U.S. courtroom.

Sen. Saxby Chambliss of Geor-gia, top Republican on the Intelligence Committee, said interrogation already was underway and “we hope to find out some positive things.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said: “We should have some quality time with this guy— weeks and months. Don’t torture him; have some quality time with him.”

Justice Department spokes-man Marc Raimondi declined to comment on whether Abu Khatalla had been read his “Miranda rights” or when that might happen.

Abu Khattala is charged in U.S. District Court in Wash-ington and will be tried like a civilian, the administration said. According to a criminal complaint unsealed Tuesday, Abu Khattala is charged with killing a person in the course of an attack on a federal facil-ity and conspiring to do so; providing, attempting and conspiring to provide mate-rial support to terrorists that resulted in death, and dis-charging, brandishing, using, carrying and possessing a fire-arm during a crime of violence. Officials said he could face the death penalty if convicted of the first charge.

The Sept. 11, 2012, attack in Benghazi, killed U.S. Ambas-sador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.

With the presidential elec-tion near, Republicans accused the White House of inten-tionally misleading voters, portraying the attack as a pro-tests over an anti-Muslim video made in America instead of a calculated terrorist attack on the president’s watch.

Obama accused the Repub-licans of politicizing a national tragedy.

Benghazi attack suspect in U.S. custody

ASSOCIATED PRESSFBI Director James Comey, backed by law enforcement personnel and prosecutors, discusses the capture of Ahmed Abu Khattala Tuesday at the FBI Minneapolis field office in Brooklyn Center, Minn.

ASSOCIATED PRESSVolunteers train at military base in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, 100 miles south of Baghdad, on Tuesday after authorities urged Iraqis to help battle Sunni insurgents.

WASHINGTON — The Internal Rev-enue Service has lost more emails connected to the tea party investiga-tion, congressional investigators said Tuesday.

The IRS said Friday it had lost an untold number of emails when Lois Lerner’s computer crashed in 2011. Lerner used to head the division that handles applications for tax-exempt status. On Tuesday, two key lawmakers said the IRS has also lost emails from six additional IRS workers, among them was Nikole Flax, who was chief of staff to Lerner’s boss, then-deputy commis-sioner Steven Miller.

Miller later became acting IRS com-missioner, but was forced to resign last year after the agency acknowledged that agents had improperly scrutinized conservative groups when they applied for tax-exempt status.

U.S. arms ban for VietnamPresident Barack Obama’s nominee

to become the next U.S. ambassador to Vietnam said Tuesday it may be time to consider lifting a ban on the sale and transfer of lethal weapons to the former American enemy. Ted Osius told his Senate confirmation hearing that the U.S. has made clear to Vietnam that the ban can’t be lifted without significant progress on human rights. But he said there has been progress in three or four of the nine areas where the U.S. is look-ing for improvements.

N.J.: Nanny rescues childAuthorities said a nanny climbed

into a 15-foot-deep septic hole and res-cued a 3-year-old neighbor who was up to her neck in water. Luz Jimenez was at the Hackettstown home where she works when she heard Alison Machigua screaming around 5:30 p.m. Monday. Authorities say the child had walked into the yard and fell through the grass-covered hole. Jimenez grabbed a rope and entered the hole, which was about a foot across. She grabbed the child, who was holding onto a metal object near the bottom of the hole. They got out after firefighters arrived and put a ladder into the hole.

N.M.: Navajo wildfireA fast-moving wildfire near the Ari-

zona-New Mexico border grew Tuesday as it approached two communities and threatened traditional grazing lands on the Navajo Nation, where sheep are a staple of life. The Assayii Lake Fire bal-looned to more than 19 square miles in less than two days across winter and summer grazing lands in the Chuska Mountains. The flames destroyed at least four structures and threatened about 50 homes near the rural commu-nities of Naschitti and Sheep Springs.

IRS lost more emails in tea party probe

U.N.: 30 million lack schoolAbout 30 million primary school-

aged children in sub-Saharan Africa are not in class, partially because of conflict and poverty, and progress to get them back to school has stalled, two U.N. agencies said. The situation is especially dire in West and Central Africa, which has the largest proportion of children out of school of any region in the world, said a pair of reports published Monday by UNICEF, the U.N. children’s agency, and the statistics arm of UNESCO, the U.N. cultural and education agency.

Nigeria: Suicide blastA suicide bomber detonated a tri-

cycle taxi packed with explosives at an outdoor World Cup viewing center in the northeast city of Damaturu on Tues-day night. Witnesses said several people were killed. Hospital workers said the death likely will rise with 15 people critically wounded and casualties still coming in. There was no immediate claim for the blast witnesses were blam-ing on Boko Haram fighters who have targeted football viewing centers and sports bars in the past. Two explosions in recent weeks killed at least 40 people in two northern cities.

Liberia: More Ebola deathsSeven people believed to have the

Ebola virus have died in recent days in the first deaths reported in Monrovia, the capital, since the outbreak began. Deputy Health Minister Tolbert Nyen-swah said Tuesday that brings to 16 the number of people believed to have died from the virus in the country.

From Herald news services

Page 11: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

BRIEFLY

Amazon . . . 325 .62 -2 .00Boeing . . . . 132 .45 -0 .09Costco . . . . 115 .45 0 .02Crane . . . . . 73 .13 -0 .24FrontierCom . 5 .70 0 .01HeritageFin 16 .26 0 .02Microsoft . . . 41 .68 0 .18Nordstrom . . 67 .80 -0 .06Starbucks . . 75 .31 0 .22WshFederal 22 .83 0 .06Zumiez . . . . . 27 .86 -0 .35

Market report, A12

BusinessA11 | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM/BUSINESS | WEDNESDAY, 06.18.2014

biz

bits Events

Sponge, a children’s language school, invites families with children up to age 6 to celebrate the summer solstice from 12 to 2 p.m. Saturday at Playdate Café in Lynnwood. Festivities will include music, dancing and Spanish and Mandarin mini-classes. RSVP to events@

spongeschool.com or call 206-227-7138.

The Master Builders Associa-tion of King & Snohomish Counties hosts the 2014 Hous-ing Summit from 7:30 to 11:30 a.m. Sept. 23 at Meydenbauer Convention Center in Bellevue. The event is free. Early reserva-tions are suggested and can be

made online at www.Master-BuildersInfo.com or by calling 425-451-7920.Kudos

The Everett Clinic has earned a Well Workplace Award for its employee wellness program from the Wellness Councils of America. The clinic earned 177.68 points out of a pos-

sible 180 for its CEO support, wellness teams, data, planning, interventions, supportive envi-ronment and outcomes.

Biz Bits runs Monday through Saturday. Send your business news and high-resolution photos to [email protected]. We post the complete list online every Monday at HeraldNet.com/bizblog.

TORONTO — Canada’s gov-ernment Tuesday approved a controversial proposed pipe-line to the Pacific Coast that would allow oil to be shipped to Asia.

Enbridge’s Northern Gate-way project, along with the controversial Keystone XL pipeline, is critical to Canada, which needs infrastructure in place to export its grow-ing oil sands production. The northern Alberta region has the world’s third largest oil reserves, with 170 billion bar-rels of proven reserves.

The approval was expected but whether the Northern Gateway pipeline ever gets built remains in question as there is fierce aboriginal and environmental opposition in British Columbia and court challenges are expected.

Popeyes buys recipesThe Atlanta-based company

that franchises Popeyes fried chicken restaurants has pur-chased the recipes for many of its dishes for $43 million from a Louisiana-based sea-soning company owned by the estate of Popeyes’ founder. Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen Inc. said the deal eliminates the $3.1 million annual royalty the company was scheduled to pay Diversified Foods and Seasonings until 2029.

Dr. Oz gets scoldingUnder pressure from Con-

gress, celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz on Tuesday offered to help “drain the swamp” of unscru-pulous marketers using his name to peddle so-called miracle pills and cure-alls to millions of Americans des-perate to lose weight. Oz appeared before the Senate’s consumer protection panel and was scolded by Chairman Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., for claims he made about weight-loss aids on his TV show, “The Dr. Oz Show.” Oz agreed that there’s no long-term miracle pill out there without diet and exercise.

China, U.K. sign dealsChinese premier Li Keq-

iang oversaw Tuesday the signing of trade deals with Britain during an official visit marked with pomp and cer-emony. Prime Minister David Cameron announced busi-ness deals worth $23.7 billion, saying Britain is a “strong and good friend of China and supporter of China’s rise.” One of the deals signed was between British energy company BP and Chinese state-owned oil company CNOOC to supply China with liquefied natural gas over 20 years.

GM used-car values, sales holding up

Consumers looking for a used vehicle aren’t shying away from GM models— even though more than 20 million GM cars and trucks have been recalled this year. GM cars such as the Chevrolet Malibu have retained or increased in value, sometimes more than rival vehicles. And sales of new cars aren’t slowing either, up 13 percent in May.

From Herald news services

Canada OKs oil pipeline to Pacific Coast

By Mae Anderson and Ryan Nakashima

Associated Press

NEW YORK — Amazon, a com-pany of seemingly boundless ambition, appears to be ven-turing into yet another market: smartphones.

The corporate juggernaut that started out with books and soon moved into music, video, cloud computing and Kindle e-readers is hosting a launch event today in Seattle, and media reports

indicate the product will be an Amazon phone — perhaps one with multiple cameras that can produce 3-D photos.

Amazon declined to com-ment, but analysts said the goal is almost certainly a device designed to get customers to buy more things from Amazon. It might include an Amazon shop-ping app or other features tied in tightly to the products the com-pany sells.

“It’s Amazon. That says to me the core value proposition is

going to be about shopping,” said Ramon Llamas of the research firm International Data Corp.

Amazon’s phone comes at a time when the nation’s larg-est e-commerce company is at a crossroads.

Its stock, which surged for years despite narrow profits, has dropped 18 percent in 2014 to about $326, in part because inves-tors have been losing patience with its habit of plowing revenue back into new ventures.

Analysts said the move into

smartphones is a bit of a head-scratcher, since the company is a late entrant into the highly com-petitive market. Amazon will be hard-pressed to compete with Samsung and Apple, the No. 1 and 2 mobile phone companies in the world.

Globally, Samsung led mobile phone manufacturers with 31 percent of the 288 million units shipped in the first quarter, fol-lowed by Apple at 15 percent.

Amazon ready to debut smartphone

By Jim KuhnhennAssociated Press

PITTSBURGH — Surrounded by an array of gadgets and high tech equipment, President Barack Obama pledged to boost American manufacturing and to give entrepreneurs greater access to production tools that would help bring their ideas to fruition.

Obama visited this vener-able steel manufacturing city to showcase a workshop chain called TechShop, a variation on a tool lending library that pro-vides high-end instruments to hobbyists, tinkerers and start-up businesses to help them realize their innovations. The tour was designed to draw attention to Obama’s own plan to make more government technology and assets available to the private sector.

“I can’t rent the space shut-tle out to you,” he joked. “But there are areas where we can in fact enhance what is already being done by companies like TechShop.”

To maintain the U.S. edge in innovation, Obama said, “we’ve got to have basic research, we’ve got to have skills like math and science and engineering that that are developed, we also have to provide platforms for people who have these ideas to go out there and actually make stuff.”

From Pittsburgh, Obama flew to New York City for a gala lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender fundraiser for the Democratic National Committee. The fundraiser comes a day after

the White House said Obama will sign an executive order pro-hibiting federal contractors from discriminating against employ-ees on the basis of their sexual orientation or gender identity.

The trip combines important election-year tasks for Obama — maintaining a focus on the economy, raising money and nurturing an important Demo-cratic voting and donor bloc.

The Pittsburgh visit is part of

Obama’s renewed emphasis on how to create jobs and improve wages. During the next several weeks Obama is looking to cut through the current foreign pol-icy flare-ups with an emphasis on working families, manufac-turing, wages and the need for greater spending on infrastruc-ture projects.

That attention could be crucial

Re-making manufacturing

ASSOCIATED PRESSPresident Barack Obama shows his iPad case as an example of a product made by a small start-up company, while answering questions Tuesday during a tour of Bakery Square’s TechShop in Pittsburgh.

By Ricardo Alonso-ZaldivarAssociated Press

WASHINGTON — Your money or your life?

Sovaldi, a new pill for hepatitis C, cures the liver-wasting disease in 9 of 10 patients, but treatment can cost more than $90,000.

Leading medical societies recommend the drug as a first-line treatment, and patients are clamoring for it. But insur-ance companies and state Medicaid programs are gagging on the price. In Oregon, officials propose to limit how many low-income patients can get Sovaldi.

Yet if Sovaldi didn’t exist, insur-ers would still be paying in the mid-to-high five figures to treat the most common kind of hep-atitis C, a new pricing survey indicates. Some of the older alter-natives involve more side effects, and are less likely to provide cures.

So what’s a fair price?The cost of this breakthrough

drug is highlighting cracks in the U.S. health care system at a time of heightened budget concerns. The Obama administration has a huge political stake in control-ling treatment costs, but its critics may cry rationing.

“People are going to want to try to dodge this hot potato,” says economist Douglas Holtz-Eakin.

For insurers, there’s a frustrat-ing twist: For each middle-aged person they pay to cure with Sovaldi, any financial benefits from preventing liver failure are likely to accrue to Medicare, not to them.

More than 3 million Ameri-cans carry the hepatitis C virus, and many don’t realize it. It’s a public health concern since the disease can be transmitted by contact with infected blood, and

The steep price for a hep C cure

The Hepatitis-C medication Sovaldi.

See AMAZON, Page A12

By Raphael Satter and Frank Jordans

Associated Press

BERLIN — A cheap brand of Chinese-made smartphones carried by major online retail-ers comes preinstalled with espionage software, a German security firm said Tuesday.

G Data Software said it found malicious code hidden deep in the propriety soft-ware of the Star N9500 when it ordered the handset from a website late last month. The find is the latest in a series of incidents where smartphones have appeared preloaded with malicious software.

G Data spokesman Thorsten Urbanski said his firm bought the phone after getting com-plaints about it from several customers. He said his team spent more than a week trying to trace the handset’s maker without success.

“The manufacturer is not mentioned,” he said. “Not in the phone, not in the docu-mentation, nothing else.”

The Associated Press found the phone for sale on sev-eral major retail websites, offered by an array of com-panies listed in Shenzhen, in southern China. It could not immediately find a reference to the phone’s manufacturer.

G Data said the spyware it found on the N9500 could allow a hacker to steal per-sonal data, place rogue calls, or turn on the phone’s camera and microphone. G Data said the stolen information was sent to a server in China.

Chinese phone carries spyware

President Barack Obama pledges to maintain U.S. edge in innovation and offers entrepreneurs easier access to more than 700 research and development facilities, including at NASA and the Energy Department.

See OBAMA, Page A12

See CURE, Page A12

Page 12: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

AlaskaAir ALK +29.4 50.31 100.98 1.00 94.94 +1.53Amazon AMZN -18.3 265.00 408.06 ... 325.62 -2.00Avista AVA +11.4 25.55 32.94 1.27 31.40 +.07BallardPw BLDP +135.0 1.25 8.38 ... 3.56 +.26BarrettB BBSI -49.6 41.96 102.20 .72 46.75 -.06Boeing BA -3.0 96.31 144.57 2.92 132.45 -.09ColBnkg COLB -3.9 21.77 30.36 .48a 26.41 +.33ColSprtw COLM +7.0 55.58 89.96 1.12 84.30 +1.05ConcurTch CNQR -9.1 74.43 130.39 ... 93.77 +1.05ConocoPhil COP +18.5 58.71 83.83 2.76 83.75 +.06Costco COST -3.0 107.38 126.12 1.42f 115.45 +.02CraftBrew BREW -36.3 7.56 18.70 ... 10.47 -.12Cray Inc CRAY -3.3 19.21 42.09 ... 26.55 +.95Data IO DAIO +7.0 1.76 3.48 ... 2.75 +.10ElectSci ESIO -31.6 6.43 12.80 .32 7.15 +.23Esterline ESL +15.7 69.16 118.48 ... 117.98 +2.09ExpdIntl EXPD +.2 36.45 46.90 .64f 44.34 -.25FEI Co FEIC -1.1 71.04 111.57 1.00f 88.42 +.19FLIR Sys FLIR +19.2 24.54 37.42 .40 35.89 +.27HrtgeFn HFWA -4.9 13.66 18.64 .32a 16.26 +.02Idacorp IDA +6.7 45.62 56.65 1.72 55.31 +.40Itron ITRI -1.2 32.30 46.09 ... 40.92 +1.26KeyTech KTEC -17.9 10.75 15.50 ... 11.77 +.20KeyTrn KTCC -2.2 9.60 12.19 ... 10.78 ...Lattice LSCC +51.4 4.17 9.19 ... 8.31 +.23LithiaMot LAD +27.7 48.18 88.62 .64f 88.68 +2.15LaPac LPX -19.3 13.73 18.96 ... 14.93 +.27MentorGr MENT -10.8 18.80 24.31 .20 21.48 +.49MicronT MU +48.3 12.31 32.19 ... 32.25 +.34Microsoft MSFT +11.4 30.84 41.66 1.12 41.68 +.18Microvisn MVIS +62.9 1.03 3.38 ... 2.15 +.15Nautilus NLS +27.5 6.15 11.99 ... 10.75 -.13NikeB NKE -4.5 59.11 80.26 .96 75.09 +.54Nordstrm JWN +9.7 54.90 70.71 1.32 67.80 -.06NwstNG NWN +6.2 39.96 46.19 1.84 45.49 +.09NwstPipe NWPX +1.9 26.02 39.62 ... 38.46 +.74Outerwall OUTR -2.9 46.25 74.30 ... 65.31 +1.19Paccar PCAR +7.4 51.13 68.81 .88f 63.52 +.19Penford PENX -8.6 10.82 15.98 ... 11.75 +.22PlumCrk PCL -5.1 40.57 50.08 1.76 44.13 +.18PopeRes POPE -.7 60.07 73.07 2.60f 66.52 +.67PrecCastpt PCP -1.4 207.47 275.09 .12 265.49 +.69RadiSys RSYS +38.0 2.02 5.11 ... 3.16 -.09RealNetwk RNWK +2.4 6.83 8.95 ... 7.73 ...Rntrak RENT +33.7 19.77 69.00 ... 50.66 +1.54SareptaTh SRPT +61.6 12.12 55.61 ... 32.91 +.16SeattGen SGEN -1.5 28.15 55.99 ... 39.29 -1.16Starbucks SBUX -3.9 63.18 82.50 1.04 75.31 +.22TTM Tch TTMI -5.8 7.24 10.91 ... 8.08 +.15TmbrlndBc TSBK +8.4 8.05 11.83 .16 10.43 ...TriQuint TQNT +101.3 6.68 16.59 ... 16.79 +.38US Bancrp USB +6.8 34.85 43.66 .98f 43.13 +.38VerizonCm VZ +.1 45.08 51.94 2.12 49.21 -.10WashFed WAFD -2.0 17.08 24.53 .40 22.83 +.06Weyerhsr WY -2.0 26.38 32.00 .88 30.93 +.07Zumiez ZUMZ +7.2 20.68 31.31 ... 27.86 -.35

NORTHWEST STOCKSNAME TICKER YTD 52-WK LOW 52-WK HIGH DIV LAST CHANGE

Dow Jones Industrials 16,970.17 14,551.27 16,808.49 +27.48 +.16 +1.40 +9.73Dow Jones Transportation 8,256.79 5,952.18 8,056.30 +33.21 +.41 +8.86 +26.70NYSE Composite 11,334.65 8,814.76 10,886.01 +22.79 +.21 +4.67 +15.81Nasdaq Composite 4,371.71 3,294.95 4,337.23 +16.12 +.37 +3.85 +24.56S&P 500 1,955.55 1,560.33 1,941.99 +4.21 +.22 +5.07 +17.57S&P MidCap 1,419.86 1,114.04 1,414.74 +12.19 +.87 +5.38 +19.05Wilshire 5000 20,748.50 16,442.14 20,621.47 +65.66 +.32 +4.65 +18.37Russell 2000 1,212.82 942.79 1,176.62 +9.80 +.84 +1.12 +17.66

52-Week YTD 12-moName High Low Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg

MAJOR INDEXES

Gainers ($2 or more)

ForestOil 89562 2.30 +.29MS CrOil31 6 45.60 +5.60YingliGrn 208859 3.95 +.43Cheetah n 12768 23.64 +2.47AmiraNatF 22615 14.47 +1.46

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

Losers ($2 or more)

DmRsBW 4656 9.77 -1.22EKodk wtA 45 9.87 -1.05Castlight n 7233 16.01 -1.42LightInBox 5346 4.84 -.38ChicB&I 136049 68.26 -5.32

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

Most Active ($1 or more)

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

S&P500ETF 743474 194.83 +.54iShR2K 604865 116.97 +.82BkofAm 562109 15.59 +.31BostonSci 369674 12.60 -.32iSh7-10yTB 332279 102.38 -.43

NYSE

Gainers ($2 or more)

GigaTr h 162327 3.36 +.91QuantFu rs 33690 5.27 +.95Biolase 14883 2.25 +.37SolarCity 239411 64.53 +9.65AltairN hlf 1157 3.44 +.50

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

Losers ($2 or more)

EscaleraR 1312 2.69 -.40AthensBcsh 65 20.65 -2.80UniPixel 7702 7.53 -.85Inventergy 630 2.99 -.30AcordaTh 23149 32.12 -3.16

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

Most Active ($1 or more)

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

SiriusXM 535974 3.37 +.04Apple Inc s 289671 92.08 -.12Intel 281218 29.95 -.06Facebook 273303 64.40 +.21MicronT 249660 32.25 +.34

NASDAQ

Gainers ($2 or more)

TrnsEntx rs 4436 6.16 +.47NewConcEn 501 3.24 +.21WirelessT 823 2.45 +.15AmShrd 133 2.69 +.15StrPathC n 3163 9.98 +.53

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

Losers ($2 or more)

RingEngy 4029 17.40 -1.99GTT Comm 2197 9.81 -.85Daxor 278 6.50 -.45InspireMD 1500 3.00 -.18Innsuites 8 2.07 -.08

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

Most Active ($1 or more)

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

Globalstar 89712 4.10 ...NwGold g 38582 6.15 -.03TherapMD 34478 5.06 -.01VantageDrl 34023 1.86 +.05EmeraldO 21954 7.02 +.23

AMEX

GAINERS/LOSERS

Total Assets Return% MinimumName OBJ ($Mlns) 4-wk 12-mo 5-year Load investment

PIMCO Instl PIMS: TotRt IB 146,918 -0.3 +1.8 +35.5 NL 1,000,000Vanguard Idx Fds: TotStk XC 112,270 +3.5 +21.5 +141.5 NL 3,000Vanguard Admiral: 500Adml SP 96,254 +3.2 +20.9 +136.8 NL 10,000Vanguard Admiral: TStkAdm XC 94,028 +3.5 +21.6 +143.0 NL 10,000Vanguard Instl Fds: InstIdx SP 93,238 +3.2 +20.9 +136.9 NL 5,000,000Vanguard Instl Fds: InsPl SP 79,394 +3.2 +21.0 +137.1 NL 200,000,000Vanguard Instl Fds: TSInst XC 77,964 +3.5 +21.6 +143.0 NL 5,000,000Fidelity Invest: Contra LG 75,259 +3.7 +21.7 +131.7 NL 2,500American Funds A: IncoA p BL 71,745 +1.7 +15.0 +102.9 5.75 250American Funds A: GwthA p LG 71,528 +3.7 +23.3 +118.4 5.75 250American Funds A: CapIBA p BL 69,891 +1.4 +13.7 +80.6 5.75 250Dodge&Cox: IntlStk IL 60,803 +2.1 +24.7 +101.9 NL 2,500Vanguard Admiral: WelltnAdm BL 57,977 +1.8 +14.2 +93.8 NL 50,000American Funds A: CapWGA p GL 57,842 +1.7 +19.6 +96.8 5.75 250American Funds A: ICAA p LC 57,235 +2.9 +24.0 +118.1 5.75 250Dodge&Cox: Stock LV 56,698 +3.3 +24.8 +148.2 NL 2,500Frank/Temp Frnk A: IncomA p BL 54,882 +2.0 +16.2 +97.6 4.25 1,000American Funds A: WshA p LC 51,305 +2.8 +20.0 +132.7 5.75 250Vanguard Idx Fds: TotlIntl IL 49,691 +2.2 +17.1 +69.5 NL 3,000American Funds A: BalA p BL 44,580 +2.2 +14.5 +99.9 5.75 250Harbor Funds: Intl r IL 43,710 +1.5 +15.9 +92.1 NL 50,000American Funds A: FdInvA p LC 42,748 +3.2 +19.8 +122.4 5.75 250Fidelity Spart Adv: 500IdxAdv SP 40,935 +3.2 +20.9 +136.6 NL 10,000Vanguard Admiral: TtlBAdml IB 37,600 -0.3 +2.1 +26.0 NL 10,000Price Funds: Growth LG 37,556 +3.9 +24.7 +144.1 NL 2,500

25 BIGGEST MUTUAL FUNDS

G = Growth. GI = Growth & Income. SS = Single-state Muni. MP = Mixed Portfolio. GG = General US Govt. EI = Equity Income. SC = Small Co Growth. A = Cap Appreciation. IL = International. Total Return: Change in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Percent Load: Sales charge. Min Initial Investment: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. NA = Not avail. NE = Data in question. NS = Fund not in existence.

PrimeDiscountFederal FundsTreasury 3 monthTreasury 6 monthTreasury 5 yearTreasury 10 yearTreasury 30 yearLibor 3-month

INTEREST RATES 3.25 3.25 0.75 0.75 .00-.25 .00-.25 0.04 0.035 0.08 0.07 1.75 1.70 2.65 2.60 3.44 3.40 0.23 0.23

Last Previous

CURRENCY

Australia 1.0713 .9335Britain .5898 1.6955Canada 1.0869 .9200China 6.1533 .1625Denmark 5.5056 .1816Euro .7384 1.3543Hong Kong 7.7516 .1290India 60.332 .0166Indonesia 11923.00 .000084Israel 3.4594 .2891Japan 102.18 .009787Malaysia 3.2215 .3104Mexico 13.1085 .076286New Zealand 1.1562 .8649Norway 5.9998 .1667Philippines 43.88 .0228Russia 34.8360 .0287

U.S. dollar buys Foreign buys

COMMODITIESUnleaded gas (gal) 3.09 3.07Crude oil (bbl) 106.36 106.90Natural gas (mm btu) 4.71 4.71Heating oil (gal) 3.02 3.00Copper (lb) 3.06 3.05Gold (oz) 1271.70 1274.90Platinum (oz) 1443.10 1439.10Silver (oz) 19.72 19.70Cattle (lb) 1.47 1.47Coffee (lb) 1.69 1.73Orange juice (lb) 1.61 1.61Corn (bu) 4.39 4.41Cotton (lb) .90 .88Lumber (1,000 brd ft) 313.00 313.00Ethanol (gal) 2.14 2.16Soybeans (bu) 13.98 14.22Wheat (bu) 5.82 5.81

Last Previous

U.S. stocks ended slightly higher as investors bid up banks and other financial companies. News that U.S. consumer prices jumped sharply in May drove up long-term interest rates, setting the stage for the turnaround as investors bought E-Trade Financial, Charles Schwab, Goldman Sachs and other stocks.

On Tuesday, the Dow Jones indus-trial average rose 27.48 points, or 0.2 percent, to 16,808.49.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index gained 4.21, or 0.2 percent, to close at 1,941.99.

THE DAY ON WALL STREET

THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM | WEDNESDAY, 06.18.2014 | A12

Market Report Heraldnet.com/financials ■ Form your own portfolio ■ Stock updates throughout the day ■ The latest news on your favorite companies

— Associated Press

sometimes through sexual activity. Health officials advise all baby boomers to get tested.

The illness is complex, with distinct virus types requiring different treat-ments. While it progresses gradually, it can ultimately destroy the liver, and trans-plants average $577,000.

An estimated 15,000 peo-ple died from hepatitis C in the U.S. in 2007, when it surpassed AIDS as a cause of death.

“If it’s going to get me the medicine, I’ll put my hand out there with a tin cup,” said Stuart Rose, a hepa-titis C patient in New York City. His insurance would pay only $4,000 a year for medications, but Rose was able to get assistance from charitable foundations. He recently started taking Sovaldi.

Until the drug’s approval late last year, standard

treatment for the most common type of the dis-ease required daily pills and extended use of inter-feron, an injection that can produce debilitating flu-like symptoms.

Taken once a day for 12 weeks, Sovaldi greatly reduces the length of inter-feron treatment, making things more tolerable for patients. Now, many more people might want to try the cure.

A similar drug, Olysio, also approved last year, is priced a bit lower.

The nation’s largest care provider for chronic hepa-titis C, the federal Veterans Administration, sees prom-ise. With 175,000 patients, the VA has started more than 1,850 of them on Sovaldi.

“After 20 years in infec-tious diseases, I never thought we would be in a position to cure this dis-ease,” said Dr. David Ross, head of the VA’s program.

By law, the VA gets drug discounts of more than 40 percent. Will the agency break even by avoid-ing the disease’s worst complications?

Not necessarily, said Ross. “If it leads to cost benefits in the long run, that’s gravy.”

Private insurers will probably introduce Sovaldi gradually. “Not everybody is going to get this all at once,” said former Medi-care administrator Mark McClellan.

Drug maker Gilead Sciences, Inc., reported Sovaldi sales of $2.3 billion worldwide in just the first three months of this year. Gilead will not disclose its pricing methods, but vice president Gregg Alton said the drug’s high cure rate makes it “a real huge value.”

In many countries, the government sets drug prices. In the US, insur-ers negotiate with drug companies. Medicare is

forbidden from bargaining, a situation that critics say saddles U.S. patients with high costs while subsidiz-ing the rest of the world.

The Associated Press asked DRX, a technology company that researches drug prices for major insurers and govern-ment programs, to look at Sovaldi. The findings:

■There aren’t many deep discounts. The midpoint — or median — discount that private payers are securing is about 14 percent off the average wholesale price of $1,200 a pill, bringing it down to $1,037. The big-gest discount DRX found was nearly 36 percent, approaching the VA rate, and bringing the cost to $773.

■How do other drugs compare? DRX compared the total drug cost of treat-ing the most common type of hepatitis C with Sovaldi and three alternatives. The regimen included pills,

interferon and an antiviral called ribavirin.

Treatment with Sovaldi had the highest cost, a median of $97,376. The lowest was $48,084 for Vic-trelis, a somewhat older drug with a lower cure rate.

Two others were about $8,000 less than Sovaldi. The total median cost with Incivek was $89,178. With Olyisio, it was $89,319.

“While Sovaldi still is the most expensive, all of these are five-figure regimens,” said Jim Yocum, DRX executive vice president. “Sovaldi is an advance ... and it doesn’t seem to be priced completely out of whack.”

But Dr. Sharon Levine, a top official working on drug policy with insurer Kaiser Permanente, disagrees.

“There was never any question that we would cover and prescribe this drug,” said Levine. But she firmly believes the price is out of line. Countries

where the government sets drug prices are paying much less, she noted.

U.S. insurers aren’t inter-ested in price controls, said Levine, but “eventually the American public is going to start getting very uncom-fortable” with high prices. Drug costs have moderated in recent years, but new medications in the pipeline for cancer and other dis-eases are expected to push spending up.

The California Technol-ogy Assessment Forum, a private group that reviews medical treatments, recently voted Sovaldi a “low value,” because it would be cost-prohibitive to treat the high number of potentially eligible patients. But the Infectious Dis-eases Society of America and the American Associa-tion for the Study of Liver Diseases issued clinical guidelines recommending that doctors use Sovaldi as a primary treatment.

Cure: Countries where governments set prices pay lessFrom Page A11

in an election year when some Democrats in vul-nerable races are not embracing other top Obama issues like climate change and health care.

Also Tuesday, the White House announced that the administration was giving entrepreneurs easier access to high-tech equipment at more than 700 research and development facilities, such as NASA’s National Center for Advanced Man-ufacturing in New Orleans and the Energy Depart-ment’s Manufacturing Demonstration Facility at Oak Ridge National Labo-ratory in Tennessee.

In addition, five fed-eral agencies will spend more than $150 million

in research to support the Material Genome Initia-tive, a government and private-sector partnership designed to speed up the development of innovative materials.

Obama touted techno-logical advances that are putting production tools in the hands of anybody who has a good idea. He showed off his own iPad case that was made by DODOcase, a company that made its first prototype of the product at a TechShop in California.

“Cost of a gym member-ship, you have access to all this equipment,” Obama said as he marveled at the output of the shop.

The administration is paying special attention to manufacturing. A White House report released Tuesday said manufactur-ing output had increased 30 percent since the reces-sion ended, growing at a

pace nearly twice that of the overall economy.

In New York, Obama was to attend three big-dollar fundraisers, with the gay community gala as the cen-terpiece. Obama will also headline his first super PAC fundraiser as the main draw for the Senate Major-ity PAC, a Democratic group that takes unlim-ited donations. Obama’s appearance will cap what has been a gradual accep-tance of the big-money groups he once decried.

Obama concluded the night at a fundraising din-ner at the home of Vogue editor Anna Wintour.

The president is likely to get a rousing reception at the gala in response to his decision to act on work-place discrimination, even if it is limited to the federal contracting workforce.

Obama lacks authority to extend that protection

to all Americans, but the order being drafted by the White House would affect about 14 million workers whose employers or states currently do not prohibit workplace discrimination against gay, lesbian, bisex-ual and transgender individuals. The scope of the measure was tabulated by the Williams Institute at UCLA Law School, which studies sexual orientation and gender identity law and public policy.

Obama had resisted signing the order in hopes Congress would pass a non-discrimination mea-sure that would apply to nearly all employers. While the Democratic-controlled Senate passed the legisla-tion last year, the measure has languished in the Republican-led House and there is little sign that law-makers will take it up in an election year.

ObamaFrom Page A11

In the U.S., Apple domi-nates with more than 37 percent of the 34 mil-lion units shipped, with Samsung at close to 29 percent.

Some analysts have speculated that the 3-D feature might tie into an Amazon shopping app. Shoppers might be able to use the phone to take a 3-D picture of a prod-uct in a store, then search for the object on Amazon and buy it online.

Analysts said the phone could also come with a data plan that could let owners use Amazon ser-vices without using up any data.

“Anything that gener-ates more repeat orders

and more frequent pur-chases is probably part of what they intend to do with this,” said R.W. Baird analyst Colin Sebastian.

To compete, Ama-zon needs more than an expected 3-D viewing fea-ture, which has been tried before by smartphone makers like HTC and LG, Llamas said.

Competing on price won’t help if it leaves people with the impres-sion that the device is cheaply built, and getting customers to buy a phone without being able to touch it first could prove difficult, he said.

“If they sell it only online, as Amazon sells many of its goods and products, that could be a challenge,” he said.

AmazonFrom Page A11

Page 13: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

■ EVERETT

Ways to fix debt, transparency

Times are tense for resi-dents and workers in Everett. The following are suggestions to increase transparency dur-ing the budgeting process and suggestions for sustainability and fiscal strength.

To increase transparency, institute the following policy: If four or more council mem-bers congregate to discuss an agenda item, notes must be submitted to the official record on what was discussed. Additionally, the city should bring back the budgetary com-mittee. Be transparent about where the money, such as car fees, will be appropriated.

Suggestions for increasing revenue include: Accept credit card donations to Jetty Island and the animal farm; ease pay-ments for library late fees with online options; allow Tier 2 and Tier 3 pot growers and dis-tributors and institute a city fee, bring fees to par with other cit-ies; end payments to the “rainy day fund.” In-depth consider-ations — conduct a cost-benefit analysis of payments to Com-cast Arena’s debt, and study the regressive structure of the proposed tax burden by com-paring the proposed increase to the state average of the ratio of tax to income. Also, if the cap on property tax is crippling our city and others, present evi-dence to Olympia and ask for a legislative solution. Finally, ask Boeing to pay a fair tax rate, on sales and new construction.

Like many, I don’t want to see a loss of staff or services, and I understand it’s time to make important decisions. We need leadership to not only bring us out of this debt but prevent it in the future.

Megan DunnEverett

■ EVERETT

Community court can help

I suggest that Mayor Ray Stephanson’s newly established task force to address street-level nuisances consider implement-ing a Community Court system similar to the one currently used by the city of Spokane.

The Community Court would be a valuable adjunct to the establishment of an Alcohol Impact Area (prohibits the sale of certain low-price, high-alco-hol content beverages) in the core of Everett’s downtown. I also encourage Everett’s mayor and City Council to request that the Washington State Liquor Control Board establish an AIA as soon as possible for the affected area(s).

Spokane’s Community Court is a system that offers chronic,

nonviolent offenders intense supervision instead of jail time. It also requires defendants get help with their problems such as homelessness, addictions and health care.

Everett officials should talk with the city of Spokane to learn from their successes struggling with street-level nuisances.

Sandra Kramer Everett

■ ONLINE TAXES

Collecting them no help to citizens

In the Guest Commentary, “Make online businesses col-lect tax,” Ms. Klein, being general manager of Alderwood Mall has a conflict of interest. I have no problem with that having owned a small business for many years. What she doesn’t point out is that in local stores customers do not pay shipping, which is in most cases, part of the cost of purchasing online.

More frustrating is the fact that should this Marketplace Fairness Act pass, the taxes col-lected will be a windfall for all the states. What will they do with that money? Since it’s a windfall will they return it to the states’ citizens in the form of lower taxes? I can almost hear you laugh. I sincerely

believe that the complaints of state legislators, including those of our own in Washing-ton, in most cases, have little or nothing to do with helping businesses but to get the extra taxes themselves — which they have no intention of sharing with their citizens. That irks me and I would hope irks you as well. I have already contacted our state legislators with but one response. I would urge you to also contact yours to tell them we expect those taxes to be returned to us as citizens.

Sherwood Sage

Mukilteo

■ FIREARMS

It’s citizens who make up a militia

Readers have recently expressed the opinion that the Second Amendment meant that only a “well-regulated militia” and not individual citizens, was intended to have guns. Allow me to suggest that they might profit from a bit of historical research and a look at their dictionaries. My American Heritage Diction-ary of the English Language defines “militia” as follows: “A citizen army, as distinct from a body of professional soldiers. The armed citizenry as distinct from the regular army. The able-bodied male citizens of the state who are not member of the reg-ular armed forces, but who are called to military service in cases of emergency.”

The authors of the Bill of Rights knew exactly what they intended the Second Amendment to mean, and it was definitely not to have a citizenry which was pow-erless against a tyrannical government. We learned in U.S. history class about the Minutemen who were pri-vate citizens who formed the first resistance to the British army. They were essentially the militia of the day, and like militiamen before and since, were expected to provide and maintain their own personal weapons. The Revolutionary

War was well underway before Congress found, and arranged, funding to establish an offi-cial army. Prior to that, the colonists/combatants would return home at their discretion for planting, harvesting, etc.

We would embark on a dangerous precedent to start arbitrarily tampering with the Bill of Rights. I have no doubt that there would soon be those who would offer “justifications” to modify, and alter the intent of others. Perhaps those who are so quick to vilify the NRA, and demand sweeping restric-tions on private gun ownership, would be better served by fol-lowing the NRA’s insistence on strict enforcement of the 22,000-plus current gun laws, and that gun law violations be punished to the limit of the law. They might also look at what transpired in those countries which have outlawed private firearms, and at the gun homi-cide rates in the U.S. cities with the most stringent gun restric-tions and prohibitions.

Lee FowbleEdmonds

■ MEDICAL TERMS

‘Elective’ isn’t ‘unnecessary’

Nice to have something minor to write about. Since two recent letters have used the term “elective surgery” incorrectly, I’d like to clear it up. “Elective surgery” doesn’t mean “optional” or “unneces-sary.” It means non-emergency. Like scheduling your hernia repair for next week. Or even your coronary artery bypass. That’s what elective is. If you have a strangulated hernia, or an acute heart attack, and are rushed to surgery, that’s not “elective.” This is, of course, the opposite of a big deal. But I thought some people might appreciate knowing the defini-tion, in case they’re considering joining the recent discussion.

Sid Schwab, MDMukilteo

A13 | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM/OPINION | WEDNESDAY, 06.18.2014

OpinionIN OUR VIEW | FISH CONSUMPTION STANDARDS

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Have your sayFeel strongly about some-thing? Share it with the community by writing a letter to the editor. You’ll need to include your name, address and daytime phone number. E-mail: [email protected]: Letters section The The Daily Herald P.O. Box 930 Everett, WA 98206Have a question about let-ters? Call Carol MacPherson at 425-339-3472.

Editorial BoardJosh O’Connor, Publisher

Peter Jackson, Editorial Page Editor Carol MacPherson, Editorial Writer

Neal Pattison, Executive Editor

The standards don’t exist. But were they to exist, they should un-exist. And so we wait. Cue Samuel Beckett’s “Waiting for Godot.” “There’s no lack of void.”

Beckett-like absurdity was on display at Monday’s press conference with leaders of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers and the Association of Western Pulp & Paper Work-ers. They, like many union honchos, said they worry that a rejiggering of Washington’s fish-consumption rate and water-quality standards will threaten jobs. So says Boeing and assorted industries. Never underestimate the power of industry fear-mongering over an unknown known.

“We want clean water but we believe this is just too extreme,” Greg Pallesen, international vice president of the paper workers union, said about the non-existent, updated standards. “We can have great intentions on this stuff but the extreme (policy) will have a negative impact on jobs.”

Specifics on the nonexis-tent weren’t forthcoming. But nothing focuses the mind like “job loss.”

The fish-consumption con-troversy was flagged last year by journalist Robert McClure and InvestigateWest. For more than a decade, the Washington Department of Ecology knew it had to update its paltry fish consumption estimates — 6.5

grams a day. The estimate is critical because it informs the acceptable level of carcinogenic discharge, specifically arse-nic, mercury and PCBs. It’s an inverse relationship — low-ball consumption rates and ratchet up the permissible discharge of cancer-causing toxins.

During the 2013 Boeing special session, the company agreed that the process Gov. Jay Inslee had laid out for fish consumption was just fine. That process includes DOE’s issuing of a draft rule with two elements: a new consump-tion standard and the tools for implementing it. While DOE will soon float its recommen-dation, it’s still a draft.

Groups, including the city of Everett, specifically ask for

an incremental excess cancer rate of less than the current 10e-6, which is one in a mil-lion (they’re technically wrong to advocate “less than.” The incremental excess cancer rate goes up under their scenario). The business preference is 10e-5, which is a tenfold decrease in protection, or one in 100,000; or, Boeing’s recom-mendation of closer to 10e-4, another tenfold reduction, with a one-in-10,000 chance of catching the Big C.

The draft recommenda-tion will exist sometime soon, and here’s wagering the implementation regime is manageable. Let public inter-est and the health of Puget Sound families trump the alarmist clatter.

Fretting over the nonexistent

Last week I got to watch the seniors at Ballard High School graduate into the next phase of their lives.

They were happy. They had more than just made it through their childhoods. Some graduates had learned differential equations. Some, perhaps almost all, now know how to write essays. Some students specialized in making top-rate videos. Others realized that knowing history is important. Whether they are good at arts, music, track, poetry, physics, journalism, or just being with their friends, students and colleagues, they have now joined the adult world, optimistic, fearful, and unknowing about the future.

The class of 2014 has already lived through an economic and political roller-coaster. Born in 1996, their first few years were in a country in which optimism was literally bubbling up. Wages were rising, the Internet economy was taking off, the federal government was running a budget surplus, taxes on the wealthy had been pushed up a little in 1993, and everyone was benefitting. That happy period lasted for about four years.

Then the Supreme Court picked George Bush as president, contrary to the popular vote. At the same time, the Internet bub-ble burst, and the economy went into a tailspin. George Bush’s answer was to cut taxes on the wealthiest Americans. In our state, public revenue dropped as fewer homes were built, consumer spending dropped, and businesses cut jobs. In 2004 our state spent $1 billion less on public services than it did in 2002. $300 million was taken out of K-12 education, even as the number of kids in school was growing by the thousands Another $300 million was taken out of higher education. The University of Washington pushed tuition up 20 percent, adding another $1,000 to the cost, at the same time that middle class wages and family incomes flattened out.

The 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center brought us together, in sadness and in solidarity. But instead of building a community of hope, George Bush told us to “go shopping,” even if we had less money, and led us, with false pretenses, into the quagmire of the war in Iraq, while cutting taxes on the wealthy even more.

Then came the housing boom, built on an expectation that housing prices would continue to go up and up and up. Banks pushed home loans onto any-one who would bite. We know where that ended up. Washington Mutual, one of the major perpetrators of dishonest home lending, is a relic of history. The housing market fell apart, the financial instruments based on these loans turned out to be close to worthless, consumer confidence fell, businesses laid off work-ers, and the banks laughed all the way to the bank with their federal bailouts. We entered the Great Recession, and outside of the metropolitan corridor, we are still in it.

What did the Class of 2014 take away from this? They saw their own parents laid off of work and having a hard time getting another job. They saw their education shrink, as in three years the state cut over $2,200 in support for every single K-12 student in the state. They saw their own future recede. When they were in middle school they could expect their tuition at the University of Washington to be $7,000. When they started high school in the fall of 2010, tuition was over $9,000. If they start at the Univer-sity this September, their tuition will be $12,800.

But the graduates of Ballard High School, and all the other high school graduates in the state, know this. And they remain optimistic, enthusiastic, and wondering ... wondering what the future portends for them, and how they can make a future for themselves. They have been through the worst cycles of our economy. They live in the results of a cul-ture that endorsed selfishness and greed. They want to make sure that is the past, not the future. If they succeed, this will be good for our kids and our kids’ kids. And it will be good for us. Thank you in advance to the class of 2014. You are your brother’s keeper.

John Burbank is the Executive Director of the Economic Opportunity Institute (www.eoionline.org). Email [email protected]

Optimistic grads already well versed in economics

JOHN BURBANK

Page 14: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

A14 Wednesday, 06.18.2014 The Daily Herald

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Push DownsBanner & Half Page Web Ads

Main New Print PositionsMain New Print PositionsJobs Section | La Raza

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964

1072

903

Are you outgoing and competitive,personable and enthusiastic,

consistent and motivated? If so...

selling subscriptions to The Daily Herald

at special events, trade shows,

retail and grocery store promotions

and more!

• No Telemarketing• No Door-To-Door Sales• Complete Training and Field Support• Full & Part Time Hours• Flexible Hours• Evenings & Weekends Available• Transportation & Valid WA DL required

Call John 425-478-1391

REPORTERThe Bellingham Business Journal, a division of Sound Publishing Inc. is seek- ing a general assignment reporter with a minimum of 1-2 years writing experi- ence and photography skills. This position is based out of the Bellingham of- fice. The primary coverage will be city government, business, sports, general assignment stories; and may include arts coverage. Schedule includes eve- ning and/or weekend work. As a Reporter for Sound Publishing, you will be ex- pected to: be inquisitive and resourceful in the coverage of assigned beats; produce 5 by-line stories per week; write stories that are tight and to the point; use a digital camera to take photographs of the stories you cover; post on the publication’s web site; blog and use Twitter on the web; layout pages, using In- Design; shoot and edit videos for the web. We are looking for a team player willing to get involved in the local business community through publication of the monthly journal and daily web journalism. The ideal applicant will have a general understanding of local commerce and industry, education, employ- ment and labor issues, real estate and development, and related public policy. He or she will have a commitment to community journalism and everything from short, brief-type stories about people and events to examining issues fac- ing the community; be able to spot emerging business issues and trends; write clean, balanced and accurate stories that dig deeper than simple features; de- velop and institute readership initiatives. Candidates must have excellent communication and organizational skills, and be able to work effectively in a deadline-driven environment. Must be proficient with AP style, layout and de- sign using Adobe InDesign; and use BBJ’s website and online tools to gather information and reach the community. Must be organized and self-motivated, exceptional with the public and have the ability to establish a rapport with the community. We offer a competitive hourly wage and benefits package includ- ing health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401K (currently with an employer match.) Email us your cover letter, resume, and include five examples of your best work showcasing your reporting skills and writing chops to:[email protected] mail to:

Sound Publishing, Inc., 19426 68th Avenue S. Kent, WA 98032,ATTN: HR/BBJ

Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly sup- ports diversity in the workplace. Check out our website to find out more about us!

www.soundpublishing.com

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238

To interview call or email: 425-324-4066 or [email protected]

SALES PROS, CLOSERS AND ENTREPRENEURS NEEDED!!!THIS IS A GOLD MINE!!!

BE YOUR OWN BOSS!!!

We promote The Daily Herald at major retail and grocery stores throughout Snohomish County. College Students and homemakers also do well at this.

POSITION:No Door-to-door sellingNo TelemarketingFlexible HoursWeekly Pay and BonusesManagement Opportunities

MUST HAVE:Professional AppearancePositive AttitudeReliable Transportation“Smart” Phone or Tablet

LOPEZ ISLAND SCHOOL DISTRICTInterim

K-5 (1.0 fte)Principal/Special Services Director

(SY 2014-15)For Lopez School District starting August 1, 2014.

For information or an application packet,please contact Bill Evans (360) 468-2202 ext. 2350

or Stephanie Fowler (360) 468-2202 ext. 2302 or www.lopezislandschool.org AA/EOE

Open until filled, screening begins July 7.

Please Call For Monthly Specials!

To advertise, call Traci Harris at 425.339.3074 | Mon-Fri - 8AM-5PM | 24/7 www.Heraldnet.com/Jobs

Bellevue-based Esterline Technologies seeks VP, Corporate Marketing and Strategy. Requires degree in industrial engi- neering and substantial aerospace and defense industry management exper ience, including overseeing international sales & marketing. Posi- tion requires limited do- mestic and international travel. Apply at www.es- t e r l i n e . c o m / c a r e e r s #1792BR.

ISLAND TRANSIT FINANCIAL ANALYST

Island Transit, located in Coupeville WA, is seek- ing a qualified applicant for the position of Finan- c i a l A n a l y s t . V i s i t www.islandtransit.org for more information and application.Island Transit is an Equal Opportunity and M/F/D/V Employer.Position closes 7/11/14

Bookkeeper/Office Manager

L e n n o n C r a n e a n d Equipment Company is seeking a Bookkeep- er/Office Manager. Posi- tion is based out of our head office in Monroe. Please see full job de- s c r i p t i o n o n l i n e www.heraldnet.com/jobsApply w/ resume AND three (3) professional (not personal) referenc- es by emai l on ly. No ‘drop ins’ [email protected]

CARPENTER’S HELPER/LABORER

WANTEDFor small remodeling

company.Reliable transportation

& phone required. 360-435-5548

CARPENTERS Needed

Remodeling and framing skills.

Reliable transportation and phone.

360-435-5548

FISH PROCESSINGonboard vessels in Alas- ka. Fast paced, long hours, heavy lifting. Ap- ply in person Thursdays at 1:00pm @ 4315 11th Ave NW, Seattle.

See our website at oharacorporation.com

GOLDEN CORRAL Now accepting

applications for all positions!

Apply in person at 1065 State Ave, Msvl.

HANDYMAN/MAIN- TENANCE/LABOR:

Home repairs, light con- struction & painting, build shed & decks, repair all areas of home, repairs including light plumbing & light electrical. Work year round. Building a

crew in the Everett/Lynn- wood area. Must have

vehicle & valid Lic. Up to $15/hr. to start 425-

353-5558 425-773-7484

Hiring Full Time!!In Everett & Marysville

Working with adults with disabilities. Please be flexible and eager to

work.

$10.50 per hour & KILLER benefits! EOE

1614 Broadway, Everett 888-328-3339 for info or employmentopps@ser-

valt.net

Local auto parts store is looking for experienced Counter help. Please ap- ply in person with re- sume to Dan at 14911 H ighway 99 in Lynn- wood Wash during regu- lar business hours, 9AM to 6PM. No phone calls.

Maintenance DirectorMust have 2+ years exp in plant management. Wages DOE. EOE.

Apply in person, Marysville Care Center,

1821 Grove St, Marysville, WA 98270

Severe Food Allergies?Earn $185

Donate Plasmaplasmalab.com425-258-3653

Aerospace/Metal Finish- ing shop in Monroe is looking for an AERO- SPACE PAINTER. Must have painting exp in the Aerospace industry with textures, var ious sub- strates- metal and plas- t ics/composi tes, read blueprints, and be famil- iar with BMS/MIL specifi- cations. GED/HS equiv, exp in a NADCAP shop a plus. Wage DOE, Per- manent, full time, bene- fits after 90 days. Email r e s u m e t o : e m p l o y - [email protected]

Aerospace/Metal Finish- ing shop in Monroe is looking for a QUALITY CONTROL person. Prior finishing inspection ex- perience is required, fa- m i l i a r w i th BMS/MIL specs. You will work out on the production floor, in governing and admin- istering ISO/AS9100 and NADCAP gu ide l i nes. Document control re- garding planning and ‘buy off’ of incoming pur- chase orders and subse- quent internal workor- ders, spot inspection of jobs before they are final and released. GED/HS equiv, experience in a NADCAP shop a plus. Wage DOE, Permanent, full time, benefits after 90 days. Email resume to: employment@metal- techfinish.com

Journeyman Electrician

* Ser v ice product ion electrical equipment per maintenance schedules* Repair manufacturing line electrical equipmentComputer programing, e lectr ica l design and process* Record and document all electrical and repair records* Instrumentation* Fix/replace outlets, cir- cuit breakers, motors, control systems, PLCs* Perform preventative electrical tasks on pro- cess and facility equip- ment to ensure efficient operationP lease app l y on l i ne www.heraldnet.com/jobs

Plater - Chem/Anodize Finishing

Aerospace/Metal Finish- ing shop in Monroe is looking for a Chem Con- version and/or Sulfuric Anodize PLATER. 6 mos p r i o r expe r ience re - quired, GED/HS equiv, exper ience in a NAD- CAP shop a plus. Wage DOE, Permanent, ful l time, benefits after 90 days. Email resume to: employment@

metaltechfinish.com

CDL Driver/ Construction

North Sky Communica- tions, a Telecommunica- tion Construction Com- pany hiring CDL Drivers and Laborers for full time employment. Apply by faxing resume to: 425- 481-0306/email: rpeters @northskycomm.com

CABDRIVERS

Make up to $200

cash per day!• Fun job! Lots of

money! • We need Help!

Call Today: (425) 609-7777

Class A CDL RouteDelivery Driver

Harbor Wholesale Foods is seeking a ful l t ime Route Driver based near E v e r e t t , WA . G r e a t benefits, Tuesday – Fri- day, returns daily. Deliv- ery of grocery products to convenience stores, restaurants, and other customers made using hand t r uck and wa lk board. Competitive pay w i t h b a s e p ay p l u s “P iece, Cube, Stops, Miles”. Career opportu- nity with a great, growing NW Company es tab- lished in 1923. More and to apply www.harbor- wholesale.com/about- harbor/career

Driver - Taxi, Snohom- ish County **BUSY***

Earn up to $250 + cash daily. 425-742-9944

Caregiver Needed- IP for COPES 80#.Female client. Must be exp. NS, Car req, Call 425-252- 9640 5-8pm for details

Caregiver needed for ma le quad PT wor k , Eves & weekend morn- ings $15/hr Lynnwood. 425-743-4510

Massage TherapistPe r fo r m t h e ra p e u t i c massages of soft tissues and joints. May assist in the assessment of range of motion and muscle s t rength , o r p ropose client therapy plans. Stil- laguamish Tribe of In- d ians, P.O. Box 277, 3 3 1 0 S m o key Po i n t Dr ive, Ar l ington, WA, 98223. Full job descrip- tion & requirements at:www.heraldnet.com/jobs

NAC’s Marysville Care Center has PT, FT and On-Call opportunities available! Look ing fo r spec ia l dedicated indiv iduals who have the heart to serve the elderly. EOE*Competitive Wages *Great Benefits Pkg *Career Advmnt Oppty.

Apply in person, 1821 Grove St, Marysville

Now Hiring!!F/T Dietary Aide -

NightsBenefits available. If interested, please ap- ply in person at: Delta Rehab, 1705 Terrace Ave, Snohomish, WA 98290. 360-568-2168

Stanwood/Arlington Area Selah AFH hiring moti- va t e d , ex p e r i e n c e d , caregiver with attention to detail. Requirements include personal care, cooking, cleaning and activities for 5 delightful residents in our lovely country home. Need day and/or night shift PT to full. Must be flexible.

The North Sound Mental Health Administration is seeking a qualified pro- fessional to function as a Quality Specialist. This position will primarily fo- cus on adult care coordi- nation, Western State Hosp i ta l admiss ions, cross-system coordina- tion, customer service and utilization manage- ment of regional mental health services. Starting salary range is $50,325 - $55,517, DOE, plus a generous benefit pack- age. Preference given to applications received by July 21, 2014. Position shall remain open until a qualified applicant is se- lected. NSMHA is an Equal Opportunity Em- p l o y e r . V i s i t www.nsmha.org/jobs for full job description and application.

Page 17: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

The Daily Herald Wednesday, 06.18.2014 B3

$48Only

SPECIAL OFFER!Open House

Feature AdCall For Details!

Wow! Free List of over 17 King County Homes. $86,100 to $377,292. Many wi th Low Down Payment FHA Financ- ing. 206-650-3908; 425- 766-7370; REALTY WEST 800-599-7741 www.realtywest.com

3 BD, 2 BA, 2 car gar- age, 1,650 sq ft, built 2004 custom rambler, level entry, many extras. Pinehurst neighborhood. Se l l o r l ease op t i on $ 2 6 5 , 0 0 0 . S t e v e n (425)338-2549

Arlington Awesome! Shy 5 acres 3bdrm 2 bath 1988 mobile with huge deck + RV Garage + workspace 1616sqf t $220,0000 FHA Terms 425-766-7370 Real ty West

CAMANO ISLAND

$342,0003 Beds / 2.5 Bth

2,026 SFad# 623404

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EVERETT

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EVERETT

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LAKE STEVENS

$270,0003 Beds / 2.5 Bth

1,850 SFad# 648692

360-659-6800

L a k e S t e v e n s T E N A C R E S ! G o r g e o u s 3 b d r m 3 b a t h S p l i t 1987sqft $15,000 Under appraisal ! $265,650. FHA Ter ms 425-766- 7370 Realty West 206- 650-3908

MARYSVILLE DUPLEX! $20,000 Under Apprai- sa l ! $188,100.Two 2- Bedroom 1 Bath units 2583sqf 1/4acre.Light f ixer, hardwoods, f ire- places. Dbl garage Real- ty West Properties 425- 766-7370

Their Loss Your Gain! Hunting Cabin on 30

Timbered Acres Year Round Creek Minutes to Lake

Roosevelt. County Road Frontage.

$69,900$500 Down $750 Month

Also, 3 Bdrm 2 Bath Farm-

house on 10 Timbered Acres close to Spo-

kane, WA. $173,000.

$3000 Down$1480 Month

Frontier509-468-0483frontiernorthwest.com

$12,500Cozy, Older single wide 2 bdrm, 1 bth (810sqft)

in Senior Park near shopping, services & I-5. Home features covered

parking, large deck,upgraded windows,

insulated roof & storage shed. Pets welcome and

low lot rent $525 includes wtr.swr, garb.

Others AvailableWe Specialize

Call Randy 425-327-9015

Preview Properties LMS, Inc.

Manufactured Home sites available.

at Alpine Meadows family community in

Goldbar. Minutes from unlimited recreational

posibilities. Rent includes water &

sewer. 3 months free rent for new homes

moved in. Contact Mike 360-793-2341

Randy McMillanManufactured/Mobile

Home Specialist

FOR BUYERS AND SELLERS

Listed And/Or Sold Over 500 Manufactured/Mobile

HomesPut my Experience to

Work for You!

[email protected]

425-327-9015Preview Properties LMS, Inc.

S Everett Senior Park

Upgraded Double wide (1296 sqft) 3 bdrm, 2 bth in quiet cul-de-sac set-

ting in Active Senior Park w/clubhouse, RV

parking. Home features include new flooring, ap- pliances, interior paint, covered parking, semi- private deck, lot rent on 557 p/m wtr/swr/garb.

Priced at $32,000. Others Available.

Financing available w/ 10% down OAC.

We SpecializeCall Randy

425-327-9015Preview Properties LMS, Inc.

Cash for Lots, Plats & Houses. Robinett & As- soc Inc. 425-252-2500

Waterfront Home Tulare Beach call 425-418-7352 or

360-654-0654

To advertise, call 425-339-3076

7 DAYS!10 Lines +

Photo

$95

Everett:1 & 2 bd Apts

Monroe:4 bd Home

Commercial Space:Evergreen Way

The Rental Connection Increntalconnectioninc.com 425-339-6200

EVERETT Garden Court 3410 Colby Ave.

Lg 2 bd, 1ba, Must-see apts! Easy I-5, close to dwntwn. Easy access to bus lines. Dishwasher, lots of strge rm, W/D. Very clean with lots of

natural light.Covered pkg incl.

from $1100.Call Linda 425-420-4458

LAKE STEVENS

3Bd/2.5 Ba. Crestline Estates! 2000+ft.

2620 112th Dr SE, Lake Stevens. 2 car gar. N/P, N/S. Great Area! Avail July,1st. $1900/mo.+ $1900

sec. references & cred check. 1 year lease

preferred. Call 206-255-7066.

North Seattle, Now ac- cepting applications. Studio apts: $526 HUD Senior Housing 62+. Rent incl/utilities. In- come limits apply.Four Freedoms House

206-364-2440

Apartment for Rent,near ECC & Providence

Cobly Campus, 2bd, 1.5ba, 2 car ga, $1080, inc. water, sewer, gar- bage; quite neighbor- hood, no smoking. 2412 8th St. Everett, Ava. 6/1Call 425-232-9708 or 360-653-8480

BRAND NEW1, 2 & 3 BR Apts

Call today forSPECIALS!

1-855-671-6162Marysville

quilcedacreekliv- ing.com

MONROE Brookside Motel

Nightly $60Weekly $200Monthly $800

Furnished kitchenettes All utilities included

On site laundry19930 Hwy 2, Monroe

360-794-8832

N Marysville/ArlingtonRV SPACE

In nice park, 1995 or newer

PROMO $295/mo W/S/ included.

Beautiful Park Like Setting. No Pets(425) 404-2058

Everett- 2 Pvt rms in cozy hm, w/d, cable, util incl, $475/400 + $200 dep. call 425-879-6952

LAKE STEVENS Master bdrm w/view,

Private bath. Rent nego. (425)737-3523

Lynnwood area. Kitchen privileges. Prefer non- s m o k i n g , n o d r u g s . $350/month, $175/ de- posit & 1/4 utilities. Ref- erences a must. Ready now! Call 425-774-2707

MARYSVILLE - Furn. rm, pvt hm, incl all utils, cable, wi-fi $495/$200 dep, ns, np. Clean/Sober h o u s e . Ava i l Ju l y 1 s t ! 425-501-5677

$150Only

GREAT DEAL!2 Inch Ad

30 DaysPrint & Online

Approximately 50 words!

Skagit City Trucking School, LLC

Class A B & C

Training

B to A upgrades.

Nights & Weekends

360-982-2891

Visit:skagitcitytruckschool.com

The Gene PooleInsurance Agency

206-550-9019

SR22-DUI-NO PRIOR

THE BESTBROADFORMINSURANCE

RATESIN TOWN

Call now!

RobertsConstruction

• Dozer• Track Hoe• Dump Truck• Grading, etc.

425-743-6803Lic#ROBERC*284BO

A COMPLETE DRYWALL SERVICE

*Wallboard Installation*Taping & Finishing*Smooth Wall*Priming & Texturing*Drywall Repairs

*Licensed *Bonded*InsuredLic# ORTHSCC 865BN

30 years Drywall Experience

ORTHS CUSTOM CARPENTRY

Dale Orth 360-243-3433

Gregco Excavatinglic#GREGCEL949CB

25 Years ExperienceResidential or Commercial

*Site Prep *Clearing *Demo *Grading

*Utilities *DrainageSolutions

No Job Too SmallCall for Estimate

425-320-6283

360-659-9322 “Locally Owned Since

1977”

FREE ESTIMATES! M.B.E

Lic#GARYSGS131OSBonded * Insured

7305 43rd Ave NE Marysville

The Gutter Professionals

*PRE-PAINTED GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS

*STEEL & ALUMINUM &COPPER

*VISIT OUR SHOWROOM

Like us on facebook

COVER-ALLHANDYMAN

All Types of *Home Repairs*Installations

*Carpentry *Hauling *Cleanup

*Pressure Washing *Painting *Drywall

*TileNo Job Too Small

425-244-6943425-334-8028

bonded/insured lic# COVERAP897DH

GEORGE’SHANDYMAN SERVICE

Quality workReasonable rates

No job too smallI do it all !!

360-436-1787425-231-0249

Lic. GEORGHS951MR

Park’sHandyman

Service

Quality WorkReasonable Rates

* Carpentry (install windows & doors)

* Remodels* PlumbingNo Job Too Small!206-778-2238

Lic# 603-405-644

R & D Handyman Sevice

•PAINTING •ELECTRICAL •REMODELS •PLUMBING•CARPENTRYSmall Jobs “OK”

Call Rod425-773-5906

Lic.# CCPREUSPP918DL

A-1 Economy Gardening & Landscaping

•Pruning •Seeding

•Mowing •Trimming •Weeding •Hauling •Bark •Rototilling

Complete Yard Work Year Long Maintenance

Established in 1981FREE ESTIMATES

Call425-344-7394 360-651-0971

D&H LandscapingIn Business since 1986

MOSS CONTROL-AERATION *Lawn Maintenance*Fertilize programs

*Thatching “Weeding*Barking *Sod Lawns, etc

Commercial & Residential Services

206-714-3816 425-743-1379

Free Estimate

G & D LandscapingFree Estimates

•Thatching •Weeding •Pruning •Hedge •Bark

•Rototilling •Mowing •Sod & Reseed •Fencing •Retaining Walls •Pavers

•Pressure Washing Family Owned. 27 + Years 360-659-4727 425-346-6413

Lic/Bond/Ins #GDLANLC927MQ

R MONTOYA LANDSCAPING

Lawn Maintenance, Pruning, Aerating,

Thatching, Yard Cleanup, Pressure Washing & More. Commerical &

Residential Free Estimates

425-622-2489Licensed & Insured

Warm Weather will be here soon! Now is the time to get your place cleaned up

& looking great for Spring! Use GreenMax Service for all

your Lawn Care Needs!GreenMax specializes in

quality lawn & garden main- tenance at great prices. We are Fast, Friendly & Work hard to make you happy! Business Owner Operated

Mowing, Edging, Trimming, Pruning, Weeding, Flower

Beds, Raking, Plant shrubs or flowers, Mulching, Gravel, Beauty Bark & New Sod In-

stallation, old grass removal, Thatching, Aereting & Over-

seed, Fertilizing, Moss & Weed Control. All Season

Cleanup & Much More! Call Anytime for a free Estimate.

No Job too big or small! 425-870-7422

Professional, Licensed & In- sured. Satisfaction Guaranteed

WHISPERING Pines Custom Landscapes,

LLCFor all your landscape needs

•Retaining walls/paverpatios•Flagstone patio/paths•Yard renovations/design •Sod/Planting Installations•Irrigation systems/repair•Water features •Low voltage outdoor lighting•Yard clean-ups

425-353-5417Lic # WHISPPC937KP

Haul Aways Projects

Clean-ups & Pruning

G&S YARD CAREResidential & Commercial

425-530-0752

All Phases Lawn& Garden

MaintenanceLicensed/Bonded/insured

AGL PAINTING

425-736-8291425-343-7544

• Excellent Home• Painting. • Interior/Exterior • Pressure Washing

Lic/Bond/Insured. WA L&I AGLPAPL87CJ

FONCECA & SON’S PAINTING

Spring Special 15% Off

Interior/ExteriorCommercial/Residential

425-334-9287 425-232-3546

Senior Citizen Special

Call for Free Estimate

Since 1986

Lic # Foncesp141K2

Needs House Painting This

Summer?

Free House Painting Estimates

Exterior and Interior

CALL TODAY

Ryan Bradford360-361-6967

or Email

[email protected]

Lic/Bond/Insured

PIONEERHOME SERVICES

Quality Construction Since 1945

General ContractorAdditions Repairs Remodeling, Wood Decks, Windows & Doors. Concrete Walks & Patios

Plumbing Repair, Consulting

Excellent ReferencesLandlords WelcomeCall now for quality!

Chuck Dudley425-232-3587

[email protected]

Lic# PIONEHS999NM

STAMBACK CONSTRUCTION &

PAINTINGREMODELS * REPAIRS Room Additions, Decks, Fences, Window, Door

& Mill Work replacement, Interior & Exterior

Painting,

PRESSURE WASHINGRoofs, Exterior of

Homes, Driveways & Sidewalks

Greg Stamback(425)760-2027 Licensed, Bonded and Insured

WA Lic# STAMBCL889RK WA Lic# STAMBPL884LN

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS: Washington State law (RCW 18.27.100) requires that all advertisements for construction - related services include the contrac-tor’s current Department of Labor & Industries registration number in the advertisement. Failure to obtain a certifi cate of registration from L & I or show the registration number in all advertising will result in a fi ne up to $5000 against the unregistered contractor. For more information, call Labor & Industries Specialty Compli-ance Services Division at 1-800-647-0982 or check out L & I’s internet site at www.wa.gov/Ini.

To list your businessor service call the

classi�ed department.425.339.3100

Our Classifieds are the best deal around! Call us 425.339.3100

Company Coming?Need that extra room painted? Your house Cleaned? Check our Service Directory for the best selection of Snohomish County businesses.

CALL 425.339.3100

Call Classi�eds today!425-339-3100

Page 18: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

B4 Wednesday, 06.18.2014 The Daily Herald

City of EverettREQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS

RFQ No. 2014-052Fire Department Efficiency Assessment

The City of Everett is requesting Statements of Qualifications (SOQ) from interested and qualified firms to provide an Operational Efficiency Assessment of the Everett Fire Department. SOQ’s will be received by the City of Everett, City Clerk, 1st Floor, 2930 Wetmore Avenue, Everett, Washington 98201.REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS INFORMATION Request for Qualification documents are available on the City’s Bid Page a t www.c i .evere t t .wa.us /c i tyb ids or by contac t ing [email protected] OF QUALIFICATIONS DEADLINE All Statements of Qualification must be submitted to the City Clerk, 1st Floor, 2930 Wetmore Avenue, Everett, Washington 98201 no later than 2:00 p.m., Tuesday, July 29, 2014, and must be clearly marked:

STATEMENT OF QUALIFICATIONS FORFire Department Efficiency Assessment

RFQ No. 2014-052 Include in the submission package, (1) one unbound original Statement of Qualifications (SOQ), (4) four bound copies and one electronic copy in Adobe Acrobat PDF format.At the appointed time a register of Statement of Qualifications shall be prepared containing the name of each offeror and a description sufficient to identify the item offered.Clark Langstraat, CPPOPurchasing ManagerPublished: June 18, 2014.

NOTICE OF APPLICATION & SEPA DETERMINATION

Proposal: Huber Administrative Conditional Use Permit - LUA2014-0038Project Location: 7304 - 10th St SE, Lake Stevens, WA 98258 (Section 23, Township 29, Range 5E)Proponent: Dave Huber, on behalf of 10th Street LLCLead Agency: City of Lake StevensProposed Project Description: Dave Huber has applied for an Administrative Conditional Use Permit (grading & clearing permit), to correct recent unauthorized earth moving activities at 7304 - 10th St SE, Lake Stevens, WA 98258. SEPA Review and Administrative Conditional Use Permits are issued for grading proposals over 100 cubic yards. The applicant’s engineer estimates that approximately 330 cubic yards of earth moving occurred (cut and fill) over an area of approximately 4,500 square feet. Specific activities included tree and vegetation removal in the upper (southeastern corner of the site), utility trenching in the lower portion of the site, adjacent to SR-204 and re-gravelling a large portion of the site. The site has been stabilized with straw to control erosion. As a condition of project approval, additional erosion control methods will be employed. The proponent has submitted a project narrative, environmental checklist and engineering report in support of the proposed Administrative Conditional Use Permit. The city has issued a Mitigated Determination of Non-Significance. As conditioned and subject to additional erosion control there will be no adverse environmental impacts.Permits Required: Administrative Conditional Use Permit (Grading & Clearing Permit) and SEPA determinationDate of Application: April 24, 2014Completeness Date: May 30, 2014Notice of Application & SEPA Determination Issued: June 18, 2014Public Review and Comment Period: Interested parties may view the project file at the Lake Stevens Permit Center (1812 Main Street) Monday-Friday 8 am to 5 pm. To receive further information or to submit written comments, please contact the Planning and Community Development Department.Phone number: (425) 212-3315Email: [email protected] address: P.O. Box 257, Lake Stevens, WA 98258Upon publication of the Notice of Application & issuance of the Mitigated Determination on Non-Significance, there is a 14-day comment / appeal period. The deadline for public comment & appeals is 5:00 PM, July 2, 2014.

It is the City’s goal to comply with the American with Disabilities Act. The City offers its assistance to anyone with special needs,

including the provision of TDD services.Published: June 18, 2014.

NOTICE OF REAL PROPERTY SALENot ice is hereby given that Snohomish County Proper ty Management will conduct a public auction on Friday, June 20, 2014 at 3:00 p.m. in Room 6C09 on the 6th floor of the Robert Drewel Building located at 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, Everett, WA.BID(S) - All sales will be made by public verbal auction to the highest bidder. All parcels must be paid for in cash or cashier’s check only, payable at the time of purchase otherwise. the bidding will be re-opened. After the bid award the Successful bidder(s) must give Property Management the grantee’s name that is to be on the deed. NO CHANGES IN NAME CAN BE MADE AFTER THE SALE. All bids received must be by oral bid and it is requested that they be presented loudly and clearly. It would also be appreciated if pr ivate conversations would be held to a minimum in order that those individuals attending may hear all bids and give everyone an equal right to bid.According to SCC 4.46.260 the Council or Property Management Division, if it deems such action to be for the best public interest, may reject any and ail bids and withdraw the property from sale.

DEED(S) AND WAIVER - A Quit Claim Deed will be issued upon receipt of full payment within thirty (30) days from the date of sale. The parcel is sold “where is” and “as is” without any representat ion or warranty, expressed or impl ied including, but not limited to, representations as to whether the parcel meets zoning or building requirements. In addition and without limiting the foregoing, purchaser will take responsibility for any hazardous material on site and for any wetland protection regulations on said property.

DISQUALIFIED BIDDERS - No person who is a County employee or officer may submit a bid at this sale, nor may such person submit a bid as an agent or allow any agent to submit a bid on his or her behalf.EASEMENTS, COVENANTS, AND RESTRICTIONS - The sale is subject to any easements, covenants, and restrictions of record, if any.POSSESSION OF PROPERTY - The successful bidder/purchaser will take possession of the property upon recording of the deed by the Snohomish County Auditor’s Office.COUNTY AS BIDDER - If no bid is received, the County will retain ownership of the propertyThe following parcel(s) of land will be sold.LEGAL DESCRIPTION: The North 20 feet of Lot 11, Block 43, Monroe Land and Improvement Co’s Plat of Monroe, according to the plat thereof, recorded in Volume 3 of Plats, page 57, records of Snohomish County, Washington.Together with that portion of the alley vacated December 31, 1900 in Volume 10 of Commissioner’s Records, page 246 that would attach by operation of law.Situate in the County of Snohomish, State of WashingtonMinimum Bid: $2,347.59#21820Published: June 11, 18, 2014.

Public NoticeDisadvantaged Business Enterprise

FY 2015-2017 GoalsEverett Transit has established a Disadvantaged Business Enterpr ise (DBE) goal of four percent (4%) in FTA funded transportation programs for FY 2015-2017. A description of this goal and its rationale are available for review during normal business hours for 30 days following publication of this notice. DBE businesses are encourage to inform Everett Transit of products and services which they have available. Public comments regarding the goal will be accepted for 45 days from the date of this notice. Any comments are for information purposes only and should be directed to Melinda Marine, Program Manager, Everett Transit, 3225 Cedar St., Everett, WA 98273; or to the Regional Civil Rights Officer, Federal Transit Administration, Region 10, 915 Second Avenue, Suite 3142, Seattle, WA 98174.Published: June 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 2014.

PUBLIC NOTICENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Public Utility District No. 1 of Snohomish County is authorizing the District construction crews to perform the following work as required by Section 39.04.020, Revised Code of Washington:

• District crews will replace existing Getaways at the Ballinger Substation. Work is located at 7221 228th St. S.W., Mountlake Terrace. Estimated cost of work is $90,000. Work order 389126.

If you desire further information concerning this work, please call: 425-783-5681 or toll free 1-877-783-1000, within the State of Washington.

PUBLIC UTILITY DISTRICT NO. 1OF SNOHOMISH COUNTYBY: Steve Klein GENERAL MANAGERDATE: Wednesday, June 18th, 2014

Published: June 18, 2014.

PUBLIC NOTICEThe Lake Stevens City Council will hold an initial ratification public hearing on June 9th, 2014 to receive public comment regarding the 2014 Comprehensive Plan Docket Proposals. Council will continue the hearing until June 23, 2014 to receive additional comment and take final action. Hearings will be held in the Lake Stevens School District Educational Service Center (Admin. Bldg.), 12309 22nd Street N.E., Lake Stevens at 7:00 p.m.Any person desiring to present testimony may do so at the above described hearing or may submit comments in writing prior to the hearing by sending them to City Hall, Attn: City Clerk, P.O. Box 257, Lake Stevens, WA 98258.Published: June 5, 18, 2014.

SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCILSNOHOMISH COUNTY, WASHINGTON

NOTICE OF ACTIONNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN under the Growth Management Act, RCW 36.70A.290 that the Snohomish County Council took the action described in (1) below on June 4, 20141. Description of agency action: Approval of Ordinance No. 14-031.2. Description of proposal: relating to the Growth Management Act,

amending the Countywide Planning Policies for Snohomish County to identify the Arlington-Marysville Manufacturing Industrial Center as a candidate for designation by the Puget Sound Regional Council

3. Documents may be examined during regular business hours at the Office of the County Council, 3000 Rockefeller Ave., Everett, Washington.

4. Name of agency giving notice: Snohomish County Council5. This notice is filed by: Debbie Eco-Parris Asst. Clerk of the CouncilDate: June 16, 2014104482Published: June 18, 2014.

SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCILSnohomish County, Washington

NOTICE OF ENACTMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that on June 4, 2014, the Snohomish County Council enacted Ordinance No. 14-031.Background: The Puget Sound Regional Council (PSRC) has a p r o c e s s fo r d e s i g n a t i n g r e g i o n a l c e n t e r s , i n c l u d i n g manufacturing/industrial centers (MIC). The cities of Arlington and Marysville have identified a proposed MIC as a candidate for regional designation. The MIC must also be identified in the Countywide Planning Pol ic ies to be e l ig ible for regional designation. Snohomish County Tomorrow unanimously voted to recommend that the Arlington-Marysville MIC be included in the Countywide Planning Policies. This ordinance amended the Countywide Planning Policies by adding a new policy to the Economic Development and Employment Chapter identifying the Arlington-Marysville MIC as a candidate for designation as a regional MIC. The ordinance additionally provides a map showing the approximate boundaries of the proposed MIC and authorizes PDS staff to work with the cities of Arlington and Marysville to apply to PSRC for designation as a regional MIC.A summary of the ordinance is as follows:

ORDINANCE NO. 14-031RELATING TO THE GROWTH MANAGEMENT ACT,

AMENDING THE COUNTYWIDE PLANNING POLICIESFOR SNOHOMISH COUNTY TO IDENTIFY THE

ARLINGTON-MARYSVILLE MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIAL CENTER AS A CANDIDATE FOR DESIGNATION BY THE

PUGET SOUND REGIONAL COUNCILSection 1. Adopts findings of fact.Section 2. Adopts conclusions.Section 3. States that Council bases its findings and conclusions on the entire record. Section 4. Amends the Economic Development and Employment Chapter of the Countywide Planning Policies to add a new policy identifying the Arlington-Marysville MIC as a candidate for designation as a regional MIC.Section 5. Identifies the Arlington-Marysville MIC as a candidate for regional designation, provides a map with the approximate boundaries of the MIC, and authorizes PDS staff to work with the cities of Arlington and Marysville to apply to PSRC for designation as a regional MIC.Section 6. Directs the Code Reviser to update SCC 30.10.050Section 7. Contains a severability clause.Where to Get Copies of the Ordinance: Copies of the full ordinance and other documentation are available in the office of the County Council. They may be obtained by call ing (425) 388-3494, 1-(800) 562-4367x3494, TDD (425) 388-3700 or E-mail to: [email protected]. Copies may be picked up at the Council office at 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, Everett, Washington, or will be mailed upon requestWebsite Access: The ordinance and other documents can also be accessed through the County Council website at:

www.snoco.org/departments/council.DATED this 16th day of June, 2014 /s/ Debbie Eco-Parris Asst. Clerk of the Council104482Published: June 18, 2014.

SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCILSNOHOMISH COUNTY, WASHINGTON

NOTICE OF INTRODUCTION OF ORDINANCEAND

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the Snohomish County Council will hold a public hearing on Wednesday, July 2, 2014, at the hour of 10:30 a.m., in the Henry M. Jackson Board Room, 8th Floor, Robert J. Drewel Building M/S 609, 3000 Rockefeller, Everett, Washington, to consider an ordinance to reenact a chapter of code relating to the Marine Resources Advisory Committee and to remove a sunset provision. A summary of the ordinance under consideration is as follows:

ORDINANCE NO. 14-044REENACTING AND AMENDING CHAPTER 2.800 SCC

PERTAINING TO THEMARINE RESOURCES ADVISORY COMMITTEE

Section 1. The county council hereby adopts the foregoing recitals as findings of fact and conclusions as if set forth in full herein. Section 2. Chapter 2.800 Snohomish County Code, adopted by Ordinance No. 04-091 on September 22, 2004, and reenacted and amended by Amended Ordinance No. 09-090 on September 8, 2009, is reenacted and amended, as follows:SCC 2.800.900, shown below in its entirety, is deleted: 2.800.900 Sunset. This chapter is repealed effective on the date five years following reenactment (September 2, 2014) unless reenacted prior to that date, as provided in Snohomish County Charter Section 2.115. Section 3. If any section, sentence, clause, or phrase of this ordinance is held to be invalid or unconstitutional by a court of competent jurisdiction, such invalidity or unconstitutionality shall not affect the validity or constitutionality of any other section, sentence, clause, or phrase of this ordinance, provided, however, that if any section, sentence, clause, or phrase of this ordinance is held to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction, then the section, sentence, clause, or phrase in effect prior to the effective date of this ordinance shall be in full force and effect for that individual section, sentence, clause, or phrase as if this ordinance had never been adopted.At said time and place anyone interested may be heard either for or against the above-described matter.Where to Get Copies of Proposed Ordinance: A copy of the full text of the proposed ordinance is available in the office of the county council. It may be obtained by calling (425) 388-3494, 1-(800) 562- 4 3 6 7 x 3 4 9 4 , T D D ( 4 2 5 ) 3 8 8 - 3 7 0 0 o r e m a i l i n g t o : [email protected]. Copies may be picked up at the council office at 3000 Rockefeller, Everett, WA, or will be mailed upon request.Website Access: The ordinance can also be accessed through the county council’s internet website at:

www.snoco.org/departments/council.Accommodations for persons with disabilities will be provided upon request. Please make arrangements one week prior to the hearing by calling Randy Reed at (425) 388-3901, 1-(800) 562-4367, or TDD (425) 388-3700, or email to [email protected] this 11th day of June, 2014. SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCIL Snohomish County, Washington DAVE SOMERS County CouncilATTEST:RANDY REEDAsst. Clerk of the Council107024Published: June 18, 2014.

SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCILSNOHOMISH COUNTY, WASHINGTONNOTICE OF PLANNED FINAL ACTION

TO CONDEMN PROPERTY FOR COUNTY PURPOSES NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the Snohomish County Council will hold a public meeting on Wednesday, June 25, 2014 at the hour of 9:00 a.m., in the Henry M. Jackson Board Room, 8th Floor, Robert J. Drewel Building M/S 609, 3000 Rockefeller, Everett, Washington. At said time and place the Snohomish County Council will consider taking final action on Motion No. 14-237 authorizing the condemnation of the following proper ty for the purpose of constructing and operating a new County Courthouse: A portion of property generally known as 1809 Wall Street (Tax Parcel No. 00439068500901), 2923 Rockefeller Avenue (Tax Parcel No. 00439168500100), 2925 Rockefeller Avenue (Tax Parcel Nos. 00439168500300 and 00439168500401), 2927 Rockefeller Avenue (Tax Parcel No. 00439168500402), 2929 Rockefeller Avenue (Tax Parcel Nos. 00439168500500 and 00439068500500), and 2931 Rockefeller Avenue (Tax Parcel No. 00439068500600), Accommodations for persons with disabilities will be provided upon request. Please make arrangements one week prior to the meeting by call ing Randy Reed at (425) 388-3494, 1(800)562-4367, or TDD # (425) 388-3700, or e-mai l to [email protected] Dated this 9th day of June, 2014 SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCIL Snohomish County, Washington Randy Reed, MMC Asst. Clerk of the Council107045Published: June 11, 18, 2014.

SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCILSNOHOMISH COUNTY, WASHINGTON

NOTICE OF ENACTMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that on Wednesday June 4, 2014 the Snohomish County Council enacted the following:

ORDINANCE NO. 14-035MAKING A SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATION IN

NONDEPARTMENTAL GRANT CONTROL FUND 130 TO PROVIDE EXPENDITURE AUTHORITY FOR PUBLIC

ASSISTANCE DISASTER GRANT FUNDS FROM THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY FEDERAL

EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY (FEMA) FOR THE PURPOSE OF PROVIDING DISASTER RELIEF RELATED TO

THE STATE ROUTE 530 LANDSLIDE WHEREAS, Snohomish County wi l l be receiving Publ ic Assistance Disaster Grant funds from FEMA, through the Washington State Department of Military, to reimburse Snohomish County’s costs of rescue, recovery, and restoration related to the State Route 530 landslide; and WHEREAS, Snohomish County will be receiving $7,500,000 in Public Assistance Disaster Grant funds immediately. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED: Section 1. The County Council makes the following findings of fact: a supplemental appropriation in Grant Control Fund 130, for the 2014 budget year, in the amount of $7,500,000, is necessary to provide expenditure authority for Snohomish County’s costs of rescue, recovery, and restoration related to the State Route 530 landslide. Section 2. The appropriation units and allocation detail are as follows:

130 Grant Control Fund EXPENDITURE:130 57416 156 4101 Professional Services $ 6,500,000 130 57416 156 6401 Equipment $ 1,000,000 Total Supplemental Appropriation: $ 7,500,000 REVENUE:130 37416 156 3383 FEMA Public Assistance Disaster Grant $ 7,500,000 Total Revenue: $ 7,500,000

Section 3. The County Council further finds that there is a need for such supplemental appropriation because the funds which support it were unanticipated at the time of adoption of the 2014 budget and have not been previously appropriated.Accommodations for persons with disabilities will be provided upon request. Please make arrangements one week prior to the hearing by calling Randy Reed at (425) 388-3901, 1(800)562-4367, or TDD # (425) 388-3700, or e-mail to [email protected]. Dated this 12th day of June, 2014. SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCIL Snohomish County, Washington Randy Reed, MMC Asst. Clerk of the Council104473Published: June 18, 2014.

SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCILSnohomish County, Washington

NOTICE OF ENACTMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that on Wednesday, June 4, 2014 the Snohomish County Council enacted the following:

ORDINANCE NO. 14-034APPROVING AND AUTHORIZING THE COUNTY EXECUTIVE TO EXECUTE AN INTERLOCAL AGREEMENT FOR NATURAL

YARD CARE PUBLIC OUTREACH AND EVALUATION PROGRAM THAT IMPLEMENTS

ECOLOGY GRANT NUMBER G1400481 WHEREAS, Snohomish County (the “County”) is a Permittee under the Phase I Municipal Stormwater Permit (the “Phase I Permit”) issued by the Washington State Department of Ecology (“Ecology”) pursuant to the Nat ional Pol lutant Discharge Elimination System (“NPDES”) permitting program established under the federal Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq. (the “CWA”), and Washington’s Water Pollution Control Law, chapter 90.48 RCW (the “WPCL”); and WHEREAS, the City of Arlington (“Arlington”), the City of Marysville (“Marysville”), the City of Granite Falls (“Granite Falls”), the City of Mountlake Terrace (“Mountlake Terrace”), the City of Everett (“Everett”), the City of Mill Creek (“Mill Creek”), the City of Bothell (“Bothell”), the City of Monroe (“Monroe”), the City of Snohomish (“Snohomish”), the City of Mukilteo (“Mukilteo”), the City of Edmonds (“Edmonds”), the City of Lynnwood (“Lynnwood”), the City of Brier (“Brier”), the City of Olympia (“Olympia”), the City of Tumwater (“Tumwater”), and Thurston County, are each Permittees under the Phase II Western Washington Municipal Stormwater Permit (the “Phase II Permit”) issued by Ecology pursuant to the NPDES permitting program established under the CWA and the WPCL; and WHEREAS, for purposes of this ordinance, Arlington, Marysville, Granite Falls, Mountlake Terrace, Everett, Mill Creek, Bothell, Monroe, Snohomish, Mukilteo, Edmonds, Lynnwood, Br ier, Olympia, Tumwater, and Thurston County shall together be collectively referred to as the “Participating Entities”; and WHEREAS, among other things, the Phase I Permit requires the County to engage in public outreach and educational activities related to water pollution prevention strategies and practices; and WHEREAS, among other things, the Phase II Permit requires each of the Participating Entities to engage in public outreach and educational activit ies related to water pollution prevention strategies and practices; and WHEREAS, chapter 39.34 RCW authorizes local governmental entities such as the County and the Participating Entities to cooperate and coordinate with one another to make more efficient and effective use of their resources; and WHEREAS, the County and Ecology have entered into that certain 2013-15 Biennial Municipal Stormwater Grants of Regional or Statewide Significance Funding Agreement Between the State of Washington Department of Ecology and Snohomish County, having an effective date of October 31, 2013, and an Ecology Grant Number of G1400481 (the “Grant Document”); and WHEREAS, pursuant to the Grant Document, Ecology will provide the County with grant funds in the amount of Two Hundred F i f t y -S ix Thousand Three-Hundred and No/100 Do l la rs ($256,300.00) (the “Grant Funds”) to enable the County and the Participating Entities to design, implement and evaluate certain public outreach and educational programs regarding natural yard care best management practices, as more fully described in the Grant Document (the “Natural Yard Care Public Outreach and Evaluation Program”); and WHEREAS, the objectives of the Natural Yard Care Public Outreach and Evaluation Program are (i) to improve water quality wi thin the region by educat ing the publ ic regarding best management practices for residential yard care, and (ii) to measure the understanding and adoption by members of the public of the targeted behaviors and evaluate the effect iveness of the educational programs in achieving desired behavior changes; and WHEREAS, the County and the Participating Entities have negotiated an Interlocal Agreement for Natural Yard Care Public Outreach and Evaluation Program, a copy of which is attached to this ordinance as Exhibit A (the “Agreement”), pursuant to which the County and the Participating Entities would work together cooperatively to undertake and implement the Natural Yard Care Public Outreach and Evaluation Program; and WHEREAS, as more fully described in the Agreement, the Natural Yard Care Public Outreach and Evaluation Program would be funded in part by the Grant Funds, in part by separate grant funds obtained by Olympia, and in part by monetary contributions from the County and each of the Participating Entities; and WHEREAS, the county council held a public hearing on June 4, 2014, to hear public comment and consider approving and authorizing the county executive to execute the Agreement; and WHEREAS, the county council has determined that it is in the public interest to approve the Agreement and authorize the county executive to execute same; NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED: Section 1. The county council hereby adopts the foregoing recitals as findings of fact and conclusions as if set forth in full herein. Section 2. The county council hereby approves and authorizes the county executive to execute the INTERLOCAL AGREEMENT FOR NATURAL YARD CARE PUBLIC OUTREACH AND EVALUATION PROGRAM, in the form attached hereto as Exhibit A. Where to Get Copies of the Ordinance: A copy of the full text of the ordinance is available in the office of the County Council. It may be obtained by calling (425) 388-3494, 1-(800) 562-4367 x 3 4 9 4 , T D D ( 4 2 5 ) 3 8 8 - 3 7 0 0 o r E - m a i l i n g t o [email protected]. Copies may be picked up at the council office at 3000 Rockefeller, Everett, WA or will be mailed upon request.Website Access: The ordinance can also be accessed through the County Council’s internet website at:

www.snoco.org/departments/council.DATED this 12th day of June, 2014 SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCIL Snohomish County, Washington Randy Reed, MMC Asst. Clerk of the Council107024Published: June 18, 2014.

SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCILSnohomish County, Washington

NOTICE OF ENACTMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that on Wednesday, June 4, 2014 the Snohomish County Council enacted the following:

ORDINANCE NO. 14-033APPROVING AND AUTHORIZING THE SNOHOMISH COUNTY EXECUTIVE TO SIGN AN AGREEMENT AMONG SNOHOMISH

COUNTY, THE WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, AND THE CITY OF GRANITE FALLS

RELATING TO THE JURISDICTIONAL TRANSFER OF THE GRANITE FALLS ALTERNATE ROUTE; AND AUTHORIZING

THE COUNTY ENGINEER TO EXECUTE AND ACKNOWLEDGE A QUITCLAIM DEED TRANSFERING THE GRANITE FALLS

ALTERNATE ROUTE RIGHT-OF-WAY TO THE STATE WHEREAS, Snohomish County (“the County”) and the City of Granite Falls (“the City”) partnered to design and construct the Granite Falls Alternate Route (“GFAR”), a new road alignment, that intersects SR 92 to the west of the City and connects with the Mountain Loop Highway, a County Road; and WHEREAS, from the project’s beginning the City, the County, and the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) intended that the GFAR would become part of SR 92 upon the completion of construction; and WHEREAS, construction of the GFAR is complete; and WHEREAS, WSDOT, the County, and the City have negotiated an agreement identified as WSDOT Agreement No. GCB 1289 whereby WSDOT will accept transfer of jurisdiction of the GFAR; and WHEREAS, WSDOT agrees to accept the GFAR as partially controlled limited access facility upon the fulfillment of the terms and conditions stated in WSDOT Agreement No. GCB 1289; and WHEREAS, the County Council held a public hearing on June 4, 2014, to consider approving WSDOT Agreement No. GCB 1289 and authorizing the County Executive to sign the agreement on the County’s behalf; NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED: Section 1. The County Council hereby adopts the foregoing recitals as findings of fact and conclusions as if set forth in full herein. Section 2. The County Council hereby approves and authorizes the Snohomish County Executive, or designee, to sign WSDOT Agreement No. GCB 1289, a copy of which is attached to this ordinance as Exhibit A. Section 3. The County Council hereby authorizes the County Engineer to execute and acknowledge a qui tc la im deed transferring all of the County’s interest in and to the GFAR right-of- way to the State as required under Section 3.4 of WSDOT Agreement No. GCB 1289. Where to Get Copies of the Ordinance: A copy of the full text of the ordinance is available in the office of the County Council. It may be obtained by calling (425) 388-3494, 1-(800) 562-4367 x 3 4 9 4 , T D D ( 4 2 5 ) 3 8 8 - 3 7 0 0 o r E - m a i l i n g t o [email protected]. Copies may be picked up at the council office at 3000 Rockefeller, Everett, WA or will be mailed upon request. Website Access: The ordinance can also be accessed through the County Council’s internet website at:

www.snoco.org/departments/council. DATED this 12th day of June, 2014 SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCIL Snohomish County, Washington Randy Reed, MMC Asst. Clerk of the Council107024Published: June 18, 2014.

INVITATION TO BID Bids for the following items will be accepted in the Business Office of the Lake Stevens School District until July 1, 2014 9:00am.

DAIRY The Lake Stevens School Board reserves the right to reject any or all bids. Specifications may be obtained in the Business Office of the Educational Service Center.

Teresa Main, Assistant Superintendent of Business ServicesLake Stevens School District No. 412309 22nd Street NELake Stevens, WA 98258(425) 335-1500

Published: June 18, 25, 2014.

NOTICE OF TIMBER SALECity of Everett will accept sealed bids for the Uneven Cub Timber Sale # 124-9 on July 1, 2014. All bids must be received in the Everett City Clerk’s office, 2930 Wetmore, prior to 2:00 p.m. July 1, 2014. The timber sale will be awarded to the highest and best bidder. The City reserves the right to reject all bids. Bidding information and complete contract terms are avai lable by contacting Mark Hitchcock at (360) 766-6500.Uneven Cub Timber Sale is located approximately 10 miles north of Sultan and comprises approximately 4,416 Mbf of timber on four final harvest units. Minimum acceptable bid will be $2,060,000.00. This sale is export restricted. The sale will be sold as a lump sum sale.Published: June 4, 11, 18, 2014.

North Transfer Station Rebuild Project PW#2012-003AC GC/CM: Lydig Construction, Inc., 3180 139th Avenue SE, Suite 110 Bellevue, Washington 98005Project Information: The North Transfer Station (NTS) project site is approximately 5.8 acres. The project consists of demolition of the existing structures and construction of a new solid waste transfer and recycling building, office spaces, employee facilities, scale house control and security systems. The new facility will include odor control systems, process instrumenta- tion and new equipment for a modern facility to collect solid waste and recycle materials. Project Address: 1350 North 34th St. Seattle, WA 98103 Owner: City of Seattle - Seattle Public Utilities (SPU) In accordance with RCW 39.10.380, GC/CM (General Contractor/ Construction Manager) is requesting sealed bids from contractors for the above referenced scopes of work for North Transfer Station Rebuild Project.

Bid Package #07 Concrete Unit Masonry Due: 7/9/14 @ 2:00 PM PSTBid Package Scope: Concrete Unit Masonry, Rebar Installation, Water Repellant Coating, Joint SealantsEngineer’s Estimate: $442,300For Inclusion Plan purposes, this sub-bidding package has a 25% WMBE utilization rate Bid Package #10 Overhead Coiling Doors Due: 7/9/14 @ 2:30 PM PSTBid Package Scope: Overhead Coiling DoorsEngineer’s Estimate: $ 207,000For Inclusion Plan purposes, this sub-bidding package has a 0% WMBE utilization rate

Bid Package #17 Truck Scales & Appurtenances Due: 7/9/14 @ 3:00 PM PSTBid Package Scope: Truck Scales, Weight Displays, HoistingEngineer’s Estimate: $483,700For Inclusion Plan purposes, this sub-bidding package has a 6% WMBE utilization rate

Sealed Bids will be accepted prior to but no later than the date and time listed above for each bid package, at the offices of Lydig Construction, Inc., 3180 139th Avenue SE, Suite 110 Bellevue, Washington 98005. Proposals received after the time noted above will not be considered. Bids will be publicly opened and read aloud. The GC/CM and Owner reserve the right to reject any or all bids and to waive any informalities or irregularities on the bids received. Two optional pre-bid meetings and job walk for potential bidders to be held June 23, 2014 at 10:00AM and June 25, 2014 at 10:00AM. Meet at the offices of Lydig Construction, Inc., 3180 139th Avenue SE, Suite 110 Bellevue, Washington 98005. All bidders and interested par ties are strongly recommended to attend the meeting. All Bids must meet the Inclusion Plan requirements and any questions on the Inclusion Plan may be directed to Dee Riley (phone: 425-885-3314; email: [email protected]). Bid documents may be examined at the following locations once the Ad is posted:

Lydig Construction, Inc., 3180 139th Avenue SE, Suite 110 Bellevue, Washington 98005Lydig’s On-line Plan Center - Smartbid - Link will be available through the company website under jobs available for bid section. http://www.lydig.com/subcontractors-partners/

Bid documents can be obtained from United Reprographics located at 1750 4th Ave South Seattle, WA 98134. Questions concerning ordering plans and specifications should be directed to United Reprographics at (206) 382-1177. Bidder is responsible for the cost of any reproduction.

Contractor is an equal opportunity contractor and we encourage bids from disadvantaged, minority-owned, women-owned, and

small businesses. Published: June 18, 19, 20, 21, 2014.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Commissioners of Public Utility District No. 1 of Snohomish County will receive sealed proposals for the following material/equipment:

Request for Quotation No. 6400 Steel Pole and Dead-End Structures

at the District’s Operations Center Administration Building, 1802 - 75th Street SW, Everett, Washington, on Wednesday, the 9th day of July, 2014, at 2:00 pm (Local Time). Proposals received after this time will not be considered. The bid opening is public and all proposals will be read aloud. Each bid must be accompanied by bid security which guarantees the amount of 5 percent (5%) of the total amount bid, excluding tax.Contract documents for this purchase, including Instructions to Bidders/Proposal Form, are available for inspection at the District Office of Contracts & Purchasing, 1802 - 75th Street SW, Operations Center Administration Building, Everett, Washington, 98203.For additional information pertaining to this Request for Quotation, please visit www.snopud.com, select “Bids” and select “RFQ No. 6400.” If interested in receiving a packet please complete the Bidder’s Request Form. This Notice to Bidders, the Planholders List, Addenda, Bid Responses, Award Recommendation, and Bid Protest Procedures are available for viewing on the District’s website, in read only format. The electronic file is provided as a courtesy to the Prospective Bidders by the District.The Distr ic t encourages minor i ty and women’s business enterprises to request the contract documents and to bid on this material/equipment. PUBLIC UTILITY DISTRICT NO. 1 OF SNOHOMISH COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS BY STEVE KLEIN, GENERAL MANAGERDATE: June 16, 2014Published: June 18, 2014.

SNOHOMISH COUNTYINVITATION TO BID

ITB 053-14: Precast Concrete Box Culvert with Concrete LidBIDS DUE: July 1, 2014 11:00 a.m., Exactly, Pacific Local TimePublic notice is hereby given that Snohomish County has issued the above mentioned invitation for bid. Full notice and complete details of the bid are available on Snohomish County’s official website. Please follow the link below:

http://www.snohomishcountywa.gov/bids.aspx Contact the County Purchasing Division, at 425-388-3344, directly if unable to access documents online. Snohomish County in accordance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 252, 42 USC 2000d to 2000d-4 and Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, Department of Transportation, Subtitle A, Office of the Secretary, Part 21, Nondiscrimination in Federally Assisted Programs of the Department of Transportation issued pursuant to such Act, hereby notifies all bidders that it will affirmatively insure that in any contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterprises as defined at 49 CFR Part 26 will be afforded full opportunity to submit bids in response to this invitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color national origin, or sex in consideration for an award.107024Published: June 18, 2014.

SNOHOMISH COUNTYINVITATION TO BID

ITB 054-14: Split Concrete Box Culvert with Concrete Lid (316th)BIDS DUE: July 1, 2014 11:00 a.m., Exactly, Pacific Local TimePublic notice is hereby given that Snohomish County has issued the above mentioned invitation for bids. Full notice and complete details of the RFP are available on Snohomish County’s official website. Please follow the link below:

http://www.snohomishcountywa.gov/bids.aspx Contact the County Purchasing Division, at 425-388-3344, directly if unable to access documents online.Snohomish County in accordance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 252, 42 USC 2000d to 2000d-4 and Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, Department of Transportation, Subtitle A, Office of the Secretary, Part 21, Nondiscrimination in Federally Assisted Programs of the Department of Transportation issued pursuant to such Act, hereby notifies all bidders that it will affirmatively insure that in any contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterprises as defined at 49 CFR Part 26 will be afforded full opportunity to submit bids in response to this invitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color national origin, or sex in consideration for an award.Don Wolfe, CPPO, CPPBInterim Purchasing Manager107024Published: June 18, 2014.

SNOHOMISH COUNTYREQUEST FOR PROPOSAL

RFP No. 14-14 Automated Asset Maintenance Management SystemPROPOSALS DUE: July 23, 2014, 4:00 P.M., Exactly Pacific Local TimePublic notice is hereby given that Snohomish County has issued the above request for proposal (RFP). Full notice and complete details of the RFP are available on Snohomish County’s official website. Please follow the link below:

http://www.snohomishcountywa.gov/bids.aspx Contact the County Purchasing Division, at 425-388-3344, directly if unable to access documents online. Snohomish County in accordance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 252, 42 USC 2000d to 2000d-4 and Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, Department of Transportation, Subtitle A, Office of the Secretary, Part 21, Nondiscrimination in Federally Assisted Programs of the Department of Transportation issued pursuant to such Act, hereby notifies all proposers that it will affirmatively insure that in any contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterprises as defined at 49 CFR Part 26 will be afforded full opportunity to submit proposals in response to this invitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, co lor nat ional or ig in , or sex in consideration for an award.Don Wolfe, CPPO, CPPBProcurement Contracting Officer104474Published: June 18, 2014.

Please Call For Pricing And

DeadlinesTo advertise, call Karen Ziemer at 425.339.3089 | Mon-Fri - 8AM-5PM | 24/7 www.Heraldnet.com/Classifi eds

Page 19: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

The Daily Herald Wednesday, 06.18.2014 B5

AMENDED NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant to R.C.W. Chapter 61.24, et seq. and 62A.9A-604(a)(2) et seq. Trustee’s Sale No: 01-FWA-133145 I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Trustee, RE- GIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION, will on June 27, 2014, at the hour of 10:00 AM, at ON THE STEPS IN FRONT OF THE NORTH ENTRANCE TO THE SNOHOMISH COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 3000 ROCKEFELLER AVENUE, EVERETT, WA, sell at pub- lic auction to the highest and best bidder, payable at the time of sale, the following described real and personal property (hereafter referred to collectively as the “Prop- erty”), situated in the County of SNOHOMISH, State of Washington: LOT 2 OF CITY OF EDMONDS SHORT PLAT NO. S-65-76, ACCORDING TO SHORT PLAT RECORDED MARCH 1, 1977 UNDER RECORDING NO. 7703010299, IN SNOHOMISH COUNTY, WASH- INGTON. Tax Parcel No: 27043000106500, commonly known as 21710 80TH AVENUE WEST, EDMONDS, WA. The Property is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 8/2/2005, recorded 8/22/2005, under Auditor’s/Re- corder’s No. 200508220919, records of SNOHOMISH County, Washington, from TERRI STOWERS AND SHAWN LIGHTNING, WIFE AND HUSBAND, as Gran- tor, to FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPA- NY, A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION, as Trustee, in fa- v o r o f W O R L D S AV I N G S B A N K , F B S , I T S SUCCESSORS AND/OR ASSIGNEES, as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest in which is presently held by Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., successor by merger to Wachovia Mortgage, FSB, formerly known as World Savings Bank, FSB. II No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. III The default(s) for which this foreclosure is/are made are as follows: FAILURE TO PAY THE MONTHLY PAYMENT WHICH BECAME DUE ON 8/15/2008, AND ALL SUBSEQUENT MONTHLY PAY- MENTS, PLUS LATE CHARGES AND OTHER COSTS AND FEES AS SET FORTH. Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: Amount due as of May 21, 2014 Delinquent Payments from Au- gust 15, 2008 1 payments at $1,310.75 each $1,310.75 3 payments at $1,390.29 each $4,170.87 9 payments at $1,387.61 each $12,488.49 12 payments at $1,473.12 each $17,677.44 12 payments at $1,565.04 each $18,780.48 12 payments at $1,663.86 each $19,966.32 12 payments at $1,770.09 each $21,241.08 1 payments at $1,822.52 each $1,822.52 8 payments at $1,803.55 each $14,428.40 (08-15-08 through 05-21-14) Late Charges: $2,772.62 BENEFICIARY ADVANCES RE- COVERABLE BALANCE $670.00 Suspense Credit: $0.00 TOTAL: $115,328.97 IV The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: Principal $271,351.29, 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 ex- penses 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, pos- session, or encumbrances on June 27, 2014. The de- fault(s) referred to in paragraph III must be cured by June 16, 2014 (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time on or before June 16, 2014, (11 days before the sale date) the default(s) as set forth in paragraph III is/are cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated at any time after June 16, 2014, (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrower, Grantor, any Guarantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or en- cumbrance paying the entire principal and interest se- cured by the Deed of Trust, plus costs, fees, and ad- vances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other de- faults. VI A written Notice of Default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following addresses: SHAWN LIGHTNING, 9527 5TH AVENUE NORTHWEST, SEATTLE, WA, 98117 SHAWN LIGHTNING, 21710 80TH AVENUE WEST, EDMONDS, WA, 98026 SHAWN LIGHTNING, PO BOX 1743, LYNNWOOD, WA, 98046 TERRI STOWERS, 21710 80TH AVENUE WEST, EDMONDS, WA, 98026 TERRI STOWERS, PO BOX 1743, LYNNWOOD, WA, 98046 TERRI STOWERS, 9527 5TH AVENUE NORTH- WEST, SEATTLE, WA, 98117 by both first class and certified mail on 5/3/2013, proof of which is in the pos- session of the Trustee; and on 5/2/2013, the Borrower and Grantor were personally served with said written no- tice of default or the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII The Trustee’s Sale will be held in accordance with Ch. 61.24 RCW and any- one wishing to bid at the sale will be required to have in his/her possession at the time the bidding commences, cash, cashier’s check, or certified check in the amount of at least one dollar over the Beneficiary’s opening bid. In addition, the successful bidder will be required to pay the full amount of his/her bid in cash, cashier’s check, or certified check within one hour of the making of the bid. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth be- low will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all of their interest in the above described property. IX Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the same pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Fail- ure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustees Sale. THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORE- CLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME. You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date on this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONTACT A HOUSING 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 for assis- tance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission Telephone: 1-877- 8 9 4 - H O M E ( 1 - 8 7 7 - 9 8 4 - 4 6 6 3 ) W e b s i t e : h t t p : / / w w w. d f i . wa . g ov / c o n s u m e r s / h o m e ow n e r - ship/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm The United States Department of Housing and Urban Devel- opment Te lephone : 1 -800-569-4287 Web s i te : h t t p : / / w w w. h u d . g ov / o f f i c e s / h s g / s f h / h c c / f c / i n - dex.cfm?webListAction=searchandsearchstate=WAand- filterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid hotline for as- sistance and referrals to other housing counselors and a t to r neys Te lephone: 1-800-606-4819 Webs i te : http://nwjustice.org/what-clear NOTICE TO OCCU- PANTS OR TENANTS The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the Deed of Trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the Deed of Trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceeding under Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with section 2 of this act. DATED: 5/20/2014 REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION Trustee By: LISA HACKNEY, AUTHORIZED AGENT Address: 616 1st Avenue, Suite 500 Seattle, WA 98104 Phone: (206) 340-2550 Sale Information: www.rtrustee.com A-4461226Published: May 28; June 18, 2014.

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant to R.C.W. Chapter 61.24, et seq. and 62A.9A-604(a)(2) et seq. Trustee’s Sale No: 01- FHH-129268 I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Trustee, REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION, will on July 18, 2014, at the hour of 10:00 AM, at ON THE STEPS IN FRONT OF THE NORTH ENTRANCE TO THE SNOHOMISH COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 3000 ROCKEFELLER AVENUE, EV- ERETT, WA, sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable at the time of sale, the following described real and per- sonal property (hereafter referred to collectively as the “Property”), situated in the County of SNOHOMISH, State of Washington: LOTS 70 AND 71, BLOCK 39, HILLMAN’S BIRMINGHAM WATER FRONT ADDITION TO THE CITY OF EVERETT DIVISION NO 1, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED IN VOLUME 8 OF PLATS, PAGES 21 THROUGH 23, INCLUSIVE, RECORDS OF SNOHOMISH COUNTY, WASHINGTON. SITUATE IN THE COUNTY OF SNOHOMISH, STATE OF WASHINGTON. Tax Par- cel No: 00394403907000, commonly known as 18701 96TH AVE- NUE NORTHWEST, STANWOOD, WA. The Property is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 9/3/2004, recorded 9/9/2004, un- der Auditor’s/Recorder’s No. 200409090332, records of SNOHOM- ISH County, Washington, from GEOFREY E URBAN AND NANCY P URBAN, HUSBAND AND WIFE, as Grantor, to STEWART TI- TLE GUARANTY COMPANY, as Trustee, in favor of BENEFICIAL MORTGAGE CORPORATION, as Beneficiary, the beneficial inter- est in which is presently held by BENEFICIAL MORTGAGE COR- PORATION. II No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. III The default(s) for which this foreclosure is/are made are as follows: FAILURE TO PAY THE MONTHLY PAYMENT WHICH BECAME DUE ON 7/9/2012, AND ALL SUBSEQUENT MONTHLY PAYMENTS, PLUS LATE CHARGES AND OTHER COSTS AND FEES AS SET FORTH. Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: Amount due as of March 19, 2014 Delinquent Payments from July 09, 2012 8 payments at $ 666.60 each $ 5,332.80 5 pay- ments at $ 601.60 each $ 3,008.00 2 payments at $ 666.60 each $ 1,333.20 6 payments at $ 1,630.42 each $ 9,782.52 (07-09-12 through 03-19-14) Late Charges: $ 1,263.36 BENEFICIARY AD- VANCES TOTAL UNCOLLECTED $ 735.00 Suspense Credit: $ 0.00 TOTAL: $ 21,454.88 IV The sum owing on the obligation se- cured by the Deed of Trust is: Principal $84,713.61, 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 in- strument secured, and as are provided by statute. V The above de- scribed real property will be sold to satisfy the expenses of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. The sale will be made without warranty, express or implied regarding title, possession, or encumbrances on July 18, 2014. The default(s) referred to in paragraph III must be cured by July 7, 2014 (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time on or before July 7, 2014, (11 days before the sale date) the de- fault(s) as set forth in paragraph III is/are cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated at any time after July 7, 2014, (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrower, Grantor, any Guarantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance paying the entire principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust, plus costs, fees, and ad- vances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI A written Notice of Default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Bor- rower and Grantor at the following addresses: ESTATE OF NAN- CY P URBAN, 18629 96TH AVENUE NORTHWEST, STAN- WOOD, WA, 98292 ESTATE OF NANCY P URBAN, PO BOX 265, LAKEWOOD, WA, 98259 ESTATE OF NANCY P URBAN, 18701 96TH AVENUE NORTHWEST, STANWOOD, WA, 98292 GEOFREY E URBAN, 18629 96TH AVENUE NORTHWEST, STANWOOD, WA, 98292 GEOFREY E URBAN, 18701 96TH AVENUE NORTHWEST, STANWOOD, WA, 98292 GEOFREY E URBAN, PO BOX 265, LAKEWOOD, WA, 98259 HEIRS AND DE- VISEES OF NANCY P URBAN, 18629 96TH AVENUE NORTH- WEST, STANWOOD, WA, 98292 HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF NANCY P URBAN, 18701 96TH AVENUE NORTHWEST, STAN- WOOD, WA 98292 HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF NANCY P UR- BAN, PO BOX 265, LAKEWOOD, WA, 98259 NANCY P URBAN, 18629 96TH AVENUE NORTHWEST, STANWOOD, WA, 98292 NANCY P URBAN, 18701 96TH AVENUE NORTHWEST, STAN- WOOD, WA, 98292 NANCY P URBAN, PO BOX 265, LAKE- WOOD, WA, 98259 SPOUSE OF GEOFREY E URBAN, 18629 96TH AVENUE NORTHWEST, STANWOOD, WA, 98292 SPOUSE OF GEOFREY E URBAN, 18701 96TH AVENUE NORTHWEST, STANWOOD, WA, 98292 SPOUSE OF GEOFREY E URBAN, PO BOX 265, LAKEWOOD, WA, 98259 by both first class and certified mail on 1/23/2014, proof of which is in the pos- session of the Trustee; and on 1/23/2014, the Borrower and Gran- tor were personally served with said written notice of default or the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII The Trustee’s Sale will be held in accordance with Ch. 61.24 RCW and anyone wishing to bid at the sale will be required to have in his/her posses- sion at the time the bidding commences, cash, cashier’s check, or certified check in the amount of at least one dollar over the Benefi- ciary’s opening bid. In addition, the successful bidder will be re- quired to pay the full amount of his/her bid in cash, cashier’s check, or certified check within one hour of the making of the bid. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all of their interest in the above described property. IX Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds what- soever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those ob- jections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the same pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s Sale. THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLO- SURE SALE OF YOUR HOME. You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date on this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DE- LAY. CONTACT A HOUSING 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 ASSIS- TANCE Housing counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in determin- ing your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may con- tact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission Telephone: 1-877-894-HOME (1-877-984- 4663) Web site: http://www.dfi.wa.gov/consumers/homeowner- ship/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development Tele- phone: 1-800-569-4287 Web site: http://www.hud.gov/offic- es/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webListAction=searchandsearch- state=WAandfilterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorneys Telephone: 1-800-606-4819 Website: http://nwjustice.org/what- clear NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the Deed of Trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the Deed of Trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict oc- cupants who are not tenants by summary proceeding under Chap- ter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with section 2 of this act. DATED: 3/13/2014 REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION Trustee By: BRIAN WELT, AUTHORIZED AGENT Address: 616 1st Avenue, Suite 500 Seattle, WA 98104 Phone: (206) 340-2550 Sale Information: www.r trustee.com A-4447848Published: June 18; July 9, 2014.

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant to R.C.W. Chapter 61.24, et seq. and 62A.9A-604(a)(2) et seq. Trustee’s Sale No: 01- FSL-118975 I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Trustee, REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION, will on July 18, 2014, at the hour of 10:00 AM, at ON THE STEPS IN FRONT OF THE NORTH ENTRANCE TO THE SNOHOMISH COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 3000 ROCKEFELLER AVENUE, EV- ERETT, WA, sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable at the time of sale, the following described real and per- sonal property (hereafter referred to collectively as the “Property”), situated in the County of SNOHOMISH, State of Washington: LOT 1 COUGAR RIDGE, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RE- CORDED UNDER RECORDING NUMBER 200502235001, IN SNOHOMISH COUNTY, WASHINGTON. SITUATE IN THE COUNTY OF SNOHOMISH, STATE OF WASHINGTON. Tax Par- cel No: 01024300000100, commonly known as 14808 228TH AVE- NUE SOUTHEAST, MONROE, WA. The Property is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 12/12/2006, recorded 12/14/2006, un- der Auditor’s/Recorder’s No. 200612140690, records of SNOHOM- ISH County, Washington, from MICHAEL PURVIS AND LAURIE J. PURVIS, HUSBAND AND WIFE, as Grantor, to LANDSAFE, as Trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR AMERICA’S WHOLESALE LENDER ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS, as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest in which is presently held by The Bank of New York Mellon FKA The Bank of New York, as Trustee for the certifi- cateholders of the CWABS, Inc., ASSET-BACKED CERTIFI- CATES, SERIES 2006- II No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obli- gation in any court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. III The default(s) for which this foreclosure is/are made are as follows: FAILURE TO PAY THE MONTHLY PAYMENT WHICH BECAME DUE ON 5/1/2009, AND ALL SUBSEQUENT MONTHLY PAYMENTS, PLUS LATE CHARGES AND OTHER COSTS AND FEES AS SET FORTH. Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: Amount due as of March 19, 2014 Delinquent Pay- ments from May 01, 2009 39 payments at $3,364.15 each $31,201.85 12 payments at $4,105.54 each $49,266.48 8 pay- ments at $3,648.44 each $29,187.52 (05-01-09 through 03-19-14) Late Charges: $8,205.68 BENEFICIARY ADVANCES TOTAL UN- COLLECTED $1,699.80 Suspense Credi t : $0.00 TOTAL: $219,561.33 IV The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: Principal $430,389.33, 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 se- cured, and as are provided by statute. V The above described real property will be sold to satisfy the expenses of sale and the obliga- tion secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. The sale will be made without warranty, express or implied regarding title, possession, or encumbrances on July 18, 2014. The default(s) re- ferred to in paragraph III must be cured by July 7, 2014 (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time on or before July 7, 2014, (11 days before the sale date) the default(s) as set forth in paragraph III is/are cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated at any time after July 7,

2014, (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrower, Grantor, any Guarantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance paying the entire principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust, plus costs, fees, and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI A written Notice of Default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the fo l lowing addresses: LAURIE J. PURVIS, 14808 228TH AVENUE SOUTHEAST, MONROE, WA, 98272 MI- CHAEL PURVIS, 14808 228TH AVENUE SOUTHEAST, MON- ROE, WA, 98272 by both f irst class and cer t i f ied mail on 2/12/2014, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and on 2/12/2014, the Borrower and Grantor were personally served with said written notice of default or the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII The Trustee’s Sale will be held in ac- cordance with Ch. 61.24 RCW and anyone wishing to bid at the sale will be required to have in his/her possession at the time the bidding commences, cash, cashier’s check, or certified check in the amount of at least one dollar over the Beneficiary’s opening bid. In addition, the successful bidder will be required to pay the full amount of his/her bid in cash, cashier’s check, or certified check within one hour of the making of the bid. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone re- questing it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all of their interest in the above described property. IX Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afford- ed an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the same pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s Sale. 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. CONTACT A HOUSING 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 for assistance and referral to housing counse- lors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission Tele- p h o n e : 1 - 8 7 7 - 8 9 4 - H O M E ( 1 - 8 7 7 - 9 8 4 - 4 6 6 3 ) We b s i t e : h t t p : / / w w w . d f i . w a . g o v / c o n s u m e r s / h o m e o w n e r - ship/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development Tele- phone: 1-800-569-4287 Web site: http://www.hud.gov/offic- es/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webListAction=searchandsearch- state=WAandfilterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorneys Telephone: 1-800-606-4819 Website: http://nwjustice.org/what- clear NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the Deed of Trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the Deed of Trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict oc- cupants who are not tenants by summary proceeding under Chap- ter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with section 2 of this act. DATED: 3/19/2014 REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION Trustee By: BRIAN WELT, AUTHORIZED AGENT Address: 616 1st Avenue, Suite 500 Seattle, WA 98104 Phone: (206) 340-2550 Sale Information: www.r trustee.com A-4448486Published: June 18; July 9, 2014.

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant to R.C.W. Chapter 61.24, et seq. and 62A.9A-604(a)(2) et seq. Trustee’s Sale No: 01- FHS-127741 I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Trustee, REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION, will on June 27, 2014, at the hour of 10:00 AM, at ON THE STEPS IN FRONT OF THE NORTH ENTRANCE TO THE SNOHOMISH COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 3000 ROCKEFELLER AVENUE, EV- ERETT, WA, sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable at the time of sale, the following described real and per- sonal property (hereafter referred to collectively as the “Property”), situated in the County of SNOHOMISH, State of Washington: LOT 7, NORTH ACRES, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RE- CORDED UNDER RECORDING NUMBER 9906145002, IN SNO- H O M I S H C O U N T Y, WA S H I N G TO N . Ta x Pa r c e l N o : 00896400000700, commonly known as 100 167TH PLACE SOUTHWEST, BOTHELL, WA. The Property is subject to that cer- tain Deed of Trust dated 10/12/2005, recorded 10/20/2005, under Auditor’s/Recorder’s No. 200510200231, records of SNOHOMISH County, Washington, from IRAM MARTINEZ AND CRISTINA NA- VA, HUSBAND AND WIFE, as Grantor, to PACIFIC NORTHWEST TITLE COMPANY OF WASHINGTON, INC, as Trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR FIELDSTONE MORTGAGE COMPANY ITS SUC- CESSORS AND ASSIGNS, as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest in which is presently held by U.S. Bank Trust, N.A., as Trustee for LSF8 Master Participation Trust, by Caliber Home Loans, Inc., as its attorney in fact. II No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obliga- tion in any court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. III The default(s) for which this foreclosure is/are made are as follows: FAILURE TO PAY THE MONTHLY PAYMENT WHICH BECAME DUE ON 8/1/2009, AND ALL SUBSEQUENT MONTHLY PAYMENTS, PLUS LATE CHARGES AND OTHER COSTS AND FEES AS SET FORTH. Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: Amount due as of February 26, 2014 Delinquent Payments from August 01, 2009 4 payments at $2,713.91 each $10,855.64 6 payments at $2,452.47 each $14,714.82 6 payments at $2,380.00 each $14,280.00 33 payments at $2,378.20 each $78,480.60 3 payments at $2,84 9.54 each $8,548.62 3 payments at $2,849.33 each $8,547.99 (08-01-09 through 02-26-14) Late Charges: $5,312.42 BENEFICIARY ADVANCES TOTAL UNCOL- LECTED $3,792.14 Suspense Credit: $0.00 TOTAL: $144,532.23 IV The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: Principal $315,959.57, together with interest as provided in the note or other instrument secured, and such other costs and fees as are due under the note or other instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. V The above described real property will be sold to satisfy the expenses of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. The sale will be made without warranty, express or implied regarding title, possession, or encumbrances on June 27, 2014. The default(s) referred to in paragraph III must be cured by June 16, 2014 (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time on or before June 16, 2014, (11 days before the sale date) the default(s) as set forth in paragraph III is/are cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated at any time after June 16, 2014, (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrow- er, Grantor, any Guarantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance paying the entire principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust, plus costs, fees, and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI A written Notice of Default was trans- mitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following addresses: CRISTINA NAVA, 100 167TH PLACE SOUTHWEST, BOTHELL, WA, 98012 CRISTINA NAVA, 20406 LITTLE BEAR CREEK ROAD UNIT 176, WOODINVILLE, WA, 98072 IRAM MARTINEZ, 100 167TH PLACE SOUTHWEST, BO- THELL, WA, 98012 IRAM MARTINEZ, 20406 LITTLE BEAR CREEK ROAD UNIT 176, WOODINVILLE, WA, 98072 by both first class and certified mail on 1/7/2014, proof of which is in the pos- session of the Trustee; and on 1/7/2014, the Borrower and Grantor were personally served with said written notice of default or the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII The Trustee’s Sale will be held in accordance with Ch. 61.24 RCW and anyone wishing to bid at the sale will be required to have in his/her posses- sion at the time the bidding commences, cash, cashier’s check, or certified check in the amount of at least one dollar over the Benefi- ciary’s opening bid. In addition, the successful bidder will be re- quired to pay the full amount of his/her bid in cash, cashier’s check, or certified check within one hour of the making of the bid. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all of their interest in the above described property. IX Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds what- soever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those ob- jections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the same pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s Sale. THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLO- SURE SALE OF YOUR HOME. You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date on this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DE- LAY. CONTACT A HOUSING 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 ASSIS- TANCE Housing counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in determin- ing your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may con- tact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission Telephone: 1-877-894-HOME (1-877-984- 4663) Web site: http://www.dfi.wa.gov/consumers/homeowner- ship/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development Tele- phone: 1-800-569-4287 Web site: http://www.hud.gov/offic- es/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webListAction=searchandsearch- state=WAandfilterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorneys Telephone: 1-800-606-4819 Website: http://nwjustice.org/what- clear NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the Deed of Trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the Deed of Trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict oc- cupants who are not tenants by summary proceeding under Chap- ter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with section 2 of this act. DATED: 2/26/2014 REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION Trustee By: BRIAN WELT, AUTHORIZED AGENT Address: 616 1st Avenue, Suite 500 Seattle, WA 98104 Phone: (206) 340-2550 Sale Information: www.r trustee.com A-4445495Published: May 28; June 18, 2014.

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE PURSUANT TO THE REVISED CODE OF WASHINGTON,

CHAPTER 61.24, et seq. TO: Andrea M. Armstrong Curtis D. Armstrong 514 Emerson Street 514 Emerson Street Snohomish, WA 98290 Snohomish, WA 98290

Occupants Andrea M. Armstrong 514 Emerson Street 520 Kirkland Way, #103 Snohomish, WA 98290 Kirkland, WA 98033

Curtis D. Armstrong Andrea M. Armstrong 520 Kirkland Way, #103 1630 228th Street SE, #E107 Kirkland, WA 98033 Bothell, WA 98021

Curtis D. Armstrong 1630 228th Street SE, #E107 bothell, WA 98021

THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME.

You only have 20 DAYS from the recording date on this notice to pursue mediation.CONTACT A HOUSING 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 our 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 for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance CommissionTelephone: 877-894-4663 Web site: www.homeownership.wa.gov The United States Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentTelephone: 800-569-4287 Web site:

http://hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/hcs.cfm?& webListAction=search&searchstate=WA

The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorneysTelephone: 800-606-4819 Web site: http://www.ocla.wa.gov/

I. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Trustee, Anthony V. Harris, will on July 18, 2014, at the hour of 10:00 a.m., at the Snohomish County Courthouse, at the flagpoles in front of the north plaza entrance to the Snohomish County Courthouse, 3000 Rockefel ler Avenue, in the City of Everett , 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 Snohomish, State of Washington to-wit:

THE EAST 66 FEET OF THE SOUTH 89.0 FEET OF THE NORTH 305.94 FEET OF TRACT 1, THE LAKE ADDITION TO SNOHOMISH, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF R E C O R D E D I N VO L U M E 5 O F P L AT S, PAG E 1 0 , RECORDS OF SNOHOMISH COUNTY, WASHINGTON. (ALSO KNOWN AS LOT 2 SNOHOMISH SHORT PLAT RECORDED UNDER RECORDING NUMBER 7707210268).SITUATE IN THE COUNTY OF SNOHOMISH, STATE OF WASHINGTON

Assessor’s Property Tax Parcel/Account No. 280607-003-081-00which is subject to that certain Deed of trust dated May 16, 2008, recorded May 30, 2008, under Auditor’s File No. 200805300355, records of Snohomish County, Washington, from Andrea M. Armstrong and Cur tis D. Armstrong, wife and husband, as Grantors, to Fidelity National Title Ins. Co., as Trustee to secure an obligation in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (‘’MERS’’), as nominee for Boeing Employees’ Credit Union, as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest in which was assigned by MERS, under an assignment recorded under Auditor’s File No. 201311210418 and re-recorded under Audi tor ’s F i le No. 201402190559.

II. No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any Court by reason of the Borrowers’ or Grantors’ default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust.

III. The default(s) for which this foreclosure is made is/are as follows:A. Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: $13,868.91, plus interest, late charges and attorney’s fees which are continuing to accrue.B. Default Description of Action Required to Cure and Documentation Necessary to Show Cure 1. None 1. None

IV. The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: Principal $223,949.33, together with interest as provided in the note or other instrument secured from May 16, 2008, and such other costs and fees as are due under the note or other instrument secured, and as are provided by statute.

V. The above-described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. The sale will be made without warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances on July 18, 2014. The default(s) referred to in paragraph III must be cured by July 7, 2014 (11 days before the sale date), to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time on or before July 7, 2014 (11 days before the sale date), the default(s) as set forth in paragraph III is/are cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated any time after July 7, 2014, (11 days before the sale date), and before the sale by the Borrowers, Grantors, any Guarantor, or the ho lder o f any recorded jun ior l ien or encumbrance paying the entire principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust, plus costs, fees, and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults.

VI. A written notice of default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrowers and Grantors at the following addresses: Andrea M. Armstrong Curtis D. Armstrong514 Emerson Street 514 Emerson StreetSnohomish, WA 98290 Snohomish, WA 98290

Andrea M. Armstrong Curtis D. Armstrong520 Kirkland Way, #103 520 Kirkland Way, #103Kirkland, WA 98033 Kirkland, WA 98033

by both first class and certified mail on November 26, 2013, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and the written notice of default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such posting.

VII. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale.

VIII. The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantors and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantors of all their interest in the above-described property.

IX. Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s sale.

X. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS

The purchaser at the trustee’s sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the grantor under the deed of trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the deed of trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants - who are not tenants by summary proceedings under chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. Dated this 4th day of March, 2014. Anthony V. Harris, Successor Trustee c/o BECU PO Box 97050, MS 1049-1 Seattle, WA 98124 (206) 812-5133Published: June 18; July 9, 2014.

State of Wisconsin Circuit Cour t - Door County Publication Summons - Case No. 14-CV-42 - The Honorable D. Todd Ehlers - Case Code 30404 (Foreclosure of Mor tgage) - The amount claimed exceeds $10,000.00 - Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 3476 Stateview Blvd., Ft. Mill, SC 29715, Plaintiff vs. Lena M. Negley & Keith A. Negley, 703 143rd Pl. SW, Lynnwood, WA 98087-6429 and Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. acting solely as a nominee for Lender, EverHome Mortgage Company, 1901 E. Voorhees St., Ste. C, Danville, IL 61834-4512, Defendants - The State of Wisconsin - To each person named above as a defendant: You are hereby notified that the plaintiff named above has filed a lawsuit or other legal action against you. Within 40 days after 6/4/14 you must respond with a written demand for a copy of the complaint. The demand must be sent or delivered to the court, whose address is 1209 S. Duluth Ave., Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235 and to Gray & Assoc., L.L.P., plaintiff’s attorney, whose address is 16345 W. Glendale Drive, New Berlin, WI 53151. You may have an attorney help or represent you. If you do not demand a copy of the complaint within 40 days, the court may grant judgment against you for the award of money or other legal action requested in the complaint, and you may lose your right to object to anything that is or may be incorrect in the complaint. A judgment may be enforced as provided by law. A judgment awarding money may become a lien against any real estate you own now or in the future, and may also be enforced by garnishment or seizure of property. Dated 5/23/14, William N. Foshag, State Bar No. 1020417, Gray & Assoc., L.L.P., Attys. for Plaintiff, 16345 W. Glendale Dr., New Berlin, WI 53151, (414) 224-1987. Gray & Assoc., L.L.P. is attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. If you have previously received a discharge in a chapter 7 bankruptcy case, this communication should not be construed as an attempt to hold you personally liable for the debt.Published: June 4, 11, 18, 2014.

Please Call For Pricing And

DeadlinesTo advertise, call Karen Ziemer at 425.339.3089 | Mon-Fri - 8AM-5PM | 24/7 www.Heraldnet.com/Classifi eds

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NOTICE OF APPLICATIONFile Name: David and Cheryl Porter File Number: 14-107628-ACUPProject Description: Administrative Conditional Use Permit for an over-sized 2,560 square foot detached private garage on 2.30 acres.Location: 18808 – 92nd Street SE, Snohomish Tax Account Number: 008285-000-013-00Applicant: David and Cheryl PorterDate of application/Completeness Date: June 11, 2014Approvals required: Administrative Conditional Use PermitComment Period: Submit written comments on or before July 9, 2014.Project Manager: Jennifer Lenz, 425-388-3311, ext. 2823Project Manager e-mail: [email protected]

NOTICE OF APPLICATIONFile Name: Elledge Short Plat File Number: 14-107696-PSDProject Description: 3 lot short plat on approximately 15 acres in R-5 zoning.Location: 22510 161st Ave SE MonroeTax Account Number: 270627-004-020-00Applicant: Todd and Kris ElledgeDate of application/Completeness Date: June 12, 2014Approvals required: Preliminary Short Plat Approval and associated construction permitsConcurrency: This project will be evaluated to determine if there is enough capacity on county roads to accommodate the project’s traffic impacts, and a concurrency determination will be made. Notice of the concurrency determination will be provided in the notice of project decision. The notice of decision will be provided to all parties of record for the project.Comment Period: Submit written comments on or before July 9, 2014.Project Manager: Aaron Hollister, 425-388-3311, ext. 2938Project Manager e-mail: [email protected]

NOTICE OF DETERMINATION OF NONSIGNIFICANCE

File Name: Gene Rich GradingFile Number: 11-102442-LDA, 09-102657-SM & 09-102659-LUDescription of Proposal: Substantial development permit and zoning setback variance for structural development and associated land disturbing activities within the shoreline jurisdiction of Lake Stevens, a shoreline of statewide significance. Development activities include construction of boating facilites (including a boathouse, dock access,and 20-foot long floating dock extension), replacement of a 24-foot section of bulkhead; construction of a new 14-foot bulkhead; construction of approximately 70 linear feet of new retaining walls; replacement of a concrete access stairway to site; construction of a 150 square foot slatted cedar deck; replacement of a 200 square foot concrete slab; installation of a drainage system; and approximately 20 cubic yards of grading. The shoreline permit and zoning variance applications were submitted on May 8, 2009, and a subsequent land disturbing activity permit was submitted April 13, 2011. Required building permit applications to be submitted at a later date.Location: 517 S Lake Stevens Rd., Lake Stevens, WA 98258Tax Account Number: 290619-001-008-00Applicant: Gene RichDate of application/Completeness date: April 13, 2011Approvals required: Zoning variance, shoreline substantial development, land disturbing activity, and building permits.Lead Agency: Snohomish County Planning & Development ServicesThreshold Determination: The lead agency has determined that the requirements for environmental analysis, protection, and mitigation measures have been adequately addressed in the development regulations and comprehensive plan adopted under chapter 36.70A RCW, and in other applicable local, state, or federal laws or rules, as provided by RCW 43.21C.240 and WAC 197-11-158. Our agency will not require any additional mitigation measures under SEPA. Therefore, an environmental impact statement (EIS) is NOT required under RCW 43.21C.030(2)(c). This decision was made after review by Snohomish County of a completed environmental checklist and other information on file with this agency and such information is adopted herein by reference. This information is available for public review upon request. This Determination of Nonsignificance is issued under WAC 197-11-340 (2) and is subject to a 30 day comment period. Written comments may be submitted to the lead agency at the address below. Comments must be received by July 18, 2014.APPEALS: Pursuant to SCC 30.61.300(10) this DNS may be appealed to the state Shorelines Hearings Board together with the appeal of the underlying Shoreline Permit. Appeal of this DNS is not allowed as a separate appeal, but must be combined with the appeal of the underlying shoreline permit and filed within the time period specified for the appeal of the shoreline permit. The appeal must be received by July 18, 2014. Appeal of a shoreline permit shall be filed with the state shoreline hearings board pursuant to RCW 90.58.180.Project Manager: Jennifer Hagenow, 425-388-3311, ext. 2283Project Manager e-mail: [email protected]

NOTICE OF APPLICATION File Name: Lord Hill Fish Passage Project File Number: 14-107606-LDAProject Description: Land Disturbing Activity to restore a stream channel that was compromised in part by catastrophic failure of beaver dams upstream; includes removal of barriers to fish passage and protection of two exposed natural gas lines. Subject to environmental review.Location: 13520 Old Snohomish-Monroe Rd, SnohomishTax Account Number: 280633-002-018-00Applicant: Kris Thorne - Williams-Northwest PipelineDate of application/Completeness Date: June 10, 2014 Approvals required: Land Disturbing ActivityComment Period: Submit written comments on or before July 9, 2014.Project Manager: Frank Scherf, 425-388-3311, ext. 2725Project Manager e-mail: [email protected]

Publication Date: June 18, 2014.• Call the planner assigned to the project.• Review project file at Snohomish County Planning and Development Services (PDS) 2nd Floor Customer Service Center.• *NEW * Permit Center and Record Center Hours are o 8:00 a.m. to Noon & 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. Mon, Tues, Wed and Fri o CLOSED on Thursdays o Please call ahead to be certain the project file is available. o Please Note: submittals of projects are now taken by appointment only

To comment on a project: • Submit written comments to PDS at the address below. All comments received prior to issuance of a department decision or recommendation will be reviewed. To ensure that comments are addressed in the decision or recommendation, they should be received by PDS before the end of the published comment period.• Comments, on a project scheduled for a hearing before the hearing examiner, may be made by submitting them to PDS prior to the open record hearing.• PDS only publishes the decisions as required by Snohomish County Code. Persons will receive notice of all decisions that they have submitted written comment on, regardless of whether or not they are published.• You may become a party of record for a project by: 1. submitting original written comments and request to become a party of record to the county prior to the hearing, 2. testifying at the hearing or 3. entering your name on a sign-up register at the hearing. NOTE: only parties of record may subsequently appeal the hearing examiner’s decision or provide written or oral arguments to the county council if such an appeal is filed.

To appeal a decision:• Department decisions (including SEPA threshold determinations): submit a written appeal and the $500 filing fee to PDS prior to the close of the appeal period. Refer to SCC 30.71.050(5) for details on what must be included in a written appeal.• A SEPA appeal also requires that an affidavit or declaration be filed with the hearing examiner within seven days of filing the appeal, pursuant to SCC 30.61.305(1).• Hearing examiner decisions issued after a public hearing are appealable as described in the examiner’s decision. Notice of those decisions is not published. You must have submitted written comments to PDS or written or oral comments at the public hearing in order to appeal a hearing examiner’s decision.• Building and Grading applications associated with a Single Family Residence are not subject to the County’s appeal process. To file a judicial appeal in Superior Court, refer to WAC 197-11-680 and RCW 43.21C.075.

How to Reach Us:The Customer Service Center for the Snohomish County Planning and Development Services is located on the 2nd floor of the Robert J. Drewel Building at 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, Everett.

Planning and Development Services

County Administration Building3000 Rockefeller Avenue, M/S 604Everett, WA 98201Phone: 425-388-3311 TTYFAX: 425-388-3872

http://www1.co.snohomish.wa.us/Departments/PDS/default.htm

ADA NOTICE: Snohomish County facilities are accessible. Accommodations for persons with dis-abilities will be provided upon advance request. Please make arrangements one week prior to hearing by calling the Hearing Examiner’s office, 425-388-3538 voice, or contact Anne Kruger (PDS) at 425-388-7119 voice, or 388-3700 TDD

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Case No. 144006581NOTICE TO CREDITORS

IN THE SUPERIOR COURTOF THE STATE OF

WASHINGTONIN AND FOR THE

COUNTY OF SNOHOMISHIn the matter of the estate of

ROBERT LEE WETTER,Deceased.

The person named below has been appointed and has q u a l i f i e d a s P e r s o n a l Representative of this estate. Pe r s o n s h a v i n g c l a i m s against the decedent must, prior to the time such claims wou ld be bar red by any otherwise applicable statute of l imitat ions, serve their c l a i m s o n t h e Pe r s o n a l R e p r e s e n t a t i v e o r t h e attorneys of record at the address stated below and fi le an executed copy o f the claim with the Clerk of this Court within four months after the date of fi rst publication of th is not ice or wi th in four months after the date of fi ling of the copy of this Notice with t he C le r k o f t he Cou r t , whichever is later or, except u n d e r t h o s e p r ov i s i o n s including RCW 11.40.011 or 11.40.013, the claim will be forever barred. This bar is effective as to claims against both the probate assets and nonprobate assets of the decedent. Sharyl Jackson 313 - 32nd Ave. Seattle, WA 98122Published: June 4, 11, 18, 2014.

NO. 11 4 007090PROBATE

NOTICE TO CREDITORS(RCW 11.40.030)

SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON

FOR SNOHOMISH COUNTYEstate of

MYRLYN J HERRING,Deceased.

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE T h e a b ove C o u r t h a s appointed me as Personal Representative of Decedent’s estate. Any person having a claim against the Decedent must present the claim: (a) Before the t ime when the claim would be barred by any a p p l i c a b l e s t a t u t e o f l imitations, and (b) In the manner provided in RCW 11.40.070; (i) By filing the original of the claim with the foregoing Court, and (ii) By serving on or mailing to me at the address below a copy of the claim. The claim must be presented by the later of: (a) Thirty (30) days after I served or mai led th is Not ice as p r o v i d e d i n R C W 11.40.020(1)(c), or (b) Four (4) months after the date of fi rst publication of this Notice. If the claim is not presented within this time period, the claim will be forever barred except as provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. Th is bar i s e f fec t i ve fo r c l a ims aga ins t bo th the Decedent’s probate and non-probate assets.Date of First Publication of this Notice: June 4, 2014.

KIM CANNONPersonal Representative7713 318th St. NWStanwood, WA 98292

Published: June 4, 11, 18, 2014.

Case No. 14 4 00754 5AMENDED

NOTICE TO CREDITORSIN THE SUPERIOR COURT

FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

IN AND FOR THECOUNTY OF SNOHOMISH

In Re the Matter ofthe Estate of:WILLIAM SHERMAN KARR,

Decedent. The personal representa-tive named below has been appointed and has qualified as personal representative of t h i s es ta te . Any pe rson having a claim against the decedent must, before the t ime the c la im would be bar red by any o therwise a p p l i c a b l e s t a t u t e o f limitations, (1) present the c l a im i n t he manne r as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative, or the personal representa-tive’s attorney at the address stated below, a copy of the c la im, and (2 ) f i l i ng the original of the claim with the Clerk of this Cour t . Such service and fi ling must occur within the later of (i) thir ty days a f t e r t he pe rsona l representat ive ser ved or mai led the not ice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (ii) four months after the date of fi rst publication of this notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the c la im i s fo reve r ba r red , except as otherwise provided i n R C W 1 1 . 4 0 . 0 5 1 o r 1 1 . 4 0 . 0 6 0 . T h i s b a r i s effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets.DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: June 4, 2014 /s/ Judy Ann Ingrum JUDY ANN INGRUM Personal RepresentativeAttorney forPersonal Representative DENNIS LEE BURMAN PO Box 1620, Marysville, WA 98270Published: June 4, 11, 18, 2014.

Case No. 14-4-03089-1 SEAAMENDED PROBATE

NOTICE TO CREDITORSRCW 11.40.030

THE SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON

FOR KING COUNTYIN RE THE ESTATE OF:LEAH L. HUDSON, Deceased. The Personal Representa-tive named below has been appointed as Personal Rep-resentative of this Estate. Any person having a claim against the Decedent must, before the t ime the claim wou ld be bar red by any otherwise applicable statute of l imitations, present the c l a im i n t he manne r as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Personal Representative or the Personal Representa-tive’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original claim with the court in which the probate proceed ings 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 c red i to r as prov ided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of fi rst publication of the notice. I f 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: June 11, 2014.Personal Representative: STEVEN K. HUDSONAttorney forPersonal Representative: Rebecca King, WSBA #35019 NORTHWEST ELDER LAW GROUPAddress forMailing or Service 11300 Roosevelt Way NE Suite #101 Seattle, WA 98125Court of probate proceedings and cause number: King County Superior CourtCase Number 14-4-03089-1 SEASigned this 9th day of June, 2014.NORTHWEST ELDER LAW GROUPREBECCA KING, WSBA #35019Attorney forPersonal RepresentativePublished: June 11, 18, 25, 2014.

No. 14-4-00888-6PROBATE

NOTICE TO CREDITORSRCW 11.40.030

SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON

COUNTY OF SNOHOMISHIn re the Estate of:STUART MARK SCHEPMAN, Deceased. The Personal Representa-t ive-Adminis t rator named below has been appointed and has qualifi ed as Personal Representative-Administrator of this estate. Persons having claims against the decedent must, prior to the time such claims would be barred by any otherwise appl icable 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-Administrator or the Personal Representative-Administra-tor’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and fi ling the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceed-ings were commenced. The c la im must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days a f t e r t he Pe rsona l Representative-Administrator served or mailed the notice to the c red i to r as prov ided under RCW 11.40.020(1 )(c); or (2) four months after the date of fi rst publication of the notice. I f 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 a s s e t s a n d n o n p r o b a t e assets.Date of First Publication: June 18 ,2014. LAUREN V. SCHEPMAN Personal Representative- Administrator Attorney for the Personal Representative-Administrator: Brad Lancaster, WSBA #27071Address for Mailing or Service:

Brad LancasterLancaster Law Offi ce17503 10th Avenue NE Shoreline, WA 98155 (206)367-3122

Court of Probate Proceedings:

Snohomish CountySuperior CourtCause Number:

14-4-00888-6Published: June 18, 25; July 2, 2014.

ABANDONED VEHICLE AUCTION

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Wednesday, June 25, 2014Bidding starts at 10:00am

Preview 9:00am6 Vehicles - #4949, 4950, 4939, 4938, 4915, 4947Published: June 18, 2014.

ABANDONED VEHICLESAUCTION

SAT., June 21, 2014Bidding starts at 10:00 a.m.

SHARPPreview vehicles at 9:00 a.m.

* CASH ONLY *SHANNON TOWING INC.

19106 B HWY 99LYNNWOOD WA 98036

* TOW OPERATOR # 5113 *‘99 Cadillac Catera AAM4658‘99 Dodge Durango AKB9646‘99 Dodge Intrepid ADJ3430‘93 Ford Aerostar ALD1533‘96 Ford Econoline VIN#37585‘93 Ford Explorer AMS7701‘98 Ford Taurus AOS9694‘88 Honda Accord 348XXO‘96 Honda Prelude AEL6607‘06 Kia Spectra ANL7332‘94 Olds Bravada 544ZRASPCNS Flatbed Trlr 4LL9331‘03 Toyota Camry AHV8103‘93 Toyota Corolla 868VZU‘99 Toyota Corolla ANK7529‘02 Toyota Rav4 362ZLO‘93 VW Passat ADP4283Published: June 18, 2014.

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Page 21: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

The Daily Herald Wednesday, 06.18.2014 B7

30 Days, 4 Lines + Photo

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New Armchair w/cherub tapestry fabric, white/ gold wood, french style, $199; ex cond 425-318-0833

Packard Bell Radio Mod- el 65A, sliding door $75,

needs work; 425-346-7592

Sensor radio model 5420, $20;

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Silvertone Upright Phonograph, $120;

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VICTORIAN Floor Lamp w/hand sewn silk bead- ed shade, exc cond, $235 425-318-0833

~BUDGET~APPLIANCELarge selection of

Reconditioned Whirlpool, Kenmore & GE

Washers, Dryers, Ranges & Frost-Free RefrigeratorsD Low cost service calls

D New & used partsServing Snohomish Co. for 20 yrs

1904 Broadway,Everett

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Kenmore Heavy Duty Freezer commercial 5 cb ft $160 425-418-3072

TV - SAMSUNG 27” MODEL #TX-P2734

X/XAA, with manual & remote, $20 obo.

Call (425)876-8665

BEAUTIFULSMILES

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WHITE PICKET FENCE (NEW)

20 Sections, 8 feet long. Paid $1,700, Will

Sell All for $1,200, Hardware Included.

wfvander- [email protected]

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2 side by side Cemetery plots at Floral Hills - Rose Garden $3900

both obo 425-268-2970

2-Unassigned Spaces in Floral Hills Cemetery, Lynnwood, WA, Ever- green Garden section, $2000/ea. For Sale by

Private Party. 425-322-5211 or

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(4) Cemetery Plots in same area at Washellis $3000 /ea OBO; Ca l l Frank, 360-668-3980

Abbey View- Extension of Evergreen Washelli in Brier/Kenmore, 2 Plots $350/ea 206-284-8797

37” Toshiba TV, heavy, works perfect! need two peop le to p ick i t up. (206)265-0846

DRY Firewood, $240 per cord, delivered. 360-691-7597

LOG TRUCK LOADS OF FIREWOODCords avail.1-800-743-6067

100% WOOL 7’6” Round Thick Area Rug, Beige

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Beautiful Oak Table- w/ six chairs and 2 leaves $ 2 4 0 t e x t f o r p i c s 425.750.8600

LOVESEAT: 54” blue p la id f l exs tee l . F i r m cushions in terrific condi- tion! 425-483-9192

P E A B O DY M U S E U M Purple glass bead neck- lace, 36”, $45 OBO. Call 425-876-8665

14” SQUARE GLASS Table, new in box,w/um- brella holder, $30. Good

Cond, All sales final 206-229-0672

Ceramic Canister Set w/ Salt/Pepper & Knap- kin holder, $55; All Good

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Kraftware Ice bucket, $15; All Good Cond, All

sales final 206-229-0672

Realistic Metal Detec- tor. Works Great!$150 425-418-3072

Stihl chainsaw, Model 017; 14” bar, $150

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Very nice, lightly used maple cr ib w/mattress $35, Fisher Price High- chair $8, Peg Perago Highchair w/casters & height adjustment $10. All furniture is in good cond. 425-743-1877

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Bob Al len Trap Vest , Navy blue w/ leather shoulder pads, like new, $25. 425-337-5683

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GIRLS BIKE, Schwinn , DeeLite, fancy, gift

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Hummingbird fish finder, 400TX, w/a l l par ts & manual, like new, $30; 425-337-5683

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er, run great. $235425-418-3072

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Estate/Antique-High End Furniture, Fine China.

By appt only. Cash only! 425-478-5592

Oudean’s Willow Creek Nursery at Sorticulture June 6 & 7(10-6),8th

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Push Lawn Mower, 16”, $55; Good Cond, All

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Happy Birthday: Don’t let emotions override common sense. Pick and choose your battles and focus on what will get you the most mileage. �e grass may look greener on the other side of the fence, but do your research before you decide to make a switch. Your numbers are 3, 12, 25, 28, 30, 34, 41.

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Observation will be your savior. Secrets will be kept, and deception is apparent. Initiate change before it is forced on you. Showing insight and forti-tude will give you the upper hand. ���

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Look for new projects or engage in a learning session that interests you. �e introductions you encoun-ter will turn out to be meaningful relation-ships. Contact someone who has been on your mind and share memories. ����

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Someone will be waiting for you to make a mistake. Don’t let negativity or mixed emotions cost you. Focus on your goals and putting in a top-notch e�ort that will bring you recognition and advancement. ��

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Take the road less traveled. Enjoy doing something unique or creative that stimulates your mind, body and soul. Getting involved in something that makes you feel good and brings you joy will enhance your life. �����

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Money comes and money goes. Show restraint when it comes to spending. Luxury items will not de�ne who you are. You cannot buy love. Don’t leave cash or valuables out in the open. ���

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Reconnect

with friends and pick up where you left o�. �e information you gather will lead to an opportunity to do something di�erent. Someone at work may not be as helpful as you are led to believe. ���

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Let your cre-ative imagination lead the way. What you present will be well-received and change your relationship with those you are deal-ing with. Focus on your peers and refuse to let personal matters slow you down. ���

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Follow your creative dreams. Your desire and need to do something special will bring you satis-faction and make you feel proud. Now is the time to expand and explore, not to let life pass you by. �����

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Watch your step. Deception and disillusionment will lead you down a dark path. Listen care-fully and ask questions if you feel uncer-tain. Precision, moderation and due dili-gence will be required to win. ��

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Stay put. Let people come to you. Don’t take liber-ties that can lead to a precarious situation. Protect your money and your important re-lationships. Your home is your castle, and your family is your support system. ����

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Expect to be burdened with matters concerning an older friend or relative. Your kindness will result in good fortune. A change in the way you earn your living is to be expected. ���

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Let your mind wander. Express your ideas and you will receive interesting feedback. Love and romance are on the rise, and plans can be made that will improve your lifestyle. ���

Universal Uclick

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Page 22: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

B8 Wednesday, 06.18.2014 The Daily Herald

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Page 23: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

By Bob DuttonThe News Tribune

SEATTLE — OK ... the Seattle Mariners see the same thing you see. (Many of you, anyway.) That Jesus Montero, for all his still-sub-stantial baggage, remains loaded with tantalizing potential as a run-production threat.

And it was Montero who, on Tuesday afternoon, produced the game’s turning point with a two-run homer in the second inning that erased an early deficit and started the Mariners toward a 6-1 victory over the San Diego Padres

at Safeco Field.“Today was a fun day,” Mon-

tero admitted. “I saw that pitch he (Padres starter Eric Stults) was going to throw me, and I hit it really (well). I was using a big bat, too. I put a good swing on the ball, and I got to help the team.”

It was Montero’s first big-league homer in more than a year and ... OK, that’s deceptive; the drought was just 31 at-bats because he spent most of the past 13 months either in the minors,

learning a new position or serv-ing a drug-related suspension.

Tuesday also marked the first time Montero, a former catcher, played first base in the big leagues. That he remains a defensive work-in-progress was a point manager Lloyd McClendon hammered home in his pre-game remarks.

But that bat ... yes, that bat, potentially, can erase a scads of shortcomings in other areas.

“He’s had some obstacles along the way,” McClendon said. “We all know about those. He’s mak-ing amends, and he’s trying to come back, and he’s trying to do the right thing.”

The Mariners also got a two-run homer from Robinson Cano in support of a strong bounce-back effort by rookie lefty Roenis

Mariners overpower the Padres, sweep short home series

SECTION C | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM/SPORTS | WEDNESDAY, 06.18.2014

SportsWorld Cup

Mexico holds off Brazil for 0-0 tie; Belgium rallies to defeat Algeria 2-1;

Russia and South Korea battle to 1-1 draw, C5

INSIDE: NFL, C2 | Baseball, C3 | College World Series, C6 | Sounders, C6 | Weather, C6

TONIGHT’S GAMESeattle at San Diego, 7:10 p.m.

TV: Root (cable) Radio: ESPN (710 AM)

By John BoyleHerald Writer

RENTON— Marshawn Lynch was in attendance, but to bor-row his own phrase, the Seattle Seahawks running back was not “about that action, boss.”

By simply showing up at the Seahawks’ minicamp, however, Lynch ended the holdout that never actually happened, even if he did not participate in the

workout because of a sore ankle.

“It was a big story,” Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said sar-castically of Lynch’s much discussed deci-sion to attend

minicamp. “We expected him to be here and he’s here.”

Lynch’s presence was anything

but a given before Tuesday, despite the minicamp being mandatory. He skipped Seattle’s voluntary organized team activities, then reports surfaced last week that he would miss minicamp as well because he is unhappy with his contract. A report on the league’s website even suggested Lynch was considering retirement if he didn’t get what he was looking for from Seattle, but for now at least, Lynch is back with his team and

was embraced by teammates and coaches while watching prac-tice, despite his less-than-stellar attendance during the voluntary portion of the offseason.

While coaches and players say every workout is important — why have offseason workouts if they don’t do any good? — Car-roll acknowledged Tuesday that not every player’s situation is the

Lynch does show up for Seahawks’ minicamp but doesn’t practice

By Rich MyhreHerald Writer

RENTON — With the pass-ing weeks and months, residents of Darrington are slowly putting the tragedy of the Oso mudslide behind them.

And as members of the Dar-rington High School football team found out on Tuesday, plenty of good people in the Puget Sound area are still looking for ways to help that happen.

On the drive to this week’s Central Washington University football camp in Ellensburg, the Loggers took a slight detour to

attend a Seattle Seahawks mini-camp at the NFL team’s Renton practice facility. Darrington’s players and coaches were invited guests of the Seahawks, and the visit included a chance to get autographs and pose for pictures with many of Seattle’s top players.

“The kids are on Cloud 9 right now,” said Darrington head coach Doug Lenker as he watched his players mingle with the Seahawks after the afternoon workout. “It is,” he added, “a heck of a day.”

This is the second time the Super Bowl champion Seahawks

Championship treatment

By Nick PattersonThe Herald

EVERETT — Austin Cousino doesn’t have the reputation of being a power hitter. Nevertheless, he managed to punctuate his pro-fessional debut in a big way.

The Everett AquaSox outfielder marked his first game as a pro Monday by belting a home run in Everett’s 7-3 loss to the Hills-boro Hops at Everett Memorial Stadium.

Cousino, the Seattle Mariners’ third-round pick in this year’s amateur draft out of the Univer-sity of Kentucky, was selected largely based on his speed and his defense in center field. In his three years at Kentucky he was 48-for-51 as a base stealer and a three-time member of the SEC All-Defensive Team. In contrast, home runs were far more rare, as he hit just four in 61 games this spring— though the scouting reports suggested he had surprising pop for a player of his size (5-foot-10, 185 pounds).

Therefore, homering in his first professional game wasn’t on Cousino’s mind.

“I just try to go up there and put a good swing on the ball every time up and try to find barrel,” Cousino said. “When you’re first adjusting to these wood bats you’re not try-ing to do too much with it because when you do you’re going to get in trouble. I just go up there and look for a good pitch to hit, and when that happens good things happen.”

That good thing happened in Cousino’s second at bat. During his first at bat Cousino belted a ball that would have been a homer, but it drifted just foul down the right-field line, and he ended up striking out. But his next time up Cousino turned on the first pitch he saw, a low changeup, and this time it stayed fair as it just dropped into the homer porch in right.

“I hit that first one foul and I was thinking it would have been cool if I could have got it around,” Cousino said. “Then I did the sec-ond time up. It was nice to get that first one out of the way, so now I can play ball from here on out.”

Cousino shows Sox he’s not just speed, ‘D’

Marshawn Lynch

TONIGHT’S GAMEEverett at Everett, 7:15 p.m.

Radio: KRKO (1380 AM)

Tuesday’s result: Everett beaten 5-3 by the Hillsboro Hops, C2

Home runs by Montero, Cano spark Seattle’s 6-1 victory

DOUG RAMSAY / FOR THE HERALDABOVE: Darrington High school quarterback Trent Green, a senior-to-be, is all smiles as Seattle Seahawk wide receiver Percy Harvin signs his hat after the Loggers football team watched the Seahawks work out during their minicamp session on Tuesday in Renton. BELOW: Darrington football head coach Doug Lenker (right) talks with Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll after the Super Bowl champs’ practice.

STEPHEN BRASHEAR / ASSOCIATED PRESSSeattle’s Jesus Montero is congratulated by teammates in the dugout after hitting a two-run home run in the second inning against San Diego Padres on Tuesday. The Mariners went on to defeat the Padres 6-1.See M’S, Page C3

Darrington High’s football team, still working to erase Oso mudslide memories, enjoys a special day with the Seattle Seahawks, then heads to CWU, where the university invited the team to attend its football camp for free

See DARRINGTON, Page C4

See COUSINO, Page C2See LYNCH, Page C2

Page 24: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

C2 Wednesday, 06.18.2014 The Daily Herald

CALENDAR WED THU 18 19JUNE

AwayHome

TELEVISIONTODAY

BASEBALL4 p.m. ESPN2 L.A. Angels at Cleveland5 p.m. ESPN NCAA World Series7 p.m. ROOT Seattle at San Diego

GOLF2 a.m. GOLF Irish Open

MOTORCYCLE RACING5 p.m. NBCS Championship Series: Glen Helen8:30 p.m. NBCS Hangtown MX Classic

SOCCER8:30 a.m. ESPN Australia vs. Netherlands8:45 a.m. CBUT Australia vs. Netherlands11:30 a.m. ESPN Spain vs. Chile11:45 a.m. CBUT Spain vs. Chile2:30 p.m. ESPN Cameroon vs. Croatia2:45 p.m. CBUT Cameroon vs. Croatia

THURSDAYAUTO RACING

5 a.m. NBCS Formula One practiceBASEBALL

5 p.m. ESPN NCAA World Series7 p.m. ROOT Seattle at San Diego

BASKETBALL7 p.m. LiveWell San Antonio at Seattle

BOXING5 p.m. FS1 Boxing

GOLF7 a.m. GOLF Irish OpenNoon ESPN2 U.S. Women’s OpenNoon GOLF Travelers Championship3:30 p.m. GOLF Travelers Championship6:30 p.m. GOLF Travelers Championship2 a.m. GOLF Irish Open

SOCCER8:30 a.m. ESPN Colombia vs. Ivory Coast8:45 a.m. CBUT Colombia vs. Ivory Coast11:30 a.m. ESPN Uruguay vs. England11:45 a.m. CBUT Uruguay vs. England2:30 p.m. ESPN Japan vs. Greece2:45 p.m. CBUT Japan vs. Greece

RADIOTODAY

BASEBALL7:10 p.m. 710 Seattle at San Diego7:15 p.m. 1380 Everett at Tri-City

THURSDAYBASEBALL

3:40 p.m. 710 Seattle at San Diego7:15 p.m. 1380 Everett at Tri-City

San Diego3:40 p.m.

ROOT

San Diego7:10 p.m.

ROOT

Tri-City7:15 p.m.

Tri-City7:15 p.m.

PSA Elite7 p.m.

San Antonio7 p.m.

LiveWell

Thurston County

7:05 p.m.

TONIGHT’S GAMEEverett at Tri-City, 7:15 p.m.Radio: KRKO (1380 AM)Probable startering pitchers: Everett right-hander Rigoberto Garcia (0-0, 6.00 earned run average) vs. Tri-City left-hander Helmis Rodriguez (0-0, 1.69)

AQUASOX | Update

By Nick PattersonHerald Writer

EVERETT — The Everett Aqua-Sox were done in by a string of balls that didn’t travel more than 70 feet.

Three consecutive bunts sparked a three-run rally as the Hillsboro Hops defeated the Sox 5-3 Tuesday night at Everett Memorial Stadium in the finale of their five-game series.

Hillsboro trailed 3-2 going into the top of the seventh inning. But Galli Cribbs beat out a sacrifice bunt attempt for a single, Tay-lor Ratliff laid down a squeeze bunt that resulted in a play at the plate in which Justin Gonza-lez was declared safe — drawing Everett manager Dave Valle from the dugout for a long and heated argument with the umpire. Then Sox pitcher Cruz Pereira fumbled Jordan Parr’s sacrifice bunt to load the bases. Two more runs scored courtesy of Todd Glaesman’s RBI single and Cesar Carrasco’s sacri-fice fly. The three runs the Hops scored in the inning held up as the difference.

Grant Heyman and Nate Robert-son each went 2-for-4 for Hillsboro, which improved to 4-1.

Luis Caballero hit a three-run double and Austin Cousino went 2-for-4 to lead Everett (1-4), which dropped its fourth straight. The Sox struck out 13 times Tuesday, the fourth consecutive game in which Hillsboro pitchers fanned at least 10 Everett batters.

Tuesday’s game saw the pro-fessional debut of Sox pitcher Dan Altavilla, a small-college star who was the Seattle Mari-ners’ fifth-round pick in this year’s amateur draft, making him the highest-drafted player currently on Everett’s roster. The right-hander, displaying a fastball in the high 80s and a sharp breaking ball, pitched three innings. He allowed two runs on three hits and two walks, striking out three.

Short staysThe Northwest League season is less

than a week old, yet the Sox already have seen their first departures. Out-fielder Arby Fields and pitcher Troy Scott both left Tuesday to join Pulaski of the rookie Appalachian League.

Fields played in Everett’s first three games, batting 2-for-9. Scott appeared in one game, allowing three runs in three innings. Scott’s tenure was par-ticularly short as he spent less than two full days with the Sox.

AquaSox fall victim to the Hops’ small ball

“When I hit it I thought (it was out), but then I saw the right fielder going after it I wasn’t so sure,” Cous-ino added. “It got out just enough so I could jog around.”

Cousino is the highest draft pick currently on Everett’s roster, and he was happy not only with his debut performance, but to be getting his pro career started.

“It went well,” Cousino said. “It’s just nice to get out there and play ball again, getting my feet wet here in pro ball and using the wood bat. It was an exciting day, I got some texts and calls from back home, which was nice. It was fun.

“There was the draft and that pro-cess, but once you’re with a team it’s go time, it doesn’t matter about any of things that came before,” Cousino added. “I’m happy to be with the Mariners and I’m happy to get this thing started.”

CousinoFrom Page C1

the same. Lynch is an incredibly physical running back and has averaged more than 300 carries per season over the past three years. The way Carroll sees it, the need for Lynch to recover physi-cally trumps whatever he could gain going through a few extra workouts in May and June.

“We have rested him a lot in the offseason,” Carroll said. “He takes a big pounding during the year, it takes him a long time to get his body back to where he doesn’t feel the rigors of the sea-son that’s passed. In this case it’s unique, but he is a unique player and he has a unique role on our football team, so we have to do what we have to do to take care of him. You won’t see him get the ball a lot in preseason. We’ll work all the way to that opening day and see if we can have him right for then. That’s what’s most important.”

Lynch was not available for

comment after practice—it’s standard policy for players who don’t practice to be unavailable to the media, and it’s also stan-dard policy for Lynch to not be available in general—but Carroll wouldn’t address the reports that Lynch is looking for a new con-tract, saying the team’s practice is to not talk about “the business side of it.”

“We haven’t talked about other guys in that regard, so we’re not doing that now,” Carroll said.

As for that ankle injury, Car-roll said, “He’s got a sore ankle, so we’re going to make sure we take care of him. As always, right now if there’s any question at all, we’re going to opt to give guys more time now.

“There’s enough there that we don’t want to mess with it… I think he just tweaked it or some-thing a while back and we’re just taking care of it and making sure he’s OK.”

Carroll was also asked if he had gotten the sense that Lynch had any uncertainty about his role on the team going forward—the Seahawks have praised

second-year running back Christine Michael at every turn, and offensive coordinator Dar-rell Bevell even used the phrase “running back by committee” before backtracking—and said that wasn’t a question at all.

“We expect him to come right back in battling and doing the things that he does,” Carroll said. “(Robert Turbin) and Chris-tine, those guys want some time too and they’re battling, they’ve had great offseasons for us, but Marshawn has really been the guy for us and we love every-thing about the way he plays and what he brings to this team. He’s never taken a step backwards at any time for us in all the years he’s been here. From the day we went after him and got him, we had sights on him becoming the player he has become, and he’s never disappointed us. Hopefully he’ll be really healthy and ready to go at season’s start, and if we’ve accomplished that with this off-season, then that will be very successful for him and our team.”

Herald Writer John Boyle: [email protected].

LynchFrom Page C1

By John BoyleHerald Writer

RENTON — It’s rare that a professional athlete embraces a decrease in playing time, but for the Seattle Seahawks’ newest addition, a slightly smaller work load sounds ideal.

Kevin Williams, the six-time Pro Bowl player who signed with Seattle last week, has been a starter and regular on the field throughout his 11-year NFL career with the Minnesota Vikings. But at this late stage in his career — Williams turns 34 later this summer — he realizes that playing on a defense that rotates linemen heavily could be the best thing for him.

Asked what he thought when he watched the Seahawks in 2013, Williams said “Man, those guys have a nice rotation on defense.”

Indeed the Seahawks do like to rotate their defensive line-men. Last season, the Seahawks didn’t have a single lineman play more than 600 snaps — Michael Bennett led the D-line in playing time taking just over 57 percent of the snaps — while Williams was on the field for 720 in Minnesota.

“I looked at some stats about a month ago. I had like 700 snaps last year and nobody on the D-Line here even touched 650,” Williams said. “It’s an awe-some chance to get in and play a limited number of snaps and maximize the ability I have.”

Williams was a prolific pass rusher early in his career, reg-istering 22 sacks in his first two

seasons. While those numbers have fallen off despite him still playing at a high level, Williams thinks in a more limited role that he could again be a pass-rushing threat.

“Absolutely, he said. “I think if I’m playing 500 plays versus 700 plays at this age I can definitely still get after the quarterback.”

And Williams’ decision to sign with Seattle of course came down to more than just his role with his new team. Heading into his 12th season, Williams wants to play for a team built to win now, some-thing the Seahawks are obviously set up to do.

On the flip side of that deci-sion, the Seahawks were eager to add another veteran to a defen-sive line that lost several key players this offseason, including Red Bryant, Clinton McDonald and Chris Clemons.

“We have tremendous respect for the person that he is, the com-petitor that he is, the leader that he is,” Seahawks coach Pete Car-roll said. “He’s a big man that plays tough. We want him to play good, physical football for us like he always has. We’re not going to ask him to do anything different than what he’s done.

“We’re asking him to go in his role and see how much he can help us. … We feel very fortunate at this time to add to our team and the things that we’ve accom-plished at this point, a guy like Kevin. He just brings a tremen-dous amount to our club.”

Next up for Williams and the Seahawks is figuring out exactly how he fits in. Carroll talked mostly about Williams playing

the three-technique defensive tackle spot, which is where Tony McDaniel started last year. That could mean those two competing for a starting job, but there could also be times that Seattle wants to use them together.

With Bryant gone, McDan-iel has been playing some as a five-technique end (Bryant’s old position) during offseason work-outs, and Carroll said he liked the idea of having both on the field together when the team wants to go big to stop the run. Williams also worked some as an interior pass rusher with Seattle’s nickel defense Tuesday. A spot is open there with McDonald leaving in free agency.

Williams still has to earn his place on the team. Just last year, former Viking Antoine Winfield, came to Seattle with a Pro-Bowl résumé and didn’t end up on the final roster. But while he’ll face a challenge from players like Jesse Williams and Jordan Hill, a pair of 2013 draft picks trying to come back from injury-plagued rookie seasons, Kevin Williams, espe-cially a more rested version of him, could be a big addition for the Seahawks.

“He said, ‘Maybe in my career it might be time to do that,’” said Carroll on pitching the idea of Seattle’s line rotation to Williams. “ … I think it’s a real natural way for us to utilize his strengths, and obviously he took to it, because he’s here. He had other choices, he had other places to go, other deals to take, and he wanted to be a part of our program.”

Herald Writer John Boyle: [email protected].

Williams adjusting just fine

Associated Press

CLEVELAND — Quarterback Johnny Manziel agreed to a con-tract with the Cleveland Browns on Tuesday.

Terms were not immediately available.

The former Heisman Trophy winner enters training camp next month as Cleveland’s No. 2 quarter-back behind veteran Brian Hoyer, who has been limited during off-season practices while recovering from knee surgery

The Browns moved up in last month’s draft to select Manziel with the No. 22 overall pick. He went 20-6 in two seasons at Texas A&M, where he became the first freshman to win the Heisman and earned the nickname “Johnny Football” for his dynamic playmaking abilities.

Sankey, Titans reach dealNASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Tennessee

Titans have agreed to terms with their second-round draft pick, University of Washington running back Bishop San-key. Terms were not disclosed.

Sankey started his last two seasons at Washington. He finished his Husky career with 3,496 yards and 37 touch-downs. He set a school single-season rushing record last year as a junior, running for 1,870 yards, which ranked fourth nationally. He topped 100 yards in eight games and finished with 2,174 all-purpose yards.

Texans’ Johnson a no-showHOUSTON — Houston receiver An-

dre Johnson skipped the first day of the Texans’ mandatory mini-camp.

Johnson hasn’t participated in any of the team’s voluntary offseason workouts and said last month that he wouldn’t attend these workouts, either. On Tuesday, he missed the first of three days of practices that are the last work-outs before the team begins training camp in late July.

Johnson, 32, has said he has not asked for a trade, but last month he wondered if Houston was “still the place for me.”

The Texans also were without No. 1 overall pick Jadeveon Clowney, who is recovering from surgery to repair a sports hernia.

Browns, Manziel agree on contract

NFL | Notebook

Associated Press

SEATTLE — Super Bowl-win-ning quarterback Russell Wilson has won the Good Guy Award from the Professional Football Writers of America for his pro-fessional approach to helping the journalists do their job.

In leading the Seattle

Seahawks to their first NFL championship, Wilson was cited for being not only the face of the franchise, “but also the voice and conscience of it.”

Wilson is the sixth quarter-back to win the award in the past seven years, and the first Seahawk. The award was first given in 2005, to Pittsburgh

running back Jerome Bettis.Wilson became just the

fourth second-year quarter-back and the third-youngest QB to win a Super Bowl. He led five fourth-quarter or overtime comebacks in 2013, including a 62-yard touchdown drive in the NFC championship against San Francisco.

Seahawks QB Wilson wins Good Guy Award

DOUG RAMSAY / FOR THE HERALD Seattle Seahawks defensive lineman Kevin Williams (left) participates in Tuesday’s first day of a three-day minicamp.

New Seahawks D-lineman used to playing more snaps than he’ll get with Seattle

Tuesday’s box scoreHops 5, AquaSox 3Hillsboro ab r h bi Everett ab r h biRatliff cf 4 1 0 1 Cousino cf 4 1 2 0Parr dh 4 1 1 0 Caballero ss 5 0 1 3Glaesmann rf 4 0 1 1 Mariscal 3b 4 0 0 0Carrasco 1b 4 0 0 1 Castillo lf 3 0 0 0Heyman lf 4 1 2 0 Plns-Art. rf 3 0 0 0Baker c 4 0 1 0 Thomas dh 3 1 1 0Robertson ss 4 0 2 0 Brito 1b 4 0 1 0Gonzalez 3b 2 1 1 0 Martin c 4 0 1 0Cribbs 2b 4 1 1 1 Cowan 2b 2 1 1 0 a-Smart ph 1 0 0 0Totals 34 5 9 4 Totals 33 3 7 3

Hillsboro 110 000 300 — 5 9 0Everett 000 030 000 — 3 7 2

a-Struck out for Cowan in the 9th.E—De Meyer (1), Pereira (1). LOB—Hillsboro 8, Everett

8. DP—Hillsboro 1, Everett 0. 2B—Parr (1), Baker (1), Ca-ballero (2), Gonzalez (1), Robertson (2). SAC—Ratliff, Parr. SF—Carrasco. CS—Cribbs (1).Hillsboro IP H R ER BB SOSchultz 3 2 0 0 1 1Savas W, 1-0 3 3 3 3 0 5Loggins 2 1 0 0 2 5Curtis 1 1 0 0 0 2Everett IP H R ER BB SOAltavilla 3 3 2 2 2 3De Meyer 3 2 0 0 1 4Pereira L, 0-1 3 4 3 3 0 5

WP—Altavilla 2. HBP—Cousino (by Savas). T—2:49. A—2,078.

Page 25: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

BaseballC3 | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM | WEDNESDAY, 06.18.2014

Locals in the pros

In the majorsThe major-league statistics for

players with Snohomish County ties. The statistics are through June 16:

HITTERS

Grady Sizemore, Cascade H.S.Boston Red Sox.216, 2 HR, 15 RBI

Travis Snider, Jackson H.S.Pittsburgh Pirates.230, 3 HR, 12 RBI

PITCHERS

Blaine Hardy, Edmonds-Woodway H.S.Detroit Tigers0-0, 2.0 IP, 0.00 ERA

Down on the farmThe minor-league statistics along

with the team, classification and major-league affiliate for players with Snohomish County ties. The statistics are through June 16:

HITTERS

David Amberson, Cascade H.S.Wichita (Independent).280, 0 HR, 4 RBI

Mitch Canham, Lake Stevens H.S.Harrisburg (AA), Nationals.186, 1 HR, 7 RBI

Aaron Cunningham, Everett C.C.Reno (AAA), Diamondbacks.238, 0 HR, 17 RBI

Kawika Emsley-Pai, Jackson H.S.West Virginia (A), Pirates.174, 1 HR, 2 RBI

Bubba Jones, Edmonds-Woodway H.S.Staten Island (A), Yankees.000, 0 HR, 0 RBI

Derek Jones, Snohomish H.S.Modesto (A), Rockies.262, 6 HR, 23 RBI

Brent Lillibridge, Jackson H.S.Round Rock (AAA), Rangers.231., 6 HR, 29 RBI

Danny Oh, Jackson H.S.*Tampa (A), Yankees.290., 0 HR, 4 RBI

Ian Parmley, Monroe H.S.Lansing (A), Blue Jays.203., 0 HR, 7 RBI

Steven Souza, Cascade H.S..Syracuse (AAA), Nationals.362, 8 HR, 31 RBI

PITCHERSAaron Brooks, Mountlake Terrace H.S.Clinton (A), Mariners3-2, 24.2 IP, 2.55 ERA

Geoff Brown, Jackson H.S.Rancho Cucamonga (A), Dodgers1-4, 44.2 IP, 4.84 ERA

Stephen Fife, Everett C.C.*Albuquerque (AAA), Dodgers1-2, 23.1 IP, 6.94 ERA

Tyler Ihrig, Monroe H.S.Boise (A), Cubs0-0, 5.0 IP, 0.00 ERA

Keone Kela, Everett CC*Frisco (AA), Rangers1-0, 14.0 IP, 1.93 ERA

Josh Kimborowicz, Everett CCHudson Valley (A), Rays1-0, 2.0 IP, 0.00 ERA

Chris Johnson, Meadowdale H.S.*Augusta (A), Giants0-1, 2.0 IP, 9.00 ERA

Owen Jones, Edmonds-Woodway H.S.Rancho Cucamonga (A) Dodgers2-1, 28.2 IP, 6.28 ERA

Tyler Kane, Archbishop Murphy H.S.Batavia (A), Marlins0-0, 1.2 IP, 0.00 ERA

Mason Tobin, Everett C.C.Fresno (AAA), Giants1-0, 29.1 IP, 3.07 ERA

Ryan Verdugo, Lake Stevens H.S.Omaha (AAA), Royals4-1, 25.0 IP, 2.52 ERA

Aaron West, Snohomish H.S.*Corpus Christi (AA), Astros2-0, 22.2 IP, 4.76 ERA

*—On the disabled listHave we missed someone?If you know of other Snohomish

County athletes playing professional baseball, let us know by calling 425-339-3470 or by sending an email to [email protected].

Who’s hotBlaine Hardy, LHP. After seven seasons in the minor leagues, the gradu-

ate of Edmonds-Woodway High School was called up to the majors Sunday by the Detrot Tigers. Hardy, 27, made his big-league debut Monday night against the Kansas City Royals, thowing two scoreless innings in the Tigers’ 11-8 loss. Prior to his promotion, Hardy posted strong numbers at Class AAA Toledo, both as a starter and as a reliever. He was 3-2 with a 2.68 earned-run average in 20 games with the Mud Hens, including six starts.

ASSOCIATED PRESSBlaine Hardy pitches against the Kansas City Royals on Monday night in his major-league debut. Hardy is a graduate of Edmonds-Woodway High School.

Sonali Basak and Mason Levinson

Bloomberg News

NEW YORK — The death of Hall-of-Fame baseball player Tony Gwynn from mouth cancer has renewed calls to remove the use of chewing tobacco from its traditional place in the game.

Gwynn, 54, died Monday after two surgeries to remove malig-nant growths inside his right cheek, where the former San Diego Padre said he chewed tobacco while he played. He was one of more than 40,000 people diagnosed with oral cancer yearly in the United States, according to the Oral Cancer Foundation.

Only about half of these patients will be alive in five years, U.S. health officials say, mostly

because oral cancers are usu-ally discovered only after they’ve spread to another location, such as the lymph nodes in the neck. It’s estimated that at least 75 per-cent of those diagnosed with oral cancer at 50 have been tobacco users.

“We’ve decreased the rate of smoking tobacco but not the rates of chewing tobacco,” said Mark Agulnik, an oncologist at Northwestern University’s Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center in Chicago.

Joe Garagiola, a former major-league catcher and broadcaster who for decades has been an advocate against the use of smokeless tobacco, said the strongest steps should be taken to rid the game of the product.

“The player’s association has

to vote on it,” he said in a tele-phone interview. “I just wish that they would take a more serious look at it and don’t wait for good people to die, good guys like Tony Gwynn.”

Gwynn, who spent his entire two-decade career with the San Diego Padres team, was an eight-time National League batting champion and was named to the All-Star team 15 times. He was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 2007. Gwynn was on leave from his position as head baseball coach of San Diego State University, where he starred as a two-sport athlete, when he died.

Gregory Connolly, a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston who has worked to get chewing tobacco out of baseball for about 30 years, says

Gwynn’s death may be a harbin-ger of future disease.

“Even though we see few reports of deaths now, the form of chewing tobacco that he took up is relatively recent in our country,” Connolly said. The use of chewing tobacco began to increase among younger people in the 1980s. He said the use of smokeless tobacco has increased in the past several years.

As a result, the number of peo-ple in their 50s, like Gwynn, being diagnosed with the disease later in life is on the rise, Connolly said. “We do know your risk fac-tor greatly increases with age,” he said. “It’s devastating. The five-year mortality rate is 50 percent, and if you don’t die, you’re left totally disfigured.”

The U.S. National Institutes

of Health has called smokeless tobacco one of the fastest grow-ing detrimental health habits in North America as “sports fig-ures promote the product in an attempt to erase the old, unsani-tary image of (smoking) and replace it with a macho image.”

Athletes, military personnel and people who find it difficult to smoke in their businesses tend to switch to smokeless tobacco, said Pamela Clark, a research professor at the department of behavioral and community health at the University of Mary-land College Park. Clark is doing research work for the Food and Drug Administration on the use of smokeless tobacco. She also said men and people who live in rural areas are more likely to chew tobacco.

Gwynn’s death renews calls to ban chewing tobacco

Elias, who improved to 6-5 by limiting the Padres to one run and three hits in seven innings.

Elias lasted a season-low 31⁄3 innings while giving up a season-high six runs in his previous start, a 6-3 loss to the New York Yankees.

“I had my control,” he said through an interpreter. “I went out and did what I was capable of doing and, thank God, it worked out well for us.”

Dominic Leone and Danny Farquhar closed out the Mariners’ third consecutive victory, which concluded an eight-game home-stand that started with five losses.

“The Yankees beat us three games,” McClendon said. “We had an opportunity to win (the first two games) against Texas, and we didn’t take advantage of it. The Yankees just kicked our butt. It’s just that simple.”

Stults (2-9) lasted just five innings but threw 102 pitches before exiting in a 4-1 hole. He gave up six hits, including the homers to Montero and Cano.

“I thought his stuff was fine,” Padres manager Buddy Black said. “They stressed him a

little bit, and his pitch count was elevated, but he battled and com-peted like he always does.”

The Mariners (37-34) got their final two runs on Kyle Seager’s two-out, bases-loaded bloop double in the seventh against reliever Tim Stauffer.

Elias retired the first five Padres before teeing up a 1-1 fastball for Rene Rivera, who rocked it into the left-field seats for a two-out homer and a 1-0 lead.

It was, pretty much, the only mis-take that Elias made in an 87-pitch performance. He struck out six and walked none. And the Padres’ 1-0 lead didn’t survive the inning.

The Mariners cashed a sloppy error by first baseman Tommy Medica, who couldn’t handle a routine throw from third base-man Chase Headley on Cole Gillespie’s one-out grounder.

Montero followed by yanking a two-run homer to left for a 2-1 lead. It was Montero’s first big-league homer since May 8, 2013, at Pittsburgh. (He did have eight this season in 59 games for Class AAA Tacoma prior to his June 12 recall.)

“He’s strong,” McClendon said. “No question about it. It was

actually a hit-and-run, and the ball was up in the zone. He’s so strong he was able to muscle it out.”

The ball seemed to float toward left field, but it found sufficient carry.

“I just ran hard,” Montero said. “I didn’t know if it was gone or not. When I looked, it was over the wall.”

It was still 2-1 when James Jones opened the fifth inning with a single, his third hit, and stole second — even though Stults guessed correctly with a pickoff throw. Jones simply beat Medica’s high throw to second.

After struggling Stefen Romero failed to advance the runner, Jones went to third on a pitch in the dirt to Cano. The Padres then shortened their infield ... and it didn’t matter.

Cano golfed a 3-1 slider into the right-field seats for a 4-1 lead.

“It was good contact,” Cano said, “but in that situation, I just wanted to put the ball in play. I didn’t want a ground ball. I just wanted to hit the ball out of the infield. With Jones on, anything (out of the infield), he can score.”

M’s: Elias rebounds from tough lossFrom Page C1

Associated Press

BOSTON — The Boston Red Sox have designated outfielder Grady Sizemore for assignment.

Sizemore, a graduate of Cascade High School in Everett, returned to the major leagues this season after injuries sidelined him from September 2011 until this season. He made the American League

All-Star team three times with the Cleveland Indians, but has under-gone seven operations since 2009, including surgery on both knees, his back and elbow.

Sizemore hit .333 in spring training and started in center field on opening day when he homered in Boston’s 2-1 loss at Baltimore. But in 52 games, he hit .216 with two homers and 15 RBI.

By designating Sizemore for assignnent, Boston removes him from the 25-man major-league roster and has 10 days to either trade or release him.

To replace Sizemore on the roster, the Red Sox recalled third baseman Garin Cecchini From Class AAA Pawtucket. He played one game with Boston, on June 1, going 1-for-2 with an RBI double.

Sizemore designated for assignment

MARINERS | Notebook

By Bob DuttonThe News Tribune

SEATTLE —  Fact: Mariners third baseman Kyle Seager bat-ted .238 with 13 homers over 638 at-bats in his first three seasons at Safeco Field.

Fact: Seager is batting .311 this season in 36 games at Safeco and already has nine homers in 119 at-bats.

Fact: Seager had 33 RBIs last season in 80 games at Safeco. This year, he already has 30. His on-base percentage at home is nearly 100 points higher than his career mark coming into the season.

Fact: There are a bunch more facts in this vein, but you get the idea.

Question (obvious): What’s going on?

“I’m not doing anything dif-ferent,” insisted Seager, who contributed a two-run double to Tuesday’s 6-1 victory over the Padres. “It’s just one of those things. But I’m going to ride the wave.”

On reflection, he added: “The numbers weren’t really good (in the past), I guess, but it’s just one of those things. You get into a rhythm, and you start feeling good. It’s worked out that I’ve been in that rhythm at home.”

Any explanation for the power surge? The fences, after all, were

shortened prior to last season.“Not that I’m aware of,” Seager

said, shaking his head. “It’s just one of those things, but I’ll take it. I’m not giving them back.”

Iwakuma slowedRight-hander Hisashi Iwakuma

skipped his regular between-starts bullpen workout Tuesday because of continuing problems with a stiff neck.

Iwakuma did play catch from flat ground and did his regular running reg-imen in the outfield. He remains listed as the Mariners’ starting pitcher for Fri-day’s series opener at Kansas City.

Manager Lloyd McClendon said “As I speak now, he will not miss a start.”

Iwakuma’s ailment surfaced prior to his start Sunday against Texas, but he pitched eight innings and limited the Rangers to one run and six hits in a 6-1 victory.

Montero at firstJesus Montero started at first base

for the first time in his big-league ca-reer —  and McClendon’s pre-game comments suggested expectations were modest.

“We’ve got a left-hander going (Eric Stults for San Diego),” McClen-don said, “and we need a first base-man. I’m not playing the left-handed first baseman (Logan Morrison).”

Asked why he had the necessary confidence to put Montero at first base, McClendon responded: “I never said I had confidence. I said I need a first baseman. He’s available, and that’s who we’re going to put out there.”

The hope was Montero could de-liver with his bat...as happened in the second inning when his two-run homer erased a 1-0 deficit.

Montero, a former catcher, con-verted to first base last season at Tri-ple-A Tacoma and played 64 minor-league games at his new position over the last two seasons.

Even so, he was surprised to see he was playing first base on Tuesday.

“The first thing I thought was…I got nervous,” Montero said. “But after that, I hit the homer and I felt better. I relaxed, and I got some confidence. I made a couple of plays in there.”

And defensively? He handled eight chances with no problems, including one grounder, before Morrison en-tered the game as a defensive replace-ment in the seventh inning.

Short hopsFirst baseman Justin Smoak, out-

fielder Michael Saunders and first baseman/outfielder Corey Hart are all expected to report Wednesday to Tacoma to continue their recovery from injuries. All three are expect-ed to play by this weekend. Smoak is recovering from a strained left quadriceps muscle, Saunders from a sore right shoulder and Hart from a strained left hamstring...center fielder James Jones went 3-for-5 and is batting .349 (15-for-43) over his last 10 games...Kyle Seager had his third straight multi-RBI day when he blooped a two-run double in the seventh inning. He has 25 RBIs in his last 29 games....The Mariners’ starters have allowed one or no runs in each of the last five games.

Seager shining on offense at Safeco

Page 26: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

BASEBALLAmerican League

West Division W L Pct GBOakland 43 28 .606 —Los Angeles 38 32 .543 4½Seattle 37 34 .521 6 Texas 35 36 .493 8 Houston 32 40 .444 11½

Central Division W L Pct GBKansas City 38 32 .543 —Detroit 36 31 .537 ½Cleveland 36 36 .500 3Chicago 34 37 .479 4½Minnesota 32 37 .464 5½

East Division W L Pct GBToronto 41 31 .569 —New York 36 33 .522 3½Baltimore 36 34 .514 4Boston 33 38 .465 7½Tampa Bay 28 44 .389 13

Tuesday’s gamesSeattle 6, San Diego 1Washington 6, Houston 5L.A. Angels 9, Cleveland 3N.Y. Yankees 3, Toronto 1Kansas City 11, Detroit 4Baltimore 7, Tampa Bay 5Boston 2, Minnesota 1Chicago White Sox 8, San Francisco 2Oakland 10, Texas 6

Wednesday’s GamesKansas City (Guthrie 3-6) at Detroit (Smyly

3-5), 10:08 a.m.Baltimore (Gausman 2-1) at Tampa Bay

(Cobb 2-4), 10:10 a.m.Minnesota (Gibson 6-5) at Boston (Lackey

8-4), 10:35 a.m.San Francisco (Hudson 7-2) at Chicago

White Sox (Sale 5-1), 11:10 p.m.Texas (Tepesch 2-2) at Oakland (Gray 6-3),

12:35 p.m.Houston (Feldman 3-4) at Washington

(G.Gonzalez 3-4), 4:05 p.m.L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 7-6) at Cleveland

(Masterson 4-5), 4:05 p.m.Toronto (Buehrle 10-3) at N.Y. Yankees

(Whitley 2-0), 4:05 p.m.Seattle (F.Hernandez 8-2) at San Diego

(Cashner 2-6), 7:10 p.m.

Angels 9, Indians 3Los Angeles Cleveland ab r h bi ab r h biCalhon rf 5 3 4 2 Bourn cf 4 0 1 0Trout cf 5 2 3 4 ACarer ss 4 0 1 0Pujols 1b 4 1 0 1 Kipnis 2b 4 1 1 0JHmltn dh 5 0 2 0 CSantn 1b 3 1 1 1Aybar ss 4 0 1 0 Chsnhll 3b 4 1 2 1HKndrc 2b 5 1 3 2 DvMrp rf 4 0 0 1Freese 3b 5 1 1 0 Swisher dh 4 0 0 0Ibanez lf 3 1 1 0 YGoms c 3 0 1 0Cowgill pr-lf 1 0 0 0 Raburn lf 3 0 0 0Conger c 4 0 0 0 Totals 41 9 15 9 Totals 33 3 7 3

Los Angeles 100 041 102—9Cleveland 010 100 001—3

E—A.Cabrera (13). DP—Los Angeles 1, Cleve-land 1. LOB—Los Angeles 7, Cleveland 4. 2B—Trout (18), J.Hamilton (6), Aybar (18), H.Kendrick (11), Kipnis (8), Y.Gomes (9). HR—Calhoun (5), Trout 2 (16), H.Kendrick (4), Chisenhall (8). CS—H.Kendrick (4). IP H R ER BB SOLos AngelesShoemaker W,4-1 8 5 2 2 1 10Frieri 1 2 1 1 0 0ClevelandTomlin L,4-4 51⁄3 11 6 5 0 4Crockett 2⁄3 0 0 0 0 1Lowe 12⁄3 2 1 1 0 0Outman 11⁄3 2 2 2 2 1Umpires—Home, Marty Foster; First, Rob Drake; Second, Alan Porter; Third, Joe West. T—3:08 (Rain delay: 0:11). A—14,639 (42,487).

Athletics 10, Rangers 6Texas Oakland ab r h bi ab r h biDRrtsn cf-lf 5 1 1 1 Crisp cf 4 1 1 1Andrus ss 4 1 2 0 Jaso c 3 1 2 0Choo dh 4 0 0 0 DNorrs ph-c 2 1 2 5ABeltre 3b 3 0 2 1 Cespds lf 4 1 1 0Rios rf 3 0 0 1 Moss 1b 5 0 0 0DMrph 1b 2 0 0 0 Lowrie dh 3 1 1 0Snyder ph-1b 2 0 0 0 Vogt rf 3 1 3 2Gimenz c 4 1 0 0 Gentry ph-rf 1 0 0 0Choice lf 2 0 0 0 Callasp 3b-2b 2 0 2 1LMartn ph-cf 2 1 1 0 Punto ss 4 1 0 0Odor 2b 4 2 2 3 Sogard 2b 1 1 0 0 Dnldsn ph-3b 2 2 1 0Totals 35 6 8 6 Totals 34 10 13 9

Texas 100 011 300—6Oakland 021 113 02x—10

E—Rios (4), Odor (3), Donaldson (15). DP—Texas 1. LOB—Texas 4, Oakland 7. 2B—Andrus (18), Jaso (9), D.Norris (11). 3B—Odor (3). HR—Odor (3), D.Norris (8). SB—D.Robertson (1), Sog-ard 2 (6). SF—Rios, Crisp. IP H R ER BB SOTexasDarvish L,7-3 5 8 7 4 5 8Poreda 2⁄3 0 0 0 0 0Sh.Tolleson 1⁄3 2 1 1 0 0Cotts 1 0 0 0 1 2Frasor 0 3 2 2 0 0S.Baker 1 0 0 0 0 1OaklandMilone W,5-3 52⁄3 5 3 3 1 3Otero H,8 2⁄3 3 3 2 0 0Abad H,7 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 1Gregerson H,9 11⁄3 0 0 0 0 1Doolittle 1 0 0 0 0 2Darvish pitched to 2 batters in the 6th.Frasor pitched to 3 batters in the 8th.WP—Darvish. Umpires—Home, Andy Fletcher; First, Chris Segal; Second, Mike Muchlinski; Third, Mark Wegner. T—3:28. A—21,288 (35,067).

Yankees 3, Blue Jays 1Toronto New York ab r h bi ab r h biReyes ss 4 1 1 1 Gardnr lf 4 1 1 2MeCarr lf 4 0 1 0 Jeter ss 4 1 2 0Bautist rf 4 0 0 0 Ellsury cf 4 0 0 0Encrnc 1b 3 0 1 0 Teixeir 1b 3 0 1 1Lawrie 3b 4 0 1 0 McCnn c 4 0 0 0DNavrr c 4 0 0 0 Beltran dh 2 0 0 0JFrncs dh 3 0 1 0 ISuzuki rf 4 0 0 0Kawsk 2b 4 0 1 0 BRorts 2b 2 0 0 0Gose cf 3 0 0 0 KJhnsn 3b 3 1 2 0Totals 33 1 6 1 Totals 30 3 6 3

Toronto 100 000 000—1New York 002 010 00x—3

LOB—Toronto 8, New York 7. 2B—J.Francisco (10), Ke.Johnson (8). 3B—Kawasaki (1). HR—Reyes (5), Gardner (6). IP H R ER BB SOTorontoStroman L,3-2 32⁄3 4 2 2 3 2Loup 11⁄3 2 1 1 0 1Redmond 2 0 0 0 1 2Santos 1 0 0 0 0 0New YorkTanaka W,11-1 6 5 1 1 2 10Betances H,10 2 0 0 0 0 3Dav.Robertson S,17-19 1 1 0 0 0 2HBP—by Tanaka (Encarnacion). WP—Loup, Redmond. Umpires—Home, Jordan Baker; First, Gabe Morales; Second, Jerry Meals; Third, Chris Conroy. T—3:07. A—41,834 (49,642).

Orioles 7, Rays 5Baltimore Tampa Bay ab r h bi ab r h biMarkks rf 5 1 2 0 DJnngs cf 5 1 1 1Pearce dh 3 2 2 2 Hanign c 0 0 0 0A.Jones cf 3 1 0 0 Joyce rf 4 1 2 0C.Davis 1b 4 1 1 4 Sands ph 1 0 0 0N.Cruz lf 4 0 0 0 Longori dh 5 1 1 0Lough lf 0 0 0 0 Loney 1b 4 0 1 2JHardy ss 4 0 0 0 Zobrist 2b-lf 4 1 1 0

Machd 3b 4 0 1 0 DeJess lf 2 0 2 0Schoop 2b 4 1 1 0 Forsyth ph-2b 1 0 1 0CJosph c 4 1 1 0 YEscor ss 3 0 0 1 JMolin c 3 0 0 0 Kiermr ph-cf 1 0 1 0 SRdrgz 3b 4 1 1 1Totals 35 7 8 6 Totals 37 5 11 5

Baltimore 005 000 200—7Tampa Bay 002 020 010—5

E—A.Jones (4). DP—Baltimore 1. LOB—Bal-timore 6, Tampa Bay 8. 2B—Markakis (14), Pearce (7), C.Joseph (3), Joyce (13), Loney (18), Zobrist (12). HR—Pearce (5), C.Davis (12), De.Jennings (6), S.Rodriguez (7). SF—Y.Escobar. IP H R ER BB SOBaltimoreM.Gonzalez W,4-4 5 8 4 4 2 5R.Webb H,11 12⁄3 0 0 0 0 1Matusz H,9 1⁄3 1 1 1 0 1O’Day H,9 1 2 0 0 0 1Z.Britton S,8-9 1 0 0 0 0 0Tampa BayBedard L,3-5 4 4 5 5 2 3Yates 2 0 0 0 1 3Boxberger 1 2 2 2 0 2Balfour 1 1 0 0 0 1C.Ramos 1 1 0 0 1 0Bedard pitched to 1 batter in the 5th.Matusz pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.HBP—by Bedard (A.Jones). WP—Bedard. PB—C.Joseph. Umpires—Home, Ron Kulpa; First, Pat Hoberg; Second, Ed Hickox; Third, Lance Barrett. T—3:31. A—10,803 (31,042).

Red Sox 2, Twins 1Minnesota Boston ab r h bi ab r h biDSantn ss 4 1 2 0 Holt cf-rf 4 2 2 0Dozier 2b 3 0 0 0 Bogarts 3b 3 0 1 1Mauer 1b 4 0 1 1 Pedroia 2b 4 0 2 1Wlngh lf 3 0 0 0 D.Ortiz dh 4 0 1 0KMorls dh 4 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 3 0 1 0Arcia rf 4 0 0 0 Nava rf 3 0 0 0KSuzuk c 3 0 1 0 BrdlyJr cf 0 0 0 0EEscor 3b 2 0 0 0 JGoms lf 3 0 0 0Fuld cf 3 0 0 0 Drew ss 3 0 1 0 D.Ross c 3 0 0 0Totals 30 1 4 1 Totals 30 2 8 2

Minnesota 000 001 000—1Boston 101 000 00x—2

LOB—Minnesota 5, Boston 5. 2B—D.Santana (6), Mauer (11), Holt (12), Pedroia (22), Drew (2). SB—D.Santana (6), Holt (5). S—Dozier. SF—Bo-gaerts. IP H R ER BB SOMinnesotaP.Hughes L,7-3 8 8 2 2 0 6BostonLester W,8-7 61⁄3 4 1 1 1 6Badenhop H,4 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 0Breslow H,2 1⁄3 0 0 0 1 0Tazawa H,7 1 0 0 0 0 3Mujica S,2-3 1 0 0 0 0 2Umpires—Home, Clint Fagan; First, Mark Carl-son; Second, Tim Welke; Third, Todd Tichenor. T—2:48. A—36,835 (37,071).

Royals 11, Tigers 4Kansas City Detroit ab r h bi ab r h biAoki rf 2 1 1 0 RDavis lf 4 0 1 0L.Cain rf 2 0 2 1 Kinsler 2b 4 1 2 1Infante 2b 3 0 1 3 AnRmn 2b 0 0 0 0Hosmer 1b 5 0 0 1 MiCarr 1b 2 0 0 1BButler dh 4 2 2 0 D.Kelly 1b 0 0 0 0AGordn lf 5 1 2 2 VMrtnz dh 4 1 2 0S.Perez c 4 2 1 1 JMrtnz rf 4 1 3 0Hayes c 0 0 0 0 Cstllns 3b 4 0 0 1Mostks 3b 5 1 1 2 AJcksn cf 4 0 1 1AEscor ss 5 3 3 0 Avila c 2 1 0 0JDyson cf 5 1 2 1 Holady c 1 0 0 0 Suarez ss 4 0 1 0Totals 40 11 15 11 Totals 33 4 10 4

Kansas City 070 030 100—11Detroit 020 010 010—4

E—A.Escobar (5), J.Martinez (2). DP—Kansas City 4, Detroit 2. LOB—Kansas City 7, Detroit 5. 2B—A.Gordon (21), J.Martinez (9). HR—A.Gor-don (8), Moustakas (7), Kinsler (7). IP H R ER BB SOKansas CityVentura W,5-5 7 8 3 3 2 4L.Coleman 1 2 1 1 1 0Crow 1 0 0 0 0 1DetroitScherzer L,8-3 4 10 10 10 1 5Coke 1 2 0 0 1 0E.Reed 2 2 1 1 2 1B.Hardy 1 0 0 0 0 1Alburquerque 1 1 0 0 0 0Scherzer pitched to 3 batters in the 5th.HBP—by Scherzer (L.Cain). PB—S.Perez. Um-pires—Home, Tom Hallion; First, D.J. Reyburn; Second, Chris Guccione; Third, Eric Cooper. T—3:14. A—34,328 (41,681).

National LeagueWest Division

W L Pct GBSan Francisco 43 28 .606 —Los Angeles 39 34 .534 5 Colorado 34 37 .479 9San Diego 29 42 .408 14Arizona 30 44 .405 14½

Central Division W L Pct GBMilwaukee 43 29 .597 —St. Louis 39 32 .549 3½Cincinnati 34 35 .493 7½Pittsburgh 34 36 .486 8Chicago 29 40 .420 12½

East Division W L Pct GBWashington 36 33 .522 —Atlanta 36 34 .514 ½Miami 36 34 .514 ½Philadelphia 31 38 .449 5New York 31 40 .437 6

Tuesday’s gamesSeattle 6, San Diego 1Cincinnati 6, Pittsburgh 5Washington 6, Houston 5Miami 6, Chicago Cubs 5Philadelphia 5, Atlanta 2Chicago White Sox 8, San Francisco 2St. Louis 5, N.Y. Mets 2Milwaukee 7, Arizona 5L.A. Dodgers 4, Colorado 2

Today’s gamesPhiladelphia (R.Hernandez 2-5) at Atlanta

(Harang 5-5), 9:10 a.m.Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 2-1) at Miami (Eovaldi

4-2), 9:40 a.m.N.Y. Mets (Colon 6-5) at St. Louis (Lynn 7-4),

10:45 a.m.San Francisco (Hudson 7-2) at Chicago

White Sox (Sale 5-1), 11:10 a.m.Cincinnati (Simon 9-3) at Pittsburgh

(Volquez 4-5), 4:05 p.m.Houston (Feldman 3-4) at Washington

(G.Gonzalez 3-4), 4:05 p.m.Milwaukee (Garza 4-4) at Arizona (Miley

3-6), 6:40 p.m.Colorado (J.De La Rosa 6-5) at L.A. Dodgers

(Kershaw 6-2), 7:10 p.m.Seattle (F.Hernandez 8-2) at San Diego

(Cashner 2-6), 7:10 p.m.

Brewers 7, Diamondbacks 5Milwaukee Arizona ab r h bi ab r h biGennett 2b 5 1 3 0 Gregrs 2b 4 1 0 0Braun rf 4 1 1 0 GParra rf 5 1 2 0Lucroy c 5 2 3 5 Gldsch 1b 2 2 0 0ArRmr 3b 4 1 1 1 MMntr c 5 0 1 1KDavis lf 4 0 0 0 Prado 3b 4 0 1 2MrRynl 1b 4 0 0 0 DPerlt cf 4 0 0 1Segura ss 4 1 2 0 Owings ss 3 0 1 0EHerrr cf 3 0 0 1 Kschnc lf 4 1 1 1Lohse p 2 0 0 0 Bolsngr p 3 0 0 0Overay ph 1 1 1 0 EMrshl p 0 0 0 0WSmith p 0 0 0 0 Ziegler p 0 0 0 0Kintzlr p 0 0 0 0 Delgad p 0 0 0 0RWeks ph 1 0 0 0 C.Ross ph 1 0 1 0FrRdrg p 0 0 0 0 Totals 37 7 11 7 Totals 35 5 7 5

Milwaukee 010 001 500—7Arizona 300 010 001—5

E—Gennett (5), Prado (12). LOB—Milwaukee 5, Arizona 8. 2B—Gennett (17), Owings (14). 3B—Segura 2 (4). HR—Lucroy 2 (8), Ar.Ramirez (8), Kieschnick (1). SF—E.Herrera. IP H R ER BB SOMilwaukeeLohse W,8-2 6 4 4 3 3 3W.Smith H,16 1 0 0 0 0 1Kintzler H,5 1 0 0 0 0 1Fr.Rodriguez S,22-24 1 3 1 1 0 2ArizonaBolsinger 61⁄3 7 3 3 0 6E.Marshall L,2-2 0 2 3 3 0 0Ziegler BS,4-5 2⁄3 1 1 1 0 2Delgado 2 1 0 0 0 5E.Marshall pitched to 3 batters in the 7th.HBP—by Lohse (Gregorius, Owings), by E.Marshall (Braun). Umpires—Home, Ted Barrett; First, Alfonso Marquez; Second, Will Little; Third, Paul Schrieber. T—2:52. A—18,148 (48,633).

Reds 6, Pirates 5Cincinnati Pittsburgh ab r h bi ab r h biBHmltn cf 4 2 3 0 Polanc rf 4 0 1 0Frazier 3b 5 2 2 1 SMarte lf 5 2 2 0Votto 1b 5 0 2 3 AMcCt cf 4 1 1 0Phillips 2b 5 1 2 0 I.Davis 1b 4 1 2 1Bruce rf 5 1 1 0 RMartn c 2 1 1 2AChpm p 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz 3b 3 0 0 0Ludwck lf 3 0 2 1 GSnchz ph 1 0 0 0LeCure p 0 0 0 0 Melncn p 0 0 0 0MParr p 0 0 0 0 Grilli p 0 0 0 0Ondrsk p 0 0 0 0 CStwrt ph 0 0 0 0Berndn rf 0 0 0 0 JHrrsn 2b-3b 5 0 4 2B.Pena c 4 0 0 1 Mercer ss 5 0 2 0Cozart ss 4 0 1 0 Cumptn p 1 0 0 0Cueto p 3 0 0 0 Tabata ph 1 0 0 0Heisey lf 1 0 0 0 JuWlsn p 0 0 0 0 JGomz p 0 0 0 0 Barmes 2b 2 0 0 0Totals 39 6 13 6 Totals 37 5 13 5

Cincinnati 100 200 201—6Pittsburgh 011 000 300—5

E—R.Martin (1), P.Alvarez (17). DP—Cincin-nati 1, Pittsburgh 2. LOB—Cincinnati 8, Pitts-burgh 13. 2B—B.Hamilton (9), Bruce (10), A.McCutchen (22), I.Davis (9), J.Harrison (10). HR—Frazier (16). SB—B.Hamilton 3 (28), Frazier (7), J.Harrison (3), Mercer (1). CS—Tabata (2). S—Cumpton. IP H R ER BB SOCincinnatiCueto 6 7 2 2 4 2LeCure H,10 1⁄3 3 3 3 1 0M.Parra H,10 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 1Odrsk W,2-2 BS,3-3 11⁄3 2 0 0 1 2A.Chapman S,12-13 1 1 0 0 1 2PittsburghCumpton 6 8 3 3 1 4Ju.Wilson 2⁄3 3 2 2 0 1J.Gomez 1⁄3 0 0 0 1 0Melancon 1 0 0 0 0 0Grilli L,0-2 1 2 1 1 0 0WP—LeCure. Umpires—Home, Adam Hamari; First, Mike DiMuro; Second, Mike Estabrook; Third, Jerry Layne. T—3:54. A—23,565 (38,362).

Marlins 6, Cubs 5Chicago Miami ab r h bi ab r h biValuen 3b 5 0 2 1 Furcal 2b 5 1 2 2Ruggin lf 3 0 0 1 Hchvrr ss 5 1 4 0Rizzo 1b 4 0 0 0 Stanton rf 4 0 0 0SCastro ss 4 0 1 0 McGeh 3b 2 1 0 0Schrhlt rf 3 1 1 0 GJones 1b 4 1 1 3Lake cf 4 1 1 2 Ozuna lf 3 0 0 0Grimm p 0 0 0 0 Mrsnck cf 4 1 2 0Barney 2b 4 1 1 0 Realmt c 3 1 0 0Whitsd c 3 0 1 0 Mathis c 0 0 0 0JoBakr ph-c 1 0 0 0 DeSclfn p 2 0 0 0Smrdzj p 1 0 0 1 SDyson p 0 0 0 0Coghln ph 1 1 1 0 MDunn p 0 0 0 0Schlittr p 0 0 0 0 Bour ph 1 0 0 0Sweeny cf 1 1 1 0 Cishek p 0 0 0 0Totals 34 5 9 5 Totals 33 6 9 5

Chicago 030 000 101—5Miami 100 200 30x—6

E[--]Samardzija (3), S.Castro (11). DP[--]Chicago 1. LOB[--]Chicago 7, Miami 8. 2B[--]Valbuena 2 (19), S.Castro (20), Sweeney (3). HR[--]Lake (9), G.Jones (9). SB[--]Barney (1), Whiteside (1). SF[--]Ruggiano, Samardzija. IP H R ER BB SOChicagoSamardzija 6 7 3 2 3 8Schlitter L,2-2 BS,2-2 1 2 3 3 1 1Grimm 1 0 0 0 1 1MiamiDeSclafani 61⁄3 6 4 4 1 5S.Dyson W,1-0 11⁄3 2 0 0 1 1M.Dunn H,10 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 0Cishek S,16-17 1 1 1 0 0 2HBP—by DeSclafani (Schierholtz). PB—White-side, Mathis. Umpires—Home, Jeff Nelson; First, Laz Diaz; Second, Marcus Pattillo; Third, Scott Barry. T—3:11. A—20,860 (37,442).

Dodgers 4, Rockies 2Colorado Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h biBlckmn rf-cf 4 0 1 0 DGordn 2b 4 0 0 0Dickrsn lf 5 0 3 1 HRmrz ss 3 1 1 2Tlwtzk ss 5 1 3 0 Triunfl ss 1 1 1 1Mornea 1b 3 0 0 0 Puig rf 4 0 1 0Stubbs cf 4 0 1 0 AdGnzl 1b 4 0 0 0Kahnle p 0 0 0 0 Kemp lf 4 1 1 1KParkr ph 1 0 0 0 Ethier cf 3 0 1 0Rosario c 4 0 0 1 A.Ellis c 3 0 1 0RWhelr 3b 3 0 0 0 Rojas 3b 3 1 2 0LeMahi 2b 4 0 0 0 Greink p 1 0 0 0Chacin p 2 0 1 0 JuTrnr ph 1 0 0 0Rutledg ph 1 1 1 0 Howell p 0 0 0 0Barnes rf 1 0 1 0 League p 0 0 0 0 BWilsn p 0 0 0 0 Jansen p 0 0 0 0Totals 37 2 11 2 Totals 31 4 8 4

Colorado 000 001 100—2Los Angeles 002 100 10x—4

E—Tulowitzki (4), D.Gordon (7). DP—Los Angeles 1. LOB—Colorado 13, Los Angeles 6. 2B—Dickerson (10), Rutledge (4). HR—H.Ramirez (11), Triunfel (1), Kemp (7). CS—Ethier (2). SF—Rosario. IP H R ER BB SOColoradoChacin L,1-5 6 7 3 3 3 5Kahnle 2 1 1 1 0 4Los AngelesGreinke W,9-3 6 6 1 1 2 5Howell H,15 1⁄3 2 1 1 0 0League H,2 2⁄3 0 0 0 1 0B.Wilson H,11 1 1 0 0 1 0Jansen S,20-22 1 2 0 0 0 2WP—Greinke. Umpires—Home, Quinn Wolcott; First, Greg Gibson; Second, Phil Cuzzi; Third, Gerry Davis. T—3:33. A—44,175 (56,000).

Phillies 5, Braves 2Philadelphia Atlanta ab r h bi ab r h biRollins ss 4 1 1 0 Heywrd rf 4 0 2 1Ruiz c 5 0 2 0 BUpton cf 4 0 1 0Byrd rf 5 1 1 0 FFrmn 1b 4 0 1 0Howard 1b 3 1 1 2 J.Upton lf 3 0 0 0DBrwn lf 4 1 1 1 Beato p 0 0 0 0Mayrry cf 3 0 0 0 Smmns p 0 0 0 0Brignc 3b 5 1 2 0 Avilan p 0 0 0 0CHrndz 2b 4 0 2 1 Doumit ph 1 0 0 0Kndrck p 2 0 0 0 LaStell 2b 4 0 0 0Utley ph 0 0 0 0 CJhnsn 3b 4 1 1 0Diekmn p 0 0 0 0 ASmns ss 3 0 1 0Papeln p 0 0 0 0 Laird c 2 1 0 0 ESantn p 1 0 0 0 JSchafr lf 1 0 0 0Totals 35 5 10 4 Totals 31 2 6 1

Philadelphia 200 200 001—5Atlanta 000 010 100—2

E—A.Simmons 2 (5). DP—Philadelphia 1, At-lanta 1. LOB—Philadelphia 11, Atlanta 4. 2B—Rollins (10), Ruiz (14), Brignac (5), Heyward (10),

F.Freeman (20), C.Johnson (12). HR—Howard (13). SB—Byrd (1). CS—C.Hernandez (1). S—K.Kendrick, E.Santana. IP H R ER BB SOPhiladelphiaK.Kendrick W,3-6 7 6 2 2 1 6Diekman H,9 1 0 0 0 0 2Papelbon S,16-18 1 0 0 0 0 0AtlantaE.Santana L,5-4 6 8 4 3 3 5Beato 12⁄3 1 0 0 3 2S.Simmons 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 0Avilan 1 1 1 1 1 0PB—Laird. Umpires—Home, Manny Gonzalez; First, Brian Knight; Second, Seth Buckminster; Third, Fieldin Culbreth. T—3:05. A—41,631 (49,586).

Cardinals 5, Mets 2New York St. Louis ab r h bi ab r h biGrndrs cf 4 0 1 0 Bourjos cf 4 0 1 1DnMrp 2b 4 0 0 0 Jay rf 5 1 2 1DWrght 3b 4 1 2 1 Hollidy lf 4 0 2 1BAreu rf 4 0 0 0 Craig 1b 4 0 0 0Duda 1b 3 1 2 1 YMolin c 4 1 1 1Recker c 2 0 0 0 JhPerlt ss 3 1 1 0Campll ph 1 0 1 0 M.Ellis 2b 4 0 0 0Tejada ss 4 0 0 0 Descals 3b 3 2 1 0Niese p 2 0 0 0 Wacha p 1 0 0 0CYoung ph 1 0 0 0 Wong ph 1 0 1 1Matszk p 0 0 0 0 SFrmn p 0 0 0 0Famili p 0 0 0 0 MAdms ph 1 0 1 0dnDkkr ph 1 0 0 0 Motte p 0 0 0 0EYong lf 4 0 1 0 Neshek p 0 0 0 0Totals 34 2 7 2 Totals 34 5 10 5

New York 000 100 001—2St. Louis 010 022 00x—5

E—B.Abreu (2), Dan.Murphy (8). LOB—New York 7, St. Louis 9. 2B—Granderson (11), D.Wright (15), Duda (16), Campbell (4), Holli-day 2 (17), Jh.Peralta (18). 3B—Jay (2). HR—D.Wright (5), Duda (9), Y.Molina (6). SB—Wong (9). S—Wacha. IP H R ER BB SONew YorkNiese L,3-4 6 8 5 3 1 3Matsuzaka 1 1 0 0 0 2Familia 1 1 0 0 1 1St. LouisWacha W,5-5 6 5 1 1 2 7S.Freeman 2 0 0 0 0 1Motte 0 2 1 1 0 0Neshek S,2-4 1 0 0 0 0 0Motte pitched to 2 batters in the 9th.HBP—by Niese (Descalso). WP—Matsuzaka.Umpires—Home, James Hoye; First, Bill Welke; Second, Bob Davidson; Third, John Tumpane. T—2:36. A—42,209 (45,399).

Interleague

White Sox 8, Giants 2San Francisco Chicago ab r h bi ab r h biBlanco lf 3 1 0 0 Eaton cf 4 1 2 1Pence rf 5 1 2 1 GBckh 2b 4 1 1 2Posey dh 4 0 1 1 Gillaspi 3b 4 1 2 0Sandovl 3b 4 0 2 0 JAreu 1b 4 1 1 0Morse 1b 4 0 1 0 A.Dunn dh 4 1 1 1HSnchz c 4 0 0 0 AlRmrz ss 4 1 1 0BCrwfr ss 4 0 1 0 Viciedo rf 4 2 2 2J.Perez cf 4 0 0 0 De Aza lf 4 0 0 0B.Hicks 2b 2 0 0 0 Flowrs c 2 0 0 1Totals 34 2 7 2 Totals 34 8 10 7

San Francisco 101 000 000—2Chicago 002 330 00x—8

E—B.Crawford (9), Al.Ramirez (7). DP—Chicago 1. LOB—San Francisco 9, Chicago 3. HR—Pence (10), G.Beckham (5), Viciedo (6). SB—Eaton (6). IP H R ER BB SOSan FranciscoM.Cain L,1-5 5 10 8 7 1 3Petit 3 0 0 0 0 3ChicagoJoh.Danks W,6-5 61⁄3 5 2 1 3 4Guerra 2⁄3 1 0 0 0 0Putnam 1 1 0 0 0 1D.Webb 1 0 0 0 1 0WP—M.Cain. Umpires—Home, Bill Miller; First, Mike Everitt; Second, Chad Fairchild; Third, Vic Carapazza. T—2:42. A—25,278 (40,615).

Nationals 6, Astros 5Houston Washington ab r h bi ab r h biFowler cf 5 1 2 1 Span cf 4 2 2 0Altuve 2b 5 1 4 2 Rendon 3b 4 1 2 3Springr rf 4 0 2 0 Werth rf 4 1 0 0Singltn 1b 5 0 1 0 LaRoch 1b 2 0 0 0JCastro c 4 1 1 0 Zmrmn lf 4 1 2 2MGnzlz pr 0 0 0 0 Dsmnd ss 3 0 1 1MDmn 3b 5 1 2 1 Espinos 2b 4 0 0 0Villar ss 5 1 2 1 Loaton c 4 0 0 0Grssmn lf 3 0 0 0 Roark p 2 0 1 0Frnswr p 0 0 0 0 Stmmn p 0 0 0 0Willims p 0 0 0 0 Hairstn ph 0 1 0 0Carter ph 1 0 0 0 Storen p 0 0 0 0Sipp p 0 0 0 0 Clipprd p 0 0 0 0Zeid p 0 0 0 0 Barrett p 0 0 0 0Keuchl p 1 0 0 0 Frndsn ph 1 0 1 0DDwns p 0 0 0 0 RSorin p 0 0 0 0Presley lf 2 0 0 0 Totals 40 5 14 5 Totals 32 6 9 6

Houston 000 100 040—5Washington 202 002 00x—6

E—Rendon (8). DP—Washington 2. LOB—Houston 11, Washington 9. 2B—Altuve 2 (23), M.Dominguez (12), Rendon 2 (13), Zimmerman 2 (9). SB—Span (10). S—Span. IP H R ER BB SOHoustonKeuchel L,8-4 5 6 4 4 4 4D.Downs 1⁄3 1 2 2 1 0Farnsworth 1 1 0 0 1 1Williams 2⁄3 0 0 0 0 2Sipp 2⁄3 1 0 0 0 1Zeid 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 1WashingtonRoark W,6-4 5 7 1 1 2 4Stammen H,2 1 1 0 0 0 1Storen 1 1 0 0 0 0Clippard 2⁄3 5 4 4 0 2Barrett H,3 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 0R.Soriano S,14-16 1 0 0 0 1 0WP—Farnsworth. Umpires—Home, Paul Nauert; First, Larry Vanover; Second, Angel Hernandez; Third, Adrian Johnson. T—3:41. A—29,960 (41,408).

Northwest LeagueNorth Division

W L Pct. GBSpokane (Rangers) 4 0 1.000 —Vancouver (Blue Jays) 3 2 .600 1½Everett (Mariners) 1 4 .200 3½Tri-City (Rockies) 1 4 .200 3½

South Division W L Pct. GBBoise (Cubs) 4 1 .800 —Hillsboro (Diamondbacks) 4 1 .800 —Salem-Keizer (Giants) 2 3 .400 2Eugene (Padres) 0 4 .000 3½

Tuesday’s gamesBoise 12, Tri-City 3Eugene at Spokane, ppd., rainSalem-Keizer 4, Vancouver 3Hillsboro 5, Everett 3

Today’s gamesBoise at Eugene, 7:05 p.m.Spokane at Vancouver, 7:05 p.m.Salem-Keizer at Hillsboro, 7:05 p.m.Everett at Tri-City, 7:15 p.m.

Pacific Coast LeaguePacific North Division

W L Pct. GBSacramento (Athletics) 41 31 .569 —Reno (Diamondbacks) 40 32 .556 1Fresno (Giants) 37 36 .507 4½Tacoma (Mariners) 32 39 .451 8½

Pacific South Division W L Pct. GBLas Vegas (Mets) 41 31 .569 —

El Paso (Padres) 34 39 .466 7½Albuquerque (Dodgers) 32 40 .444 9 Salt Lake (Angels) 29 43 .403 12

American North Division W L Pct. GBOmaha (Royals) 41 31 .569 —Oklahoma City (Astros) 40 33 .548 1½Iowa (Cubs) 34 35 .493 5½Colo. Springs (Rockies) 29 42 .408 11½

American South Division W L Pct. GBNew Orleans (Marlins) 38 34 .528 —Nashville (Brewers) 38 35 .521 ½ Round Rock (Rangers) 35 37 .486 3Memphis (Cardinals) 34 37 .479 3½

Tuesday’s gamesFresno 4, New Orleans 3El Paso 8, Iowa 5Round Rock 7, Sacramento 5Omaha 13, Albuquerque 6Memphis at Salt Lake, ppd., rainOklahoma City 4, Reno 2Tacoma 2, Colorado Springs 1Las Vegas 8, Nashville 7

Today’s gamesAlbuquerque at Omaha, 10:05 a.m.Memphis at Salt Lake, 4:05 p.m., 1st gameFresno at New Orleans, 5 p.m.El Paso at Iowa, 5:05 p.m.Sacramento at Round Rock, 5:05 p.m.Memphis at Salt Lake, 6:35 p.m., 2nd gameColorado Springs at Tacoma, 7:05 p.m.Nashville at Las Vegas, 7:05 p.m.Oklahoma City at Reno, 7:05 p.m.

College World SeriesAt TD Ameritrade Park Omaha

Omaha, Neb.Double Elimination

Tuesday’s gamesMississippi 2,Texas Tech 1, Texas Tech eliminatedVirginia 3, TCU 2 (15 inn.)

Today’s gameGame 9 — Texas (44-20) vs. UC Irvine (41-

24), 5 p.m.

BASKETBALLWNBA

WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GBMinnesota 9 3 .750 —Phoenix 7 3 .700 1San Antonio 5 6 .455 3½Tulsa 4 5 .444 3½Seattle 5 8 .385 4½Los Angeles 3 7 .300 5

EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GBAtlanta 7 3 .700 —Connecticut 7 6 .538 1½Chicago 5 5 .500 2Indiana 5 5 .500 2Washington 5 6 .455 2½New York 3 8 .273 4½

Tuesday’s gamesConnecticut 89, Indiana 67Minnesota 94, Los Angeles 77

Today’s gamesWashington at Atlanta, 9 a.m.New York at Chicago, 9:30 a.m.Minnesota at Phoenix, 7 p.m.

SOCCERWorld Cup

FIRST ROUNDGROUP A

W L T GF GA PtsBrazil 1 0 1 3 1 4Mexico 1 0 1 1 0 4 Cameroon 0 1 0 0 1 0Croatia 0 1 0 1 3 0

Tuesday’s gameBrazil 0, Mexico 0

Today’s gameCroatia vs. Cameroon, 3 p.m.

Monday’s gamesCameroon vs. Brazil, 1 p.m.Croatia vs. Mexico, 1 p.m.

GROUP B W L T GF GA PtsNetherlands 1 0 0 5 1 3Chile 1 0 0 3 1 3Australia 0 1 0 1 3 0Spain 0 1 0 1 5 0

Today’s gamesNetherlands vs. Australia, 9 a.m.Spain vs. Chile, noon

GROUP C W L T GF GA PtsColombia 1 0 0 3 0 3Ivory Coast 1 0 0 2 1 3Japan 0 1 0 1 2 0Greece 0 1 0 0 3 0

Thursday’s gamesColombia vs. Ivory Coast, 9 a.m.Greece vs. Japan, 3 p.m.

GROUP D W L T GF GA PtsCosta Rica 1 0 0 3 1 3Italy 1 0 0 2 1 3England 0 1 0 1 2 0Uruguay 0 1 0 1 3 0

Thursday’s gameUruguay vs. England, noon

Friday’s gameCosta Rica vs. Italy, 9 a.m.

GROUP E W L T GF GA PtsFrance 1 0 0 3 0 3Switzerland 1 0 0 2 1 3Ecuador 0 1 0 1 2 0Honduras 0 1 0 0 3 0

Friday’s gamesSwitzerland vs. France, noonEcuador vs. Honduras, 3 p.m.

GROUP F W L T GF GA PtsArgentina 1 0 0 2 1 3Iran 0 0 1 0 0 1Nigeria 0 0 1 0 0 1Bosnia-Herzegovina 0 1 0 1 2 0

Saturday’s gamesArgentina vs. Iran, 9 a.m.Bosnia-Herzegovina vs. Nigeria, 9 a.m.

GROUP G W L T GF GA PtsGermany 1 0 0 4 0 3United States 1 0 0 2 1 3Ghana 0 1 0 1 2 0Portugal 0 1 0 0 4 0

Saturday’s gameGermany vs. Ghana, noon

Sunday’s gamePortugal vs. United States, 3 p.m.

GROUP H W L T GF GA PtsBelgium 1 0 0 2 1 3 Russia 0 0 1 1 1 1 South Korea 0 0 1 1 1 1Algeria 0 1 0 1 2 0

Today’s gamesBelgium 2, Algeria 1Russia 1, South Korea 1

Sunday’s gamesBelgium vs. Russia, 9 a.m.South Korea vs. Algeria, noon

Major League SoccerWESTERN CONFERENCE

W L T Pts GF GASeattle 10 3 2 32 32 23Real Salt Lake 6 2 7 25 25 21Colorado 6 5 4 22 21 18FC Dallas 6 7 4 22 28 28 Vancouver 5 2 6 21 25 20Portland 4 4 8 20 28 27 Los Angeles 4 3 5 17 16 11San Jose 4 5 4 16 15 14Chivas USA 2 7 5 11 14 26

EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GAD.C. 7 4 4 25 22 16New England 7 5 2 23 21 18Sporting Kansas City 6 5 4 22 21 14Toronto FC 6 4 1 19 15 13New York 4 5 6 18 22 22

Columbus 4 5 6 18 18 18Houston 5 9 2 17 16 29Philadelphia 3 7 6 15 22 27Chicago 2 4 8 14 22 25Montreal 2 7 4 10 13 26

NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.Wednesday, June 25

Montreal at Vancouver, 7 p.m.Friday, June 27

Toronto FC at New York, 5 p.m.Sporting Kansas City at Portland, 8 p.m.

Saturday, June 28Seattle FC at D.C. United, 4 p.m.Philadelphia at New England, 4:30 p.m.FC Dallas at Columbus, 5 p.m.Vancouver at Colorado, 6 p.m.Los Angeles at San Jose, 7:30 p.m.Real Salt Lake at Chivas USA, 7:30 p.m.

Sunday, June 29Houston at Montreal, 4:30 p.m.

Nat’l Women’s Soccer League W L T Pts GF GASeattle 9 0 2 29 25 9FC Kansas City 7 4 3 24 23 17Chicago 6 4 2 20 18 12Washington 6 6 1 19 21 24Portland 5 4 2 17 12 15Western New York 4 6 2 14 20 16Houston 4 8 1 13 16 23Sky Blue FC 2 6 5 11 13 23Boston 3 8 0 9 15 24

NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.Today’s game

Chicago at Western New York, 4 p.m.Thursday’s game

Seattle FC at Boston, 4 p.m.Saturday’s games

Portland at Washington, 3:30 p.m.Chicago at FC Kansas City, 4 p.m.

Sunday, June 22Boston at Sky Blue FC, 10 a.m.Seattle FC at Western New York, noon

DEALSBASEBALL

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL — Suspended Colorado RHP Nick Masset three games and fined him and Atlanta RHP David Carpenter un-disclosed amounts for throwing at batters dur-ing a game last week.

American LeagueBOSTON RED SOX — Designated OF Grady

Sizemore for assignment. Recalled OF Garin Cecchini from Pawtucket (IL). Agreed to terms with OF Derek Miller, C Alex McKeon, SS Hector Lorenzana, 3B Jordan Betts, 1B Sam Travis and RHPs Michael Kopech, Chandler Shepherd, Kuehl McEachern and Brandon Show on minor league contracts.

CLEVELAND INDIANS — Agreed to terms with OF Bradley Zimmer, 1B Bobby Bradley and RHP Cameron Hill on minor league contracts.

DETROIT TIGERS — Agreed to terms with OF Derek Hill and Michael Gerber; RHPs Spencer Turnbull, Jack Fischer. Gabe Hemmer Jacob But-ler Nate Fury Gage Smith Joseph Pankake Paul Voelker Josh Heddinger and Adam Ladwig; SSs Will Kengor and Garrett Mattlage; LHPs Ken-ton St. John, Trent Szkutnik and Tyler Ford; Cs Grayson Greiner and Michael Thomas; 1B Corey Baptist; 3B Will Maddox; and 2B Brett Pirtle and Ross Kivett on minor league contracts.

NEW YORK YANKEES — Optioned C John Ryan Murphy to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Re-instated C Francisco Cervelli from the 60-day DL.

OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Placed LHP Drew Pomeranz on the 15-day DL. Optioned SS Jake Elmore to Sacramento (PCL). Recalled RHP Evan Scribner from Sacramento. Agreed to terms with SS Trace Loehr on a minor league contract.

TEXAS RANGERS — Agreed to terms with 1B Carlos Pena and RHP Austin Pettibone on minor league contracts. Assigned Pena to Round Rock (PCL).

TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Optioned RHP Steve Delabar to Buffalo (IL). Recalled INF Munenori Kawasaki from Buffalo.

National LeagueARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Optioned

RHP Will Harris to Reno (PCL). Recalled RHP Mike Bolsinger from Reno.

ATLANTA BRAVES — Placed RHP David Carpenter on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Pedro Beato from Gwinnett (IL).

LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Agreed to terms with RHP Trevor Oaks on a minor league contract.

MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Traded LHP Brad Mills to Oakland for cash considerations.

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Sent 3B Cody Asche to Lehigh Valley (IL) for a rehab assign-ment.

PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Agreed to terms with C Kevin Krause, INF Erik Forgione and OFs Connor Joe, Jordan Luplow and David Andriese.

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Agreed to terms with 3B Danny Diekroeger on a minor league contract.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Optioned OF Daniel Carbonell to Salem-Keizer (NWL).

BASKETBALLNational Basketball Association

MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES — Named Sam Mitchell assistant coach.

FOOTBALLNational Football League

CLEVELAND BROWNS — Agreed to terms with QB Johnny Manziel. Released WR Earl Ben-nett.

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Signed DL Seali’i Epenesa.

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — Released OT Emmett Cleary and LB Steven Jenkins.

TENNESSEE TITANS — Agreed to terms with WR Derek Hagan and RB Bishop Sankey. Re-leased WR Lamont Bryant.

Canadian Football LeagueB.C. LIONS — Released DB Brandon Mc-

Donald.HOCKEY

National Hockey LeagueBUFFALO SABRES — Placed LW Ville Leino

on unconditional waivers.DALLAS STARS — Bought out the contract

of D Aaron Rome.MONTREAL CANADIENS — Agreed to terms

with F Dale Weise on a two-year contract exten-sion.

SAN JOSE SHARKS — Signed G Alex Stalock and F Mike Brown to two-year contracts.

VANCOUVER CANUCKS — Placed LW David Booth on unconditional waivers.

SOCCERMajor League Soccer

MLS — Named Sal Della Monica director of communications.

COLLEGEARMY — Named Kristen Waagbo women’s

lacrosse coach.BALL STATE — Announced the NCAA has

granted immediate eligibility to men’s basketball transfer Jeremiah Davis III.

LA SALLE — Named Andrew Kroger wom-en’s assistant volleyball coach.

MARIST — Named Mike Maker men’s bas-ketball coach.

MINNESOTA STATE-MANKATO — Named Bryan Schmid defensive line coach.

NORTHERN KENTUCKY — Announced women’s basketball G Shar’Rae Davis is trans-ferring from Youngstown and F Rebecca Lyttle from Michigan.

PENN STATE — Announced the resignation of athletic director David Joyner, effective Aug. 1.

PRINCETON — Named Ron Fogarty men’s hockey coach.

THIEL — Named Kelly Barzak women’s vol-leyball coach.

have reached out to the Dar-rington community. On March 31, and just nine days after the horrific mudslide, several Seattle players traveled to Darrington with members of the Seattle Sounders soccer team. That ear-lier visit started a conversation that led to the Loggers being invited to Tuesday’s Seahawks practice, which was otherwise closed to the public.

“Just being around all these guys and getting (autographs), it’s a crazy feeling,” said Trent Green, a senior-to-be quarterback and defensive back. “I can’t even explain it. But it’s pretty cool to see all of them and be this close to them.”

Making a great day even better for Green, he was able to say hi to

his favorite Seattle player, quar-terback Russell Wilson. “I got a hug,” Green said with a grin.

At one point during the work-out, wide receiver Sidney Rice wandered over to a cluster of Darrington players and coaches. “Where’re you guys from?” he asked. “Darrington?” Told they were football players, he asked, “You guys going to win the championship?”

Then, seeing one of the players wearing a Seahawks Super Bowl cap, he gave the bill a playful flick with his fingertip and said, “I like the hat.”

The practice lasted about 21⁄2 hours, and when it was over sev-eral Seattle players lingered with the Darrington kids. Among them, Super Bowl MVP linebacker Mal-colm Smith and wide receiver Jermaine Kearse, who were both

in the team contingent that visited Darrington back in March.

Linebacker Bobby Wagner, wide receivers Doug Baldwin and Percy Harvin, and offensive tackle Rus-sell Okung were others who came by to chat and sign autographs.

Moments later, the team gath-ered around Wilson for a group photograph. At the last second, Seahawks head coach Pete Car-roll, smiling broadly, ducked in to be part of the picture, too.

Green ended up with a football signed by Carroll, Wilson, Harvin, safety Earl Thomas and several other Seahawks. The football “is going into a (display) case in my bedroom,” Green said.

Teammate Mason McKenzie, who will be a junior linebacker and offensive lineman/tight end, was carrying a Super Bowl hat

signed by several Seahawks. The large signature right at the top belonged to Carroll.

The entire afternoon, McK-enzie said, “has been awesome. Seeing all the drills, you can learn stuff from them.”

To his players, Lenker said, the Seahawks “are their heroes. They watch these guys on TV, and now they have a chance to get their signatures and shake their hands and be close to them. It’s a dream come true for most of them.”

As it was for the Darrington coaching staff. “This is an expe-rience for me, too,” Lenker said. “It’s awesome.”

After several minutes of meet-ing and greeting, the Loggers headed for the parking lot and the journey on to Ellensburg, where they were to open their

four-day football camp with a Tuesday evening scrimmage. In an act of real generosity, Central Washington is allowing the Log-gers to participate in the camp without charge.

The school first had to get approval from the NCAA, said CWU athletic director Dr. Dennis Francois, “and they said yes, for this situation, they would allow the university to provide free camp for those individuals.”

It was, Francois said, “the least we could do, and we were more than happy to do it. … (The mudslide) devastation changed a lot of lives and it’s something that’s not going to heal over-night, but hopefully this will help bring a little bit of nor-malcy back into the lives of these student-athletes.”

Darrington: meeting the Seahawks ‘a dream come true’From Page C1

C4 Wednesday, 06.18.2014 The Daily Herald

Page 27: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

World CupC5 | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM | WEDNESDAY, 06.18.2014

ASSOCIATED PRESSMexico goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa (left) gives a lift to teammate Javier Aquino following a 0-0 tie with Brazil on Tuesday in Fortaleza, Brazil.

Associated Press

FORTALEZA, Brazil — For-taleza means “fortress” in Portuguese and Mexico’s defense certainly lived up to the name of Brazil’s northeast city on Tuesday thanks to the heroics of goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa.

Ochoa made a series of out-standing saves to help Mexico hold Brazil to a 0-0 draw.

The result leaves each team with four points in Group A, but Brazil is ahead on goal differ-ence going into their decisive final matches. Croatia and Cameroon meet today for their second games after both opened with defeats.

Ochoa’s first remarkable save prevented Neymar from scoring in the 26th minute. The Brazil striker’s powerful header looked set to fly just inside the post when the goalkeeper dived to his right and pushed the ball wide.

Ochoa made three other diffi-cult saves to keep the hosts from breaking the deadlock — a shot by Paulinho in the 44th minute, a second-half effort by Neymar from inside the area and a close-range header by Thiago Silva in the 86th minute that produced a remarkable block by the Mexico goalkeeper.

“It was the match of my life,” said Ochoa, who was visibly moved afterward. “To do it in a World Cup, in front of all the fans, it’s incredible.”

Mexico coach Miguel Herrera called Ochoa the “hero” of the match.

“He did what we expected him to do,” Herrera said, “he came up with extraordinary saves.”

After stopping Silva’s header, there was still time for a thrilling end to the game in the north-eastern city of Fortaleza.

The referee dismissed Bra-zilian claims for a penalty after Marcelo seemed to have been grabbed in the 88th minute. Mexico then had two great chances, first with Andres Guar-dado’s shot over the crossbar in the 90th and then with an effort by Raul Jimenez that was stopped by Brazil goalkeeper Julio Cesar in injury time.

“In the end, the 0-0 mir-rors what happened, it was a very hard-fought match,” Brazil coach Luiz Felipe Scolari said. “The draw wasn’t a good result because a victory would have already allowed us to advance, but we need to be able to respect our opponent, which played very well.”

Herrera was clearly pleased with his side’s performance.

“We had a great match against a great rival playing in front of its fans, in its stadium, in its coun-try,” Herrera said. “We showed that we can play at the same level as any other team.”

A win by either team would have guaranteed a spot in the next round if Cameroon and

Croatia were to draw in the jun-gle city of Manaus.

“The only thing missing was the goal,” Scolari said. “We need to give credit to their goalkeeper. He was had a great day and that kept us from winning the match. He made some spectacular saves, was the best player of the match.”

Brazil had won all three pre-vious World Cup matches between the teams without con-ceding a goal, but the two teams hadn’t met in the sport’s show-case tournament since 1962.

“We already expected a match this difficult,” Brazil striker Fred said. “We tried to score until the end but it wasn’t possible. We’ll have to wait until the next match to try to secure a spot in the next round.”

Fans wearing Brazil’s green and yellow colors were the majority as expected, but Mexi-cans took over large sections of the stadium and at times were louder than the local fans. Among those in the crowd of 60,342 was NBA star Kobe Bry-ant, of the Los Angeles Lakers.

Mexico had won six of its past 10 matches, including in the final of the 2012 London Olym-pics, keeping the Brazilians from earning their first gold medal in football. In their latest match, Brazil won 2-0 in last year’s Confederations Cup, also in For-taleza and also in the second match of the group stage.

‘The match of my life’Behind a spectacular effort by goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa, Mexico plays powerful Brazil to a 0-0 draw

USA | Notebook

Associated Press

SAO PAULO — U.S. soccer coach Jurgen Klinsmann is opti-mistic forward Jozy Altidore will return during this World Cup.

Altidore underwent an MRI exam on his injured left ham-string Tuesday after the U.S. squad returned to its Sao Paulo headquarters from Monday night’s 2-1 victory against Ghana.

Results weren’t immediately available, and there is some doubt because hamstrings aren’t always quick to heal.

“With Jozy, we’ve got to see how he now reacts the next cou-ple days with his hamstring, and we’re full of hope that he comes back still in this tournament, and that’s what we kind of work on every day,” Klinsmann said. “The medical staff is doing a tre-mendous job ... so we still have to hope that Jozy will be back. How quickly? That is down to his heal-ing process.”

In the first half Monday, Alti-dore was running down a ball with Ghana’s John Boye when he lowered his head to attempt to control it. He immediately grabbed the back of his left leg and fell to the ground in pain. He was replaced by Aron Johannsson.

“Obviously we all hope he’ll be all right,” midfielder Alejandro Bedoya said. “I’m sure if he’s able to work hard, we’re going to get him back. We have players that can play different roles and come in and do a job. Last night we had two subs come in and add some-thing to the game. Aron is a good player and I think he did well last night under the circumstances.”

The Americans’ next Group G match is Sunday against Portugal, a 4-0 loser to Germany.

Central defender Matt Besler was replaced at halftime Mon-day as a precaution with right hamstring tightness, and he also underwent tests Tuesday. Klins-mann said Besler’s injury wasn’t serious and he would be fine for Sunday.

Captain Clint Dempsey broke his nose but is expected to play Sunday.

“Maybe he has the option if he wants a mask on,” Klinsmann said. “I don’t know how much a mask can protect him. What-ever he feels good with. I think a broken nose, yes, it was tricky during the game. He barely could breathe. He struggled with that. But once it’s broken, it’s broken. It will take time to heal completely ... He’s going to be all right.”

Goal time adjustedRIO DE JANEIRO — FIFA officially

timed Clint Dempsey’s goal at 30 sec-onds into the United States’ 2-1 World Cup win over Ghana.

Dempsey became the fifth fastest scorer in World Cup history on Mon-day in Natal.

The goal was initially timed at 29 seconds before being confirmed at one second later by FIFA on Tuesday.

The only faster goals at a World Cup were by Turkey’s Hakan Suker (11 seconds against South Korea in 2002), Czechoslovakia’s Vaclav Masek (16 seconds against Mexico in 1962), Germany’s Ernst Lehner (25 seconds against Austria in 1934), and Eng-land’s Bryan Robson (27 seconds against France in 1982).

Dempsey became the first Ameri-can to score in three World Cups.

Klinsmann: Jozy Altidore may not be done

Associated Press

BELO HORIZONTE, Brazil — All too often, it sounds phony when a World Cup coach says all 23 players on the squad are equally important. On Tuesday, Belgium coach Marc Wilmots made it ring true.

From the start against Algeria, Wilmots said the plan was to wear out the opposition with possession play and then bring in fresh sub-stitutes to pounce. Instead of just an 11-man starting lineup, he was counting on the bench from the opening whistle.

One substitute, Marouane Fel-laini, used bulk and power to head home an equalizer to cancel out an early penalty. Another, Dries Mertens, finished off a counter in the 80th minute to give Belgium, the Group H favorite, a 2-1 victory.

“I always said that the bench will make the difference and we showed it again today,” Fellaini said.

His 70th-minute glancing, back-ward header finally brought the favored Belgians back into the game after a plodding first half.

At halftime Wilmots had already brought on Mertens for more depth on the right wing. Even after he pro-vided the winning goal, Wilmots showed the bench is not necessar-ily a happy place to be.

“It was the choice of the trainer. A tough choice. But I was happy to come on,” Mertens said.

He was able to use his speed ever more effectively against the rapidly tiring Algerians and he finished off a quick counterattack with a fiery right-foot drive for the clincher.

If he had started, he might not have had such an impact.

Wilmots is in a good position, however, as few coaches have those kinds of options. While most teams struggle to fill their starting lineup with top class players, he can leave many on the bench.

“If we didn’t have the strength from our bench, it would have been different,” he said.

So for 45 minutes, he set off with possession play, hoping to exhaust the Algeria players with running. What he hadn’t counted on was an error in his own defense.

Jan Vertonghen dragged Sofi-ane Feghouli down in the area, conceding a penalty that the Alge-rian forward converted in the 25th minute.

From there, Algeria’s plan was clear: park the bus in front of goal and hope to hang on. The Algerian fans became ever more rapturous and the Belgian players were sul-len and downhearted heading into halftime.

“I knew the moment would come. We had to stay calm,” Wilm-ots said.

Bench helps Belgium rally to beat Algeria

StandingsFor World Cup standings, see the Scoreboard on Page C4.

ASSOCIATED PRESSRussia’s goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev reacts after letting in the opening goal during the Group H World Cup match between Russia and South Korea in Cuiaba, Brazil.

FIFA World CupToday’s gamesNetherlands vs. Australia, 9 a.m.TV: ESPN, CBUT

Spain vs. Chile, noon TV: ESPN, CBUT

Cameroon vs. Croatia,3 p.m.TV: ESPN, CBUT

By Steve DouglasAssociated Press

CUIABA, Brazil — Blundering Russia goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev was bailed out by teammate Alex-ander Kerzhakov in a 1-1 draw with South Korea in the World Cup on Tuesday that exposed both teams’ deficiencies.

Akinfeev aready had looked sus-pect in dealing with long-range shots before spilling Lee Keun-ho’s speculative effort into his own net in the 68th minute, gifting South Korea the lead.

Kerzhakov, though, came to Akinfeev’s rescue by turning in a shot from close range six minutes later — just three minutes after coming on as a substitute — to earn

Russia a point from a poor-quality Group H match.

Akinfeev stayed on the ground inside his own net, head in his hands, after making his error, clearly embarrassed after drop-ping what was a routine save from a shot from about 30 yards. He was consoled by a couple of teammates, who patted him on the back.

“It was a kid’s mistake,” Afin-keev said. “The goalkeeper of the national team shouldn’t make mis-takes like this one.”

Russia coach Fabio Capello has remained loyal to Akinfeev this sea-son despite some patchy form, and stood by him again.

“He is a great goalkeeper,” Capello said. “There can be mistakes, of course — some can get a penalty

wrong ... and it’s logical for a goal-keeper to make a mistake as well.

“We were able to make up for that and we can accept a mistake by a great keeper like Akinfeev.”

The explosive six-minute spell that featured both goals was not in keeping with the rest of a fairly mundane game characterized by slow build-up play, poor passing and wayward finishing.

Having lost four of its last five games heading to Brazil, the South Koreans came into their eighth straight World Cup with concerns over their flimsy defense and a lack of goal threat. There was no hiding their toothless attack Tuesday.

Russia was just as lifeless in its attack — at least until Kerzhakov came off the bench.

Russia, South Korea battle to a 1-1 draw

Page 28: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

C6 Wednesday, 06.18.2014 The Daily Herald

WA Dept. of Environmental Quality

Pollen IndexToday

Source: NAB

Everett

Bellingham

SeattleTacoma

Port Angeles

Yakima

Walla Walla

Spokane

Coeur d’Alene

MissoulaGreat Falls

Butte

Boise

Idaho FallsTwin Falls

Bend

Salem

Eugene

PortlandNewport

Libby

Medford

Eureka

Redding

Klamath Falls

Ontario

Pendleton

Calgary

Kelowna

Medicine Hat

Helena

Vancouver

Marysvile

EVERETT

Stanwood

Oak HarborMount Vernon

Bellingham

Granite Falls

Arlington

Lake Stevens

Snohomish70/50

Monroe Sultan

Gold Bar

IndexLynnwood

Kirkland

Bellevue

Redmond

Seattle

Port Orchard

Tacoma

Auburn

Langley

Mukilteo

Western WA

Mountains

Eastern WA

Puget Sound

Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Today Tomorrow

Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Today Tomorrow City Today Tomorrow City Today Tomorrow

Everett Time Feet Port Townsend Time Feet

Everett Arlington Whidbey Island

City Today Tomorrow City Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W

Almanac

Tides

National Weather

Good: 0-50; Moderate: 51-100, Unhealthy (for sensitive groups): 101-150; Unhealthy: 151-200; Very unhealthy: 201-300; Hazardous: 301-500

Air Quality Index Sun and Moon

More InformationRoad Reports:www.wsdot.wa.gov

Avalanche Reports:www.nwac.noaa.gov

Burn Ban Information:Puget Sound: 1-800-595-4341

Website: www.pscleanair.org

(for the 48 contiguous states)National Extremes

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries, sn-snow, i-ice.

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature

bands are highs for the day.

Northwest Weather

World Weather

Mill Creek

Lewiston

Roseburg 80/50/s 84/56/pcSalem 74/49/pc 79/52/pcMontanaButte 53/38/sh 69/42/pcGreat Falls 61/47/r 71/47/cMissoula 59/45/sh 76/45/pcAlaskaAnchorage 60/50/c 60/51/sh

Barrow 38/31/c 37/29/cFairbanks 58/51/r 60/48/rJuneau 57/40/sh 62/46/cBritish ColumbiaChilliwack 68/51/pc 71/55/pcKelowna 80/47/pc 85/50/pcVancouver 66/54/pc 67/56/pcVictoria 66/52/pc 66/54/pc

WashingtonBellingham 67/52/pc 68/56/pcColville 76/49/c 82/48/pcEllensburg 78/50/pc 83/55/pcForks 63/50/pc 63/51/cFriday Harbor 66/48/pc 66/50/pcMoses Lake 80/50/pc 85/54/sOcean Shores 59/54/pc 60/55/pcOlympia 70/48/pc 73/51/pcPort Angeles 62/49/pc 63/52/pcPullman 65/45/c 76/49/pcSpokane 68/48/c 77/54/pcSeattle 68/53/pc 72/54/pcTacoma 68/50/pc 72/51/pcWalla Walla 78/54/pc 84/60/sWenatchee 81/57/pc 84/61/pcYakima 81/48/pc 85/56/pcIdahoBoise 72/51/pc 83/60/sCoeur d’Alene 64/47/c 76/49/pcSun Valley 59/39/c 73/48/sOregonAstoria 65/51/pc 66/53/pcBend 74/41/s 80/43/sEugene 75/46/pc 79/50/pcKlamath Falls 75/38/s 81/45/sMedford 85/51/s 90/57/pcPortland 73/53/pc 78/56/pc

Albany 87/64/t 83/50/sAlbuquerque 87/59/s 87/65/sAmarillo 90/66/t 89/67/tAnchorage 60/50/c 60/51/shAtlanta 93/70/t 92/72/sAtlantic City 89/72/t 84/68/tAustin 91/74/pc 92/73/tBaltimore 97/73/t 90/64/tBaton Rouge 92/71/t 91/71/pcBillings 64/48/sh 73/54/tBirmingham 92/72/t 93/71/tBoise 72/51/pc 83/60/sBoston 88/69/pc 81/61/pcBuffalo 80/63/t 78/53/pcBurlington, VT 82/58/t 77/47/pcCharleston, SC 92/71/s 93/73/sCharleston, WV 92/68/t 87/66/tCharlotte 94/67/pc 94/67/sCheyenne 74/42/t 76/47/pcChicago 89/70/t 86/71/tCincinnati 91/71/t 90/70/tCleveland 88/68/t 81/62/tColumbus, OH 93/73/t 89/71/tDallas 91/77/pc 91/76/tDenver 83/47/t 81/54/pcDes Moines 91/74/pc 88/70/tDetroit 85/68/t 83/64/tEl Paso 96/74/s 96/74/sEvansville 93/71/s 92/71/pcFairbanks 58/51/r 60/48/rFargo 84/64/pc 79/58/tFort Myers 90/71/t 90/72/tFresno 90/63/s 96/66/sGrand Rapids 83/69/t 83/69/tGreensboro 94/69/pc 94/70/sHartford 91/65/t 87/54/sHonolulu 87/74/s 87/73/sHouston 92/74/pc 92/73/tIndianapolis 90/72/pc 89/71/pc

Jackson, MS 92/70/t 92/69/tKansas City 91/73/pc 87/72/tKnoxville 91/67/t 91/67/pcLas Vegas 89/71/s 95/73/sLittle Rock 93/72/s 93/73/pcLos Angeles 76/62/pc 79/62/pcLouisville 93/74/t 93/75/pcLubbock 90/68/t 88/68/tMemphis 93/74/s 93/74/pcMiami 87/74/t 88/75/tMilwaukee 79/63/t 76/63/tMinneapolis 84/70/t 86/64/tMobile 91/70/t 90/70/tMontgomery 95/70/t 94/70/tNewark 94/73/t 88/64/pcNew Orleans 90/73/t 89/73/pcNew York City 90/71/t 86/67/pcNorfolk 95/75/pc 95/74/tOakland 73/52/s 68/53/sOklahoma City 91/72/pc 89/72/tOmaha 94/74/pc 89/64/tOrlando 88/70/t 89/72/tPalm Springs 95/73/s 100/76/sPhiladelphia 94/73/t 87/67/tPhoenix 100/76/s 100/79/sPittsburgh 88/68/t 84/66/tPortland, ME 82/59/pc 79/52/pcPortland, OR 73/53/pc 78/56/pcProvidence 90/67/pc 85/56/pc

Raleigh 97/70/pc 98/70/sRapid City 76/48/pc 77/52/pcReno 80/54/s 87/58/sRichmond 98/72/pc 96/72/tSacramento 91/52/s 89/55/sSt. Louis 95/75/s 93/74/tSt. Petersburg 90/73/t 89/73/tSalt Lake City 66/52/pc 78/58/sSan Antonio 91/76/pc 92/75/tSan Diego 70/62/pc 71/64/pcSan Francisco 72/52/pc 68/54/pcSan Jose 79/53/s 77/54/sStockton 90/54/s 91/56/sSyracuse 83/64/t 79/47/sTallahassee 94/70/t 93/70/tTampa 88/73/t 89/73/tTempe 99/73/s 100/74/sTopeka 94/72/pc 89/72/tTucson 98/70/s 97/70/sTulsa 91/74/pc 90/73/tWashington, DC 97/75/pc 92/71/tWichita 94/73/pc 89/71/tWinston-Salem 93/70/pc 93/71/sYuma 96/72/s 100/76/s

High: Bullhead City, AZ ................. 108Low: Burns, OR ................................ 27

Low clouds followed by some sun today; however, clouds and

sun near the Cascades. Partly cloudy tonight. A shower pos-

sible tomorrow.

Intervals of clouds and sun-shine today; a passing shower

across the north. Patchy clouds tonight. Periods of clouds and

sunshine tomorrow.

Times of clouds and sun today; warmer in the east

with a shower in spots. Partly cloudy tonight.

Warmer in the east tomor-row.

More sunshine

Warmer

Slight chance of a shower

Summer begins 3:51 a.m.

through 5 p.m. yesterday through 5 p.m. yesterdayHigh/low ..................................... 68/52Normal high/low ....................... 66/52Records (2013/1976) ................. 75/45Barometric pressure (noon) ... 30.13 S24 hours ending 5 p.m. ............... 0.13”Month to date ............................. 2.02”Normal month to date ............... 1.76”Year to date ............................... 31.91”Normal year to date ................. 23.53”

High/low ..................................... 65/55Normal high/low ....................... 64/50Records (1958/1971) ................. 92/42Barometric pressure (noon) ... 30.11 S24 hours ending 5 p.m. .............. TraceMonth to date ............................. 0.54”Normal month to date ............... 0.77”Year to date ............................... 11.59”Normal year to date ................... 9.35”

Low 4:13 a.m. 4.3High 9:22 a.m. 8.2Low 3:42 p.m. 0.9High 10:43 p.m. 11.9

Low 3:29 a.m. 4.2High 8:33 a.m. 6.0Low 2:40 p.m. 0.0High 10:18 p.m. 9.1

through 5 p.m. yesterdayHigh/low ..................................... 64/50Normal high/low ....................... 66/52Records (1969/1919) ................. 84/39Barometric pressure (noon) ... 30.12 S24 hours ending 5 p.m. ............... 0.04”Month to date ............................. 1.01”Normal month to date ............... 1.43”Year to date ............................... 18.72”Normal year to date ................. 17.07”

Yesterday’s offender ....... Particulates Sunrise today ....................... 5:09 a.m.Sunset tonight ..................... 9:11 p.m.Moonrise today ................. 12:19 a.m.Moonset today ................... 12:07 p.m.

Amsterdam 67/53/pc 62/55/pcAthens 92/75/s 90/68/sBaghdad 108/84/s 114/85/sBangkok 91/79/t 93/79/tBeijing 93/71/c 86/67/cBerlin 77/53/pc 68/51/pcBuenos Aires 54/38/s 55/44/sCairo 97/74/s 103/79/sDublin 71/54/pc 66/47/pcHong Kong 92/84/r 92/84/shJerusalem 82/65/s 86/68/sJohannesburg 65/43/s 59/34/sLondon 69/53/pc 76/53/pc

Madrid 88/62/s 89/66/sManila 90/79/sh 87/79/tMexico City 73/55/pc 72/55/tMoscow 55/42/pc 61/48/shParis 73/52/s 72/57/pcRio de Janeiro 78/67/pc 72/63/shRiyadh 103/80/s 103/83/sRome 76/61/t 77/61/tSingapore 89/79/t 89/79/tStockholm 68/50/pc 63/48/rSydney 67/42/s 68/46/pcTokyo 75/66/sh 79/68/pcToronto 78/59/t 76/53/pc

TODAY

TOMORROW

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

64°51°

68°51°

66°53°

69°52°

71°52°

70/50 71/51 69/4867/52

68/52

68/53

69/51

68/53

69/50

68/50

69/51

65/51

66/49

63/5067/49

67/52

68/48

68/48

71/51

65/52

65/53

68/48

67/52

68/5368/50

62/49

81/48

78/54

68/48

64/47

59/4561/47

53/38

72/51

59/4068/48

74/41

74/49

75/46

73/53

62/47

68/45

85/51

63/46 75/38

76/48

78/49

61/48

80/47

61/48

60/48

66/54

93/60

Last New First FullJun 19 Jun 27 Jul 5 Jul 12

Forecasts and graphics, except the KIRO 5-day forecast, provided

by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

Wind west 7-14 knots today. Wave heights 1-3 feet. Visibil-

ity clear. Wind west 8-16 knots tonight. Wave heights 2-4 feet.

Partly cloudy.

64/51

64/51

Partly cloudy

68/52

70/51

By Don RuizThe News Tribune

TUKWILA — PSA Elite is an amateur soccer club with the mission of developing players for the pros.

Now, those aspiring profes-sionals are about to face the Seattle Sounders — the top-ranked team in Major League Soccer. The match is at 7 tonight at Starfire Sports Stadium.

You don’t need a psychic to understand how much the PSA Elite players wants to prove themselves.

“They’re going to be a team that’s really, really motivated,” Sounders coach Sigi Schmid said. “They’re almost like a col-lege all-star team, with guys that are still in college, guys that have just recently left college. For them, this is the game of their lives. Some of them are trying to impresses you, that, ‘Hey I’m a kid you’ve got to draft next year.’

Others guys are saying ‘Hey, I’m somebody that you overlooked.’ So for them it’s a really big contest.”

This is the kind of pairing that can be produced in the U.S. Open Cup — the 101-year-old club championship bringing together all levels of the United States Soccer Federation. Seattle, the three-time Open Cup champion Sounders and all other U.S.-based MLS teams enter in the tournament’s fourth round.

Meanwhile, PSA Elite climbed its way up to the fourth round with victories over the LA Misioneros of the Premier Devel-opment League, the San Diego Flash of the National Premier Soccer League, and finally LA Galaxy II of USL Pro.

Now PSA Elite has reached the toughest challenge the tourna-ment can offer: meeting an MLS team on its home pitch.

“I’ve played a lot of cup games in Europe, and it’s the same thing no matter what,” Seattle goal-keeper Marcus Hahnemann said. “When we’ve played against the big teams — you’re going to Man United, or you have them coming to your place — they don’t really want to play you. And you go in there cruising, and you’re excited to be there, and you’re buzzing

100 miles an hour and you’re trying to get a result. That’s what they’re going to come here to do.”

Sounders midfielder Lamar Neagle of Federal Way also knows what its like. He was playing with the USL-2 Charleston Battery in 2010 when it went to Chicago and eliminated the MLS Fire.

“For a team in a lower league to come up and play an MLS team and to win away was huge,” he said. “… That was a thing that we definitely took seriously.”

For all the Sounders’ success in the U.S. Open Cup — they won the title in 2009, 2010 and 2011, and cruised to the final in 2012 — they also know what it’s like to tumble early to a lower-level team.

Last season, the Sounders opened the tournament at sec-ond-division Tampa Bay, and the North American Soccer League team sent them home 1-0 los-ers. The Sounders say they do not want a repeat this season — espe-cially to an amateur side at home.

“If we enter it we want to do as good as possible and do well and win it,” Schmid said. “Last year was a disappointment for us. … So it’s important for us to get off to a better start. We’ve always done well at Starfire, and hopefully we’ll get off to a good start again.”

Sounders face young upstarts in U.S. Open CupPSA Elite has something to prove against Major League Soccer’s best

HERALD FILE PHOTOSeattle’s Lamar Neagle (left) knows what it’s like to be part of a lower- division team hungry for recognition and battling a more established pro team. He played for the USL-2 Charleston Battery when it defeated Major League Soccer’s Chicago Fire in a 2010 U.S. Open Cup match.

COLLEGE | World Series

Associated Press

OMAHA, Neb. — Pinch hitter John Gatlin’s single into short right field over a pulled-in, five-man infield in the bottom of the ninth inning gave Mississippi a 2-1 victory over Texas Tech in a College World Series elimi-nation game Tuesday.

The exciting finish came after Texas Tech had tied it in the top of the ninth on a couple daring steals and a sacrifice fly.

Ole Miss (47-20) plays

Virginia on Thursday in another elimination game. The Red Raiders (45-20) were 0-2 in their first CWS.

Ole Miss won after Colby Bortles walked with one out. Brantley Bell hit a come-backer to Cameron Smith, who tried to force out Bortles at second. But he threw high into center field, allowing Bortles to go to third.

Aaron Greenwood then pinch ran for Bortles, Domi-nic Moreno came on to face Gatlin and Texas Tech shifted an extra player to the left side

of the infield and went with only two outfielders. Gatlin punched a 1-2 pitch over sec-ond base, Greenwood scored, and the celebration was on.

Virginia 3, TCU 2 (15)OMAHA, Neb. — Daniel

Pinero’s sacrifice fly scored Thomas Woodruff in the bot-tom of the 15th inning to give Virginia a 3-2 victory Tuesday night in a game that matched the longest in the College World Series’ 66-year history.

Pinero fouled off two squeeze-bunt attempts against Trey Teakell before he lofted a fly to center. Cody Jones’

throw toward home never had a chance. The Cavaliers’ bench and bullpen emptied, with ev-erybody mobbing Pinero near second base.

Virginia (51-14), which had a walk-off win against Missis-sippi on Sunday in nine in-nings, plays Friday in its brack-et final. TCU (48-17) plays Ole Miss in an elimination game Thursday.

Artie Lewicki (8-1) got the win and Teakell (6-1) took the loss.

It was the longest game, as measured by innings, since USC beat Florida State 2-1 in 15 in the 1970 national cham-pionship game.

Ole Miss scores in ninth inning, ousts Texas Tech

1060638

Page 29: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

SECTION D | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM/LIVING | WEDNESDAY, 06.18.2014

Good Life

INSIDE: Comics, 4 | Grandparenting, 4 | Dear Abby, 5 | Television, 6

By Cindy DampierChicago Tribune

You might not imagine the anchovy, that canned fish so reviled by children and the squeamish for its overpower-ing presence in Caesar salads and on pizzas, as a stealthy ingredient.

Nevertheless, the anchovy crept up on me.

I can pinpoint the moment it wriggled its way into my cooking. It was summer, a season of warm air, languor

— and collard greens. Pag-ing through the “Southern Foodways Alliance Commu-nity Cookbook” one evening, I came across a method for cooking tender young collards with a quick saute, in a pan started with a shake of red pepper, olive oil and ancho-vies. I eyed the recipe with a healthy Southern-bred skepti-cism. Searched for the ham hock in this recipe. Searched for the bacon. The smoked turkey wing?

Nope.

And since cooking is, for me, a way to serve both my innate contrarian and her twin, the starry-eyed curiosity seeker, that was all it took.

I might scoff at the notion that any Southern cook worth her cast-iron pan would try to flavor collards without a pork product. Then I might do exactly that, just to make us both admit those fish-flavored greens were delicious.

Luckily, I was in possession of the tenderest, most perfect armload of collard greens I

had ever seen, grown in far northern Illinois (almost Wis-consin) at Kinnikinnick Farm, greens purveyor to some of Chicago’s finest restaurants. I had the cast-iron pan. One trip to the all-night grocery later, I had the fish.

More fish than I needed, actually — in a fever of inde-cision, I bought fish in jars (old school, lurid, dubious packaging) and something called creme d’anchois (silly

That little sneaky, salty fishBILL HOGAN / CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Anchovies are best known for being a pizza and salad topping as well as being feared by children and the squeamish. But it can be a secret ingredient bringing a pop of flavor to many dishes.

Learn to love the flavor anchovy can bring to dishes

By Daniel NemanSt. Louis Post-Dispatch

For people who love to cook, it’s like Disneyland.

We walk through the aisles, eyes agog, mouths agape. As with children, our hands reach out to all the shiny objects on the shelves. “I want,” we say. “I want.”

For chefs, restaurant supply companies are part of the job, where they go to pick up the kitchen equipment, plates and assorted whatnots that they need for work. It’s fast, available, con-venient and above all, cheap.

Those same attributes are what make the stores Christmas to the home cook. There, spread out in front of you, is a wondrous array of delights, all shining and spar-kly and well within your budget.

The pots and pans you might buy at a typical kitchen store are sturdier and hardier than you will find at a restaurant supply company, and they are certainly more attractive. But why buy a gorgeous, heavy fry pan at one of those high-end mall stores for $150 when you can pick up a perfectly serviceable pan at a res-taurant supply store for $12.95?

And it’s not just serviceable, it is literally what the pros use. Chefs in working kitchens who cook food all day long use these same pans. The best food you’ve had at the best restaurant in town was cooked on a pan that costs less than 13 bucks - though, admittedly, the top-of-the-line pans go for a little more than that. Maybe $20.

It is true that restaurants use their pans so much they wear them out. A cheap nonstick pan in a restaurant might only last six months, but that is with near-constant use. At home, if you use it a lot, you might get five years out of it. But so what? It costs $12.95. In 25 years, you’ve spent only 65 bucks, less than half of

By Josh NoelChicago Tribune

In the world of American craft beer, the answer is usually, “Add hops.” The question almost doesn’t matter.

But in this case, hops helped answer a question that had vexed brewers for decades: how to bring lagers into the craft realm? Brewers had long favored ales, partly for the richness and complexity they offer compared with lagers, and partly as a reaction to the conglomerates that helped inspire the craft movement. Lagers were light, fizzy beers made by Budweiser and Miller, or so went the thought.

In recent years, however, lagers have staged a craft comeback, with a hand from hops. That piney, citrus-tinged ingredient, central to craft beer’s most popular style — India pale ales — has been central to giving lagers a needed, and delicious, jolt.

Breweries both large and small have taken stabs at what has become known as India pale lagers, including Victory Brewing (Prima Pils, whose label even features a hop cone), Fire-stone Walker (Pivo Pils, which also features a hop cone) and Magic Hat,

Craft brewers rolling out India pale lagers

BILL HOGAN / CHICAGO TRIBUNECraft brewers rolling out India pale lagers, including Dream Machine IPL, Firestone Pils Pivo, and Victory Prima Pils.

By Sara MoultonAssociated Press

Like Philadelphia itself, there is a lot to love about the city’s signature sandwich — the cheesesteak.

But that delicious combina-tion of beef, onions and cheese isn’t the sort of thing you want to pack away every day, unless you’re looking to pack on pounds. So I decided to see if I could make a healthier sand-wich that is inspired by the cheesesteak, but is a bit more suited to the everyday.

I started by swapping out the beef in favor of that most steak-like of mushrooms, the portobello. Actually, it’s just the roomy cap of the portobello, filled to the brim with roasted red peppers, grilled scallions, olives and mushroom trimmings, then topped with melted provolone cheese, and lubricated with a little bit of rosemary mayonnaise.

Finally, the whole thing is set on a slice of grilled rustic bread. It may be meatless, but it is not a punk. And heartiness aside, portobellos — like all of their mushroom brethren — are chock-full of nutrients.

But these big mushrooms have to be cleaned before they can be savored. Start by removing the dark gills on the

underside, lightly scraping them out with a teaspoon. Then simply rinse the cap on both sides under cold running water to remove any dirt. I know that some folks advise against rins-ing, preferring instead to wipe away the dirt with a damp cloth to prevent the mushrooms from getting waterlogged. In fact, a quick rinse doesn’t harm them and it’s infinitely quicker and more thorough than wiping them clean. Just pat the caps dry afterward so they’ll be able to absorb the marinade.

And that’s the amazing thing

about portobellos. Though they have a high water content, if you plunk them into a flavorful mari-nade, they still absorb it quickly.

Topping-wise, I’ve gone the Mediterranean route, but you’re welcome to substitute the top-pings of your choice. Maybe you’ll want to grill and chop up some complementary mush-rooms — like shiitake or oyster — and put them on top of the portobello. Maybe you’ll opt to top it off with grilled broccoli, asparagus or onions. Likewise,

Portobello subs nicely in cheesesteak

ASSOCIATED PRESSOpen-faced stuffed portobello sandwich are a healthier alternative to the classic Philadelphia cheesesteak.

Northwest IPLsBreweries making India pale lagers in the Northwest include Pyramid Breweries and Roslyn Brewing.

Supply stores are a cook’s dream

See PORTOBELLO, Page D2See LAGERS, Page D3

See FISH, Page D2 See STORES, Page D2

Page 30: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

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Meet with your local Herald representative at one of the north

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1074751

Shirlee Hall with Assistant Store Manager

Autumn, of the Edmonds QFC.

D2 Wednesday, 06.18.2014 The Daily Herald

name, weirdly compelling yellow-and-blue tube). A sucker for packaging, I tried the fish paste first. It melted into a silky puddle in the pan, coating the garlic and red pepper flakes and then the greens, which I ate, standing up in the kitchen, by the faint light of the range hood. I was converted, and those speedy, spicy greens became a house recipe, enshrined alongside things like biscuits, chocolate chip cookies and pulled pork.

The more pungent jarred fish made their debut a few weeks later. Smashed with a fork, they flavored first the greens and then attained secret ingredient status in the pulled pork, a braised chicken thigh recipe and more. Umami all over the place. If the recipe called for starting with bacon, I subbed the fish, with deli-cious, nuanced results. Anchovy haters never knew what hit them.

Anchovies in the pantry were like money in the bank. I was always looking for new ways to try them.

By the time I noticed an online mention of a specific kind of anchovy, one that trumped the supermarket variety with superior taste and tex-ture, my inner skeptic was mostly silenced. I wanted to try those fish.

Adding to the urgency was another cooking project that had been canonized in our kitchen: pizza-making. After con-sulting with bread guru Jim Lahey for a story on homemade pizza, I was on the lookout for pizza ingredients that would deliver bigger, better flavor. Lahey’s advice was that the best ingredients are what truly elevate the pizza, not the ability to spin the dough into a perfect round every time.

Online food gurus agreed: If you wanted great anchovies, the fish you wanted were from the Can-tabrian Sea, caught by the fisherman of the Spanish town Santona, packed and sold by the Don Bocarte

company. Don Bocarte’s anchovies, they say, are caught only during April, May and June, scooped from the sea while migrat-ing along the Spanish coast. Hand-packed in extra-virgin olive oil and with a touch of salt that renders them the height of fishy, creamy delicious-ness. The more I read, the more my mouth watered. Those anchovies belonged on my pizza. I found them online but realized that the tin (less than 2 ounces for $13) would also cost $13 to ship. I called local grocers, looking for the brand, but was denied. Annoyed, I contented myself with lesser fish.

Finally, on a trip to New York, I remembered read-ing about a Spanish foods importer that had opened a SoHo shop. They carried the Bocarte anchovies. After a panicked moment scanning the shelves at Despana Foods — the anchovies were in the refrigerated case, as it turned out — two tins of anchovies were mine, for roughly the price of one ordered online. In the

logic of travel shopping, this seemed completely reasonable.

Back home, they lingered on the pantry shelf for a while, waiting to make their entrance. On the first run, I overfished the pizza — it was a touch too pungent for everyone but me. The second time around, I had a surer hand — Bocarte’s anchovies, broken and sparingly applied, were the perfect taste of but-tery olive oil and the tang of the ocean, swimming with the other toppings of olives, pepper, tomato and cheese. My journey with the anchovy had reached its satisfying end.

Maybe.There’s still a partial tin

lingering in the fridge, and it’ll need to be eaten. Of course there are greens to cook, pulled pork to season, pizza to make. But we’ve been down that path. What about a little anchovy crostini? Or an anchovy-laced pasta dish? Or soup with cannellini and kale?

Let’s just say: if you’re going to be in SoHo, I could probably use another can of fish.

FishFrom Page D1

what a more prestigious brand would cost you.

I recently bought my brother a cook’s knife for his birthday. It might be a weird birthday gift, but he needed a good knife that stays sharp, and besides, I’m a bit of a knife geek. So I went to a restaurant sup-ply company and picked him up an 8-inch Dexter Sani-Safe cook’s knife. It only cost — well, I don’t want to say how little it cost, because there is a possibility he could read this column. But let’s just say it was cheap enough that I bought myself one at

the same time.Together, they cost less

than a third of my next favorite knife, a Zwilling J.A. Henckels chef’s knife that is heavier than most but that fits my hand the best.

If you’re looking to stock up on your saucepans, you can pick up a 1 1⁄2-quart model for just $9.95. If you’d like a baking sheet (technically, it’s a half bak-ing sheet - you won’t be able to fit a full size sheet in your oven, unless you have a BlueStar), you can buy one for $5.50. You might as well buy two. And if you plan to make a lot of frozen drinks, you can get a pro-fessional Waring blender for less than $75.

Admittedly, some of the offerings at a restaurant supply company actually

cost more than you would spend on a similar item elsewhere, particularly if you like to bake, because the pros need a higher quality than the home cook. A springform pan at one company, for instance, costs a hefty $31.50, about twice what a decent ver-sion for residential use will set you back.

But the ones you use at home are relatively flimsy because they are never going to get too much use. A professional baker crank-ing out cheesecakes every day is going to need the sturdier version.

Most restaurant supply companies are happy to sell to the general public, though some (including Restaurant Depot and B&J Peerless) deal only

with restaurants.To answer the burn-

ing question that some of you serious cooks have, yes, restaurant supply companies do sell com-mercial stoves. But they will try to talk you out of buying one for your house. Commercial ranges are less insulated than residential ones, and they get much, much hotter. If you buy one, you will almost certainly lose your homeowner’s insurance. Even if you surround it in heatproof material, there is still a frighteningly good chance you will burn down your house.

Stick with the knives and the pots, the ladles and the strainers, the whisks and the metal mixing bowls. You’ll be glad you did.

StoresFrom Page D1

if you’re not crazy about provolone, you can swap in thin slices of mozzarella, cheddar or Italian fontina. Finally, if don’t like mayo on your sandwiches, don’t use it. Dijon mustard works very nicely in its place.

But however you cus-tomize it, I urge you to try adding this super-satis-fying vegetarian ringer to the menu the next time you’re grilling up hot dogs and burgers in the backyard, and see if you don’t win some converts.

Open-faced stuffed portobello sandwiches

To remove the gills from the underside of the portobello mushrooms, use a spoon to gently scrape them out.

1 garlic clove, minced 1 tablespoon Dijon mus-

tard 2 tablespoons sherry

vinegar 2 tablespoons extra-

virgin olive oil Salt and ground black

pepper 4 large portobello mush-

rooms, stems and gills discarded

1⁄2 cup light mayonnaise 2 teaspoons finely

minced fresh rosemary Olive oil cooking spray 1⁄2 cup medium chopped

jarred roasted red pep-pers

1⁄2 cup pitted black olives, medium chopped

6 large scallions, bottoms trimmed

4 slices rustic whole-grain bread

4 thin slices provolone cheese (about 3 ounces total)

Heat the grill to medium.

In a small bowl, combine the garlic, mustard, vinegar, olive oil, and a hefty pinch each of salt and pepper. Brush the marinade on both sides of the mushrooms, then transfer them to a zip-close plastic bag, along with any remaining marinade. Let them marinate at room temperature for 20 minutes.

Meanwhile, in a small bowl combine the mayonnaise and rosemary, then season with salt and pepper. In a medium bowl combine the peppers and olives, then season with pepper. Set aside.

Spray the scallions with the cooking spray and grill them, turning often, until they are charred on the edges and crisp tender, 3 to 4 minutes. Transfer them to a cutting board and let them cool slightly. Medium chop the scallions and add them to the bowl with the pep-pers and olives.

Mist the bread with cooking spray, then grill it until it is lightly toasted on both sides. Set aside.

Grill the mushrooms, gill sides down, 3 to 4 minutes. Turn them over and grill on the on the second side until tender when pierced with a knife, another 3 to 4 minutes. Spoon a quarter of the olive-pepper mixture evenly on top of each mushroom. Top with a slice of cheese, cover the grill and cook until the cheese is melted, 1 to 2 minutes.

Spread the mayonnaise mixture on each piece of bread. Transfer each mushroom to one slice of bread. Cut in half and serve right away.

Servings: 4Nutrition information per

serving: 380 calories; 230 calories from fat (61 percent of total calories); 26 g fat (7 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 35 mg cholesterol; 26 g carbohy-drate; 5 g fiber; 6 g sugar; 12 g protein; 1,060 mg sodium.

PortobelloFrom Page D1

Page 31: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

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which recently released its first new year-round beer in eight years, an IPL named Dream Machine.

At 50 international bitterness units, Dream Machine boasts as much hop character as many pale ales. Chris Rockwood, Magic Hat’s head brewer, said the brewery consid-ered a handful of styles

for its newest addition, but settled on an IPL both because he liked the beer and because the style is a smart investment.

“I don’t think (the rise in IPLs) will be a quick flash,” Rockwood said. “The beer consumer is opening up to lagers, and what they bring to the table.”

And what do they bring? Think of a cleaner, lighter pale ale or IPA, with bright hop lushness and bitter-ness, but with a lager’s clean finish. Rather than end malty, sweet or cloying

as some IPAs (or impe-rial IPAs) can, IPLs segue from their hop burst to a tidy crispness that makes them perfect for pairing with barbecue, ending the night as a refreshing palate cleanser or simply sipping on a summer day.

With a lower alcohol content, they can also be consumed repeatedly without leaving the drinker in much of a fog. In that way, IPLs are similar to another current craft beer trend: session (or lower-in-alcohol) IPAs.

It could be argued that just as craft beer was a reac-tion to mass-marketed beer, IPLs are a reaction to the last 20 years of craft beer, as bigger and boozier beers increasingly came into style. Suddenly there’s a place, for lighter, cleaner beers so long as they don’t sacrifice flavor.

It’s little wonder that hops ended up as the key ingredient to a lager trend.

“The industry certainly is not done exploring hops,” Rockwood said. “That hop-forward profile is still desired.”

LagersFrom Page D1

Rosés super with Northwest cuisineNow that we’re near

the midpoint of 2014, we are start-

ing to get a better handle on how the 2013 vintage will look.

Based on the rosés we’ve tasted so far, we think the warm, often strange vintage will have much to offer.

Rosés, which typically are made from red wine grapes (but occasionally have white wine blended in), are all the rage in the Pacific Northwest these days. And we’re not talk-ing white Zinfandel, that California Kool-Aid that left the country awash in sickly sweet pink wines for more than a decade.

Rather, the rosés we’re seeing are mostly dry and tend to pair beautifully with the bounty of cuisine the Pacific Northwest offers. We love drinking rosés all sum-mer long with such dishes as salmon, halibut, scallops, crab, oysters, ham or egg salad sandwiches, quiche, grilled flatbreads, curries, salad Niçoise and more.

Here are a few 2013 rosés we’ve tasted so far this spring. Look for them at your favorite wine merchant or contact the wineries directly.

L’Ecole No. 41 2013 Alder

Ridge Vineyard Grenache Rosé, Horse Heaven Hills, $19: The L’Ecole team reached into one of Wash-ington’s top vineyards — a majestic site overlooking the Columbia River — for this gorgeous rosé. It is a bright, elegant wine with aromas of strawberry, watermelon, apricot and purple laven-der, followed by crisp, dry flavors that hint at Rainier cherry, raspberry, apple and ripe strawberry. It’s a perfect summer wine. (14.5 percent alcohol)

Spindrift Cellars 2013 Rosé, Willamette Valley, $16: This is a blend of Pinot Noir and Pinot Gris, with the result being a gorgeous pink wine with aromas of rose petal, cherry, water-melon and peach, followed by flavors of dried cran-berry, apricot and white strawberry. (13.5 percent)

Gård Vintners 2013 Lawrence Vineyards Grand Klasse Rosé, Columbia Valley, $22: This winery with tasting rooms in Woodinville and Ellens-burg has crafted a delicious rosé using Grenache from estate grapes in Washing-ton’s Frenchman Hills. It opens with beautiful aromas of cherry blos-som, cotton candy, Rainier

cherry and baking spices, along with flavors of white strawberry, blood orange and a pinch of white pep-per. (13.1 percent)

Van Duzer Vineyards 2013 Pinot Noir Rosé, Willamette Valley, $18: Oregon Pinot Noir can make spectacular rosés, and this is another exam-ple. It brings aromas of cola, crushed herb, apricot and raspberry, followed by flavors that include peach and honeydew melon, which give way to hints of pink grapefruit in the fin-ish. (13.1 percent)

Julia’s Dazzle 2013 Pinot Grigio Rosé, Horse Heaven Hills, $16: This popu-lar pink wine from Long Shadows in Walla Walla comes in a fun bowling pin-shaped bottle. It reveals aromas of kiwi, strawberry shortcake and peach taffy, followed by deliciously dry flavors of nectarine, hon-eydew melon and white strawberry. (13.7 percent)

Ponzi Vineyards 2013 Pinot Noir Rosé, Wil-lamette Valley, $20: Second-generation Oregon winemaker Luisa Ponzi’s rosé is as beautiful as it is delicate. This dry pink wine is perfect with smoked or grilled salmon. It reveals

aromas of pie cherry, rose petal and beeswax, fol-lowed by elegant flavors of rhubarb, pomegranate and strawberry lemonade. (13.2 percent)

Sleeping Dog Wines 2013 Malbec Rosé, Yakima Valley, $18: Larry Oates runs this small winery overlook-ing the Yakima River near Benton City, and his rosé of Malbec opens with aromas of dusty cherry, strawberry and white pepper, followed by flavors of plum and Rain-ier cherry. (13.4 percent)

Kaella Winery 2013 Ciel du Cheval Vineyard Rosé, Red Mountain, $18: This stunning rosé of Sangio-vese comes from one of Washington’s top three vineyards. It kicks off with aromas of Jolly Rancher watermelon candy, straw-berry, orange zest and rosewater. On the palate, it flashes flavors of cranberry, raspberry, white strawberry and Rainier cherry. Kaella is a small winery with a Woodinville tasting room. (12.6 percent)

Eric Degerman and Andy Perdue run Great Northwest Wine, a news and information company. Listen to their podcast on iTunes or at www.greatnorthwestwine.com.

By Bill DaleyChicago Tribune

Cesar Ritz was a Victo-rian era hotelier who did much more than open luxury hotels, many of which bore his name. His modern ideas about accommodations, includ-ing an insistence on the finest cuisine, so captured the world’s imagination that the word “ritzy” has become an enduring eponym for fashionable elegance.

“He was the show-man,” said Willa Zhen, a food anthropologist and instructor at the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, N.Y. “He was the first to make hotels, and fine dining in the hotel an experience. He got the right set of people through the doors and got the rest of us imagin-ing what it would be like to stay there.”

Ritz’s philosophy was that the customer is always right. It was more than just a catchy line. So expertly did he anticipate, meet and exceed the expecta-tions of his celebrity guests that England’s Prince of Wales, the future King Edward VII, once told him, “You know better than I do what I like. Arrange a din-ner to my taste.”

That Ritz would enjoy such success that his name would come to symbolize luxury, glamour and wealth is all the more remarkable given he was the 13th child born to a peasant family in Niederwald, Switzerland. At 17, in 1867, he made his way to Paris and found work in a hotel, slowly and steadily moving up to better establishments and positions of greater

responsibility, serving an ever-grander roster of customers. Young Cesar paid attention.

“These people he served were of far more use to him than he to them,” Madame Ritz recalled in her book. “And he learned to see everything without appearing to observe, to hear everything without appearing to listen, to be attentive, not servile, to anticipate needs without being presumptuous.”

His name lives on through his eponymous hotels, the Ritz in Paris, opened in 1898 and is now owned by business-man Mohamed Al Fayed, and the Ritz in London, opened in 1906 and is now owned by the Bar-clay Brothers’ Ellerman Investments. The current Ritz-Carlton hotel chain, organized in 1988 and a subsidiary of Marriott International, lists Ritz as its founder.

Ritz cocktail ¾ ounce each: fresh

orange juice, cognac ¼ ounce Cointreau 3 to 5 ounces chilled

ChampagneShake all ingredients but the

Champagne vigorously with ice. Strain into a chilled Champagne flute; slowly top with Cham-pagne. Serves one.

From Mittie Hellmich’s “Ultimate Bar Book.”

Ritz fizz Champagne, chilled 1 dash each: lemon juice,

blue Curacao, amaretto Lemon twist

Fill a flute with Champagne. Add remaining ingredients; stir. Garnish with a twist of lemon peel. Serves one.

From “Mr. Boston Official Bartender’s Guide,” edited by Anthony Giglio with Jim

Meehan.

Putting on the Ritz for cocktails

NORTHWEST WINES | Eric Degerman and Andy Perdue

Page 32: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

DAILY CROSSWORDD4 Wednesday, 06.18.2014 The Daily Herald

GRANDPARENTING

Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level.

Subject: THE OLD TESTAMENT(e.g., Who witnessed the burning bush? Answer: Moses.)FRESHMAN LEVEL1. Who was the !rst shepherd mentioned in the Bible?2. Which Bible story explains the variation in human language?3. Who had a dream about a ladder that reached up to heaven?GRADUATE LEVEL4. What was to be 300 cubits long, 50 cubits wide and 30 cubits

high?5. Which two cities were destroyed by !re and brimstone?6. Which city’s walls fell after the blowing of trumpets?PH.D. LEVEL7. God said of him, “Twelve princes will he beget, and I will make

him a great nation”?8. What crime was Joseph accused of by Potiphar’s wife?9. Whose rod when cast down became a serpent?ANSWERS: 1. Abel. 2. "e Tower of Babel. 3. Jacob. 4. Noah’s ark.

5. Sodom and Gomorrah. 6. Jericho. 7. Ishmael. 8. Attempted rape. 9.Aaron’s.

SCORING: 18 points — congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points —honors graduate; 10 to 14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind;4 to 9 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — whoreads the questions to you?

Super Quiz is a registered trademark of K. Fisher Enterprises Ltd. (c)2014 Ken Fisher

North America Syndicate Inc.

SUPER QUIZSen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., is 77. Baseball

Hall of Famer Lou Brock is 75. Rock singer-composer-musician Sir Paul McCartney is 72.Actress Constance McCashin is 67. ActressLinda "orson is 67. Rock musician JohnEvans ("e Box Tops) is 66. Sen. Mike Johanns,R-Neb., is 64. Actress Isabella Rossellini is 62.Actress Carol Kane is 62. Actor Brian Benbenis 58. Actress Andrea Evans is 57. Rock sing-er Alison Moyet is 53. Rock musician DizzyReed (Guns N’ Roses) is 51. Figure skater KurtBrowning is 48. Country singer-musicianTim Hunt is 47. Rock singer-musician Sice("e Boo Radleys) is 45. Rhythm-and-bluessinger Nathan Morris (Boyz II Men) is 43. ActressMara Hobel is 43. Singer-songwriter Ray LaMon-tagne is 41. Rapper Silkk the Shocker is 39.Actress Alana de la Garza is 38. Countrysinger Blake Shelton is 38. Rock musician StevenChen (Airborne Toxic Event) is 36. Actor DavidGiuntoli is 34. Actress Renee Olstead is 25. Ac-tress Willa Holland is 23.

Thought for Today: “"e way of a superiorman is three-fold; virtuous, he is free from anxi-eties; wise, he is free from perplexities; bold, heis free from fear.” — Confucius, Chinese philoso-pher (551-479 B.C.).

Associated Press

BIRTHDAYS

By Dee and Tom Hardieand Key Kidder

Dear Grandparenting: I franklynever thought I would haveany grandchildren. Mimi is mydaughter and only child. She is acareer girl who put in long hoursfor years and climbed into retailmanagement. I told myself if shewas happy then I was happy. �enshe fell in love with a man shemet at an industry conference.He had two daughters (ages 11and 13) from his �rst marriage.Mimi up and got married ninemonths ago. So now I have twostep-granddaughters.

But things could be better, Iguess. �ey argue about moneymostly and how his two daughtersspend it. I mean it’s like burn, baby,burn. �ose two girls can burnthrough paychecks like there’s notomorrow. Mimi didn’t sign up forthat. Who would? I don’t want tosee my Mimi sad. She is proud andindependent and has not asked mefor any �nancial help. I have twochoices. Do I butt out or step upand write her a check?

— Joyce, Troy, Ohio

Dear Joyce: You can blame thestep-grandchildren for burningthrough the parental paychecks,but your daughter and her hus-band started the �re. Like manystep-grandparents, your loyalty lieswith Mimi, your !esh and blood.And although the husband actuallyseems to bear a greater burden ofresponsibility, your daughter cer-tainly is complicit in this mess.

�e parents control the money,not the other way around. As amanager, why didn’t your daugh-ter establish �rm guidelines tomanage the family budget? Whatwe have here is a failure to com-municate. It taxes us to imaginea more emotionally loaded topicamong newlyweds than thebehavior of stepchildren.

If you’re a grandparent or haveadult children, you stand a reason-ably good chance of becominga step-grandparent. Nearly 45percent of all marriages involveone previously married partner,and two-thirds have childrenalready. �ose who enter into such

marriages without establishinga budgetary construct regardingchild expenditures are reckless.Grandparents who intervenewith �nancial aid often miscal-culate the costs. By enabling this�nancial dysfunction to continueunabated, grandparents set them-selves up for long-term �nancialsupport of their adult children. Weadvise you to sit tight, at least untilthey come to grips with a situationentirely of their own making.

Grand remark of the week“Busy Bee” from Eloy, Arizona,

was talking with grandson Rickyabout what he wished for.

“I wish I had a big family, withthree brothers and three sisters,”said Ricky.

Busy Bee asked Ricky if he toldhis parents that.

“Sure, but they just sit there andlaugh and laugh.”

Dee and Tom, marriedmore than 50 years, have eightgrandchildren. Together withKey, they welcome questions,suggestions and Grand Remarks ofthe Week. Send to P.O. Box 27454,Towson, MD, 21285.

Step-grandchildren burn through money

ZIGGYTHE BETTER HALF

WUMO

BUCKLES

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

CORNEREDDENNIS THE MENACE

DILBERT

SIX CHIX

TUNDRA

CLASSIC PEANUTS

...

Page 33: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

Dear Abby: Helping aparent or other adult rela-tive handle their �nancesand health care can be achallenging gift to give. Youwant to honor their wishesand respect their boundar-ies, while at the same timeacting in their best interest.But it can be hard to knowwhere to begin and whomto trust, and you alwayswonder if you’re forgettingsomething.

To help your readerscarry out this importantrole, the Federal CitizenInformation Center createdthe free Family CaregiversKit. It features publicationsfrom the Consumer Finan-cial Protection Bureau thatexplain how to managea loved one’s money andprotect seniors from scams.And it also contains pub-lications from the FDA’sO�ce of Women’s Healthto keep track of medica-tions and learn to use themsafely. �e kit is full ofpractical tips that give care-givers the con�dence theyneed to manage a lovedone’s a�airs.

�anks for sharing thefree Family CaregiversKit. From one daughter toanother, you know howimportant it is to standup and support familymembers through life’schallenges. — Sarah Crane,acting director, FederalCitizen Information Center

Dear Ms. Crane: �ankyou for o�ering thisimportant information tomy readers. It is impor-tant because acceptingthis kind of responsibil-ity should not be donewithout fully understand-ing what it will entail. �epublications you sent tome provide an illuminatingoverview of the responsi-bilities involved.

Readers, this year’spacket is not to be missed,particularly if you have

aging relatives or a friendwho may need you tohandle his/her a�airs, evenfor a short period of time.

�ese booklets areo�ered free of charge andinclude the “ManagingSomeone Else’s Money”series of publications,which cover Power of Attor-ney and Managing Trusts,Property and Bene�ts. �eyare written in plain Englishand are in an easy-to-understand format.

Also included is a pam-phlet on using medicationswisely. Did you know that125,000 people die eachyear because they didn’ttake their medication asdirected — and many moreget sick because they didn’tproperly follow the direc-tions on the label? Anotherpamphlet shares informa-tion on recognizing andavoiding health scams, soyou and your loved onescan watch out for miracledevices and cures that reallyARE too good to be true.

You will also receive acopy of the 2014 ConsumerAction Handbook, whichcontains information youneed to make the best deci-sions about what you buyand the service provid-ers you use, and a samplecomplaint letter to helpyou get results.

To order this free kit, goto promotions.usa.gov/dearabby. You can alsoorder the kit by calling 888-878-3256 weekdays 8 a.m.to 8 p.m. — Love, Abby

Universal Uclick

The Daily Herald Wednesday, 06.18.2014 D5

ACROSS1 Does damage to6 Little handfuls, so to

speak10 Put the whammy on14 Alternative to U.S.P.S.15 Securely hide16 Fig leaf wearer, in

some art17 Words of resignation20 Son of 16-Across21 Advisers to players’

associations22 Actor Cariou23 “Dragnet” broadcast,

for short25 Dick Tracy’s girl27 Barista-operated

gadgets34 Old televangelism

org.35 Food item in quarter-

pound sticks36 “This is looking bad!”37 “This is looking bad!”39 Gives kudos42 Like decalcified water43 Instrument on the

Beatles’ “Norwegian Wood”

45 Sushi bar quaff

47 Part of many Frenchsurnames

48 Governor elected in a2003 recall vote

52 Chicken-sized flightless bird

53 “Yay!”54 Proof-ending letters57 Bird in the crow

family60 Like poor losers64 Punny description

of the circled letters in 17-, 27- and48-Across

67 “Pumping ___” (1977 docudrama featuring 48-Across)

68 “Whip It” band69 What a metronome

regulates70 Historic resignee of

201371 Drinks at sidewalk

stands72 “Come on down!”

announcer Johnny

DOWN1 Takes an ax to2 Friend en français3 Long broadside

4 Bit of bad luck 5 ___-mo 6 “___ to differ”

7 Drug smuggler’scourier

8 “Chop-chop!” 9 Bettor’s strategy10 Pres. Madison or

Monroe11 Golden god, say12 File directory heading13 Comics foes of

Magneto18 Old phone company

nickname19 Piece of Bacon or

Lamb24 Tour player26 Biathlete’s needs27 Set of principles28 Upside-down sleeper29 SpongeBob’s home

30 W. C. Fields persona31 Horatian work32 Send, as to a

specialist33 Old Air France fleet,

for short34 Face, slangily38 Sharp-eyed sort40 Brown who wrote

“TheDa Vinci Code”

41 Lampoon but good44 “Spider-Man”

director Sam46 ___-surf (Google

oneself)49 Country with a gorilla

on its 5,000-franc note

50 Did part of a slalompath

51 Staple Singers genre

54 Commercial swab

55 Two-tone coin

56 Barely enough to wet one’s whistle

58 ___ the way

59 N.Y.S.E. debuts

61 Resistance units

62 Towed-away auto,maybe

63 School for Prince Harry

65 180° from SSW

66 Ear-related prefix

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

PUZZLE BY VICTOR BAROCAS, 06.18.14

B A S H L A S S L E F T YA M I R A R C O I L I A DH O T H O T H O T V I B E SI N K M E A T S E CA G A I N S T T H E W I N D

N I T E D I T O U TA F T S B A L E R F R AW E A T H E R F O R E C A S TE L K E R U C T A T T AS L E E P I N O A S

A I N T N O S U N S H I N EG A S K N E E D A P

S P R I G C O L D A S I C EP I A N O O R I G T O R EA X M E N E T T E U T E S

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25 26

27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39 40 41 42

43 44 45 46 47

48 49 50 51

52 53

54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63

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67 68 69

70 71 72

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE

North dealerBoth sides vulnerable

NORTH♠♠ K 8 6♥♥♥♥ A 10 8 4♦♦♦♦ A 7 5♣♣ A 9 4

WEST EAST♠♠ Q 7 3 ♠♠ 5♥♥♥♥ K Q J 7 5 ♥♥♥♥ 9 6 2♦♦♦♦ 10 9 4 ♦♦♦♦ K Q J 3♣♣ 8 6 ♣♣ Q J 10 5 2

SOUTH♠♠ A J 10 9 4 2♥♥♥♥ 3♦♦♦♦ 8 6 2♣♣ K 7 3

North East South West1 NT Pass 4 ♠♠ All Pass

Opening lead — ♥♥♥♥ K

Free care-givers kita must for families

Cy the Cynic, a ferventbachelor, says that the bestargument against marriage is... husband vs. wife. Cy’s ad-vice about getting married issimple: Don’t.

�e best advice about try-ing to guess a missing queenis just as simple: Unless youmust, don’t. But at today’sfour spades, South took theace of hearts and went afterthe trumps by cashing theK-A. �e queen didn’t fall, andsince South couldn’t salvageany of his side-suit losers, he

went down, o� a trump, a cluband two diamonds.

How would you handle theplay?

South need not stake hiscontract on a guess for thequeen of trumps. He shouldru� a heart at Trick Two, takethe top clubs and ru� a heart.He goes back to the ace of dia-monds and ru�s the last heart.

South then exits in a minorsuit. �e defenders cash theirminor-suit tricks, but after 10tricks, declarer is left with theK-8-6 of trumps in dummyopposite his A-J-10. With adefender to lead, South issure of the last three tricks.

DAILY QUESTIONYou hold: ♠ Q 7 3 ♥ K Q J 7

5 ♦ 10 9 4 ♣ 8 6. Your partneropens one diamond, you re-spond one heart and he bidsone spade. What do you say?

ANSWER: You must actagain since game is possible— partner may have as manyas 18 points — but you haveno comfortable bid. A rebidof two hearts is possible butwould suggest a six-card suit.A raise to two spades wouldsuggest four-card support.My inclination, doubtless notshared by every expert, wouldbe to bid two diamonds.

Tribune Content Agency, LLC

BRIDGE

DEAR ABBY

ANSWERS TOPREVIOUS PUZZLE

SUDOKUJUMBLE

STONE SOUP

POOCH CAFE

PICKLES

RED & ROVER

ZITS

MARVIN

MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM

RIP HAYWIRE

Page 34: Everett Daily Herald, June 18, 2014

Wednesday, June 18

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SYFY (59)Red Planet (3) (’00) ›

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Original Sin (R, ’01) › Antonio Banderas. A Cuban business-man seeks revenge on his deceitful bride. (s)

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VH1 (62) Two Can Play That Game (4:50) (’01) › Vivica A. Fox. Space Jam (PG, ’96) ›› Michael Jordan. (s) I Love the 2000s “2002” I Love the 2000s “2003” Space Jam (PG, ’96) ›› (s)

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Channel numbers are for Comcast. For other cable systems, seeSunday’s TV Week or go to www.heraldnet.com/tvchannels.

(N) = New(s) = Stereo(cc) = Closed Captioned

12:00

5:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 6:00 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 8:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m. 9:00 p.m. 9:30 p.m. 10:00 p.m. 10:30 p.m. 11:00 p.m. 11:30 p.m.CBUT (99) News News News Coronat’n St. The Nature of Things (N) NHL-A Season NHL-A Season The National (N) (s) (cc) CBC News George S

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Countdown to the Oscars(N) (s) (cc)

Grey’s Anatomy Alex reactsto the news about his dad.

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KING (5)KING 5 News (N) (cc) NBC Nightly

News (N) (s)KING 5 News(N)

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TonightShow

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The Insider(N) (s) (cc)

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The Millers(8:31) (N) (s)

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Foyle’s War Engineers findcash at a shipyard.

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Celtic Woman: Songs From the Heart Music.

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Reign “Royal Blood” Francisand Lola grow closer.

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Hogan’s He-roes

F Troop Rhoda Rhoda The TwilightZone (cc)

Perry Mason(cc)

KCPQ (13)Q13 FOX News at 5 (N) (cc) Modern Fam-

ily (cc)Modern Fam-ily (cc)

The BigBang Theory

The BigBang Theory

American Idol Elimination;Candice Glover; Jake Bugg.

Rake “Jury Tamperer” Awoman sleeps with a juror.

Q13 FOX News at 10 (N)(cc)

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KONG (6)Who Wants/Millionaire

Who Wants/Millionaire

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Dr. Phil A wife struggles toget past betrayal. (N) (cc)

KING 5 News at 9 (N) (cc) KING 5 News at 10 (N) (cc) Katie (N) (s) (cc)

KTBW (20) Behind Joel Osteen Prince Hillsong TV Praise the Lord (cc) Holy Land Turning Best Praise Creflo Doll Book of Ruth The Prodigal

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How I MetYour Mother

How I MetYour Mother

KBTC (12) Arthur (s) Wild Kratts Northwest Changing NOVA (s) (cc) Superheroes Superheroes Superheroes: A Never-Ending Battle (s) (cc)

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Law & Order: Criminal In-tent “Alpha Dog” (s) (cc)

Law & Order: Criminal In-tent An overseas conflict.

Law & Order: Criminal In-tent An illegal arms deal.

Criminal Minds The teamtracks an arsonist. (s) (cc)

Criminal Minds A kidnappedRussian immigrant.

Cable TVAMC (67)

Mission: Impossible III (PG-13, ’06) ››› Tom Cruise, Philip Seymour Hoffman, VingRhames. Agent Ethan Hunt faces the toughest villain of his career. (cc)

Face/Off (R, ’97) ››› John Travolta, Nicolas Cage, Joan Allen. An FBI agent and a vio-lent terrorist switch identities. (cc)

Road House (11:01) (R, ’89)›› Patrick Swayze. (cc)

A&E (52)The First 48 A teen is mur-dered and left in his car.

The First 48 “When aStranger Calls; Sweet 16”

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BRAVO (66)The Millionaire Matchmak-er (s)

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The Millionaire Matchmak-er (N) (s)

The Millionaire Matchmak-er (s)

What Hap-pens

Matchmaker

CNN (44) Anderson Cooper 360 (N) And the Oscar Goes To... And the Oscar Goes To... Anderson Cooper 360 (cc) Forensic File Forensic FileCOM Sunny Sunny South Park Tosh.0 (6:29) Colbert Rep Daily Show Tosh.0 (cc) Tosh.0 (cc) Tosh.0 (cc) Tosh.0 (cc) Sunny Sunny Daily Show Colbert RepDISC (8) Amish Mafia (s) (cc) The Fighters (s) (cc) Epic Houseboats (s) (cc) Epic Homes (s) (cc) Epic Homes (s) (cc) Epic Homes (s) (cc) Epic Homes (s) (cc)

DSY (41)Jessie (s)(cc)

I Didn’t Do It(s) (cc)

Jessie (s)(cc)

Austin & Ally(s) (cc)

A.N.T. Farm(s) (cc)

Austin & Ally(s) (cc)

Camp Rock 2:The Final Jam (NR, ’10) › Demi Lovato,Kevin Jonas, Joe Jonas. (s) (cc)

Jessie (s)(cc)

A.N.T. Farm(s) (cc)

Dog With aBlog (s) (cc)

Austin & Ally(s) (cc)

ENC (518)Striking Distance (4:35) (R, ’93) ››Bruce Willis, Sarah Jessica Parker. (s) (cc)

I Spy (6:20) (PG-13, ’02) ›› Eddie Mur-phy, Owen Wilson. (s) (cc)

Once Upon a Time in Mexico (R, ’03) ››Antonio Banderas, Salma Hayek. (s) (cc)

Original Sin (9:45) (’01) › Antonio Banderas. A Cubanbusinessman seeks revenge on his deceitful bride.

Half PastDead (11:45)

ESPN (31)College Basketball (4)Arkansas at Kentucky. (N)

College Basketball Iowa at Indiana. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (cc) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (cc) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (cc) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (cc)

ESPN2 (32) College Basketball College Basketball Oregon at UCLA. (N) (Live) Olbermann (N) (Live) (cc) Olbermann (cc) Basketball NASCAR Olbermann (N) (cc)

FAM (39)The Middle“The Smile”

The Middle(s) (cc)

The Middle“The Name”

The Middle(s) (cc)

Sydney White (PG-13, ’07) ›› Amanda Bynes, Sara Pax-ton. A college coed finds a home with seven outcasts.

John Tucker Must Die (PG-13, ’06) › Jesse Metcalfe.Three students learn they are all dating the same guy.

The 700 Club (s) (cc)

FLIX (586) Stakeout (R, ’87) ››› Richard Dreyfuss. (s) (cc) Another Stakeout (PG-13, ’93) ››› Richard Dreyfuss. (s) 8 Million Ways to Die (R, ’86) ›› Jeff Bridges. (cc) Jesus’ Son (R, ’99) ››› (s)FNC (48) The O’Reilly Factor (N) The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor (cc) The Kelly File Hannity Greta Van SusterenFOOD (35) Pioneer Wo. Trisha’s Sou. Cupcake Wars Chopped Chopped Chopped Canada (N) Cutthroat Kitchen Diners, Drive Diners, Drive

FX (53)Captain America:The First Avenger (5:01) (PG-13, ’11) ››› ChrisEvans, Hayley Atwell. Capt. America battles the evil HYDRA organization.

Step Brothers (R, ’08) ›› Will Ferrell. Two spoiled menbecome rivals when their parents marry.

Anger Man-agement (N)

Taken (10:01) (PG-13, ’08) ››› Liam Neeson, MaggieGrace. Slavers kidnap the daughter of a former spy.

FXM (506)True Grit (PG-13, ’10) ››› Jeff Bridges. A crusty law-man helps a teen avenge her father’s death. (cc)

FXM Pre-sents (7:12)

True Grit (PG-13, ’10) ››› Jeff Bridges. A crusty law-man helps a teen avenge her father’s death. (cc)

FXM Pre-sents (9:42)

Planet of the Apes (’01) ›› Mark Wahlberg. An astronautleads a human uprising against ruling simians. (cc)

HALL (19) Little House on the Prairie The Waltons (cc) The Waltons (cc) The Waltons (cc) The Waltons “The Hawk” Frasier (cc) Frasier (cc) Frasier (cc) Frasier (cc)

HBO (551)Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (5:15) (PG, ’02) ››› Daniel Radcliffe, Ru-pert Grint. A malevolent force threatens the students at Hogwarts. (s) (cc)

Girls “Inciden-tals” (s)

Looking (s)(cc)

Now You See Me (PG-13, ’13) ›› Jesse Eisenberg.Agents track a team of illusionists who are thieves. (s) (cc)

The Orgasm Special: AReal Sex Xtra (s) (cc)

HGTV (68) Rehab Rehab Rehab Rehab Rehab Rehab Rehab Rehab Rehab Rehab Hunters Hunters Int’l Crwd House Hunters Int’lHIST (37) Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Vikings “Brother’s War” Vikings (11:02) (cc)

LIFE (51)Wife Swap A self-described“supermom.” (s) (cc)

Wife Swap Ex-beautyqueen, blue-collar mother.

Project Runway: Under theGunn “Hit the Stage” (cc)

Project Runway: Under theGunn (cc)

Project Runway: Under theGunn “Steampunk Chic”

The Good Mistress (10:01) (NR, ’14) Annie Heise. Awoman has a one-night stand with her friend’s husband.

MAX (561)The BourneLegacy (3:30)

MAX on Set(5:45) (cc)

Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (PG-13, ’11) ››Robert Downey Jr., Jude Law, Noomi Rapace. (s) (cc)

Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter (8:15) (R, ’12) › Ben-jamin Walker, Dominic Cooper. (s) (cc)

Natural Born Killers (R, ’94) ››› Woody Harrelson.Bloodthirsty young lovers become instant celebrities. (s)

MSNBC All In With Chris Hayes The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word All In With Chris Hayes The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word Hardball Chris MatthewsMTV (63) Fantasy Fact. Fantasy Fact. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Fantasy Fact. Cameras Ridiculous.NBCS (34) College Basketball (N) (Live) NHL-A Season NHL-A Season NHL-A Season NHL-A Season NHL Top 10 NHL Top 10NICK (40) SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Paul Blart: Mall Cop (’09) ›› Kevin James. SpongeBob Full House Full House Full House Full House Friends (cc) Friends (cc)OXY (50) Housewives/Atl. Maid in Manhattan (PG-13, ’02) ›› Jennifer Lopez. The Back-up Plan (PG-13, ’10) › Jennifer Lopez, Alex O’Loughlin. Maid in Manhattan (’02) ›› Jennifer Lopez.

ROOT (30)Planet XSquare

Mark FewShow

College Basketball Portland at St. Mary’s. (N) (Live) College Basketball Santa Clara at Loyola Marymount. (N)(Live)

College Basketball Portland at St. Mary’s.

SHOW (576)Barbershop2: Back

The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 (PG-13, ’12)›› Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson. (s) (cc)

Beauty Shop (PG-13, ’05) ›› Queen Lati-fah, Alicia Silverstone. (s) (cc)

Alex Cross (9:15) (PG-13, ’12) › Tyler Perry, Matthew Fox.A serial killer pushes Cross to the edge. (s) (cc)

Gigolos (N)(s) (cc)

Byzantium (R,’12) ››› (s)

SPIKE (57)2 Fast 2 Furious (4:30) (’03) ›› Paul Walker, Tyrese. Twofriends and a U.S. customs agent try to nail a criminal.

Cops (s) (cc) Cops “LiarLiar No. 5”

Cops (s) (cc) Cops (s) (cc) iMPACT Wrestling (N) (s) (cc) Rampage4Real (N) (s)

Ink Master(s) (cc)

STARZ (534) Jersey Girl›› Brave (5:35) (PG, ’12) ››› (s) (cc) Monsters University (7:10) (G, ’13) ››› (s) (cc) Mission to Mars (PG, ’00) › Gary Sinise. (s) (cc) After Earth (’13) › (cc)

SYFY (59)Red: Werewolf Hunter (NR, ’10) Felicia Day. A descendantof Little Red Riding Hood hunts werewolves. (cc)

Underworld: Evolution (R, ’06) ›› Kate Beckinsale. Vam-pire warrior Selene seeks revenge for her betrayal. (cc)

Underworld: Rise of the Lycans (R, ’09) ›› MichaelSheen, Bill Nighy, Rhona Mitra.

30 Days of Night: DarkDays (’10) Kiele Sanchez.

TBS (55)The King ofQueens (cc)

The King ofQueens (cc)

Seinfeld (s)(cc)

Seinfeld (s)(cc)

Seinfeld “TheBris”

Family Guy(s) (cc)

Family Guy(cc)

Family Guy(cc)

The BigBang Theory

The BigBang Theory

King of the Nerds Navigat-ing a laser maze. (N)

Conan (N) (cc)

TCM (501) The Sin of Madelon Claudet (NR, ’31) ›› Emma (NR, ’32) ››› Marie Dressler. (cc) The Guardsman (NR, ’31) ›››› Alfred Lunt. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (NR, ’31) ››› The Champ (11:15) (’31) ›››TLC (38) Medium Medium Long Island Medium (cc) Welcome to Myrtle Manor Here Comes Here Comes Here Comes Here Comes Welcome to Myrtle Manor Here Comes Here Comes

TMC (591)Crazy for Love (4:45) (’05)›› David Krumholtz. (cc)

The Perks of Being a Wallflower (6:15) (PG-13, ’12)››› Logan Lerman, Emma Watson, Ezra Miller. (s) (cc)

The Look of Love (NR, ’13) ›› Steve Coogan. Paul Ray-mond builds a porn, club and real estate empire. (s)

Java Heat (’13) › Kellan Lutz. An Americanlooks for a terrorist in Indonesia.

Killing ThemSoftly (11:45)

TNT (54)NBA Basketball New York Knicks at Miami Heat. From the AmericanAir-lines Arena in Miami. (N) (Live) (cc)

NBA Basketball Brooklyn Nets at Denver Nuggets. From the Pepsi Centerin Denver. (N) (Live) (cc)

Inside the NBA (N) (Live)(cc)

Castle “Last Call” A body isfound in the East River.

TOON (42) Regular Regular Johnny Test Regular Gumball Steven Univ. Teen Titans Johnny Test King of Hill Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Family Guy Family GuyTVLAND(163) Gilligan Isle Gilligan Isle Everybody Loves Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King The King of Queens (9:12) King King Roseanne (s) Roseanne (s)

USA (58)Law & Order: Special Vic-tims Unit “Svengali” (cc)

Law & Order: Special Vic-tims Unit “Blinded” (cc)

Law & Order: Special Vic-tims Unit “Fight” (s) (cc)

Law & Order: Special Vic-tims Unit “Annihilated” (s)

Law & Order: Special Vic-tims Unit “Paternity” (s)

Law & Order: Special Vic-tims Unit “Snitch” (s) (cc)

Suits Cameron continues touse dodgy tactics.

VH1 (62) Songs of ’90s Anger Management (5:25) (PG-13, ’03) ›› Adam Sandler. (s) Couples Therapy (s) Couples Therapy (N) (s) Mob Wives (N) (s) (cc) Tanning of Amer

COM

TelevisionD6 | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM | WEDNESDAY, 06.18.2014

By Frazier MooreAssociated Press

When CNN first signed on, it was greeted by a chorus of skeptics.

Not just doubt about Ted Turner’s vow that his all-news network would be there long enough to cover the end of the world. A bigger question reso-nated: Was there really enough news to fill 24 hours of airtime, day after day?

As CNN marks its 34th birth-day this month, a harsh truth endures: No, there really isn’t, at least not enough to get view-ers to stick around awhile. The flow of news doesn’t conform to the needs of TV programmers, and there are irksome stretches when nothing much is going on that can satisfy TV’s visual demands and keep viewers glued to the screen.

CNN was able to finesse this in its early years since it had no cable-news competitors. Then

new arrivals MSNBC and Fox News Channel faced the same dilemma. But each packed its schedule with hosts who could

fashion news into opinion, opinion that would guarantee its like-minded audience a reassur-ing hour-after-hour TV refuge.

Meanwhile, CNN clung to Turner’s mission statement that the news, not any news pre-senter, was the star.

It really had no choice. Sand-wiched between right-wing Fox News and left-wing MSNBC, CNN was forced to occupy impartial middle ground, even as it often sank to third place in the ratings.

What corrective action could it take? Well, it could loosen its definition of news. And it tried. In 1998, the network rolled out an ambitious slate of prime-time documentary and magazine shows collectively titled “CNN NewsStand” — which promptly bombed.

The current version of this strategy: goose the schedule with so-called “original series” from such promotable names as Anthony Bourdain, Morgan Spurlock, Lisa Ling and the Bible, and hope to make some noise and audience inroads.

In the midst of that sizzle offensive, however, CNN got a lucky break: a gift of news-as-breakout-star in the form of the tragic March 8 disappearance of

Malaysia Airlines Flight 370.CNN crafted an obsessive

narrative of missing-airplane coverage — breathless “Still Missing” news alerts, rounds of analysis and rank speculation, and any other flight-related filler it could think of. This made CNN a laughingstock in some quarters (fueling a “Saturday Night Live” spoof that billed CNN as the network to watch “When you want to know that they don’t know”). Never mind. Lots of viewers binged.

At the same time, CNN con-tinued its crusade to gin up must-see program “events.” The latest: a relentlessly hyped 10-part documentary series “The Sixties.”

The first episode, focusing on ‘60s-era television, drew 1.39 million viewers for its first air-ing May 29, more than doubling the 493,000 viewers CNN had averaged in that weeknight slot (though falling far short of a typical Fox News Channel prime-time hour).

The second installment, on the Cuban missile crisis, pre-miered to 866,000 viewers.

This week’s chapter revisits the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

With its catch-all,

been-there-seen-that topic, the series is a patchwork, with some episodes substantive and others featherweight.

But more to the point: The ‘60s isn’t news. Hasn’t been for decades. Thus is CNN diluting its signature role as a news provider with the sort of docu-fare found on scores of other networks.

Fox News chairman Roger Ailes, never one to miss the chance to bait an adversary, told The Hollywood Reporter in Jan-uary that, with this game plan, CNN had decided “to throw in the towel and announce they’re out of the news business.”

CNN Worldwide president Jeff Zucker, beginning his second year in the job, disagreed. “CNN is not and never will abandon our first and fundamental brand equity, which is news and break-ing news,” he declared.

But the questions remain. Can CNN stay true to its puta-tive core mission, yet still find a loyal audience? How will “original series” stunts kick-start a viewer’s appetite for watching CNN the rest of the time?

The network is struggling to find a drawing card that just may not exist for the CNN that people still recognize today. After 34 years, that’s not really news.

CNN’s eternal quest: A slow-news-day substitute“The Sixties,” a 10-part documentary series, is the network’s latest bid to attract viewers when airliners aren’t going missing.

ASSOCIATED PRESSCNN Worldwide president Jeff Zucker: “CNN is not and never will abandon our first and fundamental brand equity, which is news and breaking news.”