everett daily herald, november 16, 2015

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WAYS TO GIVE: With the holidays fast approaching, The Herald’s annual profiles and lists of charitable organizations run Sunday. HUNGER GAMES: The fate of Panem hangs in the balance. “Mockingjay Part 2,” the film last installment of the blockbuster series, is in theaters this weekend. The review is Friday in A&E. MONDAY, 11.16.2015 EVERETT, WASHINGTON WWW.HERALDNET.COM 75¢ (HIGHER IN OUTLYING AREAS) This week’s watchwords HOUSING FORUM: A community forum tonight at 6:30 at the Historic Everett Theatre will look at options for sheltering the homeless. The creator of a successful Utah program will be on hand to answer questions. Painful to watch Seahawks close major gap to take lead, but lose 39-32, Page C1 the buzz INSIDE 6 9 42963 33333 Chilly 45/44, C6 Business . . . . . A6 Classified . . . . B5 Comics . . . . . . B2 Crossword . . . B2 Dear Abby. . . . B3 Horoscope . . . B5 Lottery . . . . . . A2 Obituaries . . . . A4 Opinion. . . . . . A7 Short Takes . . . B4 Sports . . . . . . . C1 Your Photos . . B1 DAILY VOL. 115, NO. 277 © 2015 THE DAILY HERALD CO. Up To 50% OFF On Local Products, Food, Entertainment and Services! Your trusted source for local deals brings you... Go to HeraldNetDailyDeal.com to see today’s deal. Naps, too? Plays well with others: Owners of small businesses can learn much from a re- cent article in e New York Times titled “Why What You Learned in Preschool Is Crucial at Work,” writes Ever- ett Community College’s Pat Sisneros (Page A6). Who knew that the “M” in “MBA” stands for Montessori? Surfing the vast cultural wasteland: Adolf Hitler’s final day is recounted in “e Day Hitler Died,” a documentary based on filmed interviews in 1948 with members of his in- ner circle; the interviews proved the Nazi dictator did not escape from his underground bunker at the end of WWII (Short Takes, Page B4). e 1948 films also prove that, counter to today’s In- ternet culture, Hitler did not spend his final days express- ing angst about everything from the Burning Man ticket lottery to the latest Twitter outage. Don’t know much about history: On this day in 1914, in a move that rankles today’s Libertarian Party, the newly created Federal Reserve opened banks in 12 cities (Today in History, Page B4). “Affix black crepe stream- ers to flagpole” tops today’s to-do list for retired Con- gressman Ron Paul. — Mark Carlson, Herald staff By Kari Bray Herald Writer MARYSVILLE — Dell Deier- ling and his team of volunteers are putting together about 700 bags of anksgiving. e bags are full of food: flour, sugar, stuffing, fruit, vegetables, margarine, milk and eggs. en there are turkeys and chickens. ey try to have a pie for every family, too. It’s a busy start to the holi- day season at the Marysville Community Food Bank, one of a couple of dozen food banks around the county that together serve thousands of people every week. “It’s shaping up pretty good,” Deierling said of the anksgiv- ing bags. “You never know what your demand is going to be until it walks through the door.” e food bank serves 260 families each week, down about 5 percent from last year. Volunteers also fill backpacks with food for 350 children in Marysville, Tulalip and Lakewood to take home on weekends. Across Snohomish County, most food banks have seen a about the same number of visi- tors compared to last winter. Key items are hard to come by this Food banks ramping up By Dan Catchpole Herald Writer EVERETT A Snohom- ish County PUD whistleblower says he has been harassed and endured retaliation at the utility district since bringing attention to a series of no-bid contracts given to a former district employee. e whistleblower’s concerns prompted an independent eth- ics investigation this past spring, which found that the PUD and the former employee had bro- ken district policy. Since then, the Public Util- ity District employee, Anthony Curtis, has faced a “pattern of retaliation,” his attorney, Eliza- beth Hanley, said in an interview with e Daily Herald. She filed a claim Tues- day with the PUD Board of Commissioners, claiming that Curtis was recently passed over for promotion. He has asked the PUD to pay him lost wages from the denied promotion and attor- ney fees and costs. “e retaliation against Curtis for reporting governmental mis- conduct has had a chilling effect Claim filed for PUD worker The man says that ever since he raised the issue of no-bid contracts, he’s been harassed and retaliated against. Number of people being served is level, but money doesn’t go as far DAN BATES / THE HERALD At the Marysville Food Bank early Thursday morning, volunteer June Snook (right) hands an 8-pound bag of food to volunteer Karen Hammontree, who is organizing them in boxes so they can be delivered to schools. The morning provided a chaotic scene with what appeared to be more than two dozen volunteers with the Backpack Ministry working fast and furious to get 349 bags loaded and delivered. The ministry was started at St. Mary’s three years ago by Darlene Fails. By Sharon Salyer Herald Writer e annual fall mushroom picking season has begun and the Washington Poison Center is warning people to carefully check wild fungi before eating them. So far this year, the state’s poi- son center in Seattle has received 16 calls from Snohomish County with reports of people who ate a mushroom and developed symptoms such as nausea or vomiting, said Alexander Gar- rard, the poison center’s clinical managing director. Eleven of the 16 cases could be managed at home without a hospital visit. Five people were treated at hos- pitals, he said. ere were no reports of major health prob- lems or deaths. Statewide, there have been 279 calls to the poison center this year from people who ate a mush- room and had some symptoms, he said. No serious poisonings recently have been reported. But calls to the center peak in the fall and spring, when people are out foraging. e poison has issued a health alert discouraging people from eating wild mushrooms unless they’ve positively identified them as safe to eat. Even though most of the state’s wild mushrooms aren’t toxic, there are several poisonous species that can cause serious health problems if eaten. ey can cause nausea, vomiting and sometimes even kidney and liver damage. Kim Traverse, president of the Puget Sound Mycological Society said that many mushrooms look alike. at can fool even more experienced mushroom hunters, he said. Watch what you harvest See HARVEST, Page A2 See FOOD, Page A2 See CLAIM, Page A2 So far this year, the poison center in Seattle has received 16 calls dealing with people from this county who have eaten poisonous mushrooms.

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November 16, 2015 edition of the Everett Daily Herald

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

WAYS TO GIVE: With the holidays fast approaching, The Herald’s annual pro� les and lists of charitable organizations run Sunday.

HUNGER GAMES: The fate of Panem hangs in the balance. “Mockingjay Part 2,” the � lm last installment of the blockbuster series, is in theaters this weekend. The review is Friday in A&E.

MONDAY, 11.16.2015 ● EVERETT, WASHINGTON ● WWW.HERALDNET.COM ● 75¢ (HIGHER IN OUTLYING AREAS)

This week’s watchwords

HOUSING FORUM: A community forum tonight at 6:30 at the Historic Everett Theatre will look at options for sheltering the homeless. The creator of a successful Utah program will be on hand to answer questions.

Painful to watchSeahawks close

major gap to take lead, but

lose 39-32,Page C1

the

buzz

INSIDE 6 942963 33333

Chilly45/44, C6

Business . . . . .A6Classi� ed . . . .B5

Comics . . . . . .B2Crossword . . .B2

Dear Abby. . . .B3 Horoscope . . .B5

Lottery . . . . . .A2 Obituaries. . . .A4

Opinion. . . . . .A7Short Takes . . .B4

Sports . . . . . . .C1Your Photos . .B1

DAILY

VOL. 115, NO. 277 © 2015 THE DAILY HERALD CO.

Up To

50%OFF

On Local Products,

Food, Entertainment

and Services!

Your trusted source for

local deals brings

you...

Go to HeraldNetDailyDeal.com to see today’s deal.

Naps, too?

Plays well with others: Owners of small businesses can learn much from a re-cent article in � e New York Times titled “Why What You Learned in Preschool Is Crucial at Work,” writes Ever-ett Community College’s Pat Sisneros (Page A6).

Who knew that the

“M” in “MBA” stands for Montessori?

Sur� ng the vast cultural wasteland: Adolf Hitler’s � nal day is recounted in “� e Day Hitler Died,” a documentary based on � lmed interviews in 1948 with members of his in-ner circle; the interviews proved the Nazi dictator

did not escape from his underground bunker at the end of WWII (Short Takes, Page B4).

� e 1948 � lms also prove that, counter to today’s In-ternet culture, Hitler did not spend his � nal days express-ing angst about everything from the Burning Man ticket lottery to the latest Twitter outage.

Don’t know much about history: On this day in 1914, in a move that rankles today’s Libertarian Party, the newly created Federal Reserve opened banks in 12 cities (Today in History, Page B4).

“A� x black crepe stream-ers to � agpole” tops today’s to-do list for retired Con-gressman Ron Paul.

— Mark Carlson, Herald sta�

By Kari BrayHerald Writer

MARYSVILLE — Dell Deier-ling and his team of volunteers are putting together about 700 bags of � anksgiving.

� e bags are full of food: � our, sugar, stu� ng, fruit, vegetables, margarine, milk and eggs. � en

there are turkeys and chickens. � ey try to have a pie for every family, too.

It’s a busy start to the holi-day season at the Marysville Community Food Bank, one of a couple of dozen food banks around the county that together serve thousands of people every week.

“It’s shaping up pretty good,” Deierling said of the � anksgiv-ing bags. “You never know what your demand is going to be until it walks through the door.”

� e food bank serves 260 families each week, down about 5 percent from last year. Volunteers also � ll backpacks with food for 350 children

in Marysville, Tulalip and Lakewood to take home on weekends.

Across Snohomish County, most food banks have seen a about the same number of visi-tors compared to last winter. Key items are hard to come by this

Food banks ramping up

By Dan CatchpoleHerald Writer

EVERETT — A Snohom-ish County PUD whistleblower says he has been harassed and endured retaliation at the utility

district since bringing attention to a series of no-bid contracts given to a former district employee.

� e whistleblower’s concerns prompted an independent eth-ics investigation this past spring,

which found that the PUD and the former employee had bro-ken district policy.

Since then, the Public Util-ity District employee, Anthony Curtis, has faced a “pattern of retaliation,” his attorney, Eliza-beth Hanley, said in an interview with � e Daily Herald.

She � led a claim Tues-day with the PUD Board of

Commissioners, claiming that Curtis was recently passed over for promotion. He has asked the PUD to pay him lost wages from the denied promotion and attor-ney fees and costs.

“� e retaliation against Curtis for reporting governmental mis-conduct has had a chilling e� ect

Claim filed for PUD workerThe man says that ever since he raised the issue of no-bid contracts, he’s been harassed and retaliated against.

Number of people being served is level, but money doesn’t go as far

DAN BATES / THE HERALDAt the Marysville Food Bank early Thursday morning, volunteer June Snook (right) hands an 8-pound bag of food to volunteer Karen Hammontree, who is organizing them in boxes so they can be delivered to schools. The morning provided a chaotic scene with what appeared to be more than two dozen volunteers with the Backpack Ministry working fast and furious to get 349 bags loaded and delivered. The ministry was started at St. Mary’s three years ago by Darlene Fails.

By Sharon SalyerHerald Writer

� e annual fall mushroom picking season has begun and the Washington Poison Center is warning people to carefully check wild fungi before eating them.

So far this year, the state’s poi-son center in Seattle has received 16 calls from Snohomish County with reports of people who ate a mushroom and developed symptoms such as nausea or vomiting, said Alexander Gar-rard, the poison center’s clinical managing director. Eleven of the 16 cases could be managed at home without a hospital visit. Five people were treated at hos-pitals, he said. � ere were no reports of major health prob-lems or deaths.

Statewide, there have been 279 calls to the poison center this year from people who ate a mush-room and had some symptoms, he said. No serious poisonings recently have been reported. But calls to the center peak in the fall and spring, when people are out foraging.

� e poison has issued a health alert discouraging people from eating wild mushrooms unless they’ve positively identi� ed them as safe to eat.

Even though most of the state’s wild mushrooms aren’t toxic, there are several poisonous species that can cause serious health problems if eaten. � ey can cause nausea, vomiting and sometimes even kidney and liver damage.

Kim Traverse, president of the Puget Sound Mycological Society said that many mushrooms look alike. � at can fool even more experienced mushroom hunters, he said.

Watch what you harvest

See HARVEST, Page A2See FOOD, Page A2

See CLAIM, Page A2

So far this year, the poison center in Seattle has received 16 calls dealing with people from this county who have eaten poisonous mushrooms.

Page 2: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

A2 Monday, 11.16.2015 The Daily Herald

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1443

041

In the George Gilbertson Boardroom1601 Avenue D

Snohomish City Council Meeting

NOTICE OF REGULAR MEETING TUESDAY

NOVEMBER 17, 2015 - 7 P.M.

1466

069

PRELIMINARY COUNCIL MEETING AGENDA.PUBLIC HEARING – 2016 City Manager Recommended Budget – ADOPT Ordinance 2293DISCUSSION ITEMS a. Police 3rd Quarter Reportb. Cell Tower Regulations c. Unnamed Right-of-Way Vacation Request (East of Cypress Avenue, South of Pilchuck Park Access) CONSENT ITEMSa. CONFIRM Mayor’s Appointment to Parks and Recreation Boardb. AUTHORIZE City Manager to Sign Professional Services Agreement Addendum for 2015 Transportation Master Plan Consultantc. AUTHORIZE City Manager to Sign Interlocal Agreement for Yakima County Jail Services EXECUTIVE SESSION – Collective Bargaining ADJOURN

NEXT MEETING: Tuesday, December 1, 2015, Transportation Benefit District Board Meeting at 6 p.m., regular meeting at 7 p.m., in the George Gilbertson Boardroom, Snohomish School District Resource Center, 1601 Avenue D.The City Council Chambers are ADA accessible. Specialized accommodations will be provided with 5 days advanced notice. Contact the City Clerk’s Office at 360-568-3115.

This organization is an Equal Opportunity Provider.For more detailed information, please see the City of Snohomish web site at SnohomishWA.gov or call Torchie at 360-568-3115.

Josh O’Connor, PublisherNeal Pattison, Executive EditorJon Bauer, Editorial Page Editor Pilar Linares, Advertising Director

(USPS-181-740)The Daily Herald is published daily by

Sound Publishing Inc., 1800 41st Street, S-300, Everett, WA 98203.

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Herald, P.O. Box 930, Everett, WA 98206

Periodicals Postage Paid at Everett, WA and at additional mailing offices.

Member of the Associated PressThe Associated Press is entitled

exclusively to the use for republication of all the local news printed in this newspaper as well as all AP news dispatches.

The Daily Herald Information 425-339-3000Circulation 425-339-3200

(Out Of Area: 1-800-422-6018)Hours: Monday-Friday 6:00 a.m.-5 p.m.Saturday, Sunday, and Holidays7:30 am - 11:30 am

Classified Advertising 425-339-3100(Out of Area: 1-800-854-4411)

Retail Advertising 425-339-3030News Department 425-339-3426Sports 425-339-3470

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Delivery Times: Papers are due to homes by 6:00 a.m. Mon.-Fri., 7:30 a.m. Saturdays, Sundays and major holidays. Deadlines are one hour later on Whidbey Island and other outlying areas.Suggested Home Delivery Rates:7-day delivery: $17.50 monthly billing, $51.00 for 3 months billing, $100.50 for 6 months billing, $195.00 for 12 months billing, $15.75 per month for Easy Pay.5-day delivery: (Monday-Friday): $15.75 monthly billing, $47.25 for 3 months billing, $94.50 for 6 months billing, $189.00 for 12 months billing, $15.25 per month for Easy Pay.3-day delivery: (Friday-Sunday): $13.50 monthly billing, $39.75 for 3 months billing, $78.00 for 6 months billing, $153.00 for 12 months billing, $12.25 per month for Easy Pay.Sunday Only delivery: $8.67 monthly billing, $26.00 for 3 months billing, $52.00 for 6 months billing, $104.00 for 12 months billing, $9.25 per month for Easy Pay.Mail Rates: 7-day delivery: Snohomish, Island and King counties: $36.25/month, $435.00/year. Balance of Washington state, U.S., territories and possessions: $37.00/month, $444.00/year. Active military personnel are entitled to Snohomish Co. rate. Sunday Only delivery: Snohomish, Island and King counties: $14.50/month, $174.00/year. Balance of Washington state, U.S., territories and possessions: $16.75/month, $201.00/year. Prepayment required. Mail subscriptions do not contain advertising inserts. Mail service may not be available to some areas outside the USA.

A2 Monday, 11.16.2015 The Daily Herald

POWERBALL: Satur-day’s drawing was for $60 million. Saturday’s numbers: 14-22-37-45-66, Powerball 5. The next drawing is Wednes-day for $70 million.MEGA MILLIONS: Friday’s drawing was for $200 million. Friday’s numbers: 17-18-31-35-59, Mega Ball: 9. The next drawing is Tuesday for $15 million.LOTTO: Saturday’s draw-ing was for $1.8 million. Saturday’s numbers: 7-9-11-16-17-37. The next drawing is Monday for $1.9 million.HIT 5: Saturday’s draw-ing was for $140,000. Saturday’s numbers: 3-4-24-30-37. The next drawing is Monday for $170,000.MATCH 4: Sunday’s numbers: 1-5-7-8.DAILY GAME: Sunday’s numbers: 6-8-6.KENO: Sunday’s numbers: 10-18-22-23-24-26-27-38-43-49-54-56-60-64-68-71-74-75-78-79.

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Traverse said he once had such an experience himself. He picked what he thought was his first matsutake mushroom, a prized variety. A fellow mushroom picker quickly pointed out it was not a matsutake, but rather a toxic variety. “She was able to show me why it wasn’t a matsutake,” he said. “Now I’m confident I can tell them apart.”

There are a few mush-rooms that are deadly poisonous, he said. “Most of the ones that make you sick just makes your stom-ach upset,” he said. “It won’t kill you, but there is a handful that can.”

There are no shortcuts to determining which mushrooms are safe and unsafe, he said. “You have to be positive of the identification.”

Traverse said he’s been harvesting and eating wild mushrooms for 40 years and has now eaten about 60 varieties of wild

mushrooms. He said when he began harvesting, he always used two books to correctly identify wild

mushrooms. “That’s how I learned,” he said.

Traverse said most of his mushroom hunting occurs

east of the Cascade Range. Both poisonous and deli-cious and mushrooms can be found closer to home in urban settings, he said.

One of his favorites is the shaggy parasol that often grows in wood chips found in people’s gardens. “It’s a very tasty one,” Traverse said. Prince mushrooms, a relative to the common but-ton mushroom, often show up in people’s yards, he said. “It’s nice when you just have to step outside to collect.”

Sharon Salyer: 425-339-3486; [email protected].

HarvestFrom Page A1

Learn moreIf you believe that you or a family member has ingested a potentially poisonous mushroom, or if any symptoms develop within 24 hours of eating wild mushrooms, call the Washington Poison Center at 800-222-1222.More information about mushroom hunting and classes on mushroom identification is available from the Puget Sound Mycological Society at www.psms.org/index.php. Informa-tion about the most toxic mushrooms found in the Pacific Northwest is available at www.psms.org/poisoning.php.

on other reports of such misconduct, which ulti-mately, harms the public and the utility’s ratepayers,” she wrote in the claim.

The PUD said it is investi-gating the claim as required by its whistleblower policy. The district has not decided whether it will hire an out-side attorney to look into it, district spokesman Neil Neroutsos said.

In March, Curtis wrote Commission President Kathy Vaughn to share his concerns that PUD management had steered lucrative contracts to a for-mer employee’s company.

Since 2011, the district has given the company no-bid contracts related to energy storage and

worth more than $24 mil-lion, according to the district’s latest project cost estimates.

Energy storage technol-ogy could help utilities handle growing demand from consumers without simply generating more electricity, advocates say.

District policy requires whistleblowers to go through the PUD’s human resources office. However, the department was impli-cated in Curtis’ allegations. So he went directly to the district’s publicly elected commissioners.

Despite sidestepping district policy, the com-missioners treated him as a whistleblower, Vaughn said at the time.

The commission also hired an outside attorney to investigate his allega-tions. The attorney found that PUD management and the former employee had

broken PUD policy by fail-ing to avoid the appearance of favoritism.

In the months follow-ing his whistleblower complaint, his desk has been moved several times and other PUD workers have been discouraged to talk with him, Hanley said.

Before bringing his con-cerns to Vaughn in March, Curtis had been encouraged to apply for the district’s distribution services man-ager position when it came open, she said.

Earlier this year, Curtis applied and was a finalist. But in October, he was told he had not been picked despite his high qualifica-tions, she said.

“At a certain point, you have to say enough is enough,” Hanley said.

The PUD Board of Com-missioners has 30 days to respond after a retaliation claim is filed, according to

the district’s whistleblower policy.

If that does not resolve the matter, a PUD employee can go to the State Office of Administra-tive Hearings, where an administrative law judge would rule on the retalia-tion claim, according the district policy.

Earlier this year, the PUD’s former CEO and general manager, Steve Klein, filed several public records requests, asking the district for thousands of records relating to Curtis.

In his requests, Klein alleged that Curtis “con-spired to purposely defame me and the clean energy accomplishments of the PUD while I was the gen-eral manager.”

On the day he asked for emails sent from the PUD to Curtis’ private email address, Klein also asked for records of emails sent

and received by a com-puter expert at the utility.

That employee and a co-worker were placed on paid administrative leave last week by the PUD.

The district had previously seized their com-puters for forensic analysis by a Bremerton-based com-puter security firm, Critical Informatics. The PUD paid the company, which was formerly known as MK Hamilton & Associates, $18,000 for the work.

“The PUD is engaged in an investigation into the security of its computer and telecommunication networks,” Neroutsos said.

He declined to provide any details.

“This is an ongoing investigation, and it is not final,” he said.

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

ClaimFrom Page A1

year. Because of shortages in supply, the prices of eggs and turkey are up.

“The dollars that we had set aside aren’t going as far,” said Bill Kraut, director of the Volunteers of Amer-ica Food Bank in Everett.

In the winter, the food bank goes from serving about 4,500 people per month to 4,800. They need money, baby supplies and basics such as flour, sugar, canned tuna and canned vegetables.

“This is definitely the time of the year when we see a whole bunch of peo-ple who don’t come any other time,” Kraut said.

The colder the weather, the busier the food banks, said Judy Finn, director of the Lynnwood Food Bank. Many patrons can’t afford groceries and utility bills or don’t want to choose between food and a gift for their kids.

The Everett and Lynnwood locations are seeing more homeless patrons. Donations of canned food with pop-tops

and self-heating meal packs are a huge help, Finn said. Along with food, volunteers hand out hats, gloves and blankets. And there’s always a need for new socks.

“Anything warm this time of year is just wonder-ful,” she said.

Cash helps because it allows food banks to buy fresh milk, eggs, butter, produce and meat, said Anne Peterson, director of the Concern for Neighbors Food Bank in Mountlake Terrace.

Supplies are lower this year than last, she said. They’ve also seen less demand, but Peterson expects that to change.

“A lot of times someone is on our list and disappears for six months and then comes back and says, ‘I had a job but I lost it,’ ” she said.

Lake Stevens volunteers are putting together more Thanksgiving kits than usual. The most they’ve given out in the past was 200 and this year they’re up to 260 requests.

Six of every 10 people served are seniors or children, manager Anne Anderson said. They work with Hungry Hearts Foun-dation to fill backpacks

with food for students.At the Snohomish

Community Food Bank, rather than holiday packs, families pick out items at stations for baked goods, baby supplies, fresh food and more, director Eliza-beth Grant said.

They see 250 families per week, down from 300 last year. She hopes that means people are going back to work.

Local groups pledged

to support the food bank this winter. For example, a church is collecting 300 boxes of cake mix and Girl Scouts have promised 100 boxes of instant hot cocoa.

“That’s how we exist,” said Neil Watkins, director of the Sky Valley Food Bank in Monroe and president of the Snohomish County Food Bank Coalition. “The community supports us and we in turn can support those in need.”

Countywide, it seems demand is leveling off, he said. There was a big increase about five years ago thanks to the recession.

The need is still there, though. He reminds people to think of food banks after the holidays.

Darrington volunteers serve as many as 550 people each month, direc-tor Cathran Lyons said. The community has been so generous that they’ve had

enough to help other food banks.

Salt of the Earth Food Bank, which is based in Everett, tends to have fewer holiday supplies than needed, founder Sandra Richards said. The non-profit has eight banks and two soup kitchens with a growing demand. Donated hams and turkeys are needed. So are coats, blan-kets, gloves and hats.

The Stanwood Camano Food Bank has gone from serving a core group of 220 households to 340. Instead of four- to eight-person households, they have more singles or couples, director Lynn Ayers said. Many are seniors on fixed incomes.

A local farm is donat-ing 4,000 pounds of fresh potatoes and churches in the area have teamed up to bake 650 pies, Ayers said.

“A lot of our friends, neighbors and families may be needing an extra hand during this time of year,” she said. “It’s a good chance to reach out, how-ever that may be. There are opportunities to help in every community.”

Kari Bray: 425-336-3439; [email protected].

FoodFrom Page A1

IAN TERRY / THE HERALDVolunteer Brandon Todd Fuller helps Loralee Imes, of Marysville, pick out fresh fruit.

Page 3: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

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 | MONDAY, 11.16.2015

By Kari BrayHerald Writer

ARLINGTON — Emma VanderWeyst, 17, is a senior at Arlington High School with a passion for history, government and theater. She balances a 3.95 GPA with leading roles in drama club and leadership class, com-munity service and a part-time job.

Question: What subjects do you feel you excel at?

Answer: Well, my favorite subject is probably history, which is kind of nerdy. Right now I’m in an AP Government class and I love it. We look at all the different aspects of politics and history and how that all cor-relates, and that really interests me. I took a U.S. History class last year and I really enjoyed it and I loved my teacher who taught it. She just really knew her stuff and inspired me to go into politics and history when I

grow up.Q: When you say you want to

go into politics and history, what specifically interests you?

A: I want to work with non-profit groups, kind of working as a liaison between nonprofits and the government just helping get grants or get legislation passed that will help the nonprofit groups.

Q: What extracurricular activi-ties do you participate in?

A: I’m really involved in our

drama program and I love it. I’m also really involved in our leadership program and I’m currently the (student body) treasurer and I’m in the leader-ship class.

Q: What is it that drew you to drama?

A: I’ve been involved in drama since I was 5 years old and I did classes and shows through Vil-lage Theatre KidStage in Everett.

Headed into politics, history

There are a lot of high- priority road projects out there that are lost in plan-

ning la-la land until the actual money to complete them shows up.

The U.S. 2 eastbound trestle between Lake Stevens and Ever-ett is perhaps the most notorious.

Widening Highway 9 to bring relief to an increasingly clogged corridor is another.

And those who live in Mon-roe and other communities in east Snohomish County would quickly and loudly add the com-pletion of widening Highway 522.

The proposed widening of Highway 522 between Paradise Lake Road and the Snohomish River Bridge remains unfunded. The highway on either side of the section is widened, thanks to past state projects. But the gap has yet to be closed.

The reduction from four lanes to two sucks traffic into a bottleneck.

“It stays bumper to bumper until I hit the (Snohomish) River bridge,” said Pamela Cook of Monroe, who works in Bellevue. Backups get so bad, it can take 45 minutes to travel just 10 miles.

“Let’s hope the funding comes through,” Cook said. “Everyone is complaining about 405 toll lanes, but the 522 part of my commute is so much worse.”

Some funding secured

Highway 522 improvements were practically a done deal in 2007, until voters rejected a mas-sive Roads and Transit package that included a key piece of the project.

Eight years later, the project still is not complete, though a baby step has been secured.

The most recent state transpor-tation budget set aside $10 million to design a new inter-change at Paradise Lake Road, which is managed with a traffic signal. That doesn’t address the unfinished widening project. And the money won’t even be released, at this point, until 2025. There’s no construction money earmarked.

Until lawmakers can pool their influence and agree on a plan of attack, it’s the best that can be hoped for, said state Rep. Luis Moscoso, D-Mountlake Terrace, who crafted the amendment. The section of highway that remains to be widened is in his district.

That cold reality is true far beyond 522, Moscoso added, which doesn’t make getting 522 done any easier.

“Having been on the Transpor-tation Commission now for five years, and until last year not really having a revenue package that could address anything — let alone putting it off for 10 or 12 years — is

Money needed to finish work

Survivor Day planned

International Survivors of Suicide Loss Day is when people affected by suicide gather to find comfort and gain understanding as they share stories of healing and hope. A local Survivor Day event will be held in Lynnwood on Nov. 21 at the Verdant Com-munity Wellness Center, 4710 196th St. SW from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. The group will view the

documentary “Family Journeys: Healing and Hope After a Sui-cide,” which was produced by the American Foundation of Suicide Prevention. The trailer is avail-able at youtu.be/u_HoTrj8en4. The viewing will be followed by small-group discussions. For more information or to regis-ter, go to survivorday.org, call 425-582-8600 or email [email protected] for further details.

Update on Lynnwood Place: There’s no word when construc-tion might start on Lynnwood Place, the new apartment complex with ground-floor retail planned on the old Lynnwood High School property.

The location is along 184th Street SW, north of Nordstrom and south of the new Costco. The developer, Texas-based Cypress Equities, is scheduled to start paying rent on the property in

April, officials said. The developer has submit-

ted conceptual plans but has not yet applied for a building permit, officials said. Real estate listings have promised a Dave & Buster’s location — the first in Washington for the chain of adult arcade bars. The plans so far call for 330 apartments and 1,040 parking stalls, plus 89,500 square feet of commercial space.

SUPER KID

DAN BATES / THE HERALDArlington High School drama student, Emma VanderWeyst is this week’s Herald Super Kid. She maintains a 3.95 GPA while taking on leading roles.

By Chris WintersHerald Writer

EVERETT — On Wednesday the Everett City Council will take up a $324.8 million budget for 2016.

That’s a combination of the city’s general fund, which covers staffing and government opera-tions, as well as its specialized funds kept separate, such as debt

service, utility services, transit and others.

The final vote is scheduled for Dec. 2.

The total budget marks a modest decrease from 2015’s $357.6 million in spending.

Much of the difference could be explained by the way water and utility projects are accounted for: $137.4 mil-lion in spending on utilities in

2015 will drop to $88.4 million in the 2016 budget because $50 million in previously raised sewer bonds was then trans-ferred into construction funds for specific projects as they got under way, city treasurer Susy Haugen said.

On a balance sheet, those transfers from debt to construc-tion projects are recorded as expenses, she said.

“We’re not going to issue debt in 2016 for water and sewer,” Haugen said. There won’t be significant change in water and

sewer operations next year.One of the main projects

under way is the “Sewer M” project, which is separating stormwater pipes from the sew-ers in the northwest part of the city. The first phase of that project started last year and is expected to be completed in 2016, which cost about $3.9 mil-lion in 2015 and $2.8 million next year.

The 2016 budget otherwise is relatively flat compared with

Everett to consider budgetMELISSA SLAGER

STREET SMARTS

The plan is relatively flat but does contain the mayor’s proposal to spend $1 million to fight chronic homelessness.

See BUDGET, Page A4

See SMARTS, Page A8

See SUPER, Page A4

By Sharon SalyerHerald Writer

EDMONDS — Civic Field, which the city has leased from the Edmonds School District for nearly 40 years, will soon become a city park.

The city has reached an agree-ment with the school district to purchase the six-acre site near the Boys & Girls Club at 310 Sixth Ave N. for $1.9 million.

“We’re very excited for what this means to the citizens of this town — that it remains as pub-lic property for perpetuity,” said Renee McRae, the city’s assistant

parks director.The city plans to hold a series

of meetings next year to allow the public to say how they’d like the land developed, she said.

McRae said she expects the public response to plans for Civic Field to be even larger than the participation this year in planning for upgrades to Marina Beach on the city’s waterfront.

“We think people will be excited about what they want to see there,” she said. “It will become a downtown signature park.”

The city has included plans for Civic Field to become a city park since the 1980s, Mayor Dave

Earling said. “It’s been a long-term goal of the city, there’s no ques-tion about it,” he said. “To finally have the prospect of it coming into the ownership of the city is a great thing for the community.”

The city has had a 40-year lease with the school district to use the property. The school dis-trict’s lease charge has been $1 a year, but the city is responsible for maintenance of the property, Earling said.

The city will hire a consul-tant “to help us design whatever we come up with,” he said. “We want this to be open space,” he said. “It won’t be just a big space

with a bunch of fields on it.”The city received several grants

to purchase the land, including $500,000 from the Washington State Recreation Conservation Office, $500,000 from the Sno-homish Conservation Futures Program. The city has budgeted $400,000 for the project and has set aside an additional $100,000 for paying for costs such as its appraisal, an environmental assessment and a land survey. An additional $100,000 has been set aside for developing the mas-ter plan for Civic Field.

Sharon Salyer: 425-339-3486; [email protected].

Edmonds’ Civic Field to become city park

Page 4: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

SNOHOMISH COUNTYPUBLIC UTILITY DISTRICT

BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS REGULAR MEETING

EVERETT HEADQUARTERS BUILDING, 2320 CALIFORNIA STREET

NOVEMBER 17, 2015CONVENE REGULAR MEETING - 9:00 a.m. - Commission Meeting Room1. CEO/GENERAL MANAGER BRIEFING AND STUDY SESSIONEXECUTIVE SESSION - Recess into Executive Session to Discuss Current or Potential Litigation and the Legal Risks of a Current Practice or Proposed Action – Training Center Room 1RECONVENE REGULAR MEETING - 1:30 p.m. - Commission Meeting Room2. COMMENTS FROM THE PUBLIC3. CONSENT AGENDA A. Approval of Minutes for the Regular Meeting of November 2, 2015 B. Bid Awards, Professional Services Contracts and Amendments C. Consideration of Certification/Ratification and Approval of District Checks and Vouchers D. Consideration of a Resolution Designating an Authorized Representative and Alternate for Coordinating Matters Relating to the District’s Request for Certain Disaster Assistance Funds From Appropriate Federal and State Agencies for the Severe Windstorm Occurring on August 29, 2015 and Thereafter4. PUBLIC HEARING A. Continue Public Hearing on 2016 Proposed Budget5. ITEMS FOR INDIVIDUAL CONSIDERATION A. Consideration of a Resolution Adopting a Plan or System of Additions to and Extension of the District’s Water Utility; Declaring the Intention of the Board of Commissioners to Form Water Local Utility District No. 58 to Carry Out that Plan; and Fixing December 15, 2015 as the Date, Time and Place for a Public Hearing on Formation of the Proposed Local Utility District No. 58 and Confirmation of the Assessment Roll B. Consideration of a Resolution Authorizing Public Utility District No. 1 of Snohomish County to Enter Into an Interlocal Agreement with the City of Monroe for the Construction of Roadway Improvements of Tjerne Place SE in the Vicinity of the Future District Administrative Office and Operations Facility C. Consideration of a Resolution Authorizing the CEO/ General Manager to Execute an Interlocal Agreement Between Public Utility District No. 1 of Snohomish County and the City of Edmonds, Governing the 76th Ave. W at 212th St. SW Intersection Improvements Project6. COMMISSION BUSINESS A. Commission Reports B. Consideration of a Resolution Establishing the Regular Meeting Dates of the Commission for the Year 20167. GOVERNANCE PLANNING A. Governance Planning CalendarADJOURNMENT

SNOHOMISH COUNTY PUD COMMISSIONERS: David Aldrich, Tanya Olson, Kathleen Vaughn

Public Power is Best: Not-for pro� t Rates, Local Control, Responsiveness to Community NeedsVisit our Web site at www.snopud.com

1446803

Carolyn Ellene Cepa Carolyn Ellene Cepa, 77, of Tulalip, Wash. left this earth to be with the love of her life, Lloyd on November 10, 2015. Funeral serv ices wi l l be held Tuesday, November 17, 2015, at 10:00 a.m. at the Tulalip Tribal Gym with burial to follow at Mission Beach Cemetery. Arrangements entrusted to Schaefer-Shipman Funeral Home.

Phil Hunt, Sr.Sept. 3, 1935 - Nov. 16, 1997

Death leaves a heartacheNo one can heal,

Love leaves a memoryNo one can steal.

Love and miss you,Your Family and Friends

In Loving Memory of Helen Evelyn Petersen April 23 1913 - Nov. 16 2005

Gone 10 years - wish you were here to share Alexis love. We all miss you very much.

Frank Henry Cotterill F r a n k H e n r y C o t t e r i l l , Gentleman Farmer, 89, of Sultan, Washington, passed away November 9, 2015. He was born in Seatt le , Washington to Charles and A l i c e C o t t e r i l l . F r a n k graduated f rom Edmonds High School in 1944 and enlisted in the Navy, serving a s a M o t o r M a c h i n i s t ’ s M a t e . H e r e c e i v e d t h e A s i a t i c - P a c i f i c A r e a C a m p a i g n M e d a l , t h e Philippine Liberation Medal, and the World War II Victory Medal. After completing his naval service he moved to Sultan, where he met his future wife, Pat Daniels, and they made their home. I t was at this home that he passed, spending over 65 years on the homestead he c reated and bu i l t . Frank served his community in a number of ways, including being a Cub Scout Master, involvement with the 4-H and FFA Programs, Evergreen State Fair, and by serving as a School Board Member for the Sultan School District for many years. Frank was p receded in death by his wife, Pat; his parents, Charles and Alice C o t te r i l l ; s i s te r, D e n i s e Ashcrof t of Hull , England; b ro t h e r, S i d C o t te r i l l o f E v e r e t t , W a s h . ; a n d g r a n d c h i l d r e n , J a m i e Cotterill and Casey Cotterill. H e i s s u r v i v e d b y h i s chi ldren, Mike and Diane Cot te r i l l , Laur ie Morgan, Steve and Shannon Cotterill, Dave and Tracy Cot ter i l l , L inda C larke , Chuck and T i n a C o t t e r i l l , J o e a n d Michele Cotterill, and Kathy Cotterill. Frank also leaves behind 20 grandchildren, 15 g reat -g randch i ld ren ; and n u m e r o u s n i e c e s a n d nephews. The family would l ike to e x p r e s s t h e i r s i n c e r e appreciation and gratitude to the doctors and staff of the Sky Valley Medical Clinic for t h e i r c o m p a s s i o n , dedication, and commitment to the Cotterill family, having treated four generations of family members. A d a te fo r a m e m o r i a l ser v ice has not yet been determined. I n l i e u o f f l o w e r s , remembrances to the Sky V a l l e y M e d i c a l C l i n i c (Uncompensated Care), 615 W S teve n s Ave S u i te D , S u l t a n , W A 9 8 2 9 4 a r e encouraged.

Virginia (Salvadalena)

Dickmeyer V i r g i n i a ( S a l v a d a l e n a ) D i c k m e y e r j o i n e d h e r h e a v e n l y f a t h e r o n November 12, 2015. She was born in Monroe, Wash. on September 15, 1 9 3 0 , t o G u s t a v o a n d Emma Salvadalena. Virginia graduated from Monroe High School and was a l i felong res ident o f Monroe . She loved to cook and spent many years in the restaurant business and volunteering at the Monroe Senior Center. She enjoyed being involved in many groups including b e i n g a m e m b e r o f t h e Eag les C lub fo r ove r 60 years. Virginia is survived by her three loving chi ldren, Roy D ickmeyer (Denise) , L isa Sackman (Doug las ) , and S t e v e n D i c k m e y e r ; f o u r g r a n d c h i l d r e n , M i c h a e l D ickmeyer (Tash ina) , J i l l Hanson (Jacob), Stephanie Sackman (Christopher), and Danica Dickmeyer; two great g randchi ldren; and many nieces and nephews. Virginia was preceded in d e a t h b y h e r h u s b a n d , Norbert Dickmeyer, a baby daughter, her parents, three brothers, and three sisters. Special thanks to St. Jude Comfort Care, Dr. Baker-Hall a n d s t a f f , a n d J e n a n d Brandy at Evergreen Hospice for the special care Virginia received. S e r v i c e i n f o r m a t i o n : Viewing at Purdy and Kerr on Wednesday, November 18, 2 015 , f ro m 11 : 0 0 a . m . - 4:00 p.m. Rosary will also be Wednesday, November 18 at 7:00 p.m. at St. Mary o f t h e V a l l e y C h u r c h (Monroe). Funeral Mass will be November 19, 2015, at 11:00 a.m. at St. Mary of the Valley Church (Monroe). In l ieu of f lowers please m a k e d o n a t i o n s t o t h e Monroe Sr. Center.

PURDY & WALTERS with Cassidy

1702 Pacific Ave., Everett

425-252-2191www.purdy-walters-cassidy.com

PURDY & WALTERS at Floral Hills,

Funeral Home & Cemetery409 Filbert Rd., Lynnwood

425-672-1800www.FloralHillsLynnwood.com

EVERGREENFuneral Home and Cemetery

4504 Broadway, Everett

425-252-2244www.evergreen-fh.com

SCHAEFER-SHIPMAN Funeral Home

805 State Ave., Marysville

360-659-3711www.SchaeferShipmanFuneral.com

WELLER Funeral Home

327 North MacLeod Ave., Arlington

360-435-2509www.WellerFH.com

FUNERAL ALTERNATIVES

1321 State Ave., Marysville

360-658-1921www.funeralsandcremationswa.com

Visit us Online at: www.heraldnet.com/obituariesPlease Call 425-339-3023 to include your listing

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OBITUARIES AND MEMORIALS OBITUARIES AND MEMORIALS

To Place an In Memoriam or Obituary,

please call 425-339-3023

Office hours:8am-5pm Monday-Friday

Phone availability:8am-5pm Monday-Fridayand until noon Saturday

Deadlines:2pm day prior

for Tues.-Sat. Pub.By email until noon

Sat. for Sun/Mon. Pub.Email: [email protected]

1226

064861997

A4 Monday, 11.16.2015 The Daily Herald

last year’s, with small increases in some areas offset by cuts to other line items.

One of the features of the new budget is Mayor Ray Stephanson’s pro-posal for $1 million in new funding for the “Safe Streets” project to combat chronic homelessness and street-level crime on top of $1.2 million that is being carried over from 2015.

The initial $1.2 million outlay already includes funding for a social worker embedded with the Police Department, a dedicated Streets Initiative Coor-dinator (whose position is jointly funded by the United Way of Snohom-ish County) and additional

human needs projects car-ried out by existing city staff, Haugen said.

The $1 million increase will fund the hiring of four police officers, one sergeant and two social workers to func-tion as a dedicated unit within the Everett Police Department, plus a new prosecutor and some money devoted to build-ing 10 units in 2017 of permanent supportive housing for the chronically homeless.

An additional $650,000 from federally funded grant programs will also provide some neces-sary starting capital for the supportive housing project.

The budget also includes a $2.8 million increase in funding for transit-related services. A previous study of Ever-ett Transit facilities and

operations cited the need for upgrades to the cam-era equipment at Everett Station and a new main-tenance and operations building in the north end, both of which will receive funding in the new budget.

A mostly flat budget doesn’t address the city’s long-term structural defi-cits. Everett spent much of 2014 cutting expenses and increasing taxes and fees in order to eliminate at $13 million deficit for 2015.

The 2016 budget pro-posal also is balanced, but the city is still projecting a $6.4 million deficit for 2017, which will increase to $16.1 million in 2020 without further cuts or revenue sources.

The city is undertak-ing studies of both its fire and police departments to identify areas where

more savings can be extracted.

The fire department study has been released, but some of the rec-ommendations, such as closing fire stations, are controversial, and implementing any recom-mended changes in either department will involve negotiations with the city’s labor unions.

The two departments have 446.3 full-time equiv-alent positions, 38 percent of the city’s 1,167.73 total budgeted staff. Together, police and fire services will amount to $54.5 million in expenses in the 2016 budget, more than half of the city’s $103.5 mil-lion general fund, which covers staffing and basic operations.

Chris Winters: 425-374-4165; [email protected]. Twitter: @Chris_At_Herald.

BudgetFrom Page A3

I actually transferred to Arlington because of the incredible reputation the high school drama pro-gram has, so right off the bat freshman year I was attending drama club and I’ve auditioned for every show since my freshman year. I’ve been in six shows here. I just love it.

Q: What’s your favorite role you’ve played?

A: My sophomore year I got to play Marian Paroo in “The Music Man,” and that was just an incred-ible experience. It’s a part that doesn’t really fit the type I normally play. It was amazing. I don’t even know how to describe it. I just got to learn so much. I feel like that was kind of the turning point for when I went from being a kid actor to a more grown-up actor. I felt a lot more

confident about my per-formance after that.

Q: Do you have volun-teer work or a job outside of school?

A: I volunteer at Purrfect Pals Cat Shelter over in Lakewood and I volun-teer at the high school at events and stuff and also at the middle schools and elementary schools. I also work at Just Peachy Frozen Yogurt in Smokey Point. I just started there over the summer. It keeps me pretty busy, but I like it.

Q: What do you do for fun?

A: I’ve always loved to read. I love books. I sing. I do private vocal lessons and I’ve been in the choirs here at the high school for the last three years. I love to hang out with my family. We do these fam-ily dinners every Monday night where we all sit down and my grand-mother and my great-aunt come over and we all eat together. It’s one of my favorite parts of the week.

I have a little brother named Ben. He’s 13, goes to Lakewood Middle School. We’re really close. We love watching food shows on Netflix together. That’s kind of our thing. We’ll stay up until 2 in the morning watching Food Network stars.

Q: Any other activities you’re involved in?

A: During the last six months, I’ve been working with the admin-istration and some other students and we’ve been putting together an anti-bullying curriculum. It’s called The Way and we’ve been using it for a couple years but we went through it and revised it. It’s been really interesting learning about bullying and how much of it gets missed because it’s not reported or things like that. I also work as an assistant for the public relations officer for the schools, which has been an amazing expe-rience. It’s helped me build my communication

skills and my confidence. For the past two years, I have served as the Queen (and) youth ambassa-dor for Sons of Norway, Normanna Lodge. I am a fourth generation member.

Q: Anything else you want to add?

A: On my first day of auditions my freshman year for my first play I met the girl who is my best friend right now. We’ve been in all the shows together since and it’s just so awesome to have some-one interested in the same things I’m interested in. Our names are Emma and Emily, so we get a lot of grief for that all the time. We actually got to play the evil stepsisters in “Cin-derella” last year together, which was amazing. We got nominated for a 5th Avenue Award, which is such an honor. We called each other crying when we found out.

Kari Bray: 425-339-3439; [email protected].

SuperFrom Page A3

NORTHWEST BRIEFLY

SALEM, Ore. — Author-ities in Oregon have shut down recreational crab harvesting on the south-ern Oregon coast after finding high toxin levels. It also closed commercial crabbing in bays in that area.

The closure is from Heceta Head to the Cali-fornia border. It includes crab harvested in the bays and estuaries, and off docks, piers and jetties.

Washington is waiting on more test results to decide whether to open its coastal crab season Dec. 1.

Domoic acid or amne-sic shellfish toxin can cause minor to severe ill-ness and death.

Tumwater: Killer’s art

The Washington Department of Labor and Industries says it will remove from its lobby exhibit four paintings by a man serving prison for killing two FBI agents.

KING-TV reported the works are by Leonard Peltier, 71, and part of an exhibit to mark National American Indian Heri-tage Month.

An association repre-senting retired FBI agents demanded the state agency remove the paint-ings from its building in Tumwater, Washington.

Peltier was convicted in 1977 and sentenced to two consecutive life terms in the deaths of two FBI agents. From Herald news services

Oregon closes some crabbing

Page 5: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

Nation & WorldA5 | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM | MONDAY, 11.16.2015

ACROSS THE U.S.

AROUND THE WORLD

Clinton’s invoking of 9/11 to defend donations draws ire

DES MOINES, Iowa — Hillary Rod-ham Clinton’s campaign Sunday defended her donations from Wall Street by saying she worked to help the finan-cial sector rebuild after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and sought to address the abuses that led to an economic crisis.

During the second Democratic debate Saturday, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders put Clinton on the defensive when he said Wall Street had been the major contributor to her campaigns. “Now maybe they’re dumb and they don’t know what they’re going to get, but I don’t think so,” he said.

Clinton accused Sanders of trying to “impugn my integrity” and said that as a New York senator, she helped New York City’s financial hub rebuild. On Sunday, Clinton campaign spokes-man Brian Fallon elaborated, saying in a statement that her work to help the financial industry rebuild after 9/11 “did not mean she ever hesitated to call out and seek to reform the abuses and excesses that led to the economic crisis. She did so early and often.”

Fla.: Yemini prisoners freedFive men who have been held for more

than 13 years at the U.S. base at Guan-tanamo Bay, Cuba, have been released and sent to the United Arab Emirates, the Pentagon said Sunday. The five Yemeni men were accepted for resettle-ment in the Persian Gulf nation after U.S. authorities determined they no longer posed a threat, the Defense Department said in a statement. Their release brings the Guantanamo prison population to 107. The released men, who arrived in the UAE on Saturday, were identified as Ali Ahmad Muhammad al-Razihi, Khalid Abd-al-Jabbar Muhammad Uth-man al-Qadasi, Adil Said al-Hajj Ubayd al-Busays, Sulayman Awad Bin Uqayl al-Nahdi, and Fahmi Salem Said al-Asani.

Turkey: Missile talks endTurkey’s state-run news agency says

Turkey has ended negotiations with China on building a missile defense system. The Anadolu Agency, cit-ing unnamed officials, said Sunday that Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu decided to abandon the missile tender over the possibility that Turkey may con-struct its own “national” defense system. The deal with China had been a source of tension with NATO partners, who said they would not integrate Chinese-made hardware with a European-wide system. The indications that the deal is being abandoned come as leaders from the 20 leading world economies — including China and NATO allies — are meeting in Turkey in the wake of the deadly attacks in Paris. Western leaders are discussing how to respond to the attack that French President Francois Hollande called an act of war.

Japan: Technical recessionJapan’s economy shrank in the July-

September quarter as domestic demand declined, sending the nation into a tech-nical recession. The numbers from the Cabinet Office on Monday showed that gross domestic product, the value of a nation’s goods and services, declined at an annualized pace of 0.8 percent in the third quarter, and contracted a sea-sonally adjusted 0.2 percent from the previous quarter. That meant the world’s third-biggest economy slipped into a technical recession because it had con-tracted in the second quarter as well.

Worries cause stocks to fallAsian stocks fell, opening the global

trading day Monday after terrorist attacks in Paris on Friday last week sent worries across the world about their possible economic effects. Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 cascaded downward 0.8 percent to 19,443.68 in morning trading. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 lost nearly 0.7 percent to 5,017.30. South Korea’s Kospi was down nearly 1 percent at 1,954.47. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 1.7 percent to 22,013.34 while the Shanghai Composite slipped 1.6 percent to 3,522.46. Taiwan shares were also down. The attacks left 129 people dead and more than 350 injured. Inves-tors, already nervous about slowing growth in China and the future of the eurozone, are fretting about stocks and oil prices. Travel could slow not only to Paris but other major cities, hurting airlines and other related businesses. A decline in tourism in Europe could weaken the euro.

From Herald news services

By Greg Keller and Philippe Sotto

Associated Press

PARIS — France launched “massive” air strikes on the Islamic State group’s de-facto capital in Syria Sunday night, destroying a jihadi training camp and a munitions dump in the city of Raqqa, where Iraqi intelligence officials say the attacks on Paris were planned.

Twelve aircraft including 10 fighter jets dropped a total of 20 bombs in the biggest air strikes since France extended its bombing campaign against the extremist group to Syria in September, a Defense Min-istry statement said. The jets launched from sites in Jordan and the Persian Gulf, in coordi-nation with U.S. forces.

On the sidelines of the G20 summit in Turkey on Sunday, France’s Foreign Minister Lau-rent Fabius said his country was justified in taking action in Syria.

“It was normal to take the initiative and action and France had the legitimacy to do so. We did it already in the past, we have conducted new air-strikes in Raqqa today, Fabius said. “One cannot be attacked harshly, and you know the drama that is happening in Paris, without being present and active.”

Meanwhile, as police announced seven arrests and hunted for more members of the sleeper cell that carried out the Paris attacks that killed 129 people, French officials revealed to The Associated Press that several key suspects had been stopped and released by police after the attack.

The arrest warrant for Salah Abdeslam, a 26-year-old born in Brussels, calls him very dan-gerous and warns people not to intervene if they see him.

Yet police already had him in their grasp early Saturday, when they stopped a car carry-ing three men near the Belgian border. By then, hours had passed since authorities identi-fied Abdeslam as the renter of

a Volkswagen Polo that carried hostage takers to the Paris the-ater where so many died.

Three French police officials and a top French security offi-cial confirmed that officers let Abdeslam go after checking his ID. They spoke on condition of anonymity, lacking authoriza-tion to publicly disclose such details.

Tantalizing clues about the extent of the plot have emerged from Baghdad, where senior Iraqi officials told the AP that France and other countries had been warned Thursday of an imminent attack.

An Iraqi intelligence dis-patch warned that Islamic State group leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi had ordered his followers to immediately launch gun and bomb attacks and take hostages inside the countries of the coalition fight-ing them in Iraq and Syria.

The Iraqi dispatch, which was obtained by the AP, pro-vided no details on when or where the attack would take place, and a senior French security official told the AP that French intelligence gets these kinds of warnings “all the time” and “every day.”

However, Iraqi intelligence officials told the AP that they also warned France about spe-cific details: Among them, that the attackers were trained for

this operation and sent back to France from Raqqa, the Islamic State’s de-facto capital.

The officials also said that a sleeper cell in France then met with the attackers after their training and helped them to execute the plan. There were 24 people involved in the opera-tion, they said: 19 attackers and five others in charge of logistics and planning.

None of these details have been corroborated by officials of France or other Western intelligence agencies.

All these French and Iraqi security and intelligence offi-cials spoke with the AP on condition of anonymity, citing the ongoing investigation.

Abdeslam is one of three brothers believed to be involved. One who crossed with him into Belgium was later arrested, and another blew himself up inside the Bataclan theater after tak-ing the audience hostage and firing on them repeatedly. It was the worst of Friday’s syn-chronized attacks, leaving 89 fatalities and hundreds of peo-ple wounded inside.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibility. Its statement mocked France’s air attacks on suspected IS targets in Syria and Iraq, and called Paris “the capital of prostitu-tion and obscenity.”

In all, three teams of attack-ers including seven suicide bombers attacked the national stadium, the concert hall and nearby nightspots. The attacks wounded 350 people, 99 of them seriously.

Abdeslam rented the black Volkswagen Polo used by the hostage-takers, another French security official said. A Brus-sels parking ticket found inside led police to at least one of the arrests in Belgium, a French police official said.

Three Kalashnikovs were found inside another car known to have been used in the attacks that was found in Montreuil, an eastern Pari-sian suburb, another a French police official said.

As many as three of the seven suicide bombers were French citizens, as was at least one of the men arrested in the Molenbeek neighborhood of Brussells, which authorities consider to be a focal point for extremists and fighters going to Syria from Belgium.

Belgian Interior Minister Jan Jambon, speaking to The Associated Press by phone, said suspects arrested in Molenbeek had been stopped previously in Cambrai, France, “in a regular roadside check” but that police had had no sus-picion about them at the time and they were let go quickly.

France bombs Islamic State headquarters in Raqqa, Syria, while probes continue into Friday’s attack in Paris.

Retaliation, investigation

By Nicole Gaouette, Del Quentin Wilber, Donna

Abu-Nasr and Chris StrohmBloomberg News

WASHINGTON — The Islamic State’s barbaric attacks in Paris are forcing an anguished reassessment by world powers that so far have lacked the political will and regional partners to defeat an organization flush with cash, equipment and volunteers.

As leaders gathered in Turkey on Sunday for a Group-of-20 summit, they pledged to redouble efforts to sap the lifeblood of the terrorists by targeting their finances and recruitment. They will consider deeper intelligence sharing, tighter border controls and the creation of Syrian safe havens.

Some also speak of a much more aggressive military option. Experts say it would require 150,000 U.S. troops, could last decades and cost tril-lions. It is considered highly unlikely at this stage because it would need to be led by Sunni nations that have shown no appetite for the fight and would pose severe challenges regarding Russia and Syria. Nor would such an invasion address the underlying forces that have shaped Islamic State.

“At the heart of it is the failed and broken state system in the Arab world that has given IS space in Iraq, Syria, Egypt and Libya,” said Bruce Riedel, a CIA veteran at the Brookings Insti-tution. “That problem is not fixable overnight or even in the next few years.”

The Paris attacks, right after the downing of a jet of Rus-sian tourists over the Sinai and suicide bombings in Lebanon and Iraq, indicate a sharp tacti-cal shift for the Islamic State. It had mostly limited its brutality to building a state-like Islamic caliphate in parts of Syria and Iraq, rather than sending its battle abroad, like its rival al-Qaida.

That change increases the challenge to the U.S.-led coali-tion, especially with Obama having staked his foreign policy legacy on getting the United States out of wars, not entering new ones. Current and former U.S. officials say coalition gov-ernments now face the threat of more attacks in their cit-ies. Many also argue that the U.S. and its partners have little choice but to increase their military commitment.

“Unless you leave planet Earth, you can’t avoid this,” said Michael Chertoff, who has a security consulting firm and was Secretary of Home-land Security under George W. Bush.

A day before the Paris assault, Obama told ABC News that Islamic State had

been “contained” in Iraq and Syria. Indicating how the Paris attacks are affecting the dis-cussion, Hillary Clinton, his former secretary of state and the frontrunner for the Demo-cratic presidential nomination, disagreed at a debate Saturday. Islamic State “cannot be con-tained,” she said. “It must be defeated.”

The coalition had hoped to do that with more than 8,000 air strikes at a cost of $5 billion, according to the Pen-tagon. And there have been successes. The group lost the northern Iraqi city of Sinjar 48 hours after troops loyal to Syr-ian President Bashar Assad, backed by Russian air strikes, broke a two-year siege on the Kweiris military base in Aleppo province.

In fact, some analysts see the Paris attacks as a sign of IS despair after those defeats. “Islamic State’s decision to push the button is related to the pressure on it,” said Sami Nader, head of the Beirut-based Levant Institute for Strategic Affairs.

But given the nature of asymmetrical warfare, it would be hard to argue that the fight

against IS has been successful. Recently, the U.S. abandoned a train-and-equip program for moderate rebels and sent 50 Special Forces troops into Syria to assist with strikes. And those who follow the fight against terrorists say the Paris attacks showed sophistication.

“This was no small plot,” said Patrick Skinner, a former CIA officer who directs special projects at the Soufan Group, a security consulting firm. “To be able to pull this off in a mod-ern security state like France — which has really great intel and great security — it’s just worrisome.”

The answer, said Thomas Donnelly of the conservative American Enterprise Insti-tute, is “large-scale combat operations” in Iraq and Syria. It would take “more years of heavy combat than we’ve seen before” and “decades,” to properly re-integrate alienated Sunni populations that have sometimes backed IS. The ini-tial stage would cost more than $1 trillion over several years, he estimates, and 150,000 troops.

“Anything less than military engagement is likely to be use-less,” Donnelly said. “It’s a war.”

The problem is that, even with a massive troop com-mitment, such a war would only prove successful if led by regional powers, none of which are willing. In fact, the para-dox is that IS has taken root in the region precisely because of the vacuum created by other disputes — intra-Syrian, Sunni-Shia, Turkish- Kurd, Iranian-Saudi.

Smashing ISIS poses huge challengesAnything less than military engagement is likely to be useless. It’s a war.

— Thomas Donnelly,American Enterprise Institute

JEROME DELAY / ASSOCIATED PRESSFrench police patrol at the place de la Republique in Paris, France, on Sunday, two days after 129 people were killed in a series of shootings and explosions. French troops deployed Sunday around Paris and tourist sites stood shuttered in one of the most visited cities on Earth while investigators questioned relatives of a suspected suicide bomber involved in the country’s deadliest violence since World War II.

Page 6: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

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.

ABOUT BIZ BITS

Herald Business JournalA6 | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.THEHERALDBUSINESSJOURNAL.COM | MONDAY, 11.16.2015

biz

bits Everett Community College’s

Advanced Manufacturing Training & Education Center’s unmanned aerial vehicle project was featured in a discussion about 3D printing at the 2015 Association of Washington Business Manufacturing sum-mit Nov. 12 in SeaTac. It was just one key example of what the next generation of the manufacturing workforce will

use in the future.

Chiropractor Scott Harris of Village Chiropractic Clinic in Stanwood was honored Oct. 10 by the Washington State Chiropractic Association with a Special Service Award at the organization’s annual conference. Harris, a resident of Camano Island, has been in practice for 32 years. The association

represents the chiropractic pro-fession throughout the state.

Charming Charlie, a rapidly growing women’s contemporary jewelry and accessory retailer, will open a new retail store Nov. 16 at Alderwood mall in Lynnwood. The new location is a 5,300 square-foot boutique at 3000 184th St. SW. The firm has four other locations in the state.

Entrepreneurs are celebrat-ing Global Entrepreneurship Month in November in conjunc-tion with this week’s Global Entrepreneurship Week. More than 100 activities are planned statewide to inspire, encourage and support business startups. A complete list of events by county and by date can be found at the Startup 365 Washington’s website at http://tinyurl.com/nfd83ha.

By Quinn Russell BrownFor The Herald Business Journal

By all accounts, the past decade did a number on Wash-ington’s banks.

In 2006, more than 100 were headquartered in the state. Due to a mixture of mergers, acquisi-tions and closings, less than half remain today.

The number of banks head-quartered in Snohomish County went from 14 to just seven.

One of those is Everett’s Coastal Community Bank, which tripled its market share to emerge from the recession as the larg-est bank headquartered in the county, measured by both assets and deposits.

“We probably bank every third business owner,” said CEO Eric Sprink, looking out the window of his office on Evergreen Way.

Sprink, 43, joined Coastal in 2006, just in time for the early signs of the downturn.

“I thought it would be really cool to be a CEO going into a banking crisis,” he said earnestly, then burst into a laugh.

For Sprink, tragedy plus time has brought comedy, or at least a little levity, to the largest banking crisis in decades.

“It was tough, but at the same time, you look back and you laugh at the things you did,” he said. “The teammates you got through it with, you’re a lot closer now.”

Most of Coastal’s clients are small-business owners.

“At the height of the recession, we stopped and said, ‘We have 465 clients who are now partners. We need to help them and they need to help us, or else none of us are going to get through it,’ ” Sprink said.

In 2010, Coastal lost $6 million but hired 35 more employees and started to fund construction projects.

The bank has expanded from seven branches before the reces-sion to 12 in 2015, rebounding from a low point of 61 employees in the darkest days to 142 today.

The bank opened new head-quarters and a branch at 5415 Evergreen Way in Everett in 2014. Its newest branch opened in Marysville in August. A merger with Lynnwood’s Prime Pacific Bank was expected to follow in October, but the deal was voted down by Prime Pacific’s share-holders. The move surprised leadership on both sides.

Sprink gave his staff 30 minutes to reflect on the failed merger, then told them it was back to business as usual.

“Yes, I’m bummed I didn’t get the merger, but that doesn’t stop who we are and what we’re doing,” Sprink said. “Coastal is doing so many good things. We’re making a difference. Our shareholders are winning. Life is good.”

Sprink credits Coastal’s current momentum to its board of direc-tors being aggressive during the downturn (he also serves on the board).

Tom Lane, president of Dwayne Lane car dealerships, was chairman throughout the recession. He said he and Sprink often saw each other more than they saw their own wives.

“That was a horrendously dark period. You can tell by all the banks that went away,” Lane said. “Eric would not and could not take exclusive credit for the survival of the bank, but I can guarantee you that without his link in the chain, it would’ve been a lot tougher, if not impossible.”

Lane attributes part of that

to Sprink’s candid style of communication.

“You know exactly where you stand at the beginning, middle and end of every conversation. It is painfully clear to everyone involved,” Lane said, laughing. “There are no hidden agendas.”

Hal Russell, who sits on the board of Community Bankers of Washington with Sprink, echoed an appreciation for his straight talk.

“There’s a fine line between being direct and being rude, and what Eric is not is rude,” said Russell, president and CEO of Commencement Bank in Tacoma. “He’s got a good sense of humor, and he can bring that humor into a sensitive discus-sion: he has the ability to make it sound a little more fun and upbeat, and get his point across.”

This knack for conversation served Sprink well at the begin-ning of his career.

As a freshman at Arizona State University, he worked nights and weekends in a call center for Security Pacific Bank. When his employer merged with Bank of America in 1992, many

upset customers unleashed their frustration on him and his co-workers.

“You deal with people’s financial situations and it’s very emotional,” Sprink recalled. “I hated it. I didn’t hate getting yelled at, I hated what we were doing.”

So he asked the district man-ager if he could start working with customers face-to-face in a branch.

“I said, ‘I know how to do new accounts, I know how to do loans, I know where all the ser-vice centers are. People are upset and I think I can help them.’ ”

He worked at Bank of America until a merger with NationsBank in 1998, hopping to Centura Bank in North Carolina.

He earned an MBA from the University of North Carolina at night, which let him move from hands-on lending and retail banking to the corporate realm of quality improvement and merg-ers and acquisitions. “It was nice to see both sides,” he said.

When Centura Bank was acquired by a Canadian bank in 2001, Sprink declined a move to

Toronto, opting instead for a job at the family-owned Washington Trust Bank in Spokane.

In 2006, a headhunter called him about the opportunity to work below Lee Pintar, Coastal’s founder and CEO.

Sprink agreed to learn the ropes from Pintar and eventually replaced him as CEO of both the bank and the holding company.

“You’re probably saying some-where in this, ‘This poor guy can’t hold a job,’ ” Sprink said. “It’s all right, I’m getting better as I get older.”

Despite his background at larger banks, Sprink said he’s always had the mindset of a com-munity banker.

“There are community bankers at all institutions,” he said. “It’s someone who cares about their customers and goes out of their way to help people.”

Still, he admits, “it’s much harder for a corporation to embrace that philosophy the larger it gets.”

At bigger banks, for example, clients tend to belong to the bank, not the employees who secure them, and employees get shuffled around every few years to prevent them from collecting accounts that they can leave with one day.

At Coastal, the employee owns the relationship with their clients, Sprink said.

“Our customers like Coastal because of the person they’re dealing with. ...” he said. “No one says, ‘I love that building.’ They say, ‘I like the people in it.’ And then they get a warm feeling for the brand as an offshoot.”

This attitude is one reason why forgiving the loans of Oso slide victims was a no-brainer for Sprink. Such a no-brainer, in fact, that he shies away from even addressing the subject anymore. His one-line response — “We did it to pick a fight with the big guys” — reflects his disbelief that national banks would try to col-lect losses.

Outside of the office, Sprink stays active with a wife and three daughters. “We’re a soccer, soccer, soccer family,” he said. “My wife played. She got me into playing. My kids all play.”

His oldest daughter, Chase, won the U-14 national champi-onship this year. Sprink expects no less from his team at Coastal.

“We want to be the best,” he said. “We may not be today, but we’re gonna be tomorrow.”

Coastal emerges from dark days

PHOTOS BY DAN BATES / THE HERALDCoastal Community Bank CEO Eric Sprink (left) consults regularly with Chief Financial Officer Joel Edwards and Marketing Director Laura Byers.

Five things for small-business owners to check outAt the start of the holi-

day season, it’s easy for entrepreneurs to get

overwhelmed by the daily busi-ness grind. After all, this can be a make-or-break time of the year for a small business.

Before you break out the holi-day decorations, take a moment to catch up with some of the local happenings in the world of business.

Small Business Saturday

Don’t forget that Small Business Saturday is Nov. 28. There will be lots of national advertising on that day to encourage customers to support local small businesses. Take advantage of this focus by reminding your customers what is special about your business, how you are engaged with your com-munity and thank them for their year-round support.

Stay away from making a dis-count the focus of your message.

The big-box retailers are playing that game — no need to swim in that swamp.

Starbucks lessons to apply at your business

I had the great pleasure to hear Howard Behar speak on our campus last month. Behar is the former president of Starbucks International and was there dur-ing the crucial growth period for the coffee company. His message of “putting people first” in your organization really resonated with the attendees of his talk.

I especially liked his 6 P’s of leadership: having a purpose, showing passion for the mission of your company, having per-sistence through both good and bad times, practicing patience every day, focusing on perfor-mance to have your company excel and putting people first in every decision you make.

His book, “It’s Not About The

Coffee,” is a gem. I highly recom-mend it. The book has many actionable suggestions with insightful anecdotes from how Behar applied his principles at Starbucks.

Fewer new small businesses opening

For the first time in 35 years, nationally, the number of brand new businesses was smaller than the number of businesses shutting their doors. This is an ominous sign and means big trouble for our economy if this trend continues since new small businesses are such an important catalyst for job growth.

It seems to me we need in this political season to have a much more thoughtful conversation on how to get more new businesses started, including improving access to capital and implement-ing tax and regulatory reform. Government should be focused

on creating an environment for small business to flourish; it can’t be the driver of economic growth.

Free insight from TEDx and TED talks

The recent TEDx event was terrific with thought-provoking topics and engaging speakers. The event reminded me of the value of TED Talks and the TED.com website for entrepreneurs. I try and check TED.com every couple of weeks for new talks. You never know what you may discover and learn in a just 20 minute talk.

All you really need to know about business you learned in preschool

Finally, one of the best business articles I have read in the past month comes from The New York Times, titled, “Why What You Learned in Preschool Is Crucial at Work,”  (http://nyti.ms/1jGwxZP).

The article asks some basic questions: Has work become more like preschool? Are the social skills you learn in preschool now critical to survive and thrive in today’s workplace?

One of the key lines from the article: “Google researchers, for example, studied the com-pany’s employees to determine what made the best manager. They assumed it would be technical expertise. Instead, it was people who made time for one-on-one meetings, helped employees work through prob-lems and took an interest in their lives.”

It’s a fascinating read and one that I would highly encourage you to share and discuss with your employees.

Pat Sisneros is vice president of College Services at Everett Community College. Send comments to [email protected].

ENTREPRENUERSHIP | Pat Sisneros

Page 7: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

Opinion

■ HAGGEN

Head-spinning turn of events

To the Haggen business and legal team: Great! High fives all around to you for a world speed record. In less than a year you took a company from audacious acquisition — growing from 18 stores to over 150 — to humiliat-ing bankruptcy. What were you thinking? Whatever you were paid for this was way too much. You’ve again proven truth is often stranger than fiction.

David D. SpencerSnohomish

■ CITIZENSHIP

Plan can fix revenue shortfall

So here’s a plan to address those who are living in the country illegally, and the rev-enue shortfalls with Social Security and Medicare.

The citizenship application process for such immigrants should include the following plan to citizenship:

Issue work permits with the following caveats:

Require all workers to for-feit their first three years of credited service to Social Security and Medicare. During this time they do not pay into Social Security and Medicare, but their employers do.

Require all workers to for-feit their IRS refunds back to the states they live and work in. This will offset the cost of schools and social services for those who use them.

If the workers do not complete their citizenship application process in three years, the outlined forfeit-ing plan above will continue until completed. This will add incentive for quicker assimilation.

The above path to citizenship could be used for those trying to immigrate through proper channels as well, but only require one year forfeitures. This would provide incentives not break the law of the land.

If these added funds don’t right the ship for Social Secu-rity and Medicare, then increase Social Security and Medicare tax by one-half of 1 percent and remove the limit for taxing high earners.

Ron KalinaCamano island

■ LYNNWOOD

Mail stolen from locked boxes

During the week sur-rounding Veterans Day, a massive theft of mail was carried out by thieves who broke into dozens of key-locked and heretofore “secure” mailboxes at a north Lynnwood apartment com-plex located in Lake Serene neighborhood on Admiralty Way. This happened at night, even though a nightly roving security patrol is supposed to be present to protect the residents who pay a small portion of their rent money each month for this protec-tion. What happened to the security patrol? Why has there been no reporting, in

print, of this federal crime?Now, a 15-mile round-trip

journey to the nearest U.S. Post Office is required for anyone wondering where their mail has gone. No elected local leaders, in the community, have reached out to the residents to offer their support or provide assistance. Many residents have transportation difficul-ties regardless of the recent low gas prices, and for many it is a daunting task, if not impossible, plus a major pain for those on public assistance who can’t afford to go every day. For many residents, Eng-lish is a second language. Prescriptions and paychecks are now beyond the reach of many whom reside there. Contrary to the suggestion on the site location’s exter-nal signage, there is very little serenity present due to this crime. The California-based owner-operator has no help-ful suggestions for residents impacted who now feel con-fused and disenfranchised. Is your mailbox serene?

Norman ColbertSnohomish

■ FATAL CRASH

Negligence needs tougher penalty

Regarding the article, “Snohomish woman cited for negligent driving in fatal crash”: Perhaps I would understand this “traf-fic infraction” better had I been in the courtroom. I must have missed some-thing. This crash took the life of a 26-year-old, after

“the woman allegedly ran a red light before her Audi collided” with the other car. Mr. Salas “suffered fatal head injuries.” They couldn’t determine why she ran the red light, wasn’t speeding or driving recklessly. Second-degree negligent driving, “with a possible fine of up to $250.” What! I’m confused.

Gary D. SnowGold Bar

■ UNITED STATES

Attitudes toward poor saddening

To quote Bill Maher, Ameri-cans are dim-witted and easily distracted. I would like to add that they just, when push comes to shove, don’t care about poor people.

With half of the nation intentionally turning down Medicaid expansion, it’s very hard to imagine that the majority give more than a passing thought to the mil-lions of Americans suffering from very poor health care. They know people are dying unnecessarily in large num-bers. Lives are destroyed and, especially among poor, white, Southerners, suicide rates are markedly up.

But hatred of Obama and the liberals and anger about God knows what is far more emotionally impor-tant to these people than the abhorrent way we treat less successful people in this nation.

Rick WalkerSnohomish

IN OUR VIEW | WSU programs offered in Everett

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. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Send it to:Email: [email protected]: Letters section The Daily Herald P.O. Box 930 Everett, WA 98206Have a question about let-ters? Call Carol MacPherson at 425-339-3472 or send an e-mail to [email protected].

Editorial BoardJosh O’Connor, Publisher

Jon Bauer, Editorial Page Editor Neal Pattison, Executive Editor

Carol MacPherson, Editorial Writer

The demand for healthy food is not a fad; it is an ever-grow-ing consumer mandate. The New York Times reported this month about how the country’s big food manufacturers, with their processed, packaged and frozen foods, are struggling to keep up with Americans’ evolv-ing eating habits.

Sales of fresh prepared foods have grown nearly 30 percent since 2009, while sales of packaged goods have started to fall, the NYT reported. Sales of raw fruits and vegetables are growing. Per capita consumption of vegetables is up 10 percent over the past five years. Additionally, a recent survey shows 42 percent of millenials, ages 20 to 37, don’t trust large food companies.

In direct contrast to the sloth-like response by gigantic food companies to changing times are the small companies, food co-ops, farmers, and educa-tors who were, and remain, ahead of the curve, driving the change, and providing the organic and locally sourced food people want.

For example, Washington State University in Pullman offered the country’s first degree in organic agriculture

in 2008, along with an option for an 18-credit organic ag cer-tificate, which can be earned online, as part of a major, or on its own. Dozens of univer-sities followed suit and now offer courses, certificates or degree programs in organic and sustainable agriculture.

A few years later, the Leg-islature put WSU in charge of the University Center at Everett Community College. Part of the agreement to have WSU run the center was to offer its mechanical engineer-ing degree by 2012 in direct response to a stated need by Boeing. WSU now also offers degrees in electrical engi-neering, hospitality business management and integrated communication at the center. (The center also offers degrees from Central Washington University, Eastern Washing-ton University, The Evergreen State College, Hope Inter-national University (online and hybrid) the University of Washington Bothell and West-ern Washington University.)

The state now has the chance, or really, the obliga-tion, to allow WSU to expand

its respected organic farm-ing program on the west side of the state at the University Center. WSU officials are seek-ing $832,000 in state funds to launch four agriculture-related degree programs at the center, The Herald’s Jerry Cornfield reported. In 2017, in addition the organic agricul-ture systems degree, it would also offer a degree in agricul-ture and food safety. Students will study ways to protect crops from pests, diseases and other external influences that are harmful to the health of humans or the environment. Given all outbreaks of food-borne illnesses each year, this is another smart program. (And it coincides with the FDA’s announcement last week that it is finalizing rules to implement the bipartisan Food Safety Modernization Act that, which will, for the first time, establish enforce-able safety standards for produce farms and make importers accountable for verifying that imported food meets U.S. safety standards.)

Degrees in sustainable food systems and urban

horticulture would be phased in later, Cornfield reported.

In 2011, The Herald Editorial Board advocated for adding the university’s organic farming program to the center’s offer-ings because it would be such a natural fit and meet demand, like the engineering degrees. Consider that Washington is second only to California in sales of organic farm products, and when it comes to fruit, out state is the No. 1 conventional and organic producer of apples, pears and cherries in the coun-try. It’s our responsibility, not to mention in our best interest, to educate our future farmers, on both sides of the state, with the best agriculture education available.

We strongly encourage Gov. Jay Inslee to include the $832,000 request in his 2016 supplemental budget proposal due in December. WSU officials tried to get the funding this year, and had support in the House but not the Senate. Try again.

Plant the seeds, fund the farming program, and keep WSU, and therefore the state, in the forefront of the new agriculture.

Bring organic ag degree hereDES MOINES, Iowa — You can’t

drive far in these parts without seeing Ben Carson on a billboard,

looking more like a man of the cloth than of the operating room.

There’s something vaguely beatific in that face and beaming smile. “Run Ben Run!” reads the text on one sign. The moviegoer’s mind can’t escape the immediate association.

“Run, For-rest, Run!” the little girl cries out to her mentally challenged friend, For-rest Gump, as a group of mean boys taunt and pursue him.

Perhaps this very connection pen-etrated the barrier reef of Donald Trump’s self-regard when he was in Iowa recently. Thursday night, in a riff expressing his puzzlement over Carson’s growing popularity, Trump insinuated that Iowans — and perhaps even some in his audience — are of limited intelligence.

“How stupid are the people of Iowa?” he thundered to about 1,500 Iowans. “How stupid are the people of the country to believe this crap?”

Trump sprinkled “crap” elsewhere in his 95-minute tirade, saying the word at least three times. He also promised to “bomb the s—-” out of oil fields in Iraq and Syria. And he insisted that the crowd take his word that he knows more about the Islamic State than our generals do.

“Believe me,” he said.Trump has never hesitated to insult any

and everyone, including his audiences. A few months ago in South Carolina, for instance, he wasted no time taking down Sen. Lindsey Graham, who though also running for president, was polling near the bottom. Trump’s attack not only was gratuitous but reeked of pure meanness. After all, many in the audience probably put Graham in the Senate. How stupid are the people of South Carolina? Trump might as well have said.

In Fort Dodge on Thursday, he launched into several of his political opponents — calling Marco Rubio “weak like a baby,” and referring to Carly Fiorina as “Carly whatever-the-hell-her-name-is” — but he saved his most toxic remarks for Carson.

Trump couldn’t suggest that the retired pediatric neurosurgeon is dumb, so he turned the insult on Carson’s support-ers. In this richly evangelical state, he also chose to ridicule Carson’s personal story of Christian salvation and transformation — from an angry, violence-prone youth to the calm, reserved visage hovering every several miles above the Iowa landscape.

Trump: “He goes into the bathroom for a couple of hours and he comes out and now he’s religious. And the people of Iowa believe him. Give me a break. ... It doesn’t happen that way. ... Don’t be fools, OK?”

On a roll, Don, on a roll.Referring to recent media questions

about Carson’s self-described pathologi-cal temper in his youth, Trump made a comparison to child molesters, saying they are “incurable.”

First, pathological means related to dis-ease or illness, or can mean compulsive/obsessive, but it doesn’t necessarily mean incurable, as a doctor would know but per-haps a reality-star business-mogul might not. Practice what you preach, Brother Trump, and preach what you know.

For comparison purposes, Trump could have picked a number of bad habits, from gambling to boozing, but he went for the most universally repulsive thing he could think of — pedophilia.

This is the true Trump.Fort Dodge was the inevitable meltdown

many of us were anticipating far sooner than now. It’s hard even for a showman like Trump to fake for long what you are not.

In a political campaign, as in a court-ship, people try to win favor by displaying their most attractive, intelligent, talented persona. But as we all know, you can only consistently project your best self for so long. Eventually, the idealized “you” becomes worn out from the effort, and the real “you” puts on the sweats and grabs the remote. In romance, I put it at about two years.

In politics, the courtship is necessarily, if disastrously, faster — speed dating for the future of humankind.

Trump got tired. His courtship self was the one who insulted only his opponents and women. True Trump can’t stand any-one and wonders why he’s wasting time with all these clueless clucks who don’t have enough sense to recognize a charla-tan when they see one.

Thursday night in Fort Dodge, I’m bet-ting quite a few did.

Kathleen Parker’s email address is [email protected].

How stupid are the U.S. people, Donald?

A7 | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM | MONDAY, 11.16.2015

KATHLEEN PARKER

Page 8: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

A8 Monday, 11.16.2015 The Daily Herald

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A8 Monday, 11.16.2015 The Daily Herald

extremely frustrating,” Mos-coso said. “We can look at the DOT schedules and the support and the requests from the local commu-nity ... (But) unless we can find a sustainable revenue source to catch up, I don’t know how we’re going to get ahead on these projects.”

Tangled history

As far as state lawmakers involved at the time were concerned, the deal was done with the Regional Transportation Investment District agreement that

sparked the failed ballot measure.

State Rep. Dan Kristian-sen, R-Snohomish, said Snohomish County gov-ernment still has a role to play — the project can’t all fall on the state’s shoulders. “Very few people know the history lesson,” he said.

A pile of dirt was even left by state crews for the county to finish the project, he said. It’s still sitting there near the Paradise Lake sig-nal, said Kristiansen, who commutes the corridor himself to Woodinville.

Leadership at Snohom-ish County has turned over a few times since then, and many projects stalled dur-ing the Great Recession.

“Snohomish County Public Works will continue

to work with WSDOT to get this project built as soon as possible to best serve our residents,” said Owen Carter, deputy director of

Public Works.

Still speaking up

Monroe Mayor Geoffrey

Thomas, Sultan Mayor Carolyn Eslick and U.S. 2 Traffic Safety Coalition’s Fred Walser, of Sultan, are among those leading the

charge to secure funding.Both city councils as

well as the Monroe School Board have passed resolu-tions calling for funding and asking the county for help pushing for the project.

The next legislative ses-sion starts in January, and they plan to be back in Olympia making their case.

“We are concerned that if something is not done to fund to finish State Route 522, that it could be decades before the final improvements are made,” Thomas said.

Have a question? Email us at [email protected]. Please include your first and last name and city of residence. Look for updates on the Street Smarts blog.

SmartsFrom Page A3

Timeline2001: WSDOT finished wid-ening Highway 522 between Highway 9 and Paradise Lake Road2003: Legislature expects RTID funding package to include continue widen-ing Highway 522 to the Snohomish RiverAs a result, Legislature assigns Nickel Funding to logical next step, widen-ing Highway 522 from the Snohomish River to U.S. 2

2006: New interchange at Echo Lake Road opens to trafficRTID projects list drafted, including $1.5 billion for Snohomish County projects2007: Voters turn down pro-posed $17.8 billion Roads and Transit package on Nov. 6 ballot, which included $127 million to widen High-way 522 to the Snohomish River and add a Paradise Lake Road interchange2008: When construction could have begun if Roads

and Transit package passed2011: Construction on widening highway from Snohomish River to U.S. 2 starts2012: New flyover ramp to eastbound U.S. 2 opens to traffic2014: Added lanes from Snohomish River to U.S. 2 open to traffic2015: State transportation funding package includes $10 million for design of Paradise Lake Road inter-change, starting in 2025

By Lisa LeffAssociated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — A recent groundswell of pro-tests on college campuses over race, sexual miscon-duct and other social issues has some civil libertarians worried that the prized principle of free speech could be sacrificed in the rush to address legitimate student grievances.

The potential conflict between the protection of civil rights and the Consti-tution’s First Amendment guarantees was on dis-play at the University of Missouri in Columbia last week when students, sup-ported by the football team, forced the resignation of system President Tim Wolfe over racial incidents and other problems on campus that they felt he had failed to take seriously. While their campaign drew widespread sup-port and inspired similar demonstrations at colleges across the country, it also

prompted a backlash from critics who said some actions went too far.

A Missouri assistant pro-fessor supportive of the student protests blocked a student photographer from an area where dem-onstrators had set up a tent city, a move that infringed freedom of the press. The student protest-ers quickly reversed the

media ban, saying the inci-dent had been a “teachable moment” for them.

Also, university police encouraged students to report any “hateful and/or hurtful” speech they expe-rienced for investigation, leaving the impression that any comment considered offensive could be a crime. Free speech advocates complained and police

clarified that offensive lan-guage alone would not be treated as a hate crime.

While the First Amend-ment guarantees freedom of assembly and the right of citizens to state their griev-ances, it also enshrines freedom of the press and free speech. Some academ-ics and First Amendment experts said the incidents at Missouri showed a hyper-sensitivity that confused the difference between vig-orous public debate and threats or harassment that constitute crimes.

“People wrongly believe they have a right not to be offended. That is not only faulty, but we as educators have a duty to be offen-sive in the sense of forcing people to rethink their fun-damental assumptions,” said New York Law School Professor Nadine Strossen, the former president of the American Civil Liberties Union. “Diversity is cited as this mantra, yet we are killing ideological diversity, which is just as important.”

There have been numer-ous protests — and even cancellation — of cam-pus speakers who voiced controversial views rang-ing from liberal comedian Bill Maher to conservative former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. Support-ers of civil liberties also cited more restrictive campus codes of conduct, and the use of “trigger warnings” to alert students about uncom-fortable course content.

Samantha Harris, direc-tor of policy research at the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, said censorship used to come primarily from the top down but now is coming from students.

“Students increasingly seem to be arriving on cam-pus believing that there is a generalized right not to be offended beyond the actual right to be free from harass-ment and threats, this amorphous right to emo-tional safety. It’s a troubling trend,” she said.

But some student

activists counter that they are getting more aggressive because admin-istrators only give lip service to legitimate issues such as persistent racism and sexual assault.

“It doesn’t make sense to me if you are invoking free speech as a way to say things that further marginalize stu-dents on college campuses if they are critical of what you are saying. You are try-ing to devalue their words and their free speech,” said Taylor Lemmons, a student at Claremont McKenna College in California.

The dean of students there resigned last week after writing an email pledging to do more for minority students who “don’t fit our CMC mold.” The email followed previ-ous efforts by black and Hispanic students to voice concerns about the racial climate on campus and was viewed by some students as a sign their suggestions were falling on deaf ears, Lemmons said.

Amid protests, some see erosion of free speech

JEFF ROBERSON / ASSOCIATED PRESSA member of the black student protest group Concerned Student 1950 gestures while addressing a crowd Nov. 9 at the University of Missouri in Columbia following the announcement that President Tim Wolfe would resign.

Page 9: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

SECTION B | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM/LOCAL | MONDAY, 11.16.2015

Time Out

INSIDE: Puzzles, 2 | Living with Children, 2 | Super Quiz, 2 | Dear Abby, 3 | Short Takes, 4

YOUR PHOTOSA weekly showcase of our favorite photos from the reader galleries at HeraldNet.com. See more great photos or share your own at www.heraldnet.com/yourphotos.

NEEDLE ARTSKnitting, Everett: The Knitwits and Happy Hookers meets 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Thursdays and Fridays at the Carl Gipson Senior Center of Everett, 3025 Lombard Ave. Yarn donations welcome. Many things the group makes are donated to community causes. More info: Bobby Neason, 425-303-2516.

Knitting, Mukilteo: Meets 10 a.m.-noon Thursdays at the Mukilteo Library, 4675 Harbour Pointe Blvd. All skill levels welcome. Beginners, bring a pair of No. 8 or No. 9 needles and a skein of worsted-weight yarn.

Knitting, Snohomish: The Snohom-ish Knitters Guild meets 7-9 p.m. second Tuesdays at the Waltz Building, 116 Ave. B. Doors open at 6 p.m. for an impromptu

knitting group, 6:30 p.m. for Knit Lab. Main program at 7 p.m. More info: www.snohomishknittersguild.org.

Knitting, Stanwood: The North Sound Knitters Guild meets 6 p.m. second Mondays at the Stanwood Community and Senior Center, 7430 276th St. NW. Guest speakers, charitable projects and more. More info: Milly, 360-387-9611.

Needle arts, Sit-N-Stitch: Meets 6 p.m. � rst Tuesdays at The Village retirement com-munity, 302 North Alder Ave., Granite Falls. Open to all stitchers of all ages. More info: 425-273-5563.

Quilt Guild, Everett: Meets 6-8 p.m. fourth Tuesdays at Quality Sewing, 10121 Evergreen Way. For the holidays, meetings are Nov. 17 and Dec. 15. Charitable projects,

socialization and education. More info: [email protected].

Quilters, Busy Bee: Meets 12-3 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. third Thursdays at The Bridge Church, 2500 Lake Ave., Snohomish. In De-cember, meets one week early and evening only, 7-9 p.m. Dec. 10, with potluck dinner and community time. More info: www.busybeequilters.com.

Quilters, Mukilteo Lighthouse: Meets 7 p.m. third Tuesdays in the Chris-tiansen Room at Rosehill Community Center, 304 Lincoln Ave., Mukilteo. A $5 donation is appreciated. More info: www.mlquilters.org.

Smocking: The Northwest Smocking Arts Guild meets 5:30-7:30 p.m. � rst Mondays (except holidays) at The Needle and I,

4727 Evergreen Way, Everett. More info: [email protected].

Spinners Guild: Valley Spinners Guild meets 7-9 p.m. third Tuesdays at Zion Lutheran Church, 329 Ave. A, Snohom-ish. More info: Alice Lake, 360-668-8196, valleyspinnersguild.wordpress.com.

WRITTEN ARTSWriters, Mukilteo: The Mukilteo Arts Guild Writers Group meets 7 p.m. � rst and third Mondays at the Mukilteo Chamber of Commerce, 4902 76th St. SW. More info: www.mukilteoarts.org.

Writers, Evergreen Romance: Meets 11:30 a.m. third Saturdays at Lombardi’s res-taurant, 1620 W. Marine View Drive, Everett. More info: www.evergreenrwa.org.

Writers, Snohomish: Writers’ Kickstart meets 6:30-8:30 p.m. Tuesdays at Hag-gen’s grocery cafe by the � replace, 1301 Avenue D. Aspiring and experienced writers welcome. More info: www.writerskickstart.com.

ANIMALSDogs, Marysville: M-DOG (Marysville Dog Owners Group) meets 6:30 p.m. third Wednesdays (except July and December) at Haggen Food and Pharmacy, 3711 88th St. NE. More info: Leslie Buell at 425-268-5285 or [email protected], m-dog.org.

Other interest groups are listed throughout the month. Send calendar items to [email protected].

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Monroe teens give hunger a fright

A group of Monroe High School students, inspired by the Free the Children Foundation’s “We Scare Hunger” campaign, went door to door on Halloween collecting food for the Sky Valley Food Bank. � is is the third year of the school project. Teens col-lected 632 pounds of donated food this year, more than three times the amount their � rst year.

Spartans volunteer to Make A Difference

More than 80 high school seniors in Stanwood High School teacher Val Schroeder’s senior English class participated Oct. 24 in Make A Di� erence Day. � e teens organized 35 service projects for the national day of volunteering.

Students collected blankets, clothing, food, supplies and toiletries for the homeless; built birdhouses and planted trees; mowed, landscaped, assisted,

and sang for senior citizens; taught young children about science; picked up litter around the community, roadsides, trails and beaches; assisted at animal shelters; and sponsored book drives and bake sales to raise funds for the food bank and ani-mal shelters.

Stanwood FFA back from nationals

Two Teams from the Stan-wood FFA Chapter represented the state at the National FFA Convention, held Oct. 28-31 in Louisville, Kentucky. Both teams scored in the top � ve for their competition categories after placing � rst in state-level FFA competitions.

� e third-place Environment and Natural Resources team included Drew Carlson (ninth-place Individual and Gold Emblem Individual), Jessica

Funderburke (Silver Emblem), Morgan Meyers (Gold Emblem), Brandon Reynolds (Gold Emblem) and alternate Kane Ayling.

� e � fth-place Agriculture Sales team included Brooke Thompson (Silver Emblem), Zachary Wilson (Gold Emblem),

Carmen Small (Gold Emblem) and Jennifer Flake (Gold Emblem).

Elger Bay essay contest focused on flag

Anna Hoggarth-Case won the Camano Island Women’s Republican Club’s Elger Bay Elementary School fourth-grade 2015 Patriotic Essay Writing Contest with the theme “What the American Flag Means to Me.” Anna received a collectible coin set and a certi� cate of achieve-ment. Four runners-up received gift certi� cates for pizza and cer-ti� cates of achievement.

To submit items for School Winners, email [email protected].

SCHOOL WINNERS

CONTRIBUTED PHOTOStanwood High School senior Conner Helgeland picks up trash Oct. 24 as part of a Make A Difference Day service project.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTOStanwood High School seniors Kate Holm and Maddy Huges deliver food donations Oct. 24 as part of a Make A Difference Day service project.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTOBarbara Vibbert, president of the Camano Island Women’s Republican Club, presents a collectible coin set and certi� cate of achievement to Anna Hoggarth-Case, winner of the Club’s Elger Bay Elementary School fourth-grade 2015 Patriotic Essay Writing Contest.

Le� , Andrew P. O’Shea of Snohomish took this photo of the fall colors on the Pilchuck River.

Below, Steve Douglas took this photo of thousands of snow geese landing in a Skagit County � eld west of Conway.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTOThe national third-place Stanwood High School FFA Environment and Natural Resources team included (from left) Brandon Reynolds, Morgan Meyers, Jessica Funderburke, Drew Carlson, and alternate Kane Ayling.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTOThe national � fth-place Stanwood High School FFA Agriculture Sales team included (from left) Zachary Wilson, Jennifer Flake, Brooke Thompson and Carmen Small. Their advisor is Darryl Main.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTOA group of Monroe High School students went trick-or-treating Oct. 31 for the Sky Valley Food Bank. Pictured from left are (back) food bank Director Neil Watkins with students Ryan Witt, Luke Klein, Ben Garver, Tanner Kooy, Kevin Milne, Keaton Markey; (front) Matt Klein and Kegan Velie.

Page 10: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

CLASSIC PEANUTS

TUNDRA

BABY BLUES

DILBERT

DENNIS THE MENACE CORNERED

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

BUCKLES

WUMO

SIX CHIX ZIGGY

DAILY CROSSWORDB2 Monday, 11.16.2015 The Daily Herald

Q: My just-turned 3-year-old daughter has started biting other children in her preschool program. I put her in for three mornings a week thinking she could benefit from a group social experience, but it seems to be backfiring. She bites some other child — the same one, usually — almost every day. When it hap-pens, her teacher separates her from the group, tries to calm her down and talks to her about what she should have done instead of biting. That’s obviously not work-ing, and now the director is getting pressure from other parents to expel her. I don’t know why this is happening or what to do about it. She doesn’t do it during play dates when she’s one-on-one. Do you have any answers?

A: If one puts a bunch of tod-dlers together in a room for a sustained period of time, there’s great likelihood that one of them will begin biting. And as is the case with your daughter, the biter will usually target one or two other children.

The problem is compounded by licensing standards and/or policies that don’t permit teachers to use so-called “negative conse-quences,” including time-out. So when a child bites, the preschool teacher talks. And the child, in

most cases, keeps right on biting. Sometimes, it’s fairly easy for an outside observer to tell that other kids in the class have “gotten in on the act.” In other words, they begin purposefully putting themselves in harm’s way. I’ve actually seen a toddler ask to be bitten.

Why is your daughter biting? I don’t have a clue other than to point out that toddlers are given to savagery at times. It’s quite pos-sible that if your daughter hadn’t started biting, some other child would have, sooner or later. It’s also possible that if your daughter is expelled, another child in the group will pick up where she left off. Once this drama gets going in a preschool classroom, it’s difficult to stop.

Obviously, the teacher needs to do all she can to keep your daugh-ter away from her victim of choice. But let’s face it: That’s not very

realistic. Besides, even if she were able to perform the superhuman feat of keeping villain and victim at a distance, there’s a possibility that another victim will step forward.

One solution is for the teacher to separate your daughter from the group as soon as she bites and keep her separated (in the director’s office, perhaps) until you can get to the school and take her home. In that interim, no one should talk to her about the inci-dent, much less about what she could have done instead of biting. That’s all very well-intentioned, but it won’t solve the problem and may make it worse. You shouldn’t talk to her about the biting either. Just take her home and do as little as possible for the rest of the day. Hopefully, she would rather be with other children and will quickly get the message.

The other solution is for you to “expel” your daughter from pre-school yourself. At this tender age, she’s getting all the socialization she needs during the occasional play date. Besides, researchers have failed to find any long-term benefit to toddler preschool.

Can you guess which solution I favor?

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency

What to do about toddler’s biting in preschool

Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level.

Subject: POTPOURRI(e.g., Who was the first man in

space? Answer: Yuri Gagarin.)FRESHMAN LEVEL1. With which musical in-

strument is the name Les Paul associated?

2. What is the Keystone XL?3. Which group executed

American journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff?

GRADUATE LEVEL4. In which U.S. state is Area 51

located?5. In which film is the ship An-

drea Gail featured?6. What did the fictional Brit-

ish spy Alec Leamas come in from?

PH.D. LEVEL

7. Which Best Actress Oscar winner had parents who were both Oscar winners?

8. For what is SETI an acronym?

9. Name any one digraph.ANSWERS: 1. Guitar. 2. Oil

pipeline project. 3. ISIS. 4. Ne-vada. 5. “The Perfect Storm.” 6. The cold (“The Spy Who Came in From the Cold.”) 7. Liza Minnelli. 8. Search for extraterrestrial intel-ligence. 9. ch, sh, th, ph, wh, ea, etc.

SCORING: 18 points — con-gratulations, doctor; 15-17 points — honors graduate; 10-14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4-9 points — you re-ally should hit the books harder; 1-3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you?

North America Syndicate Inc.

SUPER QUIZActor Clu Gulager is 87. Journalist Elizabeth

Drew is 80. Blues musician W.C. Clark is 76. Ac-tress Joanna Pettet is 73. Actor Steve Railsback is 70. Actor David Leisure is 65. Actor Miguel San-doval is 64. Actress Marg Helgenberger is 57. Rock musician Mani is 53. Country singer-musician Keith Burns (Trick Pony) is 52. Tennis player Zina Garrison is 52. Former MLB All-Star pitcher Dwight Gooden is 51. Jazz singer Diana Krall is 51. Actor Harry Lennix is 51. Rock musician Dave Kushner (Velvet Revolver) is 49. Actress Lisa Bonet is 48. Actress Tammy Lauren is 47. Rhythm-and-blues singer Bryan Abrams (Color Me Badd) is 46. Actress Martha Plimpton is 45. Actress Missi Pyle is 43. Olympic gold medal figure skater Ok-sana Baiul is 38. Actress Maggie Gyllenhaal is 38. Pop singer Trevor Penick is 36. NBA player Amare Stoudemire is 33. Actress Kimberly J. Brown is 31. Rock singer Siva Kaneswaran (The Wanted) is 27.

Thought for Today: “An American who can make money, invoke God, and be no better than his neighbor, has nothing to fear but truth itself.” — Marya Mannes, American critic (1904-1990).

The Associated Press

BIRTHDAYS

JOHN ROSEMONDLIVING WITH CHILDREN

Page 11: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

RIP HAYWIRE

MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM

PICKLES

POOCH CAFE

LUANN

JUMBLE

PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN

ZITS

RED & ROVER

SUDOKU

ANSWERS TOPREVIOUS PUZZLE

Dear Abby: My husband works as a bouncer at a strip club. I was OK with it at first, but then he started making friends with the dancers and waitresses. They exchange phone numbers, and he talks to some of them late at night when I’m sleeping. I get upset and jealous that these women are getting his time. It causes fights. What should I do? — Wife Of A Texas Bouncer

Dear Wife: Is your hus-band placing these calls, or are the women calling him? Tell him you feel they are a threat to your marriage and ask why the calls happen after you have gone to bed.

It’s possible the conver-sations are innocent. The women may relate to him because his job makes them feel “safe” with him. Many co-workers con-verse after work. Because a woman works in a strip club doesn’t mean she’s a predator.

However, because the timing of these calls both-ers you, ask him if he would have them call before work rather than afterward when you would like him in bed with you.

Dear Abby: I host holiday dinners and always invite my husband’s side of the family as well as mine. Each time, my brother’s wife, “Arlene,” asks if my husband’s family will be there, and says if they are, they won’t attend. They are the only ones who don’t show up; all the rest of my family does.

When I asked Arlene if she has a problem with my husband’s side of the family, she said no, she just feels we don’t pay as much attention to her when there is “so much family.”

I have tried having separate dinners, but as the years have passed, it has gotten harder to cook two

Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter dinners on sep-arate days. After 30 years of this, I’m tired of having my feelings hurt and trying to please my brother and his wife. How am I supposed to respond when she texts me telling me that if it’s just our family they’ll attend? — Tired Of It In Iowa

Dear Tired: You are too kind. I wish you had asked this question 30 years ago because, if you had, I could have spared you a lot of grief. The next time your self-centered sister-in-law pulls that stunt, send her a text saying, “Sorry you can’t make it. We’ll miss you!” Then add a smiling emoji.

Dear Abby: My daugh-ter sent out save-the-date cards for her wedding next year. Many of our family members live out of state and abroad.

Save-the-date cards were also sent to my co-work-ers. When the wedding happens, I will have been gone from that company for three months. Does sending the card obligate us to invite people who will then be my former co-workers? — Unsure In Fort Lauderdale

Dear Unsure: Yes. If you don’t send an invitation or an explanation, your former co-workers may feel they were asked to save the date not because they were considered friends, but that it was a bid for more gifts for your daughter. And they wouldn’t be wrong.

Universal Uclick

The Daily Herald Monday, 11.16.2015 B3

ACROSS 1 Front of a ship 5 Smart-alecky10 ___ Ben-Hur15 Volcano’s output16 Give 10% to the

church17 Layer in global

warming discussions18 Antiquing substance19 Operatic solos20 Word repeated when

calling a cat21 Where Picture A

might be found24 Preceder of Sept.25 Rower30 Rolled sandwich32 Baby dog33 Coin of France or

Spain34 Online commerce36 Goodyear craft

37 Picture A … or, after switching the circled letters and reading the result phonetically, Picture B

43 Benghazi’s land44 Of equal size45 “Guilty” or “not

guilty”46 Fitting48 City haze50 Fox’s trait52 Due-in info53 Where Picture B

might be found60 Madison, Monroe

or any of four other presidents

64 Put-down from Donald Trump

65 Norway’s capital66 Wise saying67 Kind of leaf on

Canada’s flag68 Give a face-lift

69 Wrinkle-reducing injection

70 Tudor or Art Deco71 Look for

DOWN 1 Blueprint 2 Pasta sauce brand 3 “Your turn,” on a

walkie-talkie 4 Poland’s capital 5 1994 sci-fi film turned

into a series on Showtime

6 Light and open 7 Blend using a spoon 8 Former Iranian ruler 9 “Who, me?” reply10 Wild card in a deck11 Gun in many an

action flick12 Part of an “i” or “j”

13 Kitchen pest14 “Psst!”22 Exultant cry of

discovery23 Page in an atlas26 ___-portrait27 California’s ___

Woods28 Navy’s gridiron rival29 Yep’s opposite31 Small butter portion32 +35 “___ first you don’t

succeed …”36 Colombia’s capital37 Tour de France

mountains38 Capsule alternative39 Do as one’s told40 Blue used by a printer41 Abbr. on a gym

weight

42 Bearer of green fruit46 Dangerous

snake47 Biblical book of

poems49 Florida bigmouths?51 English or New Jersey

county54 Layer of paint55 Cable sports award56 Bear market order57 “Ah, that’s what you

mean”58 Ye ___ Shoppe59 Cozy corner60 Quick punch61 Hubbub62 Doorstep “welcomer”63 A politician might

have a big one

11-16-2015 #1012 PUZZLE BY PATRICK MERRELL

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLEH O M A G E S D I N G B A TE P A U L E T A L T O O N AR E D D E E R S A W T O I TE N D I N A R A T U T S II S A O S T I N G P I T AA E S W E E N I E S E O NM A H J O N G G C E S S N A

O K E Y D O K E YP A R S E C I P O D N A N OA S O N A N N I E S S E DL A S E S I G N S P K W YO R A L B P S I P H E W SM U L L E T S O N E I D A SA L I E N E E N O T L I V ER E E N T R Y S W E E N E Y

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 64 65

66 67 68

69 70 71

We asked some favorite Times crossword contributors, “What would you like to do in a daily Times crossword that has never been done before?” This week’s puzzles, Monday to Saturday, are the result.

A

B

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE

Daily Bridge Club

Monday, November 16, 2015

Since 1981 I’ve written a monthlycolumn for the ACBL’s magazine.Many have been “over-my-shoulder”style. You listen in on my thoughtsduring a deal.

Ninety of the best of these appearin “Play Bridge With Me,” my 23rdbook, just published. The deals areintermediate level; the focus is onlogical thinking.

At today’s four spades, I win thefirst heart in dummy and lead adiamond. I can’t risk losing an earlytrump finesse; I need a quick pitchfor my heart loser. East wins thesecond diamond and returns a heart,and I win to discard dummy’s lastheart on my high diamond. When Ifinesse in trumps, East wins and exitswith a trump.

PASSED HAND

Now I must guess in clubs. ButEast, a passed hand, had the ace ofdiamonds, queen of hearts and kingof spades. He won’t have the ace ofclubs, so I lead to the king, makingthe game.

For a postpaid to U.S. copy of“Play Bridge With Me,” send $23.95to PO Box 962, Fayette AL 35555.Tell me how you’d like it inscribed.Profits donated.

DAILY QUESTION

You hold: ♠ A 9 8 2 ♥♥ K 6 3 ♦♦ 7 6 ♣ K J 9 2. The dealer, at your

left, opens one heart. Your partnerdoubles, and the next player passes.What do you say?

ANSWER: This case is close. Intheory, your 11 points are enough fora jump to two spades, inviting game,but your king of hearts, trapped infront of the opening bidder, may beworthless. Many experts would jumpanyway. I would reluctantlydowngrade the hand and settle for aresponse of one spade.

East dealerN-S vulnerable

NORTH♠ A 9 8 2♥♥ K 6 3♦♦ 7 6♣ K J 9 2

WEST EAST♠ 7 ♠ K 5 3♥♥ J 10 9 4 ♥♥ Q 8 5♦♦ 9 8 3 2 ♦♦ A 10 5 4♣ A 8 7 5 ♣ Q 6 3

SOUTH♠ Q J 10 6 4♥♥ A 7 2♦♦ K Q J♣ 10 4

East South West NorthPass 1 ♠ Pass 3 ♠Pass 4 ♠ All Pass

Opening lead — ♥♥ J(C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

‘Play Bridge With Me’By FRANK STEWARTTribune Content Agency

Wife jealous of strippers who phone her husband

Since 1981 I’ve written a monthly column for the ACBL’s magazine. Many have been “over-my-shoul-der” style. You listen in on my thoughts during a deal.

Ninety of the best of these appear in “Play Bridge With Me,” my 23rd book, just pub-lished. The deals are inter-mediate level; the focus is on logical thinking.

At today’s four spades, I win the first heart in dummy and lead a diamond. I can’t risk losing an early trump finesse; I need a quick pitch

for my heart loser. East wins the second diamond and returns a heart, and I win to discard dummy’s last heart on my high diamond. When I finesse in trumps, East wins and exits with a trump.

Now I must guess in clubs. But East, a passed hand, had the ace of diamonds, queen of hearts and king of spades. He won’t have the ace of clubs, so I lead to the king, making the game.

For a postpaid to U.S. copy of “Play Bridge With Me,” send $23.95 to PO Box 962, Fayette AL 35555. Tell me how you’d like it inscribed. Profits donated.

DAILY QUESTIONYou hold: ♠ A 9 8 2 ♥ K 6

3 ◆ 7 6 ♣ K J 9 2. The dealer, at your left, opens one heart. Your partner doubles, and the next player passes. What do you say?

ANSWER: This case is close. In theory, your 11 points are enough for a jump to two spades, invit-ing game, but your king of hearts, trapped in front of the opening bidder, may be worthless.

Many experts would jump anyway. I would reluctantly downgrade the hand and settle for a response of one spade.

BRIDGE

DEAR ABBY

Page 12: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

By Joe MandakAssociated Press

PITTSBURGH — Ameri-can television viewers get their first chance to see and hear Adolf Hitler’s inner circle describe the dicta-tor’s final hours in filmed interviews when “The Day Hitler Died” premieres on the Smithsonian Channel.

The documentary marks the first time view-ers outside Germany will see the filmed interviews by Michael Musmanno, a Navy attorney who presided at one of the Nuremburg war crimes trials and later became a Pennsylvania Supreme Court justice.

After the trials, Mus-manno spent more than two years tracking down witnesses and re-inter-viewing them on camera in 1948 to prove Hitler was dead, hoping to thwart rumors spawned when Soviet dictator Josef Stalin claimed Hitler had escaped his underground Berlin bunker.

“There can be no doubt that Adolf Hitler, the fuhrer of Germany, the master criminal of the world, the greatest gangster who ever disgraced the human race, is dead,” Musmanno says, concluding the interviews.

The films “give you a sense of what they were thinking, why they were there, and why they would stay in the bunker,” said Thomas White, the archi-vist tasked with preserving the films at Duquesne Uni-versity in Pittsburgh.

“The Nazis were like the generic villains of the 20th century, but that’s the real danger,” White said. “We tend to forget that some people found them charm-ing and how they got there and came to power.”

The interviews also vividly describe Hitler’s volatile moods as the Rus-sian Red Army moved into Berlin in April 1945.

Buoyed by news that U.S. President Franklin Roos-evelt died April 12, 1945, “Hitler went into a dance and congratulated himself as if he had himself had brought about this event,” Hitler’s press attache, Heinz

Lorenz, told Musmanno. “He exclaimed, ‘This will mean I will win the war.”’

But 10 days later, Hitler’s mood permanently dark-ened upon learning one of his generals refused to lead a suicidal counter-attack with a rag-tag collection of German army units.

“He collapsed and said, ‘It’s all over, and I’ll shoot myself,” Lorenz recalled.

But it would be eight days before Hitler would shoot himself alongside Eva Braun, the longtime mistress who took a poison capsule and died beside Hitler the day after they were married.

In the meantime, the 16-room bunker — with its 12-foot thick concrete ceil-ings and walls some 30 feet below ground — became a macabre Neverland as Hitler’s confidants and staff awaited his suicide.

“After April 22, he talked about it constantly,” said Traudl Junge, the secretary to whom Hitler dictated his last will and testament.

Or, as German Army Major Baron von Loring-hoven told Musmanno, “The bunker became a mortuary and the people in it living corpses.”

Musmanno wrote a book based on his inter-views, “Ten Days to Die,” published in 1950. But the films were lost for decades and became available for American viewing only two years ago.

Musmanno died in 1968 after a storied career in which he also represented

on appeal Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, Ital-ian anarchists some believe were wrongfully executed for a murderous Massa-chusetts shoe company robbery in 1920.

Musmanno willed his many personal papers and the films to two nephews who have also since died, said Patricia Homer, Mus-manno’s great-niece, who now owns the films.

The nephews turned over the material to Duquesne, a Catholic school in the city where Musmanno was considered an Italian-American folk hero. At first, the school tried to re-create Musmanno’s chambers before realizing the papers and other materials were not properly stored and were deteriorating.

The school had begun a decades-long effort to properly store and catalog the records when a Ger-man production company, Spiegel TV, learned of the films in about 2007.

The resulting documen-tary, “Witnesses of Doom: The Lost Interviews,” aired in Germany in 2010, but the rights agreement kept Scottish-based Finestripe Productions from access-ing the films until 2013, said White, the archivist.

The money raised by selling the documentary rights to the films is being used to preserve them, White said.

“The Day Hitler Died” premieres on the Smithso-nian Channel on Monday at 8 p.m.

Short TakesB4 | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM | MONDAY, 11.16.2015

Monday’s highlights on TV include:

Jennifer Lopez, Rita Moreno, Ricky Martin, Pitbull and Gloria Estefan are just some of the stars featured in “The Latin Explosion: A New Amer-ica.” It’s a documentary

that explores how the growing Latino com-munity is influencing mainstream American music. 9 p.m., HBO.

On “Fargo,” someone has kidnapped a member of the ruthlessly violent Gerhardt family. Don’t you

know, that could be a huge mistake. 10 p.m., FX.

“The Day Hitler Died”: Hitler’s final days are reconstructed from 1948 interviews. 8 p.m., Smithsonian.

From Herald news services

THE CLICKER

TODAY IN HISTORY

SMITHSONIAN CHANNEL This photo shows an actor portraying Adolf Hitler (seated) addressing his top generals in the new Smithsonian Channel special, “The Day Hitler Died.” The documentary premieres on the Smithsonian Channel on Monday at 8 p.m.

Film of Hitler confidants set for Smithsonian Channel debut

Today is Monday, Nov. 16, the 320th day of 2015. There are 45 days left in the year.

Today’s highlights:On Nov. 15, 1945, the

United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Orga-nization (UNESCO) was founded at the conclusion of a conference in London. “The Lost Weekend,” star-ring Ray Milland and Jane Wyman,” was released by Paramount Pictures.

On this date:In 1776, British troops

captured Fort Washington in New York during the American Revolution.

In 1885, Canadian rebel leader Louis Riel was exe-cuted for high treason.

In 1907, Oklahoma became the 46th state of the union.

In 1914, the newly cre-ated Federal Reserve Banks opened in 12 cities.

In 1917, Georges Clem-enceau again became prime

minister of France.In 1933, the United States

and the Soviet Union estab-lished diplomatic relations.

In 1939, mob boss Al Capone, ill with syphilis, was released from prison after serving 7½ years for tax evasion and failure to file tax returns.

In 1959, the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical “The Sound of Music” opened on Broadway.

In 1960, Academy Award-winning actor Clark Gable died in Los Angeles at age 59.

In 1973, Skylab 4, carrying a crew of three astronauts, was launched from Cape Canaveral on an 84-day mission.

In 1989, six Jesuit priests, a housekeeper and her daughter were slain by army troops at the Uni-versity of Central America Jose Simeon Canas in El Salvador.

In 1993, President Bill Clinton signed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, making it harder for gov-ernment to interfere with religious practices.

Ten years ago: Hoping to reverse the deteriora-tion of pension plans, the Senate voted 97-2 to force companies to make up underfunding and live up to promises made to employees. (The bill, how-ever, has yet to become law.) Vice President Dick Cheney joined the chorus of Republican criticism of Democrats who contended the Bush administra-tion had manipulated intelligence on Iraq, an accusation Cheney called “one of the most dishonest and reprehensible charges ever aired in this city.” “This Is Your Life” host Ralph Edwards died in West Hol-lywood at age 92.

The Associated Press

By Steven WuzubiaHealth Correspondent;

Clearwater, Florida: Dr. Meir Shinitzky, Ph.D., is a former visiting professor at Duke University, recipient of the prestigious J.F. Kennedy Prize and author of more than 200 international scientifi c papers on human body cells. But now he’s come up with what the medical world considers his greatest accomplishment — A vital compound. so powerful, it’s reported to repair… even regrow damaged brain cells. In layman’s terms — Bring back your memory power. And leave you feeling more focused and clear-headed than you have in years!

Dr. Shinitsky explains this phenomenon in simple terms; “Science has shown when your brain nutrient levels drop, you can start to experience memory problems and overall mental fatigue. Your ability to concentrate and stay focused becomes compromised. And gradually, a “mental fog” sets in. It can damage every aspect of your life”. Not only do brain cells die but they become dysfunctional as if they begin to fade away as we age. This affects our ability to have mental clarity and focus and impacts our ability to remember things that were easy for us to do in our 20’s and 30’s.

Scientists think the biggest cause of brain deterioration in older people is the decreased functioning of membranes and molecules that surround the brain cells. These really are the transmitters that connect the tissues or the brain cells to one another that help us with our sharp memory, clear thinking and mental focus, even our powers to reason well. “When we are in our 20’s” according to Dr. Shinitzky “our body produces key substances like phosphatidylserine and phosphatidic acid”…unfortunately they are believed to be critical essential nutrients that just fade away with age, much like our memories often do leading to further mental deterioration.

As we get older it becomes more frustrating as there is little comfort when you forget names… misplace your keys…or just feel “a little confused”. And even though your foggy memory gets laughed off as just another “senior moment,” it’s not very funny when it keeps happening to you.

The Missing Link is Found and Tested

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The group taking phosphatidylserine, not only enjoyed sharper memory, but listen to this… they were also more upbeat and remarkably more happy. In contrast, the moods of the individuals who took the placebo (starch pill), remained unaffected….no mental or mood improvement at all.

Vital Nutrient Reverses “Scatter Brain”

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Earth-Shaking SciencePublished, clinical reports show

replenishing your body’s natural supply of Phosphatidylserine, not only helps sharpen your memory and concentration — but also helps “perk you up” and put you in a better mood. PS as it turns out also helps to reduce everyday stress and elevate your mood by lowering your body’s production of the hormone cortisol. When cortisol levels are too high for too long you experience fatigue, bad moods and weakness. This drug-free brain-boosting formula enters your bloodstream fast (in as little as thirty minutes).

Offi cially Reviewed by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration: Lipogen PS Plus is the ONLY Health Supplement that has a “Qualifi ed Health Claim for both Cognitive Dysfunction and Dementia”.

Special Opportunity For Our Readers

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THESE STATEMENTS HAVE NOT BEEN EVALUATED BY THE US FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION. THESE PRODUCTS ARE NOT INTENDED TO DI-AGNOSE, TREAT, CURE OR PREVENT ANY DISEASE. RESULTS BASED UPON AVERAGES. MODELS ARE USED IN ALL PHOTOS TO PROTECT PRIVACY

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My Memory Started to Scare Me. I would forget all kinds of things and something that I just said earlier

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Doctor’s Memory BreakthroughADVERTISEMENT

280600_4.9_x_20.indd 1 11/12/15 8:49 AM

1467052

Page 13: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

The Daily Herald Monday, 11.16.2015 B5

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Circulation Call CenterThe Daily Herald, a division of Sound Publishing, Inc., has a Customer Service Representative po- sition available, up to 25.0 hours per week.

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ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE / SPECIAL PROJECTS MANAGER (EVERETT, WA)

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ANNUAL FALL COIN & STAMP

SHOWNov. 21st - 10-5

Nov. 22nd - 10-3:30Free Admission

12810 35th Avenue Southeast

Everett, WA 98208

Annual Holiday BazaarSaturday Nov. 21, 2015 9-4

Everett United Church of Christ

22 vendors selling hand- made & commercial gifts in one place.

Cedar Park NorthshoreChristmas Bazaar

Nov 21st, 9am to 4pm18737 68th Ave NE,

KenmoreMany exciting and

unique hand crafted items for everyone on

your list!Call Jenni at

425-939-1377or email

[email protected]

“FOLLOW THE STAR” Arts & Craft Fair

Friday, November 27th Saturday, Nov. 28th

10 am-4 pm *Over 60 Tables of Handmade Crafts*

*Delectable Lunch in the Starlight Café*

Sponsored by: Analia Chapter #112 O.E.S. Edmonds Masonic

Center, 515 Dayton, Edmonds

Holiday Toy Sale & Vendor Fair

20,000 sf of amazing deals on gently used & n e w t oy s , g a m e s , books, winter coats & so much more! Just in time for the holidays! M a ke yo u r bu d g e t s t re tch fu r ther th is season. And over 25+ vendors showcasing their unique products & services- there is something for every- one at this sale event!

Nov. 19-21stGold Creek Church4326 148th St SE

Mill CreekThurs.,5-8pm

Fri., 9-7pmSat., 9-3 (many items

50% off on Sat!) www.lynnwood.jbfsale.com

MOPSBOUTIQUE

Sat., Nov. 2110 a.m.-4 p.m.

New Life Church6830 Highland Drive

Everett50+ VendorsGifts, Crafts,

Home decor, Jewelryand Much More

Puget Sound Artists’ Gift Show

Sat 11/21, 10-6pm at Ar tWorks, 201 2nd Ave S. Edmonds. 30 art- ists, High quality, one-of- a-kind gifts by local pro- fessional artists. pottery, jewelr y, wood, photo, paintings, cards, calen- dars, scarves, purses, c h o c o l a t e s , h o n e y, soaps. free parking, free admission.

SEATTLE HOLIDAY BAZAAR

Gi f t s , C ra f t s , Baked Goods, Treasures and much more...

Friday, 11/20, 9am-4pmSatur., 11/21, 9am-3pm

BALLARD NW SENIOR CENTER, 5429 32nd Avenue NW, Seat t le, WA 98107 (2 b locks North of Locks)

Happy Birthday: Speak your mind and fol-low through with hard work, practicality and con�dence. Let past experiences help you make good choices and bring about the chang-es that will allow you to use your skills to their fullest. A wide variety of opportunities await you if you are progressive and ready to put yourself on the line. Your numbers are 3, 8, 19, 23, 32, 39, 45.

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Show some initiative. If you wait too long, someone will outmaneuver you. Look out for yourself and refuse to let anyone charm you into taking on responsibilities that don't belong to you. Com-pliments will not pay the bills. ★★

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Consistency will make you look good and help you out-perform anyone who is trying to beat you at your own game. It's vital for you to stay fo-cused and do your best to �nish what you start. Don't let emotional issues cost you �nancially. ★★★★★

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Get involved in activities that are conducive to meeting new people or sharing something special with someone you love. Take pride in the way you look and put your best foot forward. Don't ne-glect your responsibilities. ★★★

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Do the things you enjoy. Take care of your health and be careful while doing anything that requires physical ac-tion or working with dangerous equipment. A �nancial investment looks inviting. Check out a piece of property. ★★★

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Don't back someone else �nancially. A deal being o�ered isn't as good as you are being led to believe. Invest in your skills and knowledge, not in what some-one else is trying to accomplish. Romance will improve your life. ★★★

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Share concerns with friends and you'll come up with a solution to a problem that has been keeping you awake at night. Honesty will bring emotions to the surface. Confront anyone who has been lean-ing on you too heavily. ★★★★★

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): You'll face prob-lems at home if you try to ignore the emotional issues that are bothering you. Check out ways to cut corners or bring in extra cash if your �-nances are getting you down. Update your look for a quick pick-me-up. ★★

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Expand an idea you have and share your plans with the people you feel can contribute. A steady approach and a unique presentation will capture attention. Short trips will pay o� as long as you are open to suggestions. ★★★★

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Doubt will set if you aren't precise and detailed in all that you do. It's important to express your thoughts and ask questions if something is unclear. You can bring about positive changes at home that will improve your love life. ★★★

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Don't let a last-minute change of plans end up costing you �nancially. Stay on top of your money matters and avoid joint ventures. A discussion with someone you work with will help you ad-vance. Protect your health. ★★★

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Someone will provide you with poor information. Make changes based on what works best for you. �ere is money to be made if you invest in your abilities, your appearance and your future. Ro-mance will lead to a commitment. ★★★

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): �e information you pick up at a tradeshow, conference or just by listening to someone who has more life ex-perience will help push you in a favorable di-rection. A partnership or contribution will be the in�uence and boost you need. ★★★★

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Newspaperadvertising is still one of the most effective ways to

market your home.

Page 14: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

B6 Monday, 11.16.2015 The Daily Herald

PUBLIC NOTICEADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS

Snohomish County Fire Protection District No. 17Sealed bids for ONE (1) OR MORE 1500 GPM UL Rated Triple Combination Rescue Pumper and equipment will be received by Snohomish County Fire Protection District No. 17 up to but not later than 7:00 PM, December 10th, 2015 at 116 S. Granite Ave., Granite Falls, WA 98252 at which time they shall be publicly opened and recorded. Vendors may obtain bid documents from Fire Chief Jim Haverfield at 360-691-5553.Snohomish County Fire Protection District No. 17PO Box 1049116 S. Granite AvenueGranite Falls, WA. 98252Snohomish County Fire Protection District No. 17 reserves the right to reject any or all bids, waive minor irregularities in the bidding process, and to accept the bid deemed best for the District.Advertisement Bid Date: November 16th, 2015Published: November 16, 2015. EDH669049

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATIONSTATE OF WASHINGTON COUNTY OF SNOHOMISHIn The General Court of Justice Superior Court Division

Jurisdiction of the ClerkTo Melvin Lee Veal: Take notice that Petitioner Adam Patrick Hunter seeks relief against you. Answer is required to be filed not later than December 9, 2015 in special proceeding case 15-SP- 36.The nature of the relief being sought is as follows: Adoption of minor child: Lucy Annabella Veal, born on December 2, 2009. You are required to make a defense to such pleading not later than December 9, 2015 and upon your failure to do so, your consent will be found unnecessary, and upon entry of the decree, your parental rights will be terminated. This the November 9, 2015. Lauren E. Arizaga-Womble/ The Twiford Law Firm, Attorney for Petitioner. P.O. Box 99 Elizabeth City, NC 27909.Published: November 9, 16, 23, 2015. EDH667976

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATIONSTATE OF WASHINGTON COUNTY OF SNOHOMISHIn The General Court of Justice Superior Court Division

Jurisdiction of the ClerkTo Melvin Lee Veal: Take notice that Petitioner Adam Patrick Hunter seeks relief against you. Answer is required to be filed not later than December 9, 2015 in special proceeding case 15-SP- 37.The nature of the relief being sought is as follows: Adoption of minor child: Zion Andrew Veal, born on June 7, 2008.You are required to make a defense to such pleading not later than December 9, 2015 and upon your failure to do so, your consent will be found unnecessary, and upon entry of the decree, your parental rights will be terminated. This the November 9, 2015 Lauren E. Arizaga-Womble/ The Twiford Law Firm, Attorney for Petitioner. P.O. Box 99 Elizabeth City, NC 27909.Published: November 9, 16, 23, 2015. EDH667975

United States District Court for the District of IdahoCivil Action No. 4:15-cv-00345-CWD

Atain Specialty Insurance Company, Plaintiffvs.Mountain Resort Services; Robert F.Caesar Jr.; Stacey B. Caesar; RickyArmand Dore; The Estate ofJoseph Scott Deluca, Defendants.

SUMMONS IN A CIVIL ACTIONTo: Ricky Armand Dore A lawsuit has been filed against you. Within 21 days after service of this summons on you (not counting the day you received it)-or 60 days if you are the United States or a United States agency, or an officer or employee of the United States described in Fed. R. Civ. P. 12 (a)(2) or (3)-you must serve on the plaintiff an answer to the complaint on file with the United States District Court, District of Idaho, or a motion under Rule 12 of the Federal rules of Civil Procedure. The answer or motion must be served on the plaintiff or plaintiff’s attorney, whose name and address are: Jonathan H. Rupp, Scalley Reading Bates Hansen & Rasmussen, 15 West South Temple, Suite 600, Salt Lake City, Utah 84101. If you fail to respond, judgment by default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint. You also must file your answer or motion with the court.Published: November 16, 23, 30; December 7, 2015. EDH668940

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 Monday, November 23, 2015, at the hour of 10:30 a.m., in the Henry M. Jackson Board Room, 8th Floor, Robert J. Drewel Building, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, Everett, Washington to consider proposed Ordinance No. 15-096. A summary of the ordinance is as follows:

ORDINANCE NO. 15-096 RELATING TO PROPERTY TAXES,

FIXING THE 2016 ROAD PROPERTY TAX LEVY FOR SNOHOMISH COUNTY

Section 1. The annual amount of road proper ty tax levy necessary to raise the amount of revenues required by Snohomish County for expenditure during calendar year 2016 is hereby levied upon all real and personal proper ty subject to taxation in unincorporated Snohomish County as set forth in the table below.

2016 ROADL PROPERTY TAX LEVY Estimated Use of Funds Levy Rate Levy Amount Road Levy 1.565 $62,295,090 Section 2. The amount set forth in Section 1 is hereby levied upon all real and personal property in accordance with certified assessed values and the completed tax rolls of Snohomish County for collection in 2016. That property tax levy amount is intended:

(a) to include an increase above the County’s 2015 levy amount as authorized by separate ordinance pursuant to RCW 84.55.120; (b) to include any additional amounts allowed under (i) the new const ruct ion increases in assessed va lue due to construction of wind turbine facilities, improvements to property and state-assessed property provisions of RCW 84.55.010 and, ( i i) as provided pursuant to RCW 84.55.070, the refund provisions of Chapters 84.68 and 84.69 RCW; and (c) to exclude any amounts in excess of the 2016 maximum levy amount resulting from application of the limit factor, plus those additional amounts described in paragraph (b) above;

and shall be adjusted by the County Assessor when property values are certified.Public Testimony: Anyone interested may testify concerning the above-described matter. The Chair of the Council may choose to limit testimony to three minutes in the interest of accommodating all persons wishing to testify. Written testimony is encouraged and may be sent to the office of the County Council at the following address: Snohomish County Council, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, MS-609, Everett, WA 98201. Faxed documents may be sent to (425) 388-3496 or E-mail comments to [email protected]. Where to Get Copies of the Proposed Ordinance: Copies of the full text of the ordinance are available in the office of the County Council. They may be obtained by call ing (425) 388-3494, 1-(800) 562-4367 x3494, TDD (425) 388-3700 or by e-mailing to [email protected]. Copies may be picked up at the Council office at 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, 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.snohomishcountywa.gov/2134/Council-Hearings-Calendar.American Disabilities Act Notice: Accommodations for persons with d isabi l i t ies wi l l be prov ided upon request . P lease make arrangements one week prior to the hearing by calling Debbie Eco at (425) 388-3494, 1-800-562-4367 x 3494, or TDD# 388-3700. DATED this 5th day of November, 2015 SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCIL Snohomish County, Washington /s/ Dave Somers Council ChairATTEST:/s/ Debbie EcoClerk of the Council#104482Published: November 9, 16, 2015. EDH668002

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 Monday, November 23, 2015, at the hour of 10:30 a.m., in the Henry M. Jackson Board Room, 8th Floor, Robert J. Drewel Building, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, Everett, Washington to consider proposed Ordinance No. 15-097.

ORDINANCE NO. 15-097RELATING TO CONSERVATION FUTURES PROPERTY TAXES,

FINDING SUBSTANTIAL NEED TO ESTABLISH A LIMIT FACTOR FOR THE 2016 CONSERVATION FUTURES

PROPERTY TAX LEVY, AND ESTABLISHING A LIMIT FACTOR WHEREAS, pursuant to Chapter 84.55 RCW, a tax ing jurisdiction may levy property taxes in an amount no greater than the highest regular tax which could have been lawfully levied beginning with the 1985 levy multiplied by a limit factor; and WHEREAS, under RCW 84.55.005(2)(c), the limit factor for taxing jurisdictions with a population of 10,000 or greater is the lesser of 101 percent or 100 percent plus inflation; and WHEREAS, RCW 84.55.005(1) def ines inf lat ion as the percentage change in the implicit price deflator for personal consumption expenditures for the United States as published for the most recent twelve-month period by the Bureau of Economic Analysis of the federal Department of Commerce by September 25 of the year before the taxes are payable; and WHEREAS, inflation calculated by the Department of Commerce in September 2015, is lower than one hundred one (101) percent for 2016; and WHEREAS, Chapter 84.55 RCW allows taxing jurisdictions to provide for the use of a limit factor of 101 percent or less upon a finding of substantial need, provided that for jurisdictions having legislative authorities with more than four members the action is approved by a majority plus one vote; and WHEREAS, Snohomish County has suffered losses related to the SR 520 Event and other legal claims; andWHEREAS, the Snohomish County Council finds that these and related conditions create a substantial need for a limit factor for the 2016 conservation futures levy of 101 percent; NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED: Section 1. Pursuant to RCW 84.55.0101, the Snohomish County Council finds that there is a substantial need for use of a limit factor of 101 percent for the 2016 conservation futures property tax levy, and therefore establishes a limit factor of 101 percent. Public Testimony: Anyone interested may testify concerning the above-described matter. The Chair of the Council may choose to limit testimony to three minutes in the interest of accommodating all persons wishing to testify. Written testimony is encouraged and may be sent to the office of the County Council at the following address: Snohomish County Council, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, MS-609, Everett, WA 98201. Faxed documents may be sent to (425) 388-3496 or E-mail comments to [email protected]. Where to Get Copies of the Proposed Ordinance: Copies of the full text of the ordinance are available in the office of the County Council. They may be obtained by call ing (425) 388-3494, 1-(800) 562-4367 x3494, TDD (425) 388-3700 or by e-mailing to [email protected]. Copies may be picked up at the Council office at 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, 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.snohomishcountywa.gov/2134/Council-Hearings-Calendar.American Disabilities Act Notice: Accommodations for persons with d isabi l i t ies wi l l be prov ided upon request . P lease make arrangements one week prior to the hearing by calling Debbie Eco at (425) 388-3494, 1-800-562-4367 x 3494, or TDD# 388-3700. DATED this 5th day of November, 2015 SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCIL Snohomish County, Washington /s/ Debbie Eco Clerk of the Council#104482Published: November 9, 16, 2015. EDH668003

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGMunicipal Code Amendment Request

PROJECT NAME/ FILE NUMBER: High Urban Residential (HUR) Impervious Surface Allowance Code Amendment / LUA2015-0042APPLICANT: Seattle Pacific Development, Inc.PROJECT LOCATION: Parcels within the City of Lake Stevens

zoned High Urban Residential (HUR) and outside of the Subareas

DATE & TIME OF PUBLIC HEARING: November 24, 2015 at 7 pmHEARING LOCATION:

Lake Stevens School District Educational Service Center(Administrative Building)12309 22nd Street NE, Lake Stevens, WA 98258

PROPOSED PROJECT DESCRIPTION:• Seattle Pacific Development, Inc. requests an amendment

to the City of Lake Stevens Municipal Code (LSMC) 14.48.055: Maximum Impervious Surface. The proposal is to increase the allowed amount of impervious surface in the HUR zoning district from 40% to 65%.

• The City issued a SEPA Determination of Non-significance on July 21, 2015.

• The City of Lake Stevens Planning Commission made a motion to forward a recommendation of approval of the code amendment to City Council following a public hearing held September 2, 2015. The Lake Stevens City Council will consider adoption of the proposal at a scheduled public hearing.

PUBLIC REVIEW AND COMMENT:Any person may submit written comments before the hearing or testify at the public hearing. Substantial changes in the proposed amendment may be made following the public hearing. Comments can be submitted to City Hall, Attn: Stacie Pratschner, PO Box 257, Lake Stevens, WA 98258 or by email at

[email protected] project file, including the full text of the amendment and the Planning Commission’s recommendation is available for review at the Permit Center, located behind City Hall, Monday-Friday 8:30 am- 4:30 pm. Limited materials are available at:

http://www.ci.lake-stevens.wa.us/index.aspx?nid=360.For additional information, please contact the Department of Planning and Community Development at 425-377-3223.

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: November 9, 16, 2015. EDH667990

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 Monday, November 23, 2015, at the hour of 10:30 a.m., in the Henry M. Jackson Board Room, 8th Floor, Robert J. Drewel Building, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, Everett, Washington to consider proposed Ordinance No. 15-093. A summary of the ordinance is as follows:

ORDINANCE NO. 15-093RELATING TO PROPERTY TAXES, FIXING THE 2016 GENERAL

PROPERTY TAX LEVY FOR SNOHOMISH COUNTY AND PRESERVING FUTURE LEVY CAPACITY

Section 1. The annual amount of general property tax levy necessary to raise the amount of revenues required by Snohomish County for expenditure during calendar year 2016 is hereby levied upon all real and personal proper ty subject to taxation in Snohomish County as set forth in the table below.

2016 GENERAL PROPERTY TAX LEVY Estimated Use of Funds Levy Rate Levy Amount General Levy 0.898 $86,489,485 Section 2. The amount set forth in Section 1 is hereby levied upon all real and personal property in accordance with certified assessed values and the completed tax rolls of Snohomish County for collection in 2016. That property tax levy amount is intended:

(a) to include an increase above the County’s 2015 levy amount as authorized by separate ordinance pursuant to RCW 84.55.120; (b) to include any additional amounts allowed under (i) the new const ruct ion increases in assessed va lue due to construction of wind turbine facilities, improvements to property and state-assessed property provisions of RCW 84.55.010 and, ( i i) as provided pursuant to RCW 84.55.070, the refund provisions of Chapters 84.68 and 84.69 RCW; and (c) to exclude any amounts in excess of the 2016 maximum levy amount resulting from application of the limit factor, plus those additional amounts described in paragraph (b) above;

and shall be adjusted by the County Assessor when property values are certified.Public Testimony: Anyone interested may testify concerning the above-described matter. The Chair of the Council may choose to limit testimony to three minutes in the interest of accommodating all persons wishing to testify. Written testimony is encouraged and may be sent to the office of the County Council at the following address: Snohomish County Council, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, MS-609, Everett, WA 98201. Faxed documents may be sent to (425) 388-3496 or E-mail comments to [email protected]. Where to Get Copies of the Proposed Ordinance: Copies of the full text of the ordinance are available in the office of the County Council. They may be obtained by call ing (425) 388-3494, 1-(800) 562-4367 x3494, TDD (425) 388-3700 or by e-mailing to [email protected]. Copies may be picked up at the Council office at 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, 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.snohomishcountywa.gov/2134/Council-Hearings-Calendar.American Disabilities Act Notice: Accommodations for persons with d isabi l i t ies wi l l be prov ided upon request . P lease make arrangements one week prior to the hearing by calling Debbie Eco at (425) 388-3494, 1-800-562-4367 x 3494, or TDD# 388-3700. DATED this 5th day of November, 2015 SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCIL Snohomish County, Washington /s/ Dave Somers Council ChairATTEST:/s/ Debbie EcoClerk of the Council#104482Published: November 9, 16, 2015. EDH667998

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 Monday, November 23, 2015, at the hour of 10:30 a.m., in the Henry M. Jackson Board Room, 8th Floor, Robert J. Drewel Building, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, Everett, Washington to consider proposed Ordinance No. 15-091.

ORDINANCE NO. 15-091RELATING TO GENERAL PROPERTY TAXES, FINDING

SUBSTANTIAL NEED TO ESTABLISH A LIMIT FACTOR FOR THE 2016 GENERAL PROPERTY TAX LEVY AND

ESTABLISHING A LIMIT FACTOR WHEREAS, pursuant to Chapter 84.55 RCW, a tax ing jurisdiction may levy property taxes in an amount no greater than the highest regular tax which could have been lawfully levied beginning with the 1985 levy multiplied by a limit factor; and WHEREAS, under RCW 84.55.005(2)(c), the limit factor for taxing jurisdictions with a population of 10,000 or greater is the lesser of 101 percent or 100 percent plus inflation; and WHEREAS, RCW 84.55.005(1) def ines inf lat ion as the percentage change in the implicit price deflator for personal consumption expenditures for the United States as published for the most recent twelve-month period by the Bureau of Economic Analysis of the federal Department of Commerce by September 25 of the year before the taxes are payable; and WHEREAS, inflation calculated by the Department of Commerce in September 2015, is lower than one hundred one (101) percent for 2016; and WHEREAS, Chapter 84.55 RCW allows taxing jurisdictions to provide for the use of a limit factor of 101 percent or less upon a finding of substantial need, provided that for jurisdictions having legislative authorities with more than four members the action is approved by a majority plus one vote; and WHEREAS, Snohomish County has suffered losses related to the SR 520 Event and other legal claims; andWHEREAS, the Snohomish County Council finds that these and related conditions create a substantial need for a limit factor for the 2016 general levy of 101 percent; NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED: Section 1. Pursuant to RCW 84.55.0101, the Snohomish County Council finds that there is a substantial need for use of a limit factor of 101 percent for the 2016 general property tax levy, and therefore establishes a limit factor of 101 percent.Public Testimony: Anyone interested may testify concerning the above-described matter. The Chair of the Council may choose to limit testimony to three minutes in the interest of accommodating all persons wishing to testify. Written testimony is encouraged and may be sent to the office of the County Council at the following address: Snohomish County Council, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, MS-609, Everett, WA 98201. Faxed documents may be sent to (425) 388-3496 or E-mail comments to [email protected]. Where to Get Copies of the Proposed Ordinance: Copies of the full text of the ordinance are available in the office of the County Council. They may be obtained by call ing (425) 388-3494, 1-(800) 562-4367 x3494, TDD (425) 388-3700 or by e-mailing to [email protected]. Copies may be picked up at the Council office at 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, 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.snohomishcountywa.gov/2134/Council-Hearings-Calendar.American Disabilities Act Notice: Accommodations for persons with d isabi l i t ies wi l l be prov ided upon request . P lease make arrangements one week prior to the hearing by calling Debbie Eco at (425) 388-3494, 1-800-562-4367 x 3494, or TDD# 388-3700. DATED this 5th day of November, 2015 SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCIL Snohomish County, Washington /s/ Debbie Eco Clerk of the Council#104482Published: November 9, 16, 2015. EDH667992

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 Monday, November 23, 2015, at the hour of 10:30 a.m., in the Henry M. Jackson Board Room, 8th Floor, Robert J. Drewel Building, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, Everett, Washington to consider proposed Ordinance No. 15-092.

ORDINANCE NO. 15-092AUTHORIZING AN INCREASE IN GENERAL TAX REVENUES

FOR PROPERTY TAXES COLLECTED IN 2016 WHEREAS, the County Council held a public hearing on November 23, 2015, following public notice as required by law, to consider the County’s annual budget, including revenue sources for the calendar year 2016, pursuant to RCW 84.55.120; and WHEREAS, the County Counci l , after hear ing and duly considering all relevant evidence and testimony presented, including evidence and testimony presented upon consideration of proposed Ordinance No. 15 - _____, has determined that an increase in general tax revenue from the previous year, in addition to the increases resulting from the addition of new construction, improvements to property, newly constructed wind turbine facilities, and any increase in the value of state-assessed property under RCW 84.55.010 and from the refund provisions of Chapters 84.68 and 84.69 RCW, is necessary in order to discharge the expected expenses and obligations of the County and in its best interests.NOW THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED: Section 1. Pursuant to RCW 84.55.120, an additional one percent (1%) increase in proper ty tax revenues from taxes collected in 2015 is hereby authorized in the total amount of $860,000 for the 2016 general levy. Said increase is in addition to increases result ing from the addit ion of new construction, improvements to property, newly constructed wind turbine facilities, and any increase in the value of state-assessed property under RCW 84.55.010, and from the refund provisions of Chapters 84.68 and 84.69 RCW.Public Testimony: Anyone interested may testify concerning the above-described matter. The Chair of the Council may choose to limit testimony to three minutes in the interest of accommodating all persons wishing to testify. Written testimony is encouraged and may be sent to the office of the County Council at the following address: Snohomish County Council, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, MS-609, Everett, WA 98201. Faxed documents may be sent to (425) 388-3496 or E-mail comments to [email protected]. Where to Get Copies of the Proposed Ordinance: Copies of the full text of the ordinance are available in the office of the County Council. They may be obtained by call ing (425) 388-3494, 1-(800) 562-4367 x3494, TDD (425) 388-3700 or by e-mailing to [email protected]. Copies may be picked up at the Council office at 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, 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.snohomishcountywa.gov/2134/Council-Hearings-Calendar.American Disabilities Act Notice: Accommodations for persons with d isabi l i t ies wi l l be prov ided upon request . P lease make arrangements one week prior to the hearing by calling Debbie Eco at (425) 388-3494, 1-800-562-4367 x 3494, or TDD# 388-3700. DATED this 5th day of November, 2015 SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCIL Snohomish County, Washington /s/ Debbie Eco Clerk of the Council#104482Published: November 9, 16, 2015. EDH667996

AGENDACity of Lynnwood

Transportation Benefit District (TBD) Board Council Chambers, City Hall

19100 44th Avenue W, Lynnwood, WA, 98036Special Meeting

November 18, 20157:00 P.M.

10 Call to Order20 Roll Call30 Approval of Minutes - July 8, 2015 Special Meeting40 Voucher Approval50 Citizen Comments and Communications60 Presentation, discussion and approval of the 2014 TBD

Annual Report70 Ordinance #9 - 2016 Budget A Public Hearing B Consideration, discussion, and possible action on said Ordinance80 Presentation, Discussion and Possible Final Action or other

Disposition: Transportation Funding Status and Needs, Potential Funding

Sources and Next Steps for Potential Funding, Including But Not Limited to Options for Possible Ballot Measure

o Possible motion relating to potential ballot measure resolution for increased sales tax and/or increased or decreased vehicle registration fee funding options90 Scheduling for potential upcoming special meeting(s)100 Adjournment

Regular TBD Board meetings are held on the second Monday of March and the second Monday of October of each year in

the City of Lynnwood City Council Chambers starting at 6:00PM. In addition to the regular Board meetings, special

Board meetings may be scheduled from time to time.Published: November 16, 2015. EDH669136

CITY OF BRIERORDINANCE NO. 428

AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF BRIER AMENDING THE RATES CHARGED FOR STORMWATER SERVICE TO PROVIDE NECESSARY REVENUES TO FUND CAPITAL P RO J E C T S A N D O N G O I N G M A I N T E N A N C E A N D OPERATION OF THE SURFACE WATER SYSTEM AND TO PRESERVE THE SOLVENCY OF THE UTILITY; AMENDING CHAPTER 12.32 OF THE BRIER MUNICIPAL CODE; PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILITY; ESTABLISHING AN EFFECTIVE DATE; AND PROVIDING FOR SUMMARY PUBLICATION; WAS APPROVED BY THE BRIER CITY C O U N C I L AT T H E I R R E G U L A R M E E T I N G H E L D NOVEMBER 10, 2015.

THE FULL TEXT WILL BE MAILED UPON REQUEST.Paula SwisherCity ClerkPublished: November 16, 2015. EDH669100

CITY OF LAKE STEVENSLAKE STEVENS, WASHINGTON

ORDINANCE NO. 944AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF LAKE STEVENS LEVYING TAXES UPON ALL PROPERTY - REAL, PERSONAL AND UTILITY, SUBJECT TO TAXATION WITHIN THE CORPORATE LIMITS OF THE CITY OF LAKE STEVENS, WASHINGTON FOR THE YEAR 2016.Published: November 16, 2015. EDH669127

CITY OF LYNNWOODNOTICE OF APPLICATION & IMPENDING DECISION

LIFT STATIONS 4 & 8 AND SANITARY SEWER GRAVITY AND FORCE MAIN EXTENSIONSFILE NO. ERC-003296-2015

Application and Project Description On November 4, 2015, David Mach, (City of Lynnwood Public Works) submitted an application on behalf of the applicant, the City of Lynnwood. The City of Lynnwood is seeking a threshold determination for proposed construction of City of Lynnwood Lift Stations 4 and 8 and construction of sanitary sewer gravity and force main extensions. Lift Station 4 is proposed at 18119 26th Ave. W (Parcel 00372800400102). The existing Lift Station 4 is located at 18121 Alderwood Mall Pkwy. The existing and proposed Lift Station 8 is located at 3009 Alderwood Mall Blvd. in the southwest corner of parcel 00372600100305. Approximately 1,140 lineal feet of 8-inch force main and 3,225 lineal feet of 12-inch gravity main will be installed between Lift Stations 4 and 8. Proposed construction is to begin in 2016 and completed in 2017. For project specific informatin, please contact Resident Capital P r o j e c t E n g i n e e r, D av i d M a c h , P. E . , 4 2 5 - 6 7 0 - 5 2 7 5 , [email protected]:

Lift Station 4: 18119 26th Ave. W;Lift Station 8: 3009 Alderwood Mall Blvd.

SEPA Environmental Review: The City has reviewed the proposed project for probable adverse environmental impacts and expects to issue a Determination of Nonsignificance (DNS) for this project. The optional DNS process in WAC 197-11-355 is being used. This may be the only opportunity to comment on the environmental impacts of the proposed project. The proposal may include mitigation measures under applicable codes, and the project review process may incorporate or require mitigation measures regardless of whether an EIS is prepared. Agencies, t r ibes, and the publ ic are encouraged to review and comment on the proposed project and its probable environmental impacts. A copy of the subsequent threshold determination for the proposal may be obtained upon request.Additional Permits: Right-of-way use permit.Comments: Comments concerning SEPA Environmental Review should be mailed to the City of Lynnwood, Community Development Department, PO Box 5008, Lynnwood, WA 98046 OR delivered to the Permit Center at 4114 198th St SW, Suite 7. Comments must be submitted by 4:00 PM on November 30, 2015.Contact: The f i le on th is pro ject is mainta ined in the Communi ty Development Department office at the above listed address. Only persons who submit written comments to the Director or request a copy of the original decision may appeal the Director’s decision when it is issued. If you wish to be notified of any decision, the appeal rights of this application or if you have other questions, please contact Todd Hall, Project Manager, at (425) 670-5407 or [email protected]. Please make reference to ERC-003296- 2015 when making contact.Date of this Notice: November 16, 2015Comment Period Ends: November 30, 2015Published: November 16, 2015. EDH669026

CITY OF MONROENOTICE OF CITY COUNCIL

PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE is hereby given that a PUBLIC HEARING will be held on the proposed 2015 -2035 COMPREHENSIVE PLAN on Tuesday, December 1, 2015, at 7:00p.m. by the Monroe City Council in the Council Chambers at City Hall, 806 West Main Street, Monroe, Washington.PROJECT DESCRIPTION The City has prepared, and the Planning Commission has recommended, an update to the Monroe Comprehensive Plan. The Comprehensive Plan evaluates growth and proposes land use changes for the City over a 20 year planning horizon.PUBLIC COMMENT PROCEDURE Anyone w i sh i ng t o co mme n t o n t h e D ra f t 2 0 1 5 -2 0 3 5 Comprehensive Plan or provide other relevant information may do so in writing or appear in person before the City Council at the time and place of the public hearing. The document is available for review at Monroe City Hall, 806 W Main St., Monroe WA during regular business hours, Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., and can also be found on the City’s web site @ www.monroewa.gov/compplan.In considering the Planning Commission’s recommendation on the Comprehensive Plan, the City Council may make amendments to the draft Comprehensive Plan text, figures, maps, and/or tables prior to final adoption.Accommodations for people with disabilities will be provided upon request. Please contact City Hall at: 360.794.7400 and allow one- week advance notice.

Elizabeth M. Smoot, MMC, City ClerkPublished: November 16, 2015. EDH669034

Edmonds School District #15NOTICE OF INTENT TO SELL

REAL PROPERTY OF THE DISTRICT - Civic FieldEdmonds School District No. 15 proposes to sell all interest in approximately 6.07 acres, more or less, of real property, which it owns, commonly known as Civic Field, located at 310 6th Ave. N., in Edmonds, WA, Parcel #s 00434210102100, 00434210000000, 00434209900100. Per RCW 28A.335.120, the school district shall not take action for at least 45 days following the publication of this notice. A public hearing regarding this proposed sale will be held by the Board of Directors of Edmonds School District during its regular meeting on November 24th, 2015, 6:30pm, at the Educational Services Center at 20420 - 68th Ave. W., Lynnwood WA. Members of the public desiring to comment on the proposed sale may attend the hearing. Written comments should be addressed to the Executive Director of Business & Operations, at the Educational Services Center at 20420 - 68th Ave. W., Lynnwood WA, 98036. 425-431-7015. The Board will not consider comments received after the hearing.Published: November 16, 23, 2015. EDH669043

HIGHLAND WATER DISTRICT2016 Budget Hearing

Notice is hereby given that the Board of Commissioners of Highland Water District unanimously set the following date for the District’s 20016 Budget Hearing:

Thursday, December 10, 2015 at 7:00pmThe hearing will be held during the regular Board meeting at the District office located at 24602 Old Owen Rd, Monroe, WASigned,Donovan SheppardSecretary, Board of CommissionersPublished: November 16, 2015. EDH669116

SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCILSNOHOMISH COUNTY, WASHINGTON

NOTICE OF FINAL PLAT APPROVAL NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on November 10, 2015, the Snohomish County Council passed Motion No. 15-436 approving the final plat of Canton Park South Division II, fka Yorkshire PRD Div II, PFN 13-102333 FSD. The subject property is located at 17412 Sunset Road, Bothell; Snohomish County Washington. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that any person having standing to appeal the Snohomish County Council’s approval of this final plat must do so pursuant to chapter 36.70C RCW and the time periods set forth therein. Dated this 10th day of November, 2015. Randy Reed, MMC Asst. Clerk of the Council#107010Published: November 16, 2015. EDH669124

SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCILSNOHOMISH COUNTY, WASHINGTON

NOTICE OF FINAL PLAT APPROVAL NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on November 10, 2015, the Snohomish County Council passed Motion No. 15-437 approving the final plat of Canton Park South Division I, fka Yorkshire PRD Div I, PFN 05-126766 FSD. The subject property is located at 17428 Sunset Road, Bothell; Snohomish County Washington. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that any person having standing to appeal the Snohomish County Council’s approval of this final plat must do so pursuant to chapter 36.70C RCW and the time periods set forth therein. Dated this 10th day of November, 2015. Randy Reed, MMC Asst. Clerk of the Council#107010Published: November 16, 2015. EDH699122

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 Monday, November 23, 2015, at the hour of 10:30 a.m., in the Henry M. Jackson Board Room, 8th Floor, Robert J. Drewel Building, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, Everett, Washington to consider proposed Ordinance No. 15-094.

ORDINANCE NO. 15-094RELATING TO ROAD PROPERTY TAXES, FINDING

SUBSTANTIAL NEED TO ESTABLISH A LIMIT FACTOR FOR THE 2016 ROAD PROPERTY TAX LEVY AND ESTABLISHING A

LIMIT FACTOR WHEREAS, pursuant to Chapter 84.55 RCW, a tax ing jurisdiction may levy property taxes in an amount no greater than the highest regular tax which could have been lawfully levied beginning with the 1985 levy multiplied by a limit factor; and WHEREAS, under RCW 84.55.005(2)(c), the limit factor for taxing jurisdictions with a population of 10,000 or greater is the lesser of 101 percent or 100 percent plus inflation; and WHEREAS, RCW 84.55.005(1) def ines inf lat ion as the percentage change in the implicit price deflator for personal consumption expenditures for the United States as published for the most recent twelve-month period by the Bureau of Economic Analysis of the federal Department of Commerce by September 25 of the year before the taxes are payable; and WHEREAS, inflation calculated by the Department of Commerce in September 2015, is lower than one hundred one (101) percent for 2016; and WHEREAS, Chapter 84.55 RCW allows taxing jurisdictions to provide for the use of a limit factor of 101 percent or less upon a finding of substantial need, provided that for jurisdictions having legislative authorities with more than four members the action is approved by a majority plus one vote; and WHEREAS, Snohomish County has suffered losses related to the SR 520 Event and other legal claims; and WHEREAS, the Snohomish County Council finds that these and related conditions create a substantial need for a limit factor for the 2016 road levy of 101 percent; NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED:Section 1. Pursuant to RCW 84.55.0101, the Snohomish County Council finds that there is a substantial need for use of a limit factor of 101 percent for the 2016 road property tax levy, and therefore establishes a limit factor of 101 percent.Public Testimony: Anyone interested may testify concerning the above-described matter. The Chair of the Council may choose to limit testimony to three minutes in the interest of accommodating all persons wishing to testify. Written testimony is encouraged and may be sent to the office of the County Council at the following address: Snohomish County Council, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, MS-609, Everett, WA 98201. Faxed documents may be sent to (425) 388-3496 or E-mail comments to [email protected]. Where to Get Copies of the Proposed Ordinance: Copies of the full text of the ordinance are available in the office of the County Council. They may be obtained by call ing (425) 388-3494, 1-(800) 562-4367 x3494, TDD (425) 388-3700 or by e-mailing to [email protected]. Copies may be picked up at the Council office at 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, 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.snohomishcountywa.gov/2134/Council-Hearings-Calendar.American Disabilities Act Notice: Accommodations for persons with d isabi l i t ies wi l l be prov ided upon request . P lease make arrangements one week prior to the hearing by calling Debbie Eco at (425) 388-3494, 1-800-562-4367 x 3494, or TDD# 388-3700. DATED this 5th day of November, 2015 SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCIL Snohomish County, Washington /s/ Debbie Eco Clerk of the Council#104482Published: November 9, 16, 2015. EDH667999

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 Monday, November 23, 2015, at the hour of 10:30 a.m., in the Henry M. Jackson Board Room, 8th Floor, Robert J. Drewel Building, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, Everett, Washington to consider proposed Ordinance No. 15-095.

ORDINANCE NO. 15-095AUTHORIZING AN INCREASE IN ROAD TAX REVENUES

FOR PROPERTY TAXES COLLECTED IN 2016 WHEREAS, the County Council held a public hearing on November 23, 2015, following public notice as required by law, to consider the County’s annual budget, including revenue sources for the calendar year 2016, pursuant to RCW 84.55.120; and WHEREAS, the County Counci l , after hear ing and duly considering all relevant evidence and testimony presented, including evidence and testimony presented upon consideration of proposed Ordinance No. 15 - _____, has determined that an increase in road tax revenue from the previous year, in addition to the increases resulting from the addition of new construction, improvements to property, newly constructed wind turbine facilities, and any increase in the value of state-assessed property under RCW 84.55.010 and from the refund provisions of Chapters 84.68 and 84.69 RCW, is necessary in order to discharge the expected expenses and obligations of the County and in its best interests.NOW THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED: Section 1. Pursuant to RCW 84.55.120, an additional one percent (1%) increase in proper ty tax revenues from taxes collected in 2015 is hereby authorized in the total amount of $575,000 for the 2016 road levy. Said increase is in addition to increases result ing from the addit ion of new construction, improvements to property, newly constructed wind turbine facilities, and any increase in the value of state-assessed property under RCW 84.55.010, and from the refund provisions of Chapters 84.68 and 84.69 RCW.Public Testimony: Anyone interested may testify concerning the above-described matter. The Chair of the Council may choose to limit testimony to three minutes in the interest of accommodating all persons wishing to testify. Written testimony is encouraged and may be sent to the office of the County Council at the following address: Snohomish County Council, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, MS-609, Everett, WA 98201. Faxed documents may be sent to (425) 388-3496 or E-mail comments to [email protected]. Where to Get Copies of the Proposed Ordinance: Copies of the full text of the ordinance are available in the office of the County Council. They may be obtained by call ing (425) 388-3494, 1-(800) 562-4367 x3494, TDD (425) 388-3700 or by e-mailing to [email protected]. Copies may be picked up at the Council office at 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, 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.snohomishcountywa.gov/2134/Council-Hearings-Calendar.American Disabilities Act Notice: Accommodations for persons with d isabi l i t ies wi l l be prov ided upon request . P lease make arrangements one week prior to the hearing by calling Debbie Eco at (425) 388-3494, 1-800-562-4367 x 3494, or TDD# 388-3700. DATED this 5th day of November, 2015 SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCIL Snohomish County, Washington /s/ Debbie Eco Clerk of the Council#104482Published: November 9, 16, 2015. EDH668000

TOWN OF DARRINGTONNotice is hereby given that the Town of Darrington has issued a Determination of Nonsignificance for the consideration of the adopt ion o f a Ten-year major amendment update to i ts Comprehensive Plan, a non-project action under WAC 197-11- 704(2)(b). The DNS has been signed by Raelynn Jones, Deputy Clerk on November 10, 2015 and sent to the Department of Ecology. Comments may be submitted via mail or email to Raelynn J o n e s , S E PA O f f i c i a l f o r t h e To w n o f D a r r i n g t o n . [email protected] Darrington Town Hall P.O. Box 397, Darrington, WA 98241Published: November 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 2015. EDH668292

Page 15: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

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No. 15-4-01688-7 EverettPROBATE

NOTICE TO CREDITORS(RCW 11.40.030)

SUPERIOR COURT OF THESTATE OF WASHINGTON

FOR SNOHOMISH COUNTYEstate of

Florence Frances Petry,Deceased.

The personal representative n a m e d b e l ow h a s b e e n a p p o i n t e d a s p e r s o n a l representative 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 11.04.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the cour t. The claim must presented within the latter of: (1) Th i r ty days a f ter the p e r s o n a l r e p r e s e n t a t i ve served or mailed the notice to the c red i to r as prov ided under RCW 11.40.020(3); or (2) four months after the fi rst publication of the 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 a n d 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: November 9, 2015.Personal RepresentativeBERNARD P. KARLOVICH11422 167th PL NERedmond,WA 98052Published: November 9, 16, 23, 2015. EDH667963

NO. 15-4-01691-7PROBATE

NOTICE TO CREDITORS(RCW 11.40.030)

SUPERIOR COURT OFWASHINGTON

FOR SNOHOMISH COUNTYEstate of

VIRGINIA K. LEE,Deceased.

PLEASE TAKE NOTICET h e a b o v e 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 applicable statute of limita-tions, and (b) In the manner provided in RCW 11.40.070: (i) By fi ling the original of the c la im wi th the fo rego ing Court, and (ii) By serving on o r ma i l i ng to me a t t he 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 Publicationof this Notice:

November 9, 2015.THOMAS LEEPersonal Representative9408 217th St. SWEdmonds, WA 98020Published: November 9, 16, 23, 2015. EDH667988

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 Monday, November 23, 2015, at the hour of 10:30 a.m., in the Henry M. Jackson Board Room, 8th Floor, Robert J. Drewel Building, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, Everett, Washington to consider proposed Ordinance No. 15-098.

ORDINANCE NO. 15-098AUTHORIZING AN INCREASE IN CONSERVATION FUTURES

TAX REVENUES FOR PROPERTY TAXES COLLECTED IN 2016 WHEREAS, the County Council held a public hearing on November 23, 2015, following public notice as required by law, to consider the County’s annual budget, including revenue sources for the calendar year 2016, pursuant to RCW 84.55.120; and WHEREAS, the County Counci l , after hear ing and duly considering all relevant evidence and testimony presented, including evidence and testimony presented upon consideration of proposed Ordinance No. 15 - _____, has determined that an increase in property tax revenue from the previous year, in addition to the increases resulting from the addition of new construction, improvements to property, newly constructed wind turbine facilities, and any increase in the value of state-assessed property under RCW 84.55.010 and from the refund provisions of Chapters 84.68 and 84.69 RCW, is necessary in order to discharge the expected expenses and obligations of the County and in its best interests.NOW THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED: Section 1. Pursuant to RCW 84.55.120, an additional one percent (1%) increase in proper ty tax revenues from taxes collected in 2015 is hereby authorized in the total amount of $39,500 for the 2016 conservation futures levy. Said increase is in addi t ion to increases resul t ing f rom the addi t ion of new construction, improvements to property, newly constructed wind turbine facilities, and any increase in the value of state-assessed property under RCW 84.55.010, and from the refund provisions of Chapters 84.68 and 84.69 RCW.Public Testimony: Anyone interested may testify concerning the above-described matter. The Chair of the Council may choose to limit testimony to three minutes in the interest of accommodating all persons wishing to testify. Written testimony is encouraged and may be sent to the office of the County Council at the following address: Snohomish County Council, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, MS-609, Everett, WA 98201. Faxed documents may be sent to (425) 388-3496 or E-mail comments to [email protected]. Where to Get Copies of the Proposed Ordinance: Copies of the full text of the ordinance are available in the office of the County Council. They may be obtained by call ing (425) 388-3494, 1-(800) 562-4367 x3494, TDD (425) 388-3700 or by e-mailing to [email protected]. Copies may be picked up at the Council offi ce at 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, 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.snohomishcountywa.gov/2134/Council-Hearings-Calendar.American Disabilities Act Notice: Accommodations for persons with d isabi l i t ies wi l l be prov ided upon request . P lease make arrangements one week prior to the hearing by calling Debbie Eco at (425) 388-3494, 1-800-562-4367 x 3494, or TDD# 388-3700. DATED this 5th day of November, 2015 SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCIL Snohomish County, Washington /s/ Debbie Eco Clerk of the Council#104482Published: November 9, 16, 2015. EDH668004

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 Monday, November 23, 2015, at the hour of 10:30 a.m., in the Henry M. Jackson Board Room, 8th Floor, Robert J. Drewel Building, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, Everett, Washington to consider proposed Ordinance No. 15-099. A summary of the ordinance is as follows:

ORDINANCE NO. 15-099RELATING TO PROPERTY TAXES, FIXING THE 2016

CONSERVATION FUTURES PROPERTY TAX LEVY FOR SNOHOMISH COUNTY

Section 1. The annual amount of conservation futures property tax levy necessary to raise the amount of revenues required by Snohomish County for expenditure during calendar year 2016 is hereby levied upon all real and personal property subject to taxation in Snohomish County as set forth in the table below.

2016 CONSERVATION FUTURES PROPERTY TAX LEVY Estimated Use of Funds Levy Rate Levy Amount Conservation Futures Levy .0401 $3,820,900 Section 2. The amount set forth in Section 1 is hereby levied upon all real and personal property in accordance with certified assessed values and the completed tax rolls of Snohomish County for collection in 2016. That property tax levy amount is intended:

(a) to include an increase above the County’s 2015 levy amount as authorized by separate ordinance pursuant to RCW 84.55.120; (b) to include any additional amounts allowed under (i) the new const ruct ion increases in assessed va lue due to construction of wind turbine facilities, improvements to property and state-assessed property provisions of RCW 84.55.010 and, ( i i) as provided pursuant to RCW 84.55.070, the refund provisions of Chapters 84.68 and 84.69 RCW; and (c) to exclude any amounts in excess of the 2016 maximum levy amount resulting from application of the limit factor, plus those additional amounts described in paragraph (b) above;

and shall be adjusted by the County Assessor when property values are certifi ed.Public Testimony: Anyone interested may testify concerning the above-described matter. The Chair of the Council may choose to limit testimony to three minutes in the interest of accommodating all persons wishing to testify. Written testimony is encouraged and may be sent to the office of the County Council at the following address: Snohomish County Council, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, MS-609, Everett, WA 98201. Faxed documents may be sent to (425) 388-3496 or E-mail comments to [email protected]. Where to Get Copies of the Proposed Ordinance: Copies of the full text of the ordinance are available in the office of the County Council. They may be obtained by call ing (425) 388-3494, 1-(800) 562-4367 x3494, TDD (425) 388-3700 or by e-mailing to [email protected]. Copies may be picked up at the Council offi ce at 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, 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.snohomishcountywa.gov/2134/Council-Hearings-Calendar.American Disabilities Act Notice: Accommodations for persons with d isabi l i t ies wi l l be prov ided upon request . P lease make arrangements one week prior to the hearing by calling Debbie Eco at (425) 388-3494, 1-800-562-4367 x 3494, or TDD# 388-3700. DATED this 5th day of November, 2015 SNOHOMISH COUNTY COUNCIL Snohomish County, Washington /s/ Dave Somers Council ChairATTEST:/s/ Debbie EcoClerk of the Council#104482Published: November 9, 16, 2015. EDH668006

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Page 17: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

Sports

SEATTLE — If the 2015 Seattle Seahawks were the equivalent of a high school

senior, they’d be a lock for being voted one of the class awards:

Biggest tease.Seattle’s 39-32 loss to the Ari-

zona Cardinals on Sunday night at CenturyLink Field was just the latest example of the Seahawks giving their fans hope, only to leave those hopes dashed at the final moment.

Whether it’s been in individual games or the season as a whole, these Seahawks have whetted the appetite only to leave a sour aftertaste. Sunday was just more of the same course Seattle has been serving all season long.

One couldn’t have created a script more representative of Seattle’s season than the way the game against the Cardinals

played out. First there was the set-up, where the Seahawks made sure they put themselves in an adverse situation by plunging into a 19-0 hole. Then there was the dramatic comeback, with the defense creating two fumbles on sacks that were returned for touchdowns (the first was even-tually brought back to the 3-yard line, but Seattle scored one play

INSIDE: Cougars, C2 | Auto racing, C2 | UFC, C2 | NFL, C3 | Weather, C6

NFLPackers lose third straight; Patriots beat Giants to improve to 9-0; Broncos bench Manning, C3

SECTION C | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM/SPORTS | MONDAY, 11.16.2015

Arizona Cardinals 39, Seattle Seahawks 32NFL WEEK 10

✓ Defense can’t hold lead, C4✓ Seahawks offense struggles in first half, C5A remembrance for the victims of terror-ist attacks in Paris isbig part of pre-game ceremonies, C5✓ Seahawks grades, C5✓ Game statistics, C5

INSIDE

NICK PATTERSON

Season on the brink

By Rich MyhreHerald Writer

SEATTLE — For the first nine weeks of the 2015 season, the Arizona Cardinals suggested they were ready to dethrone the Seattle Seahawks for supremacy in the NFC West.

On Sunday night, the Cardinals put an exclamation point on that scenario.

After surrendering the lead to Seattle early in the fourth quarter, the Cardi-nals scored touchdowns on consecutive offensive possessions and the result was a 39-32 victory at CenturyLink Field. The loss — one that head coach Pete Car-roll called “a very difficult loss to take”

— pushes the Seahawks back under .500 (4-5) and leaves them three games behind Arizona (7-2) in the division race.

With seven games to play, the odds of a third straight division NFC West title for Seattle are not impossible, but cer-tainly improbable.

The outcome was particularly discour-aging for a Seahawks team that started the season 2-4, but then found life with back-to-back road wins vs. San Francisco and Dallas. But despite the backing of a boisterous home crowd, Seattle dug itself into a hole, trailing 22-7 at halftime and 25-10 midway through the third quarter.

Seahawks fall to 4-5 after losing to Cardinals

Once again, Seahawks tease, but don’t deliver at the end

ELAINE THOMPSON / ASSOCIATED PRESSCardinals wide receiver Michael Floyd catches a 35-yard pass for a touchdown as Seahawks cornerback Cary Williams tries to defend in the first half of Sunday’s game.

STEPHEN BRASHEAR / ASSOCIATED PRESSSeahawks quarterback Russell Wilson is hit by Cardinals cornerback Justin Bethel after throwing a pass during the second half.

ELAINE THOMPSON / ASSOCIATED PRESSCardinals running back Andre Ellington eludes Seahawks strong safety Kam Chancellor as Ellington runs 48 yards for a touchdown during the second half of Sunday’s game.

See SEAHAWKS, Page C4

See PATTERSON, Page C4

Page 18: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

C2 Monday, 11.16.2015 The Daily Herald C2 Monday, 11.16.2015 The Daily Herald

TELEVISIONTODAY

BASKETBALL2:30 p.m. ESPN2 UConn at Ohio St. (w)4 p.m. FS1 Mary.-Baltimore County at St. John’s4 p.m. ROOT LA-Lafayette at Miami4:30 p.m. ESPN2 Virginia at George Washington6 p.m. FS1 IUPUI at Marquette6:30 p.m. ESPN2 San Diego State at Utah6:30 p.m. ROOT N. Arizona at Boise St.8:30 p.m. ESPN2 Baylor at Oregon10:45 p.m. ESPN2 BYU at Long Beach St.1 a.m. ESPN2 Nevada at Hawaii3 a.m. ESPN2 Green Bay at East Tennessee State5 a.m. ESPN2 Stephen F. Austin State at Northern Iowa

FOOTBALL5:15 p.m. ESPN Houston at Cincinnati

SOCCER11:30 a.m. FS1 Ireland vs. Bosnia and Herzegovina

TUESDAYBASKETBALL

7 a.m. ESPN2 Valparaiso at R. Island10 a.m. ESPN Alabama at DaytonNoon ESPN Colorado at Auburn2 p.m. ESPN Oklahoma at Memphis3:30 p.m. FS1 Missouri at Xavier4 p.m. ROOT St. Bonaventure at Syracuse4:30 p.m. ESPN Duke vs. Kentucky5:30 p.m. FS1 Nebraska at Villanova 6 p.m. ESPN2 Georgetown at Maryland6 p.m. ROOT Jacksonville at Florida St.7 p.m. ESPN Kansas vs. Michigan St.

HOCKEY4:30 p.m. NBCS Minnesota at Pittsburgh

SOCCER11:30 a.m. ESPN2 Denmark vs SwedenNoon FS1 England vs France

RADIOTODAY

FOOTBALL5:20 p.m. 950 Houston at Cincinnati

TUESDAYBASKETBALL

6:05 p.m. 770 Seattle at E. WashingtonFOOTBALL

6 p.m. 1380 Everett at Kootenay

PREPSTODAYNo events scheduled

CALENDAR WED TUE 16 17NOVEMBER

AwayHome

Next game: Mt. Saint Mary’s 7:30 p.m., Thu., Nov. 19

Next game: Idaho State 8 p.m., Fri., Nov. 20

Next game: at Washington 7 p.m., Wed., Nov. 18

Next game: N. Arizona 6 p.m., Wed., Nov. 18

Kootenay 6 p.m.

Eastern Washington

6:05 p.m.

WSU MEN

GONZAGA MEN

UW MENUW MEN

UW WOMENUW WOMEN

Next game: San Francisco 1:25 p.m., Sun., Nov. 22

Next game: at Oregon St. 3 p.m., Sat., Nov. 21

Next game: Colorado 7:45 p.m., Sat., Nov. 21

Next game: Seattle 7 p.m., Wed., Nov. 18

Associated Press

PASADENA, Calif. — A few UCLA players warmed up on Washington State’s side of the field before Saturday night’s game, and the Cougars felt disre-spected. That’s not a new emotion for players at the long-struggling, frequently overlooked Pac-12 school.

Several hours and several jaw-dropping moments later, a diving catch by wide receiver Gabe Marks exacted revenge and made a statement: The Cougars are worthy of respect.

“People were not going to give us respect until they absolutely have to,” Marks said. “Now they have to.”

Marks caught a 21-yard touch-down pass from Luke Falk with 3 seconds to play, sending Wash-ington State to a 31-27 victory over No. 18 UCLA late Saturday night.

WSU (7-3, 5-2) added an improbable addendum to what seemed to be a storybook ending to the Bruins’ home finale. UCLA quarterback Josh Rosen capped a desperate 80-yard drive by scram-bling 37 yards for the go-ahead touchdown with 1:09 to play.

Falk answered with his own 75-yard drive, ending with a

remarkable catch by Marks, who became the Cougars’ career receptions leader earlier in the game with his 196th catch.

“I was a little kid who dreamed about having a game-winning drive at the Rose Bowl,” said Falk, who lived in the Los Angeles area while growing up. “Any time you come down here and win at the Rose Bowl in the fashion that we did, it’s going to give us some

momentum as a program.”Falk returned from a mid-game

injury after passing a concussion protocol and finished with 331 passing yards. He threw two TD passes to Marks, and the Cou-gars punctuated their resurgent season with their first win over a ranked team in 10 tries since 2013. Falk returned to the game in the second half after taking a violent sack and leaving the field in the second quarter. Falk, the Pac-12’s leader in yards passing and total offense, appeared to hit his head on the ground while getting hit by Jacob Tuioti-Mariner.

Falk downplayed the hit, saying he “got my bell rung a little bit.”

Freshman Peyton Bender threw his first career touchdown pass — to Dom Williams — dur-ing Falk’s absence.

WSU coach Mike Leach’s team has won five of its past six games, giving the Cougars seven victo-ries for the first time since 2003. Leach claimed he didn’t know about UCLA’s pregame use of the Cougars’ side of the field, but his players hadn’t missed it.

“Even if it’s your home field,

you should have the decency to let us warm up,” linebacker Jer-emiah Allison said.

WSU still needs ample help to contend for the Pac-12 North title, but Stanford’s loss to Oregon on Saturday gave the Cougars reason to hope their comeback season can get even better.

Rosen was 33-for-57 for 340 yards, and the freshman appeared to clinch the win after Jaleel Wadood’s end-zone interception with 3:13 left gave a last chance to the Bruins, who racked up 554 yards.

Rosen sprinted through the defense for his score and then hit Thomas Duarte for the 2-point conversion.

But the Cougars went 75 yards in 66 seconds, and Marks hung on to the ball despite contact with a UCLA defender.

UCLA (7-3, 4-3 Pac-12) lost after leading at halftime for the first time in 32 games under coach Jim Mora. The Bruins also lost despite holding Washington State’s pro-lific Air Raid offense to 288 yards in the first three quarters.

The Bruins still control their fate in the Pac-12 South. UCLA can win the division with season-ending road victories over Utah and Southern California

Late score earns Cougars a win, respect

ASSOCIATED PRESSWSU wide receiver Gabe Marks celebrates after making a touchdown catch in the second half of Saturday’s Pac-12 football game against UCLA.

For the statistics from Saturday night’s game, see

the Scoreboard on Page C6.

>>

By Lance PugmireLos Angeles Times

By producing the remarkable upset of Ronda Rousey, Holly Holm has earned the opportunity to duplicate it.

Dana White, the Ultimate Fighting Cham-pionship president, told reporters Sunday in Melbourne, Australia, that he’ll pursue a rematch between his former champion and the still-unbeaten Holm, who stands as the first-ever boxing and UFC champion.

“A rematch is what a lot of people want to see,” White said after Holm (10-0) knocked out Rousey (12-1) early in the second round with a devastating left kick to the head that rendered the former champion briefly unconscious and sent her to a local hospital for precautionary reasons.

“Biggest upset ever,” White told Fox Sports 1 after the fight.

White said following Rousey’s knockout of Brazil’s Bethe Correia on Aug. 1 that he was leaning toward making No. 1 contender Mie-sha Tate the next foe for Rousey.

But conversations with matchmakers inside UFC offices shifted the focus to Holm since Rousey had beaten Tate twice already and because Holm, a former boxing world champion, boasted a one-inch height and reach advantage on Rousey.

Something different became something monumental.

“This is the fight I went after,” White said. “Holly — we said it all the time — had the range, uses her distance very well, has great head kicks. Everything we talked about is essentially what went down.”

The southpaw Holm not only slipped out of Rousey’s usually lethal grasps in the first round, she repeatedly landed left-handed punches to Rousey’s head and once buried a left elbow to her face.

“That’s the way I expected Holly to fight,” White said. “Obviously, I thought Ronda would have more answers.”

In the second round, a left-handed punch led to Rousey falling to the canvas. As she rose, Holm, a former pro kickboxer, unleashed a devastating left head kick that knocked Rousey out 59 seconds into the round.

“I don’t think Ronda was exposed,” White said. “I think Ronda got beat tonight.”

The stunning event came after Rousey, the 28-year-old, acted out of character by confronting Holm at the weigh-in a day earlier, charging at the New Mexico-based

challenger and labeling the “Preacher’s Daughter” a phony.

Rousey endured a turbulent training camp that included her mother’s highly critical comments of Rousey’s trainer, Edmond Tarverdyan, whose specialty is boxing. It also will be interesting to see if Rousey retains Tarverdyan, or lessens his role, after he crafted a plan prodding Rousey to box.

Rousey also hung up on a conference call with reporters when asked about a relation-ship with UFC heavyweight Travis Browne. And she fended off questions last week about domestic violence when an episode from her past, a physical confrontation with an ex-boyfriend detailed in her book, was reviewed.

“It’s been an interesting camp and a rough couple of months for her,” White said. “It’s impossible to say that doesn’t affect her. She’s the mentally strongest person I’ve ever met, a workhorse, unlike any person I’ve ever met. If anybody can deal with it, it’s her.

“But at the end of the day, Ronda Rousey’s human.”

White said he originally planned for Rousey to next fight at UFC 200 in July. She’s involved in a film project, starring in Patrick Swayze’s former bouncer role in a remake of “Roadhouse.”

Rousey has earned an immediate rematch if she wants it, White said, but he wouldn’t commit to a date.

One earlier possibility could be April 23 at Madison Square Garden in New York should the UFC win a federal injunction that would allow New York to permit mixed martial arts fighting.

“I don’t think there’s any rush,” White said. “She still has a movie to film, doing all the things she has to do before she fights again. I wouldn’t expect her back anytime soon.”

UFC president: Rousey deserves rematch

ASSOCIATED PRESSHolly Holm holds the champion belt after defeating Ronda Rousey during their UFC 193 bantamweight title fight on Sunday in Melbourne, Australia.

COLLEGE | Basketball

Herald news services

SEATTLE — Marcus Graves scored a career-high 24 points, and Sacramento State used a big second half to pull away from Seattle for a 77-65 men’s basket-ball win Sunday.

Brendan Westerndorf had 18 points and 10 rebounds for Seattle (0-2). Jack Crook and William Pow-ell also pulled down 10 boards, with the Redhawks holding a 54-40 rebounding advantage.

WOMENSeattle 58, Montana 44

MISSOULA, Mont. — Taelor Ross scored 13 points and Kaylee Best add-ed 11 to lead Seattle (1-1) to a non-conference win over Montana (0-1)

“This was a very good win for us,” Redhhawks coach Joan Bonvicini said. “We played team basketball, this was a win by committee, and our defense was much improved. We did a much better job on the boards and out-rebounded them by 11 in a tough environment.”

Sacramento St. tops Seattle U

AUTO RACING | Roundup

Associated Press

AVONDALE, Ariz. — Kevin Harvick, Kyle Busch and Mar-tin Truex Jr. advanced to the Chase for the Sprint Cup cham-pionship finale after surviving a long Sunday that ended with a rain-shortened race at Phoenix International Raceway.

The race was delayed nearly seven hours by a series of storms, forcing the penultimate race in the Chase to start under the lights at the mile oval.

More rain forced NASCAR to called it after 219 laps, with Har-vick second behind winner Dale Earnhardt Jr., Busch fourth and Truex 14th. They join Jeff Gor-don next weekend in the finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway, with the series title decided by the finishing order among the four drivers.

Carl Edwards finished 12th, leaving him five points out of the final spot for the Chase finale. Joey Logano, Kurt Busch and Brad Keselowski also missed the finale.

Gordon had the only spot at Homestead locked up before the race, thanks to his win at

Martinsville two weeks ago.That left seven drivers fighting

for three spots, including three sets of teammates.

The long rain delay included numerous stops and starts around pit road, with drivers going on to their cars a couple times, only to be forced back into the garage area.

Once the race started, Kurt Busch put himself in a difficult position, forced to the back after being penalized for jumping the start.

He worked his way back toward the front, reaching the top 10 near the race’s midpoint.

That put all the Chase con-tenders near the front, hoping they could make the move to get into the top three with Gordon.

The Chase pressure ratcheted up with about 120 laps left when Joey Gase slid up into the wall, causing a caution.

With rain moving toward the track Harvick, Kyle Busch and Truex were in the final four, and Edwards five points behind the final spot.

The caution stretched out as crews tried to clean the track and the drivers were held in a yellow

holding pattern as rain started to fall at PIR.

“We can’t let it end like this,” Edwards told his team on the radio.

The cars ran under caution for several more laps before being sent to pit road as the track was red flagged.

The rain picked up after that, ending the race with Earnhardt in the lead, three drivers happy and four others wondering what might have happened had the race continued.

For the complete race results, see the Scoreboard on Page C6.

Brazilian Grand PrixSAO PAULO — Nico Rosberg

won Sunday’s Brazilian Grand Prix, leading from start to finish to beat Mercedes teammate and already-crowned season champion Lewis Hamilton.

Rosberg started from pole and won his second consecutive race — his fifth victory of the season — to clinch second place in the season standings with one race to run in Abu Dhabi.

Rosberg and Hamilton spent the entire race 1-2, remaining that way through three pits stops. Hamil-ton turned some of the fastest laps near the end but could not catch his

teammate and rival.Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel finished

third and teammate Kimi Raikkonen was fourth, exactly the way the top four racers started on the grid.

It was Hamilton’s ninth race in Brazil, and he has yet to win. He of-ten compares his struggle to that of Brazilian great Ayrton Senna, who needed eight races to win his home race.

Drivers wore black armbands as a sign of mourning for those killed in deadly attacks in Paris. In addition, a French flag decorated with a black ribbon was displayed on a truck used during the drivers’ parade before the race.

The race at Interlagos was run on a dry day free of rain, which is often a feature of the Brazilian GP outside Sao Paulo. It made for a race with few incidents, and little excitement in the racing.

Rosberg safely protected his lead at the start with Hamilton right be-hind. Both pitted early and Rosberg managed to hold the lead by 0.9 sec-onds after the first round of stops with Vettel and Raikkonen right behind.

Shortened race in Phoenix determines final 3 Chase spots

Final FourThe four drivers who advanced to next week’s Chase for the Sprint Cup championship finale:

Points1. Kevin Harvick ..............5,0002. Jeff Gordon .................5,0003. Kyle Busch ..................5,0004. MartinTruex Jr. ............5,000

Page 19: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

NFLC3 | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM | MONDAY, 11.16.2015

LEAGUE | StandingsNATIONAL CONFERENCE

West W L T Pct PF PAArizona 7 2 0 .778 302 185St. Louis 4 5 0 .444 166 183Seattle 4 5 0 .444 199 179San Francisco 3 6 0 .333 126 223

East W L T Pct PF PAN.Y. Giants 5 5 0 .500 273 253Washington 4 5 0 .444 205 209Philadelphia 4 5 0 .444 212 184Dallas 2 7 0 .222 166 214

South W L T Pct PF PACarolina 9 0 0 1.000 255 175Atlanta 6 3 0 .667 229 190Tampa Bay 4 5 0 .444 191 237New Orleans 4 6 0 .400 255 315

North W L T Pct PF PAMinnesota 7 2 0 .778 198 154Green Bay 6 3 0 .667 219 185Chicago 4 5 0 .444 199 234Detroit 2 7 0 .222 167 261

AMERICAN CONFERENCEWest

W L T Pct PF PADenver 7 2 0 .778 205 168Oakland 4 5 0 .444 227 241Kansas City 4 5 0 .444 224 195San Diego 2 7 0 .222 210 249

East W L T Pct PF PANew England 9 0 0 1.000 303 169Buffalo 5 4 0 .556 231 207N.Y. Jets 5 4 0 .556 217 184Miami 4 5 0 .444 191 225

South W L T Pct PF PAIndianapolis 4 5 0 .444 200 227Houston 3 5 0 .375 174 205Jacksonville 3 6 0 .333 192 255Tennessee 2 7 0 .222 169 214

North W L T Pct PF PACincinnati 8 0 0 1.000 229 142Pittsburgh 6 4 0 .600 236 191Baltimore 2 7 0 .222 210 236Cleveland 2 8 0 .200 186 277

Last Thursday’s gameBuffalo 22, N.Y. Jets 17

Sunday’s gamesDetroit 18, Green Bay 16Carolina 27, Tennessee 10Chicago 37, St. Louis 13Tampa Bay 10, Dallas 6Washington 47, New Orleans 14Miami 20, Philadelphia 19Pittsburgh 30, Cleveland 9Jacksonville 22, Baltimore 20Minnesota 30, Oakland 14Kansas City 29, Denver 13New England 27, N.Y. Giants 26Arizona 39, Seattle 32Open: Atlanta, Indianapolis, San Diego, San Francisco

Monday’s gameHouston at Cincinnati, 5:30 p.m.

Thursday’s gameNext Thursday’s game

Buffalo at N.Y. Jets, 5:25 p.m.Next Sunday’s games

N.Y. Jets at Houston, 10 a.m.Denver at Chicago, 10 a.m.Oakland at Detroit, 10 a.m.Indianapolis at Atlanta, 10 a.m.Tampa Bay at Philadelphia, 10 a.m.St. Louis at Baltimore, 10 a.m.Dallas at Miami, 10 a.m.Washington at Carolina, 10 a.m.Kansas City at San Diego, 1:05 p.m.San Francisco at Seattle, 1:25 p.m.Green Bay at Minnesota, 1:25 p.m.Cincinnati at Arizona, 5:30 p.m.Open: Cleveland, N.Y. Giants, New Orleans, Pittsburgh

Monday’s gameBuffalo at New England, 5:30 p.m.

SUNDAY | Stars

SUNDAY | Injuries

By Genaro C. ArmasAssociated Press

GREEN BAY, Wis. — Mat-thew Stafford couldn’t bear to watch with his team on the verge of another heartbreaking moment.

Instead, the Detroit Lions held on for a signature win in the unlikeliest of places.

Stafford threw for two touch-downs, and Detroit stopped a 24-game road losing streak against the Green Bay Packers with an 18-16 victory Sunday despite a late blunder by Calvin Johnson.

“I bet nobody gave us a chance, but that’s the way we like it,” Stafford said.

Mason Crosby missed a 52-yard field goal as time expired after the Packers recov-ered an onside kick that was mishandled by Johnson with about 31 seconds left.

Detroit (2-7) had stopped Green Bay on a 2-point con-version attempt after Aaron Rodgers hit Justin Perillo for an 11-yard touchdown pass on the previous drive. Backup cor-nerback Crezdon Butler, signed

from the practice squad on Fri-day, stuck a hand in front of Davante Adams to break up the conversion try.

A nervous Stafford said he couldn’t watch that play. He threw for 242 yards for the league-worst Lions, an orga-nization that had been reeling following the midseason firings of the team president and gen-eral manager.

“We don’t really care who gives us a chance, because we feel good about ourselves in that locker room and we know what we’re about,” Stafford said.

The Packers (6-3) lost their third straight game, but this was a new low after their two previous defeats came on the road to Super Bowl contenders Denver and Carolina.

“We dropped one today that we felt we had a very good opportunity to win,” coach Mike McCarthy said.

A sluggish game filled with three-and-outs turned into a thriller in the fourth quarter.

The Lions barely held on for their first road win against Green Bay since 1991. Matt

Prater missed two extra points, but also hit field goals from 49 and 51 yards.

“To be able to come in here and get a win is pretty special,” coach Jim Caldwell said.

Rodgers was 35 of 61 for 333 yards, but wasn’t at his best. Receivers including Randall Cobb and Adams had a few drops.

Green Bay finally got into the end zone when Rodgers found tight end Richard Rodgers for a 4-yard touchdown pass with 5:55 left.

Lance Moore’s 4-yard touch-down reception increased Detroit’s lead to 18-10, and the Lions held off the Packers fol-lowing Perillo’s score.

It has been a precipitous decline for a quick-strike offense that was once the envy of the NFL. The Packers’ run-ning game stalled, with James Starks gaining just 42 yards on 15 carries against the league’s 26th-ranked defense.

“This isn’t easy,” McCarthy said. “And frankly, if we spoiled you in the past, that’s great. We’re looking forward to spoil-ing you again in the future.”

Signature winLions snap 24-game road losing streak against Packers,

win 18-16 when Green Bay misses FG on final play

SUNDAY | Roundup

PASSINGBen Roethlisberger, Steelers. Roethlisberger

passed for 379 yards and three touchdowns after Landry Jones went down with a left leg injury to lead Pittsburgh past Cleveland in a 30-9 romp.

Kirk Cousins, Redskins. Cousins threw a career-high four touchdown passes and registered a perfect passer rating of 158.3 to lead Washington past New Orleans 47-14.

Tom Brady, Patriots. Brady was 26 of 42 for 334 yards and two touchdowns while helping New England remain undefeated with a 27-26 win over the New York Giants.

Jay Cutler, Bears. Cutler threw three touchdown passes and finished 19 of 24 for 258 yards in Chi-cago’s 37-13 win at St. Louis.

Eli Manning, Giants. Manning passed for 361 yards and two TDs in New York’s 27-26 loss to New England.

RUSHING Adrian Peterson, Vikings. Peterson rushed for

203 yards — tying O.J. Simpson for the most 200-yard games in NFL history with six — on 26 carries in Min-nesota’s 30-14 victory at Oakland.

Alfred Morris, Redskins. Morris ran for 92 yards on 15 carries in Washington’s 47-14 win over New Orleans.

Jonathan Stewart, Panthers. Stewart had 22 carries for 91 yards, including a 16-yard touchdown, in Carolina’s 27-10 win at Tennessee.

Jeremy Langford, Bears. Langford ran for 73 yards and a TD on 20 carries and also caught seven passes for 109 yards and a score in Chicago’s 37-13 win at St. Louis..

RECEIVINGAntonio Brown, Steelers. Brown, had 10

catches for 139 yards and two TDs as Pittsburgh cruised past Cleveland 30-9.

Zach Miller, Bears. Miller caught five passes for 107 yards and two TDs, including an 87-yarder that was Chicago’s longest play since 2010, in Chicago’s 37-13 win at St. Louis.

Martavis Bryant, Steelers. Bryant had six re-ceptions for 178 yards and a score, helping Pittsburgh to a 30-9 win over Cleveland.

Matt Jones, Redskins. Jones had 131 yards receiving on three catches, including 78-yarder on a screen pass, in Washington’s 47-14 win over New Orleans.

Mike Evans, Buccaneers. Evans caught eight passes for 126 yards to help Tampa Bay beat Dallas 10-6.

Brandin Cooks, Saints. Cook had two touchdown catches in New Orleans’ 47-14 loss at Washington.

Associated Press

Manning benched as Broncos fall 29-13 to ChiefsAssociated Press

DENVER — Peyton Manning is hurt — and he’s sorry he hurt his team.

“I thought I felt good enough to play,” Manning said Sunday after the worst perfor-mance of his career in Denver’s 29-13 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs.

“Maybe it was a false feeling or a wrong feeling.”

Manning knew the Broncos (7-2) were already missing stars DeMarcus Ware and Aqib Talib and that Emmanuel Sanders was hurting.

So, he gutted it out, telling his coach and athletic trainer he felt fine even though he’s been dealing with a sore right foot, throbbing ribs and aching right shoulder.

“By going out there and trying to help the team,” Manning lamented, “I ended up hurt-ing the team.”

He finished the day with just 35 yards on 5-of-20 passing, zero touchdowns, four interceptions, two sacks and an almost unheard-of zero passer rating before being benched late in the third quarter in favor of longtime backup Brock Osweiler.

“He’s still a great quarterback — just not what he used to be,” Chiefs linebacker Der-rick Johnson said.

With his first, modest completion, Man-ning set another milestone, supplanting Brett Favre for most career passing yards

Manning entered the day with 71,836 yards through the air, 2 shy of Favre’s record and tied with Favre with 186 victories.

Panthers 27, Titans 10NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Cam Newton completed

his first 11 passes — the longest streak of his career — and Carolina remained unbeaten.

The Panthers (9-0) extended their league-best winning streak to 13 games as Newton ran for a touchdown and passed for another score.

Jaguars 22, Ravens 20BALTIMORE — Jason Myers kicked a 53-yard

field goal after Jacksonville got one final play on a facemask penalty with no time left, and the Jaguars ended their 13-game road losing streak.

Steelers 30, Browns 9PITTSBURGH — Ben Roethlisberger threw for

379 yards and three touchdowns.Roethlisberger began the game on the bench

to rest his sprained left foot but entered in the first quarter after Landry Jones went down with a left ankle injury. Roethlisberger completed 22 of 33 passes and was sacked once as Pittsburgh won its second straight.

Dolphins 20, Eagles 19PHILADELPHIA — Ryan Tannehill threw a go-

ahead 4-yard touchdown pass to Jarvis Landry and the defense held on for Miami.

Buccaneers 10, Cowboys 6TAMPA, Fla. — Jameis Winston scored on a

1-yard quarterback keeper with 54 seconds re-maining, extending Dallas’ longest losing streak since 1989 to seven games.

Bears 37, Rams 13ST. LOUIS — Zach Miller caught two touch-

down passes, including an 87-yard score that was Chicago’s longest play since 2010, and rookie Jer-emy Langford also had two TDs.

Redskins 47, Saints 14LANDOVER, Md. — Kirk Cousins threw for a

career-high four touchdowns — each one longer than any scoring pass he’d completed all season — to lead Washington. Cousins went 20 for 25 for 324 yards, zero interceptions and a perfect passer rating of 158.3.

Vikings 30, Raiders 14OAKLAND, Calif. — Adrian Peterson ran for 203

yards and a touchdown in his record-tying sixth career 200-yard game, Cordarrelle Patterson re-turned a kick 97 yards for a score and Minnesota took over sole possession of first place in the NFC North by beating Oakland.

Sam Bradford, Eagles. Bradford trudged off the field with what appeared to be a left shoulder injury, and ended up with a concussion to boot, after a hard hit by Miami linebacker Chris McCain on a sack that forced a fumble. Although X-rays were negative, Brad-ford held his non-throwing arm close to his stomach like it was in a sling after the third-quarter hit.

Julian Edelman, New England. The Patriots’ leading receiver sustained a foot injury in the first half against the New York Giants. He had four catches for 53 yards before the injury, and was ruled out for the rest of the game.

Associated Press

By Barry WilnerAssociated Press

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — There’s an air of invincibility and inevitability about the New Eng-land Patriots.

Invincible because since Janu-ary, they haven’t lost. Inevitable because of the feeling they will find a way — something they did in their toughest test this sea-son, edging the New York Giants 27-26 on Stephen Gostkowski’s 54-yard field goal with 1 second remaining.

“You’re one kick away from being Public Enemy No. 1,” Gos-tkowski said. “You’re always one kick away from trending on Twit-ter as the No. 1 loser in America.

“But it’s fun being on a good team. It’s kind of like being on a baseball team where everybody’s got a hit, and you can’t wait to get up there and get a hit, too.”

The Giants, who seemed to have New England’s number, were poised to knock off the Patri-ots (9-0) on Josh Brown’s fourth field goal with 1:47 remaining. But you don’t beat the Patriots with field goals.

After Brown made his franchise-record 27th straight, from 29 yards, Tom Brady drove the Patriots 44 yards, converting a fourth-and-10 on the series. He also got lucky when Giants rookie safety Landon Collins dropped an interception; Collins said he hit his head on the turf and lost the ball.

Gostkowski, the NFL’s leading scorer the last three seasons, sent his winning kick soaring through the uprights.

New York (5-5) has given the Patriots fits under Tom Cough-lin, including two Super Bowl wins, and nearly pulled off another victory. A 5-yard pass to Odell Beckham Jr. on New York’s final drive was originally called a touchdown, then reversed by video review.

“I should have caught the ball,” said Beckham, who admitted he didn’t know the whole rule about completing the catch.

That possession was set up when Trumaine McBride inter-cepted Brady at the goal line, setting up an 86-yard, 15-play march to Brown’s field goal.

That left room for Brady, who hit Danny Amendola three times for 32 yards on the winning series.

“Just finish the game,” an exasperated Coughlin said, rec-ognizing four of his team’s defeats this year came because the Giants failed in the final moments.

“You don’t win, they are all mis-erable. I don’t look at it in terms of degrees. I look at it in terms of frustration that goes along with it because of what could have been. It’s not that far away from being a win. Just finish the thing off.”

Patriots rally to beat Giants on last-second FG

MATT LUDTKE / ASSOCIATED PRESSThe Lions’ Quandre Diggs breaks up a pass intended for the Packers’ Davante Adams during Sunday’s game.

JOE MAHONEY / ASSOCIATED PRESSBroncos quarterback Peyton Manning was taken out of the game against the Chiefs midway through the third quarter. The five-time NFL MVP was 5 of 20 for 35 yards with four interceptions. He had a passer rating of 0.0.

L.G. PATTERSON / ASSOCIATED PRESSBears tight end Zach Miller caught five passes for 107 yards and two TDs against the Rams.

Page 20: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

SeahawksC4 | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM | MONDAY, 11.16.2015

By Todd FredricksonHerald Writer

SEATTLE — For a few glorious moments — the first two min-utes of the fourth quarter, to be precise — it looked like the Seat-tle Seahawks defense was going to snatch an improbable victory away from the Arizona Cardinals on Sunday.

But after giving the Seahawks the lead, the defense couldn’t hold it and the Cardinals walked away with a 39-32 victory in a piv-otal NFL game at CenturyLink Field.

The Seahawks (4-5) had stag-gered and stumbled their way into a deep hole early on in a game they had to win to put pres-sure on the Cardinals (7-2) in the race for the NFC West title.

The Seahawks trailed 19-0 in the second quarter and 22-7 and

halftime, but they scratched and clawed their way back to make it 25-17 going into the fourth quarter.

Then, the defensive magic that marked this team the last two years struck and seemed to turn the game upside down.

On the second play of the quar-ter, from the Arizona 19-yard line, defensive end Cliff Avril flew around the right side of the Cardi-nals’ offensive line and knocked the ball away from Arizona quar-terback Carson Palmer.

K.J. Wright recovered the fum-ble and nearly scored. Palmer just barely tripped him up, and Wright came down at the 3.

Seattle running back Mar-shawn Lynch scored a touchdown on the next play. A two-point conversion attempt failed, but the Seahawks were back within one score at 25-23.

Then, four plays after the ensu-ing kickoff, the defense did it again.

Wright rushed Palmer from his linebacker position and came through untouched. He slapped the ball away from Palmer, and linebacker Bobby Wagner scooped up the fumble and returned it 22 yards for a touchdown.

Seattle again went for two and failed, but they had the lead for the first time at 29-25, and they had all the momentum.

For all the world, it looked and felt like the NFC Championship Game against Green Bay last sea-son, in which Seattle fell behind 16-0 with putrid offensive perfor-mance early on but exploded late to win in overtime.

However, Sunday’s game was the second time this season that Wag-ner scored a touchdown in a game

Seattle ultimately lost. He also scored on a fumble recovery against Cincinnati to put the Seahawks ahead 24-7, but they eventually lost that game 27-24 in overtime.

Both of the sacks and fum-ble recoveries Sunday came on plays when the Seahawks rushed more than four defenders. The Seahawks are not known as a team that does that a lot.

“It was a fantastic job,” Seat-tle head coach Pete Carroll said of the defensive game called by defensive coordinator Kris Richard. “I thought it was a very aggressive change to our approach in that regard. I though Kris did a great job.

“To turn the ball over like that and make the plays, that was fan-tastic,” Carroll said.

Avril had a stellar game. In addition to the sack and forced fumble, he had three other

quarterback hits and two tackles for losses. He finished with five tackles overall.

“Cliff Avril just came roaring off the ball tonight,” Carroll said.

But, in the end, the defense couldn’t hold it together.

After giving the Seahawks the lead at 29-25, the defense gave up touchdowns on drives of 83 and 80 yards.

That’s almost exactly the way they finished in the last home game, a 27-23 loss to Carolina, as well as the Super Bowl last season against New England, from which everybody remembers the final offensive play at the risk of over-looking two long fourth-quarter touchdown drives by the Patriots.

There were moments Sunday when the Seattle defense was devastating and intimidating.

Just not enough of them.Again.

Seahawks defense can’t hold lead

STEPHEN BRASHEAR / ASSOCIATED PRESSCardinals tight end Jermaine Gresham catches a 14-yard pass for a touchdown in the fourth quarter of Sunday’s game against the Seahawks.

SeahawksFrom Page C1

The Seahawks seemed to get untracked in the third quarter, scoring first on a 32-yard pass from quarterback Russell Wilson to wide receiver Doug Baldwin, and then getting two touchdowns early in the fourth period after recov-ering Arizona fumbles. The first set up a 3-yard Marshawn Lynch TD run, and the defense scored the second on a 22-yard return by Seattle linebacker Bobby Wagner.

Despite the first half struggles, “we didn’t feel like we were out of the game,” Carroll said. “And we weren’t. The guys came back

on both sides of the all and got ahead in the football game. They gave us a chance to win.”

But with the game on the line, Seattle’s defense — the founda-tion of the team’s 2013 and 2014 Super Bowl runs — simply could not stop Arizona. The Cardinals scored the go-ahead touchdown and then an insurance TD in the late minutes, making this the fifth time this season — all of the team’s defeats — the Seahawks have surrendered the lead in the fourth quarter.

Also, Arizona’s 39 points were the most given up by Seattle since a 41-7 loss to the New York Giants on Nov. 7, 2010, Carroll’s first sea-son as Seahawks head coach.

Mathematically, the Seahawks

are hardly dead. But practically speaking, the road to a playoff spot — let alone a third straight Super Bowl appearance — is improbably steep. Seattle has home games the next two weeks against San Francisco and Pitts-burgh, but then plays three of its final five games on the road.

For the Seahawks, Sunday’s game was one of frustration, mostly due to penalties and other miscues. But in the fourth quarter, Seattle’s defense sent a jolt through the stadium with two outstanding defensive plays deep in Arizona territory. The first came when defensive end Cliff Avril sacked Arizona quar-terback Carson Palmer, knocking the ball out. It popped into the air

and was snagged by linebacker K.J. Wright, who returned it to the Cardinal 3-yard line.

On the next play, Lynch bulled his way into the end zone, pull-ing the Seahawks within 25-23, though a two-point conversion try failed.

Moments later Seattle had the lead as Wright came up the mid-dle on a blitz and slapped the ball out of Palmer’s hand. Linebacker Bobby Wagner scooped up the fumble and raced to the end zone for a touchdown. Again a two-point PAT failed, but the Seahawks had moved in front, 29-25.

But the lead was short-lived. The Cardinals mounted a 10-play, 83-yard drive for the go-ahead touchdown, with a

14-yard Palmer pass to Jermaine Gresham covering the final 14 yards to the end zone. And after a Seattle punt, Arizona tacked on another TD with a eight-play, 80-yard drive, with running back Andre Ellington dashing 48 yards for the score.

The Seahawks got a field goal from Steven Hauschka with 1:03 remaining to pull within seven points, but failed to recover the ensuing onside kick. The Cardi-nals were able to take a knee to run off the final seconds.

“We were so excited to play this game,” Carroll said. “But all of a sudden it was one thing after another. ... It was our game to win. We have to finish that game and we didn’t get it done.”

PattersonFrom Page C1

later) as the Seahawks went ahead 29-25. Finally there was the letdown, with Arizona twice walking right past that same defense that turned the game in Seattle’s favor.

It wasn’t just the game as a whole, there were several indi-vidual moments in the game in which the Seahawks had their full tease going:

■ Seattle seemed to have the momentum early in the third quarter. The Seahawks, despite a dismal first half, conjured up a touchdown late in the second quarter, moved the ball well on the first possession of the second half to put more points on the board, then forced the Cardinals to punt. But just when it seemed Seattle had momentum, quarterback

Russell Wilson missed an open Doug Baldwin streaking down-field, throwing to the wrong side of Baldwin and allowing Tyrann Mathieu to intercept the pass.

■ The Seahawks scored a touch-down early in the fourth quarter and decided to go for the two-point conversion in an attempt to tie the score, only to call a fade pass to the back of the end zone to the 5-foot-10 Baldwin, a play that never had a chance and left Seattle trailing by two.

■ Needing a stop on third-and-3 as the two-minute warning approached, the Seahawks not only failed to stop Andre Elling-ton from picking up the first down, they allowed him to scam-per 48 yards down the sideline for the clinching touchdown.

But then, we’ve all seen this type of script before. Seattle’s sea-son as a whole follows the same pattern. Twice the Seahawks fell two games below .500, only to

provide hope by clawing back even, thanks to victories over inferior competition.

Twice Seattle had undefeated teams on the ropes in the fourth quarter, only to suffer dramatic late collapses against both the Cincinnati Bengals and Caro-lina Panthers, depriving the Seahawks of that signature vic-tory that could have catapulted their season forward.

Even Seattle’s struggles in the red zone, which saw the Seahawks converting fewer than 30 percent of their red zone opportunities into touchdowns, are a tease. Settling for field goals instead of touchdowns is the equivalent of expecting creme brulee for des-sert, but then being served a piece of last Christmas’ fruitcake.

Sunday’s game sure had the feel of a passing of the torch. Arizona had to play third fiddle to Seattle and San Francisco two years ago, missing out on

the playoffs despite winning 10 games. Last year the Cardinals were in control of the division race all season long, and despite Seattle’s late-season surge could have wrapped up the NFC West title by beating the Seahawks at home in the penultimate week of the season. Instead the Cardinals were slaughtered by Seattle 35-6, and a once-promising season dissolved in a season-ending three-game losing streak, which concluded with the embarrass-ment of losing a playoff game to a team with a losing record.

But the tables were turned Sunday, and this time it was the Seahawks who had to suffer the indignity of losing a crush game on their home field, despite it being a prime-time game, where Seattle has usually shined under head coach Pete Carroll

It’s hard to see how Seattle can recover from this one. The loss dropped the Seahawks three games

behind the Cardinals in the divi-sion standings with seven games to play. The division title may be out of reach, and the playoffs also are in danger of fading away.

“We’ll talk about the truth of what happened tomorrow, make sure we cover it all, and we get back to battling,” Carroll said after the game. “Look at how much potential there is to come back and control the game. That was exquisite. I don’t care how it starts, I care how we finish it. We came back and that was our game to win. We have to finish that game, we didn’t get it done.”

Unfortunatley, that’s been the teasing story of Seattle’s season. So much potential, but too often the end product wasn’t there.

Check out Nick Patterson’s Seattle Sidelines blog at http://www.heraldnet.com/seattlesidelines, and follow him on Twitter at @NickHPatterson.

Page 21: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

SeahawksC5 | THE DAILY HERALD | WWW.HERALDNET.COM | MONDAY, 11.16.2015

Seahawks schedule(Home games in bold)

Sept. 13: Rams 34, Seahawks 31 (OT) Sept. 20: Packers 27, Seahawks 17Sept. 27: Seahawks 26, Bears 0Oct. 5: Seahawks 13, Lions 10Oct. 11: Bengals 27, Seahawks 24 (OT)Oct. 18: Panthers 27, Seahawks 23Oct. 22: Seahawks 20, 49ers 3Nov. 1: Seahawks 13, Cowboys 12Nov. 15: Cards 39, Seahawks 32Nov. 22: San Francisco, 1:25 p.m.Nov. 29: Pittsburgh, 1:25 p.m.Dec. 6: at Minnesota, 10 a.mDec. 13: at Baltimore, 5:30 p.m.Dec. 20: Cleveland, 1:05 p.m.Dec. 27: St. Louis, 1:25 p.m.Jan. 3: at Arizona, 1:25 p.m.

Report CardOffense

D+ Seattle was awful in the first half, at one point having

as many negative yards because of penalties as yards gained. The offense picked up after going to the hurry-up late in the first half, but two of the four touchdowns scored were essentially because of the defense. The run game was a non-factor, and quarterback Russell Wilson had by far his worst performance in terms of completion percentage, going just 14-for-32.

Defense

C- Seattle’s defense was asked to do way too much in the first

half, being on the field for more than 21 minutes. The defense was the rea-son the Seahawks got back into the game, forcing two fumbles on sacks deep in Arizona territory and taking one of those back for a touchdown. But the defense then crumbled after Seattle took the lead, allowing the Cardinals to take the game back with two long touchdown drives.

Special teams

C- There were no disasters for Seattle, but there were sev-

eral small slips that hampered the Seahawks. Return man Tyler Lockette let a short kickoff late in the game bounce and then bobbled the ball, forcing Seattle to start a key drive inside its own 10. Punter Jon Ryan had a couple odd punts, including being unable to pin the Cardinals deep late in the game. But kicker Ste-ven Hauschka continued his strong season, making both his field-goal attempts..

Coaching

D Despite an extra week of prepa-ration, and despite it being a

make-or-break game with regards to the NFC West, Seattle was not ready at the start of the game. The Seahawks made some questionable choices with regards to two-point conversions, both in play calling and the decision to go for two. Seattle’s penalty woes re-emerged, with 14 flags for 131 yards. And the running game was abandoned as Marshawn Lynch received just eight carries..

Overall

D+ This was the biggest game of Seattle’s season. A win

would have put the Seahawks back in the fray, just a game behind Arizona for first place in the NFC West. Instead Seattle is now three games back with seven left to play. And despite having a home game in prime time, the Seahawks allowed the most points they have in a single game since 2010. This one was a big disappointment..

— Nick Patterson, Herald Writer

Cardinals 39, Seahawks 32Arizona 0 22 3 14—39Seattle 0 7 10 15 —32

Second QuarterAri—FG Catanzaro 33, 12:52. Drive:

7 plays, 34 yards, 3:03. Key Plays: Palmer 22 pass to Fitzgerald; Palmer 13 pass to Fitzgerald. Arizona 3, Seattle 0.

Ari—Rucker safety, 12:14. Arizona 5, Seattle 0.

Ari—Floyd 27 pass from Palmer (Cat-anzaro kick), 6:41. Drive: 10 plays, 59 yards, 5:33. Key Plays: Sherman 7-yard de-fensive pass interference penalty on 3rd-and-8; Palmer 11 pass to Floyd; Palmer 12 pass to Gresham on 3rd-and-9. Arizona 12, Seattle 0.

Ari—Floyd 35 pass from Palmer (Cat-anzaro kick), 4:02. Drive: 3 plays, 45 yards, 1:23. Key Play: Peterson 24 punt return to Seattle 45. Arizona 19, Seattle 0.

Sea—Tukuafu 1 run (Hauschka kick), 1:52. Drive: 6 plays, 80 yards, 2:10. Key Plays: Wilson 11 run; Wilson 40 pass to Richardson; Mathieu 14-yard defensive pass interference penalty. Arizona 19, Se-attle 7.

Ari—FG Catanzaro 43, :00. Drive: 9 plays, 55 yards, 1:52. Key Plays: Palmer 11 pass to Floyd; Palmer 19 pass to Fitzger-ald; Ellington 2 run on 3rd-and-1; Palmer 8 pass to D.Johnson on 3rd-and-4. Arizona 22, Seattle 7.

Third QuarterSea—FG Hauschka 31, 11:18. Drive: 9

plays, 67 yards, 3:42. Key Plays: Lynch 16 run; Rawls 13 run; Wilson 30 pass to Gra-ham. Arizona 22, Seattle 10.

Ari—FG Catanzaro 43, 6:29. Drive: 4 plays, 11 yards, 1:42. Key Plays: Mathieu 24 interception return to Seattle 36; Sher-man 11-yard defensive pass interference penalty. Arizona 25, Seattle 10.

Sea—Baldwin 32 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), 4:52. Drive: 3 plays, 69 yards, 1:37. Key Play: Wilson 33 pass to Baldwin. Arizona 25, Seattle 17.

Fourth QuarterSea—Lynch 3 run (pass failed), 14:44.

Drive: 1 play, 3 yards, 0:05. Key Play: Wright 4 fumble return (Palmer). Arizona 25, Seattle 23.

Sea—Wagner 22 fumble return (pass failed), 13:00. Seattle 29, Arizona 25.

Ari—Gresham 14 pass from Palmer (Catanzaro kick), 8:41. Drive: 10 plays, 83 yards, 4:19. Key Plays: Palmer 15 pass to Fitzgerald; Palmer 10 pass to Floyd on 3rd-and-4; Palmer 10 pass to Ja.Brown; Wagner 5-yard illegal contact penalty on 3rd-and-10; Palmer 20 pass to Ja.Brown. Arizona 32, Seattle 29.

Ari—Ellington 48 run (Catanzaro kick), 1:58. Drive: 8 plays, 80 yards, 4:04. Key Play: Palmer 8 pass to Ja.Brown on 3rd-and-3. Arizona 39, Seattle 29.

Sea—FG Hauschka 46, :58. Drive: 7 plays, 40 yards, 1:00. Key Plays: Wilson 10 pass to Kearse; Wilson 20 run. Arizona 39, Seattle 32.

A—69,005. Ari SeaFIRST DOWNS 30 18Rushing 5 9Passing 20 7Penalty 5 2THIRD DOWN EFF 8-17 1-8FOURTH DOWN EFF 0-0 1-1TOTAL NET YARDS 451 343Total Plays 84 52Avg Gain 5.4 6.6NET YARDS RUSHING 117 115Rushes 33 18Avg per rush 3.5 6.4NET YARDS PASSING 334 228Sacked-Yds lost 3-29 2-12Gross-Yds passing 363 240Completed-Att. 29-48 14-32Had Intercepted 1 1Yards-Pass Play 6.5 6.7KICKOFFS-EndZone-TB 7-4-2 8-6-2PUNTS-Avg. 3-44.7 5-40.8Punts blocked 0 0FGs-PATs blocked 0-0 0-0TOTAL RETURN YARDAGE 154 104Punt Returns 3-29 1-0Kickoff Returns 5-101 5-104Interceptions 1-24 1-0PENALTIES-Yds 9-71 14-131FUMBLES-Lost 2-2 1-0TIME OF POSSESSION 38:52 21:08

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING—Arizona, Ellington 5-61,

C.Johnson 25-58, Palmer 3-(minus 2). Se-attle, Wilson 6-52, Lynch 8-42, Rawls 2-19, Tukuafu 2-2.

PASSING—Arizona, Palmer 29-48-1-363. Seattle, Wilson 14-32-1-240.

RECEIVING—Arizona, Fitzgerald 10-130, Floyd 7-113, Ja.Brown 3-38, Ellington 3-27, Fells 3-21, Gresham 2-26, D.Johnson 1-8. Seattle, Baldwin 7-134, Graham 3-41, Richardson 1-40, Kearse 1-10, Lynch 1-8, Lockett 1-7.

PUNT RETURNS—Arizona, Peterson 3-29. Seattle, Lockett 1-0.

KICKOFF RETURNS—Arizona, D.Johnson 4-79, Peterson 1-22. Seattle, Lockett 5-104.

TACKLES-ASSISTS-SACKS—Arizona, Mathieu 5-1-0, Bucannon 4-3-1, Bethel 3-0-0, Jefferson 2-2-0, Minter 2-2-0, Mauro 2-1-0, Powers 2-1-0, Rucker 1-1-0, Ja.Brown 1-0-0, B.Golden 1-0-0, D.Johnson 1-0-0, Okafor 1-0-0, Palmer 1-0-0, Peterson 1-0-0, Taylor 1-0-0, R.Johnson 0-4-0, Campbell 0-3-0, Fua 0-1-0, Woodley 0-1-0, TEAM 0-0-1. Se-attle, Chancellor 7-12-0, Thomas 5-0-0, Wagner 4-7-0, Wright 4-5-1, Avril 3-2-1, Sherman 3-2-0, Rubin 3-0-1, Morgan 3-0-0, Williams 2-5-0, Clark 2-0-0, Irvin 1-4-0, Coleman 1-1-0, Shead 1-1-0, Dobbs 1-0-0, Graham 1-0-0, Hill 1-0-0, Marsh 1-0-0, Matthews 1-0-0, Ryan 1-0-0, Terrell 1-0-0, Bennett 0-2-0, Mebane 0-1-0.

INTERCEPTIONS—Arizona, Mathieu 1-24. Seattle, Thomas 1-0.

MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.OFFICIALS—Referee Clete Blakeman,

Ump Jeff Rice, HL Hugo Cruz, LJ Carl Johnson, FJ Terry Brown, SJ Joe Larrew, BJ Steve Patrick, Replay Richard Reels.

Time: 3:53.

By Todd FredricksonHerald Writer

SEATTLE — Defense wins championships.

Yeah, we get that.But at some point, at some

minimal level, you have to play offense, too, and the Seattle Seahawks are well short of the mark in that department.

Seattle’s offensive futility for the first 26 minutes of their 39-32 NFL loss to Arizona on Sunday would have been comical if it hadn’t been so painful for Seahawks fans to watch.

And while there are a lot of reasons the Seahawks fell so far behind so early, the offense cer-tainly was one of them.

On their first four possessions, the Seahawks (4-5) had five pen-alties, 21 total yards, one first down, and a safety that occurred when quarterback Russell Wil-son bumped into tackle Russell Okung, dropped the ball and had to fall on it in the end zone to pre-vent an Arizona touchdown.

Factoring in the penalties, the Seahawks moved backward on three of their first four possessions.

They came to life on their next possession and drove 80 yards for a touchdown, but even with that they had the ball for just eight minutes, 43 seconds of the first half, and they went to the locker room trailing 22-7.

And don’t be fooled by the final tally of 32 points.

The offense was better in the second half, yes, but the defense did most of the heavy lifting. The defense scored one touchdown and set up another by recovering a fumble at the Arizona 3-yard line.

Those accounted for 12 points as the Seahawks went for two after both TDs and failed on both.

So the offense really generated just 20 points on its own.

The Seahawks have proven the past two seasons that you don’t

have to score a lot of points to win a championship.

In fact, they have never won a regular-season game under coach Pete Carroll in which the oppo-nent scored more than 27 points. They aren’t built for shootouts, and they don’t win them, as was the case again Sunday.

In their four victories this sea-son, Seattle has scored 26, 13, 20, and 13 points.

So you can be just sort of medi-ocre on offense and still win some games, but you can’t be flat-out bad, and that has been the case too often this season.

The stat sheet will suggest that Arizona’s offense had a field day on Seattle’s vaunted defense, and there is some truth to that. But when you’re on the field for 22 minutes in the first half against a good NFL offense, it’s going to look bad.

The offense hung the defense out to dry, and that is becoming a theme of this season.

The penalties early on were especially frustrating as tight ends Luke Willson and Jimmy Graham had three penalties on the first four series. They each were flagged for holding, and Willson also was called for a face-mask penalty that was initially and incorrectly assigned to tackle Garry Gilliam.

A holding penalty also killed a promising drive late in the third quarter when the score was 25-17 and the Seahawks had the momentum.

After converting on fourth-and-1 at the Arizona 47, Seattle had an apparent 11-yard run by Marshawn Lynch nullified by a holding penalty called on guard J.R. Sweezy. The Seahawks failed to convert from first-and-20 and punted.

The Seahawks had another killer penalty on their final offen-sive possession. Trailing 32-29 with seven minutes left, Seat-tle appeared to generate some

momentum on back-to-back passes to Doug Baldwin that gained 42 yards and gave Seattle a first down at the Arizona 45.

But Wilson was called for inten-tional grounding on the next play to make it second-and-23, and they punted after two incomplete passes.

Arizona (7-2) drove down the field and clinched the victory with Andre Ellington’s 48-yard touch-down run.

Seattle finished with 14 penal-ties for 131 yards, and penalties had a direct hand in killing at least five drives. The Seahawks aren’t built to recover from first-and-20-or-more, and they failed to convert on any of those situations Sunday.

If there’s anything remotely positive to come from Sunday’s offensive performance, it was that Seattle scored touchdowns on two of three red-zone posses-sions. The Seahawks entered the game scoring touchdowns on just 29 percent of their possessions inside the opponents’ 20-yard line, which was last in the NFL by a wide margin.

They went to Jimmy Graham to set up their first red-zone touch-down. Graham, the tight end who was acquired in large part to cure Seattle’s red-zone woes, was the targeted receiver on Seattle’s first two red-zone plays in the second quarter.

Both passes were incom-plete, but defensive pass interference was called on safety Tyrann Mathieu in the end zone on the second, and Seattle’s Will Tukuafu scored on a 1-yard run on the next play.

Optimists will look at the Seahawks’ remaining games and see a string of games they should probably win.

But if they continue to play offense like they did in the first half Sunday — and have for much of the season — don’t count on those victories.

KEVIN CLARK / THE HERALDSeattle QB Russell Wilson (3) collides with tackle Russell Okung and fumbles in the second quarter Sunday. The play resulted in a safety, giving Arizona a 5-0 lead.

Offensively challengedAnother inept performance leads to loss to Arizona

SEAHAWKS | Notebook

By Rich MyhreHerald Writer

SEATTLE — A remembrance for the victims of Friday’s terrorist attacks in Paris was a big part of the pregame ceremonies Sunday at CenturyLink Field.

The Seattle Seahawks and Arizona Cardinals both carried flags of France as they ran onto the field before the game, with defensive end Cliff Avril carry-ing the French tri-colour for Seattle. A member of the U.S. military ran beside him, carrying the U.S. flag.

Before the national anthem, the stadium

observed a moment of silence for the victims. Dur-ing the anthem, and in addition to the U.S. flag, members of the military on the field held banners in the colors of the French flag.

Wideout Richardson returnsSeattle wide receiver Paul Richardson saw action for the

first time since suffering a torn anterior cruciate knee liga-ment in a Jan. 10 playoff game against Carolina.

Richardson made his first catch late in the second quar-ter and it was a big one, a 40-yard reception up the left side-line to set up a Seahawks touchdown. But he left the game late in the half with a hamstring injury and did not return.

Seahawks honor victims of Paris tragedy

Herald staff

SEATTLE — Seahawks line-backer Bruce Irvin went to the locker room in the fourth quarter of Sunday’s 39-32 loss to Arizona with a knee injury.

He did not return to the game.

LB Irvin injured

Page 22: Everett Daily Herald, November 16, 2015

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WashingtonBellingham 47/46/r 56/41/rColville 42/35/pc 50/28/shEllensburg 45/35/c 59/36/rForks 52/50/r 56/41/rFriday Harbor 48/46/r 55/41/rMoses Lake 46/41/pc 61/35/rOcean Shores 55/54/r 57/49/rOlympia 46/45/r 57/40/rPort Angeles 48/45/r 56/40/rPullman 39/35/pc 52/35/cSpokane 39/35/pc 52/34/shSeattle 47/46/r 57/42/rTacoma 47/46/r 57/40/rWalla Walla 48/45/pc 63/41/shWenatchee 44/37/r 56/38/rYakima 49/38/r 64/36/rIdahoBoise 41/32/pc 49/41/cCoeur d’Alene 40/35/pc 51/33/shSun Valley 35/22/c 41/33/sfOregonAstoria 55/53/r 60/46/rBend 42/38/sn 50/37/rEugene 50/45/r 59/44/rKlamath Falls 40/32/c 46/40/rMedford 46/43/r 54/48/cPortland 49/47/r 61/44/r

Albany 55/27/s 48/27/sAlbuquerque 51/29/sh 48/29/pcAmarillo 71/37/t 53/32/cAnchorage 7/-2/s 5/-2/sAtlanta 64/51/pc 63/57/cAtlantic City 67/50/s 56/48/pcAustin 79/58/t 68/45/rBaltimore 69/40/s 59/46/pcBaton Rouge 78/71/c 80/54/rBillings 44/26/pc 50/42/sBirmingham 69/59/pc 69/63/cBoise 41/32/pc 49/41/cBoston 56/34/s 48/35/sBuffalo 56/36/s 58/45/pcBurlington, VT 44/26/pc 45/27/sCharleston, SC 70/55/pc 72/64/pcCharleston, WV 66/40/pc 67/53/cCharlotte 64/41/pc 64/52/pcCheyenne 47/24/r 39/31/pcChicago 58/45/r 58/54/rCincinnati 61/46/pc 66/58/cCleveland 63/43/s 62/53/cColumbus, OH 62/43/pc 62/54/cDallas 72/56/t 66/46/rDenver 51/28/r 39/31/snDes Moines 57/50/sh 63/43/rDetroit 62/44/pc 59/52/rEl Paso 65/40/pc 57/37/pcEvansville 57/50/r 68/58/rFairbanks -8/-17/pc -9/-18/pcFargo 57/47/c 47/32/shFort Myers 86/70/pc 87/72/pcFresno 56/35/s 58/38/sGrand Rapids 62/44/pc 57/49/rGreensboro 65/41/pc 64/50/pcHartford 59/28/s 50/27/sHonolulu 87/72/sh 86/74/sHouston 78/71/t 73/49/rIndianapolis 59/45/r 62/55/r

Jackson, MS 76/67/c 77/54/rKansas City 59/52/r 66/41/rKnoxville 60/43/pc 68/56/cLas Vegas 56/38/pc 61/43/sLittle Rock 64/61/r 72/47/rLos Angeles 64/45/s 73/49/sLouisville 60/50/pc 68/59/cLubbock 75/39/t 61/33/pcMemphis 69/62/r 72/53/rMiami 82/74/sh 83/77/shMilwaukee 58/46/r 55/51/rMinneapolis 53/48/sh 55/48/rMobile 75/67/pc 77/67/cMontgomery 73/58/pc 73/67/cNewark 65/41/s 52/42/sNew Orleans 79/70/c 81/56/rNew York City 62/42/s 51/43/sNorfolk 65/50/s 67/58/pcOakland 63/45/s 66/46/sOklahoma City 67/50/t 60/40/sOmaha 57/51/sh 61/40/rOrlando 84/67/pc 85/71/pcPalm Springs 68/47/s 75/50/sPhiladelphia 68/45/s 57/45/pcPhoenix 62/42/pc 64/44/sPittsburgh 64/41/s 61/51/cPortland, ME 50/27/s 49/27/sPortland, OR 49/47/r 61/44/rProvidence 60/31/s 50/30/s

Raleigh 67/40/pc 66/51/pcRapid City 58/28/pc 45/31/pcReno 38/24/pc 52/30/sRichmond 65/40/s 65/51/pcSacramento 59/40/s 65/43/sSt. Louis 56/51/r 69/50/rSt. Petersburg 85/71/s 86/74/pcSalt Lake City 38/27/sn 41/36/pcSan Antonio 80/62/t 73/49/rSan Diego 66/48/s 69/53/sSan Francisco 61/50/s 65/50/sSan Jose 59/43/s 67/45/sStockton 59/39/s 64/42/sSyracuse 53/27/s 53/35/pcTallahassee 81/63/pc 84/70/cTampa 86/71/pc 87/74/pcTempe 60/38/pc 62/40/sTopeka 62/56/r 68/38/rTucson 56/34/pc 59/37/sTulsa 64/59/t 64/42/rWashington, DC 69/46/s 61/51/pcWichita 66/53/t 61/37/cWinston-Salem 64/41/pc 63/51/pcYuma 69/49/s 66/50/s

High: Brownsville, TX ...................... 87Low: Bodie State Park, CA ................ 7

Periods of rain, some heavy today. Breezy near the coast;

chilly near the Cascades. On-and-off rain, some heavy tonight; watch for fl ooding.

Cloudy today with a bit of snow in the afternoon, accumulating

1-3 inches.

A little rain this after-noon; some sun, then

turning cloudy and colder in the east.

Cloudy, a little rain; chilly

Breezy with rain, heavy at times

An afternoon shower around

Sun and clouds with a shower

through 5 p.m. yesterday through 5 p.m. yesterdayHigh/low ..................................... 45/37Normal high/low ....................... 49/41Records (2008/2014) ................. 64/16Barometric pressure (noon) ... 29.76 S24 hours ending 5 p.m. ............... 0.50”Month to date ............................. 3.84”Normal month to date ............... 3.32”Year to date ............................... 34.37”Normal year to date ................. 37.87”

High/low ..................................... 49/37Normal high/low ....................... 50/39Records (2001/1955) ................... 60/8Barometric pressure (noon) ... 29.76 R24 hours ending 5 p.m. ............... 0.68”Month to date ............................. 3.70”Normal month to date ............... 1.65”Year to date ............................... 18.77”Normal year to date ................. 16.43”

Low 1:14 a.m. -0.4High 8:35 a.m. 11.3Low 2:21 p.m. 6.7High 6:46 p.m. 8.8

Low 12:11 a.m. -0.9High 8:20 a.m. 8.9Low 1:32 p.m. 6.3High 5:53 p.m. 6.9

through 5 p.m. yesterdayHigh/low ..................................... 44/38Normal high/low ....................... 49/41Records (1995/1955) ................... 66/9Barometric pressure (noon) ... 29.74 S24 hours ending 5 p.m. ............... 0.95”Month to date ............................. 4.36”Normal month to date ............... 3.02”Year to date ............................... 22.72”Normal year to date ................. 27.68”

Yesterday’s offender ....... Particulates Sunrise today ....................... 7:16 a.m.Sunset tonight ..................... 4:31 p.m.Moonrise today ................. 11:23 a.m.Moonset today ..................... 9:09 p.m.

Amsterdam 58/51/sh 58/51/rAthens 69/57/s 70/54/sBaghdad 70/61/c 69/55/tBangkok 92/79/t 93/79/pcBeijing 48/31/c 51/31/pcBerlin 55/48/sh 56/49/shBuenos Aires 83/65/pc 80/62/pcCairo 76/61/pc 75/59/pcDublin 49/41/r 54/41/rHong Kong 83/77/t 83/76/sJerusalem 69/54/t 58/52/tJohannesburg 75/52/t 77/58/tLondon 57/51/c 60/49/sh

Madrid 64/39/s 64/38/sManila 91/80/s 92/79/sMexico City 74/52/pc 74/52/pcMoscow 31/25/r 32/26/cParis 58/56/sh 61/52/shRio de Janeiro 79/73/c 83/74/cRiyadh 80/54/s 82/60/sRome 65/47/s 65/49/pcSingapore 87/78/t 87/78/tStockholm 42/38/r 45/36/pcSydney 71/58/pc 77/63/sTokyo 68/62/pc 69/62/cToronto 50/34/pc 48/40/pc

TODAY

TOMORROW

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

45°44°

54°41°

47°39°

46°38°

44°34°

47/45 48/45 45/4248/45

48/46

49/47

49/47

47/46

48/45

47/46

49/47

47/45

48/46

49/4747/44

47/46

46/44

45/42

48/45

48/46

49/46

45/42

47/46

47/4647/46

48/45

49/38

48/45

39/35

40/35

37/2441/26

29/14

41/32

35/1936/29

42/38

50/48

50/45

49/47

51/48

40/29

46/43

56/49 40/32

47/31

48/43

35/26

39/34

38/24

40/24

46/45

57/42

First Full Last NewNov 18 Nov 25 Dec 2 Dec 11

Forecasts and graphics, except the KIRO 5-day forecast, provided

by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Small craft should exercise caution today. Wind south-

southeast at 12-25 knots. Seas 4-7 feet. Visibility under 3

miles in rain.

45/44

45/44

Clouds and intervals of sunshine

48/45

46/39

AUTO RACINGRace for Heroes 500

At Phoenix International RacewayAvondale, Ariz.

Lap length: 1 miles(Start position in parentheses)

1. (3) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 219 laps, 47 points.

2. (8) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 219, 44.3. (14) Joey Logano, Ford, 219, 41.4. (10) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 219, 41.5. (1) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 219, 40.6. (11) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 219, 39.7. (2) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 219, 37.8. (13) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 219, 36.9. (18) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 219, 36.10. (17) Aric Almirola, Ford, 219, 34.11. (22) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 219, 33.12. (4) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 219, 32.13. (15) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 219, 31.14. (5) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 219, 30.15. (12) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 218, 29.16. (21) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 218, 28.17. (25) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 218, 27.18. (29) David Ragan, Toyota, 218, 27.19. (7) Erik Jones, Toyota, 218, 0.20. (16) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 218, 24.21. (6) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 218, 23.22. (24) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 218, 22.23. (27) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 218, 21.24. (23) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 218, 20.25. (20) Greg Biffle, Ford, 218, 19.26. (9) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 217, 18.27. (31) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 217, 17.28. (30) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 217, 16.29. (33) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 216, 0.30. (34) David Gilliland, Ford, 216, 14.31. (28) Sam Hornish Jr., Ford, 215, 13.32. (36) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 215, 12.33. (38) Cole Whitt, Ford, 215, 11.34. (26) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 215, 10.35. (32) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 215, 0.36. (40) Brett Moffitt, Ford, 215, 8.37. (41) Ryan Preece, Ford, 214, 7.38. (35) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 214, 6.39. (37) Jeb Burton, Toyota, 213, 5.40. (42) Ryan Ellis, Chevrolet, 211, 0.41. (19) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, accident,

194, 3.42. (39) Joey Gase, Ford, accident, 161, 0.43. (43) Timmy Hill, Chevrolet, 127, 0.Top 16 in Points: 1. K.Harvick, 5,000;

2. J.Gordon, 5,000; 3. Ky.Busch, 5,000; 4. M.Truex Jr., 5,000; 5. C.Edwards, 2,334; 6. J.Logano, 2,319; 7. D.Earnhardt Jr., 2,306; 8. B.Keselowski, 2,304; 9. Ku.Busch, 2,297; 10. D.Hamlin, 2,293; 11. R.Newman, 2,286; 12. J.Johnson, 2,280; 13. J.McMurray, 2,264; 14. P.Menard, 2,239; 15. M.Kenseth, 2,197; 16. C.Bowyer, 2,174.

BASKETBALLNBA

EASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division

W L Pct GBToronto 7 4 .636 —Boston 5 4 .556 1New York 5 6 .455 2Brooklyn 1 9 .100 51⁄2Philadelphia 0 10 .000 61⁄2

Southeast Division W L Pct GBAtlanta 8 4 .667 —Miami 6 3 .667 Washington 4 4 .500 2Charlotte 5 5 .500 2Orlando 5 6 .455 2

Central Division W L Pct GBCleveland 8 2 .800 —Chicago 6 3 .667 11⁄2Indiana 6 4 .600 2Milwaukee 5 5 .500 3Detroit 5 5 .500 3

WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division

W L Pct GBSan Antonio 7 2 .778 —Dallas 6 4 .600 1Memphis 5 6 .455 3Houston 4 6 .400 3New Orleans 1 9 .100 6

Northwest Division W L Pct GBOklahoma City 6 4 .600 —Utah 5 5 .500 1Denver 5 5 .500 1Minnesota 4 6 .400 2Portland 4 7 .364 2

Pacific Division W L Pct GBGolden State 11 0 1.000 —L.A. Clippers 6 4 .600 41⁄2Phoenix 5 4 .556 5Sacramento 4 7 .364 7L.A. Lakers 2 8 .200 81⁄2

Sunday’s GamesNew York 95, New Orleans 87Memphis 114, Minnesota 106Charlotte 106, Portland 94Utah 97, Atlanta 96Boston 100, Oklahoma City 85Sacramento 107, Toronto 101L.A. Lakers 97, Detroit 85

Monday’s GamesDallas at Philadelphia, 4 p.m.Indiana at Chicago, 5 p.m.Oklahoma City at Memphis, 5 p.m.Boston at Houston, 5 p.m.Portland at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m.L.A. Lakers at Phoenix, 6 p.m.

College BasketballSunday’s Games

EASTArmy 75, Binghamton 60East Stroudsburg 94, St. Rose 86Franklin Pierce 83, Chestnut Hill 73Lafayette 87, St. Peter’s 86, OTLeMoyne 84, Bloomfield 80NYU 77, Purchase 53Penn 77, CCSU 61Rutgers 82, Howard 70Saint Joseph’s 73, Niagara 62Seton Hall 69, Wagner 59Wake Forest 90, Bucknell 82

SOUTHClemson 78, UTSA 45Denver 82, Lipscomb 69Florida St. 109, Nicholls St. 62High Point 93, NC Wesleyan 69Jacksonville St. 81, Fort Valley St. 68NC State 88, South Alabama 70

North Carolina 92, Fairfield 65Richmond 108, Stetson 85Troy 97, Reinhardt 82W. Carolina 90, UNC Asheville 81

MIDWESTCincinnati 106, Robert Morris 44Evansville 80, SE Missouri 65Illinois 80, N. Dakota St. 74Iowa 103, Coppin St. 68Minnesota 67, Louisiana-Monroe 56Missouri 73, Md.-Eastern Shore 55N. Illinois 65, Wright St. 59Nebraska-Omaha 104, St. Mary’s (Minn.) 58Ohio St. 76, Mount St. Mary’s 54Purdue 107, Vermont 79S. Illinois 81, Florida A&M 51Saint Louis 85, Hartford 68South Dakota 76, CS Northridge 72UMKC 73, William Jewell 59Valparaiso 83, Iona 58W. Illinois 94, Hannibal-LaGrange 57Wisconsin 92, Siena 65FAR WESTE. Washington 126, George Fox 64Hawaii 74, Coastal Carolina 63Milwaukee 71, Santa Clara 65Nevada 83, Montana St. 62New Mexico 83, New Mexico St. 74Sacramento St. 77, Seattle 65Stanford 93, Charleston Southern 59UC Davis 79, Portland 66UC Irvine 77, Loyola Marymount 53

Sacramento State 77, Seattle 65

SACRAMENTO ST. (2-0)Hornsby 4-9 1-2 9, E. Stuteville 1-3 1-2 3,

Graves 7-15 7-11 24, Barlett 1-4 1-2 4, Demps 1-9 0-2 2, Strings 6-10 0-0 13, Ugbaja 2-2 0-0 5, Jackson 0-0 3-4 3, Wu 5-11 1-4 14, M. Stuteville 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 27-64 14-27 77.

SEATTLE (0-2)Powell 3-4 2-2 8, Crook 5-7 0-3 10, West-

endorf 6-13 4-5 18, Cohee 2-11 0-1 5, Shaugh-nessy 3-10 2-3 8, Chibuogwu 2-3 1-2 5, Spur-geon 0-7 0-0 0, Clair 1-9 4-4 7, Menzies 2-4 0-3 4. Totals 24-68 13-23 65.

Halftime—Seattle 27-25. 3-Point Goals—Sacramento St. 9-29 (Wu 3-8, Graves 3-9, Ug-baja 1-1, Strings 1-3, Barlett 1-4, Hornsby 0-2, Demps 0-2), Seattle 4-27 (Westendorf 2-7, Cohee 1-4, Clair 1-7, Shaughnessy 0-4, Spur-geon 0-5). Fouled Out—Crook, Demps, Powell. Rebounds—Sacramento St. 40 (Hornsby 9), Seattle 54 (Crook, Powell, Westendorf 10). As-sists—Sacramento St. 18 (Graves 5), Seattle 12 (Westendorf 4). Total Fouls—Sacramento St. 24, Seattle 21. A—1,754.

FOOTBALLAmway Top 25 Poll

The Amway Top 25 football coaches poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 14, total points based on 25 points for first place through one point for 25th, and previous ranking: Record Pts Pvs 1. Clemson (28) 10-0 1560 2 2. Ohio State (32) 10-0 1541 1 3. Alabama (4) 9-1 1484 4 4. Oklahoma State 10-0 1348 5 5. Notre Dame 9-1 1333 6

6. Iowa 10-0 1278 8 7. Oklahoma 9-1 1240 11 8. Florida 9-1 1132 10 9. Michigan State 9-1 1020 1410. Baylor 8-1 999 311. TCU 9-1 970 1212. North Carolina 9-1 801 1713. Michigan 8-2 759 1514. Houston 10-0 745 1615. Stanford 8-2 690 716. Florida State 8-2 638 t1817. LSU 7-2 584 918. Utah 8-2 493 1319. Navy 8-1 456 2320. Wisconsin 8-2 447 2221. Northwestern 8-2 359 2422. Oregon 7-3 186 NR23. Washington State 7-3 155 NR24. Southern California 7-3 154 NR25. Mississippi 7-3 70 NR25. Mississippi State 7-3 70 20

Others receiving votes: UCLA 57; Memphis 51; Georgia 35; Toledo 33; Arkansas 28; Texas A&M 25; Temple 17; Pittsburgh 14; Western Ken-tucky 11; Bowling Green 8; Louisville 3; Appala-chian State 2; Arkansas State 2; Brigham Young 1; Marshall 1.

Associated Press Top 25The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press

college football poll, with first-place votes in pa-rentheses, records through Nov. 14, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Record Pts Pv 1. Clemson (34) 10-0 1,496 1 2. Ohio St. (23) 10-0 1,460 2 3. Alabama (4) 9-1 1,424 3 4. Oklahoma St. 10-0 1,301 5 5. Notre Dame 9-1 1,286 6 6. Iowa 10-0 1,216 8 7. Oklahoma 9-1 1,182 12 8. Florida 9-1 1,055 11 9. Michigan St. 9-1 1,008 1410. Baylor 8-1 946 411. TCU 9-1 857 1312. North Carolina 9-1 791 1713. Houston 10-0 790 1614. Michigan 8-2 738 1515. Stanford 8-2 668 716. Florida St. 8-2 559 1917. LSU 7-2 549 918. Utah 8-2 514 1019. Navy 8-1 465 2220. Northwestern 8-2 397 2421. Wisconsin 8-2 338 2322. Southern Cal 7-3 201 NR23. Oregon 7-3 170 NR24. Washington St. 7-3 167 NR25. Mississippi 7-3 44 NR

Others receiving votes: Toledo 39, Arkansas 35, Memphis 32, Mississippi St. 25, UCLA 18, Pittsburgh 15, Temple 13, Georgia 8, Texas A&M 8, Bowling Green 4, W. Kentucky 4, Air Force 1, Arkansas St. 1.

WSU 31, UCLA 27Saturday’s game

WSU 7 7 7 10—31UCLA 6 10 0 11—27

First QuarterUCLA—FG Fairbairn 22, 9:44.WSU—Wicks 2 run (E.Powell kick), 4:31.UCLA—FG Fairbairn 22, :19.

Second QuarterUCLA—Starks 14 run (Fairbairn kick), 4:14.WSU—D.Williams 7 pass from Bender

(E.Powell kick), 1:30.UCLA—FG Fairbairn 38, :11.

Third QuarterWSU—Marks 4 pass from Falk (E.Powell

kick), 7:59.Fourth Quarter

WSU—FG E.Powell 25, 11:40.UCLA—FG Fairbairn 38, 7:10.UCLA—Rosen 37 run (Duarte pass from

Rosen), 1:09.WSU—Marks 21 pass from Falk (E.Powell

kick), :03.A—76,255. WSU UCLA

First downs 26 30Rushes-yards 22-38 32-214Passing 388 340Comp-Att-Int 40-58-1 33-57-0Return Yards 0 12Punts-Avg. 5-44.6 3-16.7Fumbles-Lost 1-0 2-2Penalties-Yards 9-45 13-75Time of Possession 32:35 27:25

RUSHING—Washington St., Morrow 5-32, Wicks 5-19, Harrington 1-10, Martin Jr. 1-(minus 6), Falk 10-(minus 17). UCLA, Perkins 20-121, Rosen 5-70, Starks 4-14, Jamabo 1-12, Andrews 1-0, Iese 1-(minus 3).

PASSING—Washington St., Falk 38-53-1-331, Bender 2-5-0-57. UCLA, Rosen 33-57-0-340.

RECEIVING—Washington St., Marks 12-92,

D.Williams 7-100, Sweet 4-53, Wicks 4-9, Lewis 3-32, Priester 3-25, Harrington 2-55, Morrow 2-10, Baker 2-7, Martin Jr. 1-5. UCLA, Payton 14-152, Andrews 7-60, Perkins 4-28, Massing-ton 3-44, Duarte 2-30, Walker 1-14, Starks 1-10, Jamabo 1-2.

Arizona State 27, Washington 17

Saturday’s game

Washington 10 7 0 0—17Arizona St. 0 3 7 17—27

First QuarterWash—FG Van Winkle 35, 9:57.Wash—Gaskin 1 run (Van Winkle kick),

6:50.Second Quarter

Wash—Daniels 29 pass from Browning (Van Winkle kick), 8:20.

ASU—FG Gonzalez 40, 2:21.Third Quarter

ASU—Ballage 3 run (Gonzalez kick), 9:56.Fourth Quarter

ASU—Lucien 32 pass from Bercovici (Gon-zalez kick), 13:52.

ASU—FG Gonzalez 23, 8:25.ASU—Ballage 48 run (Gonzalez kick), 5:59.A—51,695. Wash ASU

First downs 27 19Rushes-yards 34-142 43-144Passing 405 253Comp-Att-Int 28-52-3 22-34-0Return Yards 39 50Punts-Avg. 6-42.8 11-46.1Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-0Penalties-Yards 7-60 3-39Time of Possession 30:48 29:12

RUSHING—Washington, Gaskin 18-108, Cooper 3-15, Hall 2-10, Browning 10-7, Carta-Samuels 1-2. Arizona St., Ballage 11-92, Richard 14-45, Foster 6-17, Hayes 1-5, Team 1-(minus 1), Gammage 1-(minus 4), Bercovici 9-(minus 10).

PASSING—Washington, Browning 28-52-3-405. Arizona St., Bercovici 22-34-0-253.

RECEIVING—Washington, Lenius 6-59, Mickens 5-100, Daniels 4-61, Renfro 3-30, Per-kins 3-29, Hall 2-65, Pettis 2-35, Gaskin 2-11, Sample 1-15. Arizona St., Foster 5-62, T.White 5-22, Lucien 4-63, Kohl 4-55, Chambers 1-24, Ballage 1-10, Jefferson 1-10, Hayes 1-7.

GOLFOHL Classic

SundayAt El Camaleon Golf ClubPlaya del Carmen, Mexico

Purse: $6.2 millionYardage: 6,987; Par: 71

Fourth Round(27 golfers did not finish the round)

Keegan Bradley 67-71-68-66—272Peter Malnati 68-71-67-67—273Boo Weekley 67-70-69-67—273Hunter Stewart 68-69-68-68—273Charles Howell III 66-71-70-67—274Jim Herman 69-67-70-68—274Dawie van der Walt 66-74-64-70—274Si Woo Kim 68-64-72-70—274Jason Kokrak 68-67-68-71—274Will Wilcox 69-66-68-71—274D.J. Trahan 66-71-67-70—274Bronson Burgoon 71-68-67-69—275Roberto Castro 70-68-68-69—275Cameron Beckman 67-71-68-69—275

Leaderboard Score ThruRussell Knox -19 12Graeme McDowell -18 12Jason Bohn -17 12Scott Brown -15 14Derek Fathauer -15 12Fredrik Jacobson -13 13Patrick Rodgers -13 15Harold Varner III -13 13Justin Leonard -13 13

Lorena Ochoa InvitationalSunday

At Club de Golf MexicoMexico City

Purse: $1 millionYardage: 6,774; Par 72

FinalInbee Park, $200,000 68-71-67-64—270Carlota Ciganda, $103,449 72-69-69-63—273Sei Young Kim, $75,045 73-66-70-66—275So Yeon Ryu, $58,053 71-70-69-67—277Sakura Yokomine, $46,726 72-70-69-68—279Mariajo Uribe, $35,115 71-73-71-65—280Caroline Masson, $35,115 73-71-70-66—280Jaye Marie Green , $24,354 71-70-72-69—282Suzann Pettersen, $24,354 69-71-73-69—282Cristie Kerr, $24,354 74-69-69-70—282Christina Kim, $24,354 73-66-73-70—282

HOCKEYNHL

EASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GAMontreal 18 13 3 2 28 63 39Ottawa 17 8 5 4 20 51 53Tampa Bay 19 8 8 3 19 46 48Boston 16 8 7 1 17 52 49Detroit 17 8 8 1 17 37 42Buffalo 17 8 8 1 17 40 46Florida 17 7 7 3 17 48 45Toronto 18 5 9 4 14 41 54

Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAN.Y. Rangers 18 14 2 2 30 57 32Washington 16 11 4 1 23 50 37New Jersey 17 10 6 1 21 44 40N.Y. Islanders 18 9 6 3 21 49 42Pittsburgh 17 10 7 0 20 36 37Philadelphia 17 6 8 3 15 33 50Carolina 17 6 9 2 14 34 49Columbus 18 6 12 0 12 45 62

WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GADallas 18 14 4 0 28 65 47Minnesota 16 10 3 3 23 48 43Nashville 16 10 3 3 23 50 38St. Louis 17 11 5 1 23 47 41Chicago 18 10 7 1 21 49 44Winnipeg 18 8 8 2 18 48 59Colorado 17 7 9 1 15 49 45

Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GALos Angeles 17 11 6 0 22 43 36Arizona 17 9 7 1 19 48 49Vancouver 18 7 6 5 19 52 46San Jose 17 9 8 0 18 45 43Anaheim 17 5 8 4 14 29 45Calgary 19 6 12 1 13 45 72Edmonton 18 6 12 0 12 47 58

NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.

Sunday’s GamesN.Y. Rangers 4, Toronto 3Chicago 4, Calgary 1

Monday’s GamesArizona at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m.Anaheim at Carolina, 4 p.m.Vancouver at Montreal, 4:30 p.m.Detroit at Ottawa, 4:30 p.m.Tampa Bay at Florida, 4:30 p.m.Winnipeg at St. Louis, 5 p.m.

WHLU.S. DIVISION

GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PtSeattle 19 12 6 1 0 68 49 25Spokane 21 10 8 2 1 65 72 23Everett 16 10 5 0 1 38 33 21Portland 19 10 9 0 0 66 56 20Tri-City 20 7 12 1 0 59 77 15

B.C. DIVISION GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PtKelowna 20 14 5 1 0 80 63 29Victoria 22 14 7 0 1 71 45 29Prince George 19 10 8 1 0 53 56 21Kamloops 18 9 8 1 0 65 58 19Vancouver 20 5 11 2 2 54 78 14

EASTERN CONFERENCEEAST DIVISION

GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PtPrince Albert 21 13 5 2 1 74 66 29Brandon 21 12 7 0 2 74 58 26Moose Jaw 20 11 6 2 1 77 62 25Saskatoon 19 9 7 3 0 66 74 21Regina 18 9 8 1 0 54 66 19Swift Current 20 8 10 2 0 52 61 18

CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PtRed Deer 22 15 7 0 0 85 63 30Lethbridge 20 12 8 0 0 78 65 24Calgary 22 11 10 0 1 63 73 23Edmonton 21 7 11 3 0 53 71 17Medicine Hat 17 6 8 2 1 62 69 15Kootenay 21 4 15 2 0 47 89 10

Sunday’s gamesRegina 5 Lethbridge 3Prince Albert 3 Brandon 2Kamloops 9 Prince George 1

Monday’s gamesNo games scheduled

DEALSFOOTBALL

National Football LeagueHOUSTON TEXANS —] Waived C Eric Kush.

Activated TE Ryan Griffin from the injured re-serve-return list.

HOCKEYNational Hockey League

ARIZONA COYOTES — Recalled F Craig Cun-ningham from Springfield (AHL).

COLORADO AVALANCHE — Claimed F Chris Wagner off waivers from Anaheim. Placed G Semyon Varlamov on injured reserve, retroactive to Nov. 10.

C6 Monday, 11.16.2015 The Daily Herald

WA Dept. of Environmental Quality

Planets

Mercury ..... 7:17 a.m. ........ 4:26 p.m. Venus ......... 3:08 a.m. ........ 2:57 p.m.Mars ........... 2:32 a.m. ........ 2:43 p.m.Jupiter ........ 1:22 a.m. ........ 2:16 p.m.Saturn ........ 8:14 a.m. ........ 5:15 p.m.Uranus ....... 3:02 p.m. ........ 4:04 a.m.Neptune ..... 1:46 p.m. ...... 12:25 a.m.Pluto ......... 10:59 a.m. ........ 7:44 p.m.

Rises Sets

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

Snohomish47/45

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 51/48/r 59/51/rSalem 50/48/r 61/44/rMontanaButte 29/14/c 42/27/sfGreat Falls 41/26/c 53/34/cMissoula 37/24/c 46/31/sfAlaskaAnchorage 7/-2/s 5/-2/s

Barrow -4/-10/c -4/-16/cFairbanks -8/-17/pc -9/-18/pcJuneau 35/25/sn 33/19/snBritish ColumbiaChilliwack 44/41/r 53/36/rKelowna 39/34/r 48/24/rVancouver 46/45/r 55/39/rVictoria 49/47/r 58/42/r

WashingtonBellingham 47/46/r 56/41/rColville 42/35/pc 50/28/shEllensburg 45/35/c 59/36/rForks 52/50/r 56/41/rFriday Harbor 48/46/r 55/41/rMoses Lake 46/41/pc 61/35/rOcean Shores 55/54/r 57/49/rOlympia 46/45/r 57/40/rPort Angeles 48/45/r 56/40/rPullman 39/35/pc 52/35/cSpokane 39/35/pc 52/34/shSeattle 47/46/r 57/42/rTacoma 47/46/r 57/40/rWalla Walla 48/45/pc 63/41/shWenatchee 44/37/r 56/38/rYakima 49/38/r 64/36/rIdahoBoise 41/32/pc 49/41/cCoeur d’Alene 40/35/pc 51/33/shSun Valley 35/22/c 41/33/sfOregonAstoria 55/53/r 60/46/rBend 42/38/sn 50/37/rEugene 50/45/r 59/44/rKlamath Falls 40/32/c 46/40/rMedford 46/43/r 54/48/cPortland 49/47/r 61/44/r

Albany 55/27/s 48/27/sAlbuquerque 51/29/sh 48/29/pcAmarillo 71/37/t 53/32/cAnchorage 7/-2/s 5/-2/sAtlanta 64/51/pc 63/57/cAtlantic City 67/50/s 56/48/pcAustin 79/58/t 68/45/rBaltimore 69/40/s 59/46/pcBaton Rouge 78/71/c 80/54/rBillings 44/26/pc 50/42/sBirmingham 69/59/pc 69/63/cBoise 41/32/pc 49/41/cBoston 56/34/s 48/35/sBuffalo 56/36/s 58/45/pcBurlington, VT 44/26/pc 45/27/sCharleston, SC 70/55/pc 72/64/pcCharleston, WV 66/40/pc 67/53/cCharlotte 64/41/pc 64/52/pcCheyenne 47/24/r 39/31/pcChicago 58/45/r 58/54/rCincinnati 61/46/pc 66/58/cCleveland 63/43/s 62/53/cColumbus, OH 62/43/pc 62/54/cDallas 72/56/t 66/46/rDenver 51/28/r 39/31/snDes Moines 57/50/sh 63/43/rDetroit 62/44/pc 59/52/rEl Paso 65/40/pc 57/37/pcEvansville 57/50/r 68/58/rFairbanks -8/-17/pc -9/-18/pcFargo 57/47/c 47/32/shFort Myers 86/70/pc 87/72/pcFresno 56/35/s 58/38/sGrand Rapids 62/44/pc 57/49/rGreensboro 65/41/pc 64/50/pcHartford 59/28/s 50/27/sHonolulu 87/72/sh 86/74/sHouston 78/71/t 73/49/rIndianapolis 59/45/r 62/55/r

Jackson, MS 76/67/c 77/54/rKansas City 59/52/r 66/41/rKnoxville 60/43/pc 68/56/cLas Vegas 56/38/pc 61/43/sLittle Rock 64/61/r 72/47/rLos Angeles 64/45/s 73/49/sLouisville 60/50/pc 68/59/cLubbock 75/39/t 61/33/pcMemphis 69/62/r 72/53/rMiami 82/74/sh 83/77/shMilwaukee 58/46/r 55/51/rMinneapolis 53/48/sh 55/48/rMobile 75/67/pc 77/67/cMontgomery 73/58/pc 73/67/cNewark 65/41/s 52/42/sNew Orleans 79/70/c 81/56/rNew York City 62/42/s 51/43/sNorfolk 65/50/s 67/58/pcOakland 63/45/s 66/46/sOklahoma City 67/50/t 60/40/sOmaha 57/51/sh 61/40/rOrlando 84/67/pc 85/71/pcPalm Springs 68/47/s 75/50/sPhiladelphia 68/45/s 57/45/pcPhoenix 62/42/pc 64/44/sPittsburgh 64/41/s 61/51/cPortland, ME 50/27/s 49/27/sPortland, OR 49/47/r 61/44/rProvidence 60/31/s 50/30/s

Raleigh 67/40/pc 66/51/pcRapid City 58/28/pc 45/31/pcReno 38/24/pc 52/30/sRichmond 65/40/s 65/51/pcSacramento 59/40/s 65/43/sSt. Louis 56/51/r 69/50/rSt. Petersburg 85/71/s 86/74/pcSalt Lake City 38/27/sn 41/36/pcSan Antonio 80/62/t 73/49/rSan Diego 66/48/s 69/53/sSan Francisco 61/50/s 65/50/sSan Jose 59/43/s 67/45/sStockton 59/39/s 64/42/sSyracuse 53/27/s 53/35/pcTallahassee 81/63/pc 84/70/cTampa 86/71/pc 87/74/pcTempe 60/38/pc 62/40/sTopeka 62/56/r 68/38/rTucson 56/34/pc 59/37/sTulsa 64/59/t 64/42/rWashington, DC 69/46/s 61/51/pcWichita 66/53/t 61/37/cWinston-Salem 64/41/pc 63/51/pcYuma 69/49/s 66/50/s

High: Brownsville, TX ...................... 87Low: Bodie State Park, CA ................ 7

Periods of rain, some heavy today. Breezy near the coast;

chilly near the Cascades. On-and-off rain, some heavy tonight; watch for fl ooding.

Cloudy today with a bit of snow in the afternoon, accumulating

1-3 inches.

A little rain this after-noon; some sun, then

turning cloudy and colder in the east.

Cloudy, a little rain; chilly

Breezy with rain, heavy at times

An afternoon shower around

Sun and clouds with a shower

through 5 p.m. yesterday through 5 p.m. yesterdayHigh/low ..................................... 45/37Normal high/low ....................... 49/41Records (2008/2014) ................. 64/16Barometric pressure (noon) ... 29.76 S24 hours ending 5 p.m. ............... 0.50”Month to date ............................. 3.84”Normal month to date ............... 3.32”Year to date ............................... 34.37”Normal year to date ................. 37.87”

High/low ..................................... 49/37Normal high/low ....................... 50/39Records (2001/1955) ................... 60/8Barometric pressure (noon) ... 29.76 R24 hours ending 5 p.m. ............... 0.68”Month to date ............................. 3.70”Normal month to date ............... 1.65”Year to date ............................... 18.77”Normal year to date ................. 16.43”

Low 1:14 a.m. -0.4High 8:35 a.m. 11.3Low 2:21 p.m. 6.7High 6:46 p.m. 8.8

Low 12:11 a.m. -0.9High 8:20 a.m. 8.9Low 1:32 p.m. 6.3High 5:53 p.m. 6.9

through 5 p.m. yesterdayHigh/low ..................................... 44/38Normal high/low ....................... 49/41Records (1995/1955) ................... 66/9Barometric pressure (noon) ... 29.74 S24 hours ending 5 p.m. ............... 0.95”Month to date ............................. 4.36”Normal month to date ............... 3.02”Year to date ............................... 22.72”Normal year to date ................. 27.68”

Yesterday’s offender ....... Particulates Sunrise today ....................... 7:16 a.m.Sunset tonight ..................... 4:31 p.m.Moonrise today ................. 11:23 a.m.Moonset today ..................... 9:09 p.m.

Amsterdam 58/51/sh 58/51/rAthens 69/57/s 70/54/sBaghdad 70/61/c 69/55/tBangkok 92/79/t 93/79/pcBeijing 48/31/c 51/31/pcBerlin 55/48/sh 56/49/shBuenos Aires 83/65/pc 80/62/pcCairo 76/61/pc 75/59/pcDublin 49/41/r 54/41/rHong Kong 83/77/t 83/76/sJerusalem 69/54/t 58/52/tJohannesburg 75/52/t 77/58/tLondon 57/51/c 60/49/sh

Madrid 64/39/s 64/38/sManila 91/80/s 92/79/sMexico City 74/52/pc 74/52/pcMoscow 31/25/r 32/26/cParis 58/56/sh 61/52/shRio de Janeiro 79/73/c 83/74/cRiyadh 80/54/s 82/60/sRome 65/47/s 65/49/pcSingapore 87/78/t 87/78/tStockholm 42/38/r 45/36/pcSydney 71/58/pc 77/63/sTokyo 68/62/pc 69/62/cToronto 50/34/pc 48/40/pc

TODAY

TOMORROW

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

45°44°

54°41°

47°39°

46°38°

44°34°

47/45 48/45 45/4248/45

48/46

49/47

49/47

47/46

48/45

47/46

49/47

47/45

48/46

49/4747/44

47/46

46/44

45/42

48/45

48/46

49/46

45/42

47/46

47/4647/46

48/45

49/38

48/45

39/35

40/35

37/2441/26

29/14

41/32

35/1936/29

42/38

50/48

50/45

49/47

51/48

40/29

46/43

56/49 40/32

47/31

48/43

35/26

39/34

38/24

40/24

46/45

57/42

First Full Last NewNov 18 Nov 25 Dec 2 Dec 11

Forecasts and graphics, except the KIRO 5-day forecast, provided

by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Small craft should exercise caution today. Wind south-

southeast at 12-25 knots. Seas 4-7 feet. Visibility under 3

miles in rain.

45/44

45/44

Clouds and intervals of sunshine

48/45

46/39

AUTO RACINGRace for Heroes 500

At Phoenix International RacewayAvondale, Ariz.

Lap length: 1 miles(Start position in parentheses)

1. (3) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 219 laps, 47 points.

2. (8) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 219, 44.3. (14) Joey Logano, Ford, 219, 41.4. (10) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 219, 41.5. (1) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 219, 40.6. (11) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 219, 39.7. (2) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 219, 37.8. (13) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 219, 36.9. (18) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 219, 36.10. (17) Aric Almirola, Ford, 219, 34.11. (22) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 219, 33.12. (4) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 219, 32.13. (15) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 219, 31.14. (5) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 219, 30.15. (12) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 218, 29.16. (21) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 218, 28.17. (25) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 218, 27.18. (29) David Ragan, Toyota, 218, 27.19. (7) Erik Jones, Toyota, 218, 0.20. (16) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 218, 24.21. (6) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 218, 23.22. (24) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 218, 22.23. (27) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 218, 21.24. (23) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 218, 20.25. (20) Greg Biffle, Ford, 218, 19.26. (9) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 217, 18.27. (31) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 217, 17.28. (30) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 217, 16.29. (33) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 216, 0.30. (34) David Gilliland, Ford, 216, 14.31. (28) Sam Hornish Jr., Ford, 215, 13.32. (36) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 215, 12.33. (38) Cole Whitt, Ford, 215, 11.34. (26) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 215, 10.35. (32) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 215, 0.36. (40) Brett Moffitt, Ford, 215, 8.37. (41) Ryan Preece, Ford, 214, 7.38. (35) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 214, 6.39. (37) Jeb Burton, Toyota, 213, 5.40. (42) Ryan Ellis, Chevrolet, 211, 0.41. (19) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, accident,

194, 3.42. (39) Joey Gase, Ford, accident, 161, 0.43. (43) Timmy Hill, Chevrolet, 127, 0.Top 16 in Points: 1. K.Harvick, 5,000;

2. J.Gordon, 5,000; 3. Ky.Busch, 5,000; 4. M.Truex Jr., 5,000; 5. C.Edwards, 2,334; 6. J.Logano, 2,319; 7. D.Earnhardt Jr., 2,306; 8. B.Keselowski, 2,304; 9. Ku.Busch, 2,297; 10. D.Hamlin, 2,293; 11. R.Newman, 2,286; 12. J.Johnson, 2,280; 13. J.McMurray, 2,264; 14. P.Menard, 2,239; 15. M.Kenseth, 2,197; 16. C.Bowyer, 2,174.

BASKETBALLNBA

EASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division

W L Pct GBToronto 7 4 .636 —Boston 5 4 .556 1New York 5 6 .455 2Brooklyn 1 9 .100 51⁄2Philadelphia 0 10 .000 61⁄2

Southeast Division W L Pct GBAtlanta 8 4 .667 —Miami 6 3 .667 Washington 4 4 .500 2Charlotte 5 5 .500 2Orlando 5 6 .455 2

Central Division W L Pct GBCleveland 8 2 .800 —Chicago 6 3 .667 11⁄2Indiana 6 4 .600 2Milwaukee 5 5 .500 3Detroit 5 5 .500 3

WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division

W L Pct GBSan Antonio 7 2 .778 —Dallas 6 4 .600 1Memphis 5 6 .455 3Houston 4 6 .400 3New Orleans 1 9 .100 6

Northwest Division W L Pct GBOklahoma City 6 4 .600 —Utah 5 5 .500 1Denver 5 5 .500 1Minnesota 4 6 .400 2Portland 4 7 .364 2

Pacific Division W L Pct GBGolden State 11 0 1.000 —L.A. Clippers 6 4 .600 41⁄2Phoenix 5 4 .556 5Sacramento 4 7 .364 7L.A. Lakers 2 8 .200 81⁄2

Sunday’s GamesNew York 95, New Orleans 87Memphis 114, Minnesota 106Charlotte 106, Portland 94Utah 97, Atlanta 96Boston 100, Oklahoma City 85Sacramento 107, Toronto 101L.A. Lakers 97, Detroit 85

Monday’s GamesDallas at Philadelphia, 4 p.m.Indiana at Chicago, 5 p.m.Oklahoma City at Memphis, 5 p.m.Boston at Houston, 5 p.m.Portland at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m.L.A. Lakers at Phoenix, 6 p.m.

College BasketballSunday’s Games

EASTArmy 75, Binghamton 60East Stroudsburg 94, St. Rose 86Franklin Pierce 83, Chestnut Hill 73Lafayette 87, St. Peter’s 86, OTLeMoyne 84, Bloomfield 80NYU 77, Purchase 53Penn 77, CCSU 61Rutgers 82, Howard 70Saint Joseph’s 73, Niagara 62Seton Hall 69, Wagner 59Wake Forest 90, Bucknell 82

SOUTHClemson 78, UTSA 45Denver 82, Lipscomb 69Florida St. 109, Nicholls St. 62High Point 93, NC Wesleyan 69Jacksonville St. 81, Fort Valley St. 68NC State 88, South Alabama 70

North Carolina 92, Fairfield 65Richmond 108, Stetson 85Troy 97, Reinhardt 82W. Carolina 90, UNC Asheville 81

MIDWESTCincinnati 106, Robert Morris 44Evansville 80, SE Missouri 65Illinois 80, N. Dakota St. 74Iowa 103, Coppin St. 68Minnesota 67, Louisiana-Monroe 56Missouri 73, Md.-Eastern Shore 55N. Illinois 65, Wright St. 59Nebraska-Omaha 104, St. Mary’s (Minn.) 58Ohio St. 76, Mount St. Mary’s 54Purdue 107, Vermont 79S. Illinois 81, Florida A&M 51Saint Louis 85, Hartford 68South Dakota 76, CS Northridge 72UMKC 73, William Jewell 59Valparaiso 83, Iona 58W. Illinois 94, Hannibal-LaGrange 57Wisconsin 92, Siena 65FAR WESTE. Washington 126, George Fox 64Hawaii 74, Coastal Carolina 63Milwaukee 71, Santa Clara 65Nevada 83, Montana St. 62New Mexico 83, New Mexico St. 74Sacramento St. 77, Seattle 65Stanford 93, Charleston Southern 59UC Davis 79, Portland 66UC Irvine 77, Loyola Marymount 53

Sacramento State 77, Seattle 65

SACRAMENTO ST. (2-0)Hornsby 4-9 1-2 9, E. Stuteville 1-3 1-2 3,

Graves 7-15 7-11 24, Barlett 1-4 1-2 4, Demps 1-9 0-2 2, Strings 6-10 0-0 13, Ugbaja 2-2 0-0 5, Jackson 0-0 3-4 3, Wu 5-11 1-4 14, M. Stuteville 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 27-64 14-27 77.

SEATTLE (0-2)Powell 3-4 2-2 8, Crook 5-7 0-3 10, West-

endorf 6-13 4-5 18, Cohee 2-11 0-1 5, Shaugh-nessy 3-10 2-3 8, Chibuogwu 2-3 1-2 5, Spur-geon 0-7 0-0 0, Clair 1-9 4-4 7, Menzies 2-4 0-3 4. Totals 24-68 13-23 65.

Halftime—Seattle 27-25. 3-Point Goals—Sacramento St. 9-29 (Wu 3-8, Graves 3-9, Ug-baja 1-1, Strings 1-3, Barlett 1-4, Hornsby 0-2, Demps 0-2), Seattle 4-27 (Westendorf 2-7, Cohee 1-4, Clair 1-7, Shaughnessy 0-4, Spur-geon 0-5). Fouled Out—Crook, Demps, Powell. Rebounds—Sacramento St. 40 (Hornsby 9), Seattle 54 (Crook, Powell, Westendorf 10). As-sists—Sacramento St. 18 (Graves 5), Seattle 12 (Westendorf 4). Total Fouls—Sacramento St. 24, Seattle 21. A—1,754.

FOOTBALLAmway Top 25 Poll

The Amway Top 25 football coaches poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 14, total points based on 25 points for first place through one point for 25th, and previous ranking: Record Pts Pvs 1. Clemson (28) 10-0 1560 2 2. Ohio State (32) 10-0 1541 1 3. Alabama (4) 9-1 1484 4 4. Oklahoma State 10-0 1348 5 5. Notre Dame 9-1 1333 6

6. Iowa 10-0 1278 8 7. Oklahoma 9-1 1240 11 8. Florida 9-1 1132 10 9. Michigan State 9-1 1020 1410. Baylor 8-1 999 311. TCU 9-1 970 1212. North Carolina 9-1 801 1713. Michigan 8-2 759 1514. Houston 10-0 745 1615. Stanford 8-2 690 716. Florida State 8-2 638 t1817. LSU 7-2 584 918. Utah 8-2 493 1319. Navy 8-1 456 2320. Wisconsin 8-2 447 2221. Northwestern 8-2 359 2422. Oregon 7-3 186 NR23. Washington State 7-3 155 NR24. Southern California 7-3 154 NR25. Mississippi 7-3 70 NR25. Mississippi State 7-3 70 20

Others receiving votes: UCLA 57; Memphis 51; Georgia 35; Toledo 33; Arkansas 28; Texas A&M 25; Temple 17; Pittsburgh 14; Western Ken-tucky 11; Bowling Green 8; Louisville 3; Appala-chian State 2; Arkansas State 2; Brigham Young 1; Marshall 1.

Associated Press Top 25The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press

college football poll, with first-place votes in pa-rentheses, records through Nov. 14, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Record Pts Pv 1. Clemson (34) 10-0 1,496 1 2. Ohio St. (23) 10-0 1,460 2 3. Alabama (4) 9-1 1,424 3 4. Oklahoma St. 10-0 1,301 5 5. Notre Dame 9-1 1,286 6 6. Iowa 10-0 1,216 8 7. Oklahoma 9-1 1,182 12 8. Florida 9-1 1,055 11 9. Michigan St. 9-1 1,008 1410. Baylor 8-1 946 411. TCU 9-1 857 1312. North Carolina 9-1 791 1713. Houston 10-0 790 1614. Michigan 8-2 738 1515. Stanford 8-2 668 716. Florida St. 8-2 559 1917. LSU 7-2 549 918. Utah 8-2 514 1019. Navy 8-1 465 2220. Northwestern 8-2 397 2421. Wisconsin 8-2 338 2322. Southern Cal 7-3 201 NR23. Oregon 7-3 170 NR24. Washington St. 7-3 167 NR25. Mississippi 7-3 44 NR

Others receiving votes: Toledo 39, Arkansas 35, Memphis 32, Mississippi St. 25, UCLA 18, Pittsburgh 15, Temple 13, Georgia 8, Texas A&M 8, Bowling Green 4, W. Kentucky 4, Air Force 1, Arkansas St. 1.

WSU 31, UCLA 27Saturday’s game

WSU 7 7 7 10—31UCLA 6 10 0 11—27

First QuarterUCLA—FG Fairbairn 22, 9:44.WSU—Wicks 2 run (E.Powell kick), 4:31.UCLA—FG Fairbairn 22, :19.

Second QuarterUCLA—Starks 14 run (Fairbairn kick), 4:14.WSU—D.Williams 7 pass from Bender

(E.Powell kick), 1:30.UCLA—FG Fairbairn 38, :11.

Third QuarterWSU—Marks 4 pass from Falk (E.Powell

kick), 7:59.Fourth Quarter

WSU—FG E.Powell 25, 11:40.UCLA—FG Fairbairn 38, 7:10.UCLA—Rosen 37 run (Duarte pass from

Rosen), 1:09.WSU—Marks 21 pass from Falk (E.Powell

kick), :03.A—76,255. WSU UCLA

First downs 26 30Rushes-yards 22-38 32-214Passing 388 340Comp-Att-Int 40-58-1 33-57-0Return Yards 0 12Punts-Avg. 5-44.6 3-16.7Fumbles-Lost 1-0 2-2Penalties-Yards 9-45 13-75Time of Possession 32:35 27:25

RUSHING—Washington St., Morrow 5-32, Wicks 5-19, Harrington 1-10, Martin Jr. 1-(minus 6), Falk 10-(minus 17). UCLA, Perkins 20-121, Rosen 5-70, Starks 4-14, Jamabo 1-12, Andrews 1-0, Iese 1-(minus 3).

PASSING—Washington St., Falk 38-53-1-331, Bender 2-5-0-57. UCLA, Rosen 33-57-0-340.

RECEIVING—Washington St., Marks 12-92,

D.Williams 7-100, Sweet 4-53, Wicks 4-9, Lewis 3-32, Priester 3-25, Harrington 2-55, Morrow 2-10, Baker 2-7, Martin Jr. 1-5. UCLA, Payton 14-152, Andrews 7-60, Perkins 4-28, Massing-ton 3-44, Duarte 2-30, Walker 1-14, Starks 1-10, Jamabo 1-2.

Arizona State 27, Washington 17

Saturday’s game

Washington 10 7 0 0—17Arizona St. 0 3 7 17—27

First QuarterWash—FG Van Winkle 35, 9:57.Wash—Gaskin 1 run (Van Winkle kick),

6:50.Second Quarter

Wash—Daniels 29 pass from Browning (Van Winkle kick), 8:20.

ASU—FG Gonzalez 40, 2:21.Third Quarter

ASU—Ballage 3 run (Gonzalez kick), 9:56.Fourth Quarter

ASU—Lucien 32 pass from Bercovici (Gon-zalez kick), 13:52.

ASU—FG Gonzalez 23, 8:25.ASU—Ballage 48 run (Gonzalez kick), 5:59.A—51,695. Wash ASU

First downs 27 19Rushes-yards 34-142 43-144Passing 405 253Comp-Att-Int 28-52-3 22-34-0Return Yards 39 50Punts-Avg. 6-42.8 11-46.1Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-0Penalties-Yards 7-60 3-39Time of Possession 30:48 29:12

RUSHING—Washington, Gaskin 18-108, Cooper 3-15, Hall 2-10, Browning 10-7, Carta-Samuels 1-2. Arizona St., Ballage 11-92, Richard 14-45, Foster 6-17, Hayes 1-5, Team 1-(minus 1), Gammage 1-(minus 4), Bercovici 9-(minus 10).

PASSING—Washington, Browning 28-52-3-405. Arizona St., Bercovici 22-34-0-253.

RECEIVING—Washington, Lenius 6-59, Mickens 5-100, Daniels 4-61, Renfro 3-30, Per-kins 3-29, Hall 2-65, Pettis 2-35, Gaskin 2-11, Sample 1-15. Arizona St., Foster 5-62, T.White 5-22, Lucien 4-63, Kohl 4-55, Chambers 1-24, Ballage 1-10, Jefferson 1-10, Hayes 1-7.

GOLFOHL Classic

SundayAt El Camaleon Golf ClubPlaya del Carmen, Mexico

Purse: $6.2 millionYardage: 6,987; Par: 71

Fourth Round(27 golfers did not finish the round)

Keegan Bradley 67-71-68-66—272Peter Malnati 68-71-67-67—273Boo Weekley 67-70-69-67—273Hunter Stewart 68-69-68-68—273Charles Howell III 66-71-70-67—274Jim Herman 69-67-70-68—274Dawie van der Walt 66-74-64-70—274Si Woo Kim 68-64-72-70—274Jason Kokrak 68-67-68-71—274Will Wilcox 69-66-68-71—274D.J. Trahan 66-71-67-70—274Bronson Burgoon 71-68-67-69—275Roberto Castro 70-68-68-69—275Cameron Beckman 67-71-68-69—275

Leaderboard Score ThruRussell Knox -19 12Graeme McDowell -18 12Jason Bohn -17 12Scott Brown -15 14Derek Fathauer -15 12Fredrik Jacobson -13 13Patrick Rodgers -13 15Harold Varner III -13 13Justin Leonard -13 13

Lorena Ochoa InvitationalSunday

At Club de Golf MexicoMexico City

Purse: $1 millionYardage: 6,774; Par 72

FinalInbee Park, $200,000 68-71-67-64—270Carlota Ciganda, $103,449 72-69-69-63—273Sei Young Kim, $75,045 73-66-70-66—275So Yeon Ryu, $58,053 71-70-69-67—277Sakura Yokomine, $46,726 72-70-69-68—279Mariajo Uribe, $35,115 71-73-71-65—280Caroline Masson, $35,115 73-71-70-66—280Jaye Marie Green , $24,354 71-70-72-69—282Suzann Pettersen, $24,354 69-71-73-69—282Cristie Kerr, $24,354 74-69-69-70—282Christina Kim, $24,354 73-66-73-70—282

HOCKEYNHL

EASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GAMontreal 18 13 3 2 28 63 39Ottawa 17 8 5 4 20 51 53Tampa Bay 19 8 8 3 19 46 48Boston 16 8 7 1 17 52 49Detroit 17 8 8 1 17 37 42Buffalo 17 8 8 1 17 40 46Florida 17 7 7 3 17 48 45Toronto 18 5 9 4 14 41 54

Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAN.Y. Rangers 18 14 2 2 30 57 32Washington 16 11 4 1 23 50 37New Jersey 17 10 6 1 21 44 40N.Y. Islanders 18 9 6 3 21 49 42Pittsburgh 17 10 7 0 20 36 37Philadelphia 17 6 8 3 15 33 50Carolina 17 6 9 2 14 34 49Columbus 18 6 12 0 12 45 62

WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GADallas 18 14 4 0 28 65 47Minnesota 16 10 3 3 23 48 43Nashville 16 10 3 3 23 50 38St. Louis 17 11 5 1 23 47 41Chicago 18 10 7 1 21 49 44Winnipeg 18 8 8 2 18 48 59Colorado 17 7 9 1 15 49 45

Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GALos Angeles 17 11 6 0 22 43 36Arizona 17 9 7 1 19 48 49Vancouver 18 7 6 5 19 52 46San Jose 17 9 8 0 18 45 43Anaheim 17 5 8 4 14 29 45Calgary 19 6 12 1 13 45 72Edmonton 18 6 12 0 12 47 58

NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.

Sunday’s GamesN.Y. Rangers 4, Toronto 3Chicago 4, Calgary 1

Monday’s GamesArizona at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m.Anaheim at Carolina, 4 p.m.Vancouver at Montreal, 4:30 p.m.Detroit at Ottawa, 4:30 p.m.Tampa Bay at Florida, 4:30 p.m.Winnipeg at St. Louis, 5 p.m.

WHLU.S. DIVISION

GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PtSeattle 19 12 6 1 0 68 49 25Spokane 21 10 8 2 1 65 72 23Everett 16 10 5 0 1 38 33 21Portland 19 10 9 0 0 66 56 20Tri-City 20 7 12 1 0 59 77 15

B.C. DIVISION GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PtKelowna 20 14 5 1 0 80 63 29Victoria 22 14 7 0 1 71 45 29Prince George 19 10 8 1 0 53 56 21Kamloops 18 9 8 1 0 65 58 19Vancouver 20 5 11 2 2 54 78 14

EASTERN CONFERENCEEAST DIVISION

GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PtPrince Albert 21 13 5 2 1 74 66 29Brandon 21 12 7 0 2 74 58 26Moose Jaw 20 11 6 2 1 77 62 25Saskatoon 19 9 7 3 0 66 74 21Regina 18 9 8 1 0 54 66 19Swift Current 20 8 10 2 0 52 61 18

CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PtRed Deer 22 15 7 0 0 85 63 30Lethbridge 20 12 8 0 0 78 65 24Calgary 22 11 10 0 1 63 73 23Edmonton 21 7 11 3 0 53 71 17Medicine Hat 17 6 8 2 1 62 69 15Kootenay 21 4 15 2 0 47 89 10

Sunday’s gamesRegina 5 Lethbridge 3Prince Albert 3 Brandon 2Kamloops 9 Prince George 1

Monday’s gamesNo games scheduled

DEALSFOOTBALL

National Football LeagueHOUSTON TEXANS —] Waived C Eric Kush.

Activated TE Ryan Griffin from the injured re-serve-return list.

HOCKEYNational Hockey League

ARIZONA COYOTES — Recalled F Craig Cun-ningham from Springfield (AHL).

COLORADO AVALANCHE — Claimed F Chris Wagner off waivers from Anaheim. Placed G Semyon Varlamov on injured reserve, retroactive to Nov. 10.